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George Fox: An Autobiography

Chapter 47: Transcriber's note:
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About This Book

An autobiographical journal records a personal spiritual awakening and the subsequent life of itinerant ministry, describing widespread travel to preach, debates with religious leaders, and repeated imprisonments for refusing conventional worship practices. It sets out a theology centered on inward guidance and immediate access to the divine, rejecting priestly mediation and advocating religious toleration and social equality. The narrative blends episodic travel accounts, letters, sermons, and prison reports to show how convictions shaped social encounters and institutional responses. Episodes of suffering and perseverance illustrate the costs and communal foundations of a movement that emphasized plain speech, simple worship, and the primacy of inward experience.

Transcriber's note:

Variations in spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been retained except in obvious cases of typographical error.

Page 429 The transcriber has supplied the opening double quote mark in the following sentence: "I do deny them in my heart; for I am a Christian, and shall show forth Christianity amongst you this day. It is for Christ's doctrine I stand."

Page 575 The transcriber has supplied the closing double quote mark in the following sentence: "A general epistle to Friends, to forewarn them of the approaching storm, that they might all retire to the Lord, in whom is safety."

Missing page numbers are page numbers that were not shown in the original text.