Preservative against Popery (also Preservation against Popery) is a name commonly given to a collection of anti-Catholic works published in 1738 by Edmund Gibson. It drew largely on the literature of the "Romish Controversy" of the 1680s, in which Church of England controversialists made a case against what they saw as a present threat from Catholicism. The original edition was in three folio volumes.
Contents
19th-century edition (1848–49)
John Cumming made an edition in the 1840s. In 18 volumes, it collected up extra tracts. The publication was supported by the British Reformation Society, part of the reaction to Tractarianism.
Supplement (1849–50)
Cumming, Richard Paul Blakeney and Martin Wilson Foye then edited a Supplement to the edition of Cumming, again for the British Reformation Society. It was in eight volumes.
- Isaac Barrow, The Pope's Supremacy'
- Simon Birckbek, The Protestant's Evidence (2 vols.)
- Humphrey Lynde, Via Tuta and Via Devia
- Lynde, A Case for the Spectacles, and Daniel Featley, Stricturæ in Lyndomastigem
- John Edwards, The Doctrines Controverted between Papists and Protestants
- Foye, Rites, Offices and Legends
- James Serces, Popery Enemy to Scripture (1736; a reply to Robert Witham, Annotations on the New Testament of Jesus Christ, 1730), Pierre Mussard, The Religious Rites of Ancient and Modern Rome, Barrow, A Discourse Concerning the Unity of the Church