Aspinwall, W. (1647). Certaine queries touching the ordination of ministers: Soberly propounded to the serious consideration of all the parochiall ministers of England in generall; and more especially those sundry ministers in London authors of a late printed booke entituled Ius divinum regiminis ecclesiastici: or the divine right of church-government, &c. Or the opening of a doore into a further discussion of the divine right of presbyters by succession, and of the interrest of particular churches in the ordination of their owne officers: as also of mens preaching without ordination. Printed by Matthew Simmons for Henry Overton, and are to be sold by J. Pounce at the lower end of Budg-Row, neere Canning-Street.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationAspinwall, William. Certaine Queries Touching the Ordination of Ministers: Soberly Propounded to the Serious Consideration of All the Parochiall Ministers of England in Generall; and More Especially Those Sundry Ministers in London Authors of a Late Printed Booke Entituled Ius Divinum Regiminis Ecclesiastici: Or the Divine Right of Church-government, &c. Or the Opening of a Doore into a Further Discussion of the Divine Right of Presbyters by Succession, and of the Interrest of Particular Churches in the Ordination of Their Owne Officers: As Also of Mens Preaching Without Ordination. London: Printed by Matthew Simmons for Henry Overton, and are to be sold by J. Pounce at the lower end of Budg-Row, neere Canning-Street, 1647.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationAspinwall, William. Certaine Queries Touching the Ordination of Ministers: Soberly Propounded to the Serious Consideration of All the Parochiall Ministers of England in Generall; and More Especially Those Sundry Ministers in London Authors of a Late Printed Booke Entituled Ius Divinum Regiminis Ecclesiastici: Or the Divine Right of Church-government, &c. Or the Opening of a Doore into a Further Discussion of the Divine Right of Presbyters by Succession, and of the Interrest of Particular Churches in the Ordination of Their Owne Officers: As Also of Mens Preaching Without Ordination. Printed by Matthew Simmons for Henry Overton, and are to be sold by J. Pounce at the lower end of Budg-Row, neere Canning-Street, 1647.