Nicholas Bownd's Works - No-Cost eBooks

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davejonescue

Puritan Board Senior
Hello all. Just want to let everyone know that all of Nicholas Bownd's works, except for the larger "Doctrine of the True Sabbath," are available for no-cost download via Monergism, in ePUB and PDF formats.

The Doctrine of the Sabbath: Plainly laid Forth, and Soundly Proved - 323pgs

The Holy Exercise of Fasting: Described Largely and Plainly out of the Word of God - 182pgs

The Unbelief of St. Thomas the Apostle: Laid Open for the Comfort of All that Desire to Believe - 97pgs

Consolation for All that are Afflicted: Which Armeth Us Against Impatience Under Any Cross - 84pgs

Medicines for the Plague: Godly and Fruitful Sermons Upon Part of the 20th Psalm - 339pgs
 
Monergism is citing my words from the Naphtali Press/RHB edition's book jacket without permission. Changing one word "parish" to "rural" doesn't cut it.
Monergism: Nicholas Bownd (1551?–1613) was the pastor of a country parish in rural England. Judging from the sermons he published, his ministry exhibited the practical divinity taught by his stepfather, Richard Greenham, which focused on the means of grace. The crucial ‘mean of the means’ whereby all these means of grace were made available to the people of God was the weekly gatherings on the Christian Sabbath or Lord’s Day.

In 1595, Bownd published True Doctrine of the Sabbath, which derived from sermons preached about 1586. This book embroiled him in a singular controversy with a troublesome neighbor, which resulted in the first Sabbatarian controversy in England, and also led to a vindicating expanded edition in 1606.

NP: For most of his ministry, Nicholas Bownd (1551?–1613) was the pastor of a country church in rural England. Judging from the sermons he published, his ministry exhibited the practical divinity taught by his stepfather, Richard Greenham, which focused on the means of grace. The crucial ‘mean of the means’ whereby all these means of grace were made available to the people of God was the weekly gatherings on the Christian Sabbath or Lord’s Day. In 1595, Bownd published True Doctrine of the Sabbath, which derived from sermons preached about 1586. This book embroiled him in a singular controversy with a troublesome neighbor, which resulted in the first Sabbatarian controversy in England, and also led to a vindicating expanded edition in 1606.
 
Hello all. Just want to let everyone know that all of Nicholas Bownd's works, except for the larger "Doctrine of the True Sabbath," are available for no-cost download via Monergism, in ePUB and PDF formats.

The Doctrine of the Sabbath: Plainly laid Forth, and Soundly Proved - 323pgs

The Holy Exercise of Fasting: Described Largely and Plainly out of the Word of God - 182pgs

The Unbelief of St. Thomas the Apostle: Laid Open for the Comfort of All that Desire to Believe - 97pgs

Consolation for All that are Afflicted: Which Armeth Us Against Impatience Under Any Cross - 84pgs

Medicines for the Plague: Godly and Fruitful Sermons Upon Part of the 20th Psalm - 339pgs

I am positively loving the collection of homilies on fasting. Thank you for your work.
 
Monergism is citing my words from the Naphtali Press/RHB edition's book jacket without permission. Changing one word "parish" to "rural" doesn't cut it.
Monergism: Nicholas Bownd (1551?–1613) was the pastor of a country parish in rural England. Judging from the sermons he published, his ministry exhibited the practical divinity taught by his stepfather, Richard Greenham, which focused on the means of grace. The crucial ‘mean of the means’ whereby all these means of grace were made available to the people of God was the weekly gatherings on the Christian Sabbath or Lord’s Day.

In 1595, Bownd published True Doctrine of the Sabbath, which derived from sermons preached about 1586. This book embroiled him in a singular controversy with a troublesome neighbor, which resulted in the first Sabbatarian controversy in England, and also led to a vindicating expanded edition in 1606.

NP: For most of his ministry, Nicholas Bownd (1551?–1613) was the pastor of a country church in rural England. Judging from the sermons he published, his ministry exhibited the practical divinity taught by his stepfather, Richard Greenham, which focused on the means of grace. The crucial ‘mean of the means’ whereby all these means of grace were made available to the people of God was the weekly gatherings on the Christian Sabbath or Lord’s Day. In 1595, Bownd published True Doctrine of the Sabbath, which derived from sermons preached about 1586. This book embroiled him in a singular controversy with a troublesome neighbor, which resulted in the first Sabbatarian controversy in England, and also led to a vindicating expanded edition in 1606.
Naphtali you seem to be reaching a bit. Most likely Monergism just got the bio off of RHB. I doubt there was a shred of malicious intent at all.

greenham bio.jpg
 
I am positively loving the collection of homilies on fasting. Thank you for your work.
Our pleasure. And if you find yourself running into a Them/Then problem, I went back and updated both the Sabbath and the Fasting book, as there was a tad issue where when the PP updates were done, we had updated "thē" word incorrectly. This can mean either "Then" or "Them" and should have not been updated to "then." This was a version 2 problem, the texts from version 1 don't have this. It doesnt affect many books as not all the books have this "shortcut" but Bownd used it often so it had affected his books disproportionally.
 
Naphtali you seem to be reaching a bit. Most likely Monergism just got the bio off of RHB. I doubt there was a shred of malicious intent at all.

View attachment 11691
Citing RHB directly from where they are selling the NP/RHB edition without attribution is more than tacky. It is unethical. RHB routinely uses the verbiage from the dust jackets to do their web promoting.
 
Citing RHB directly from where they are selling the NP/RHB edition without attribution is more than tacky. It is unethical. RHB routinely uses the verbiage from the dust jackets to do their web promoting.
Naphtali, I really dont agree with you here. It would be one thing if someone was copying your entire book, or someones books and pawning the work off as their own. It is another for a person to look for a trusted source for a 3 sentence bio. Monergism didnt dig into your book or anybody else's to steal yours or their work. They just went to a trusted source on Puritans and got a short bio.
 
The words are my bio of Nicholas Bownd from the dust jacket. Stop defending this. Please ask them to remove the words or at least take the effort to reword them. I get that you and they are all about free, but ripping off other's people's work/words from their editions is reprehensible.
 
Naphtali, I really dont agree with you here. It would be one thing if someone was copying your entire book, or someones books and pawning the work off as their own. It is another for a person to look for a trusted source for a 3 sentence bio. Monergism didnt dig into your book or anybody else's to steal yours or their work. They just went to a trusted source on Puritans and got a short bio.
What is plagiarism?
 
a trusted source for a 3 sentence bio

Without citation? As a high school teacher, this excuse ("only 3" - it's not like it's 30 sentences) would be dismissed outright by teachers and administration as a violation of policy. It usually doesn't get that far since it is only 3 sentences. So the kid usually ends up citing them or re-wording them.
 
as there was a tad issue where when the PP updates were done, we had updated "thē" word incorrectly. This can mean either "Then" or "Them" and should have not been updated to "then."

Just a clarifying note that you say "we" but that word replacement (and tens of thousands of others) were 100% my work and decision and I do still stand by it. I recognized that there are multiple instances where the context had to decide which was the correct one (then/them). My decision was to go with what was statistically more common and leave the mistakes be corrected by proofreading. There was no perfect automated solution and I chose to fix most of them and introduce a few errors rather than fix none.
 
You guys make me chuckle a bit at the sheer pettiness. Yes I will contact Monergism and ask them to put a RHB citation, as you can use up to 250-500 words without written permission, per their policy.

policy rhb.jpg
 
I wasn’t trying to be petty, but I did make that choice and it wasn’t necessarily a mistake. Just requires proofing as intended.

I am quite surprised at the ban.
 
I wasn’t trying to be petty, but I did make that choice and it wasn’t necessarily a mistake. Just requires proofing as intended.

I am quite surprised at the ban.
Fixed to a warning/suspension (if enough points).
Post automatically merged:

I wasn’t trying to be petty, but I did make that choice and it wasn’t necessarily a mistake. Just requires proofing as intended.

I am quite surprised at the ban.
Fixed to a warning/suspension (if enough points).
 
It should be a week if I understand the set up; but admins are not in the practice of discussing thread moderation and "timeouts" outside the admin lounge. So no more commenting on this. I'm closing this thread.
 
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