Author:Edward Elwall

Works

 * A true testimony for God and his sacred Law; being a plain, honest defence of the First Commandment of God, against all the Trinitarians under Heaven
 * Response to Elwall's True Testimony for God by James Barter
 * To James Barter's Reflections on my Late Book Intitled A True Testimony for God and for His Sacred Law


 * A Defence of the Fourth Commandment of God in Answer to a Treatise entitled The Religious Observation of the Lord's Day, 1724
 * The Religious Observation of the Lord's Day by Dr. S. Wright to which he was responding


 * A Reply to James Barter's Reflections
 * Dagon fallen before the Ark of God: or, the inventions of men not able to stand before the first commandment 1725 in response to Author:James Barter
 * Dagon fallen upon his Stumps (1726) Google Books
 * Elwall's challenge to George II to meet him in James's Park
 * With the case of the Seventh Day Sabbath-Keepers consider'd, as intended to be laid before the Parliament
 * The vanity and improbability of expecting that any good Jews should ever be brought over to the pretended Christian Religion
 * A declaration against all the kings and temporal power under heaven. Shewing that they have no Authority, 1734
 * The Grand Question in Religion … With an Account of the Author's Tryal (1736)
 * The true and sure way to remove hirelings out of the church, by freeing mankind from the forced maintenance of priests 1738
 * With an answer to my beloved friend Thomas Chubb’s dissertation, concerning the time for keeping the sabbath
 * And a short remark on Daniel Dobel’s late book upon the same subject, 1738
 * Letter to William Nassau, Prince of Orange

Works about Elwall

 * The Triumph of Truth, being an account of the trial of Mr. Elwall by Joseph Priestly Pg 47-61 of this
 * Discussed in The Memoir of Joshua Toulmin
 * Letter to Edward Elwall from an unknown author
 * Letter to Edward Elwall from an unknown author

Misattributed

 * The 1737 Sermon preached in the Grand Assembly of Quakers in London was misattributed to Elwall but believed to be actually the work of Alberto Radicati, count di Passerano