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heart; Great afflictions and tribulations for many weeks was he exercised in ... he was in that state, and while therein exercised for many days, a wonder to all that beheld him, as one passing out of the body, as one under the deep sense of the hand of the Lord, under the operation of his Power; thus it was with many of us, and particularly with him...
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And when it pleased the Lord God everlasting to raise us up to be a People in the North parts, ... This same Person was one among the first of us whose heart the Lord touched with the sense of his Power and
Kingdom; and amongst us he had the mighty operation of the Power of God experienced in his
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describes him as being "inclinable from his youth upwards to
Religion and to the best way, always minding the best things", though unlike the headstrong young George, his disposition was "meek and lowly", and he "loved peace among men". However, around age 20 he joined the army and fought in the
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A collection of the several books and writings of that faithful servant of God, Richard
Hubberthorn, who finished his testimony (being a prisoner at Newgate for the truths sake) the 17th of the 6th month,
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But the spark that lit a fire under the
Westmorland Seekers was the arrival of George Fox in June 1652. Burrough, who was also one of them, recounts Hubberthorne's conversion experience in this way:
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pp. vii–viii, spelling modernized. The account continues: "Till such time as the same Power that killed made alive, as wounded also healed, as brought down also raised up ...
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includes him among the "heroic pioneers of the new movement", but puts him last, and later describes his writing as having "no distinction either of style or matter".
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After the war ended, he apparently was in the company of the large group of disaffected radical puritans known as "
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This article was derived from
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area. The
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Not everything he wrote appears to be included in this volume however, because another recent book (
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A volume of his collected works were published in 1663, a year after his death, and titled
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Hubberthorne is generally overshadowed by more famous early
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on "The Seed
Lifting Up" that formed the starting point for this article
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Claus Bernet (2010). "Richard
Hubberthorne". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.).
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Meredith Baldwin Weddle) refers to a pamphlet of his called
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153:(in German). Vol. 31. Nordhausen: Bautz. cols. 669–677.
210:(1912) by William Braithwaite, p. 86 (hereafter, "BQ").
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and his wife. His childhood is reminiscent of Fox's –
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of his works (see "Works" section above), pp. vi–vii.
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Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL)
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