Richard Clarke
Active Years
Min year: 1746, Max year: 1799, Max count: 6
As Author
- 1746: Notice is hereby given to all dealers in brandy, rum, malt, or Melasses-Spirits, Arrack, &c. that the hydrometer, or brandy-prover, being the production of many years study and Experiments, is now brought to its utmost perfection
- 1750: An essay on the number seven. Wherein the duration of the Church of Rome, and of the Mahometan imposture; the time also of the conversion of the Jews; and the year of the world, for the beginning of the millennium; ... are attempted to be shewn. By a member of the Church of Christ
- 1759: The prophetic numbers of Daniel and John calculated
- 1759: The prophetic numbers of Daniel and John calculated
- 1759: An essay on the number seven
- 1759: The prophetic numbers of Daniel and John calculated
- 1759: A warning to the world
- 1759: The prophetic numbers of Daniel and John calculated
- 1760: A spiritual voice to the Christian church, and to the Jews;in an explanation of the sabbatical year of Moses by the Gospel of Jesus Christ: In which The approaching Millennium is supported, and the Different Durations of future Punishments are proved and confirmed by the two Revelations of God. By the Rev. Mr. Clarke, Author of Essay on the Number Seven, and of the Calculations on the Prophecies of Daniel and John
- 1760: A second warning to the world, by the spirit of prophecy. In an explanation of the mysteries in the feast of trumpets on the first day of the seventh month. Wherein is shewn the approaching Manifestation of our Lord in the Spirit and the Glory. To offer up the extraordinary Number of Sacrifices in his first-fruits from among all Nations: When he will unveil the great Cloud of Fire in the new Heavens and new Earth of his spiritual Body, which will overshadow the Land of Canaan, according to the Journeys of Abraham therein. At this Time Satan will be bound in the Abyss, and a first Death and Judgment to all the unregenerate, as well as a first Resurrection to all the Israel of God will succeed. The Period for this Event will be at the End of the two thousand three hundred Days for the cleansing of the Sanctuary in Daniel, Ch. viii. 12, 13, 14. which must be measured from the Night of the old Babylon's Captivity, when the other Babylon of the Prophet John will fall. The whole is offered to the Universal Church of Christ, and to the Jews, with an earnest Desire for their Conversion, before he comes in the Clouds of Heaven. By the Rev. Mr. Clarke, Author of the Sabbatical Year, of the Essay on the Number Seven, and of the Calculations on the Prophetical Numbers of Daniel and John
- 1763: A voice of glad-tidings to Jews and gentiles, from the mysteries of the first-born, and first-fruits under the law of Moses, the servant of shadows, explained by the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Lord in the spirit and truth
- 1767: The gospel of the daily-service of the law, preached to the Jew and gentile, in an explanation of that grand ritual, ... By the Rev. Mr. Richard Clarke,
- 1772: Real scriptural predestination, asserted and defended against the false account of it, by the Rev. Mr. Madan
- 1773: Signs of times
- 1773: The nabob
- 1775: A series of dialogues, addressed to the Jews in the 35th jubilee of their dispersion and captivity. In these Dialogues, Jesus Christ is proved to be that Man-Child revealed to John, Rev. xii. 1 -- 5. And that he is the same Son of Man (bar Enosh) whom Daniel sees brought in the Clouds of the Heaven to the Throne of the Ancient of Days. Ch. 7. 13. That he is called Jesus of Nazareth under the Gospel, because he was separated and kept hid as it were, many Ages before he came into Flesh, to redeem the Children of his Father and Mother, Adam, un der the Fall
- 1775: A copious comment on Psalm LXVIII
- 1792: Mr. Clarke's letters
- 1792: A series of letters, essays, dissertations, and discourses, on various subjects
- 1792: Proposals for printing by subscription, in two volumes, ... A series of letters on various occasions:
- 1792: Proposals for printing by subscription, in two volumes, ... A series of letters on various occasions:
- 1794: A discourse on the third day of the Gospel
- 1795: Plans for increasing the naval force of Great Britain by rendering the service a more desirable object to officers and seamen, in which the following classes are particularly considered: masters and commanders, masters', mates, midshipmen, and able seamen
- 1795: A collection of poems and letters. Poems, &c. 1. An Ode from Sans Souci, characteristic of the late Northern Potentaete, with Annotations by Machiavel in the Shades. 2. Lines on the death of Infants, &c. 3. A Father's Soliloquy over a Sleeping Child, before his going to Prison. 4. Verses on the Death of a Son four Years old. 5. On the late Fast for National Sins, &c. 6. On the French Standards hung up at St. Paul's. Letters. 1. On German Electors and Princes Hiring out their Subjects for Soldiers. 2. An Account and Defence of the Author's Publications in Support of Universal Redemption, and of his Objections to an exclusive Priesthood. 3. A short View of the Signs of Times, drawn from a larger Work on the Numbers in the Law, the Prophets, and the Gospel. 4. A Letter on the Military Profession to a Gentleman, who, from Doubt and Fear of its being inconsistent with his Christian Profession, resigned his Commission. 5. A Letter on the present Rage for Fragments of Prophecies, not founded on Scripture, but on Conjectures and Probalities; in which, the late Mr. Toplady's Prophecy of Christopher Love, given by the late Dr. Gifford, Librarian to the British Museum, is considered; with some Notice of the Bishops of Llandaff and Rochester
- 1795: Jesus the Nazarene, addressed to Jews, Deists, and believers. By Richard Clarke, Late Rector of St. Philip's, Charlston, South-Carolina
- 1795: An account of books published from the year 1760 to 1795
- 1799: Medical strictures; being a concise and effectual method of treating the following diseases: colds ague smallpox ... In which the means of prevention, palliation, and cure, are distinctly pointed out, and the whole adapted to general comprehension. By Richard Clarke, M.D
Sat Dec 09 03:43:27 CST 2023