Thomas Long (1621–1707) was an English clergyman and writer on Church politics.
[1] In 1678 he attacked the late John Hales, incidentally taking a swipe at Andrew Marvell.
[2] After the Glorious Revolution he wrote from the Whig perspective, in A Resolution of Certain Queries (1689), advocating submission to the new government.
After the 1690 republication of Eikonoklastes, he entered the controversy over the authorship of the Eikon Basilike, writing against Anthony Walker and supporting Richard Hollingworth.
[4] He also attacked the Unitarian tract The Naked Gospel (1690), the work of Arthur Bury.