APA Citation

Sharp, G. (1776). The law of passive obedience, or Christian submission to personal injuries: Wherein is shewn, that the several texts of scripture, which command the entire submission of servants or slaves to their masters, cannot authorize the latter to exact an involuntary servitude, nor, in the least degree, justify the claims of modern Slaveholders. By Granville Sharp. [London]: s.n.

Chicago Style Citation

Sharp, Granville. The Law of Passive Obedience, or Christian Submission to Personal Injuries: Wherein Is Shewn, That the Several Texts of Scripture, Which Command the Entire Submission of Servants or Slaves to Their Masters, Cannot Authorize the Latter to Exact an Involuntary Servitude, Nor, in the Least Degree, Justify the Claims of Modern Slaveholders. By Granville Sharp. [London]: s.n, 1776.

MLA Citation

Sharp, Granville. The Law of Passive Obedience, or Christian Submission to Personal Injuries: Wherein Is Shewn, That the Several Texts of Scripture, Which Command the Entire Submission of Servants or Slaves to Their Masters, Cannot Authorize the Latter to Exact an Involuntary Servitude, Nor, in the Least Degree, Justify the Claims of Modern Slaveholders. By Granville Sharp. [London]: s.n, 1776.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.