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Christopher Love

Christopher Love (1618 – August 22, 1651) was a Welsh Presbyterian preacher and martyr whose ministry during the English Civil War left a significant mark on Puritan history. Born in Cardiff, Wales, to Christopher Love Sr. and an unnamed mother, he was the youngest of several children in a middle-class family. At age 14, he attended a sermon by William Erbery, which led to his conversion, sparking a rift with his father, who opposed his religious zeal and sent him to apprentice in London. Supported by his mother and Erbery, he instead studied at New Inn Hall, Oxford, earning a B.A. in 1639, though he was expelled before completing his M.A. due to his refusal to subscribe to Archbishop Laud’s canons of 1640. Love’s preaching career began in London, where he served as chaplain to Sheriff John Warner, marrying Warner’s ward, Mary Stone, in 1641, with whom he had five children—two daughters who died young and three sons, the last born posthumously. Denied ordination by the Church of England, he preached at St. Anne’s, Aldersgate, and later sought Presbyterian ordination in Scotland, only to return to England in 1641 and face imprisonment for denouncing the Book of Common Prayer. Ordained in 1644 at Aldermanbury Church, he became pastor of St. Lawrence Jewry and preached during the First English Civil War, serving as chaplain to Colonel John Venn’s regiment at Windsor Castle. Arrested in 1651 for alleged involvement in the “Love Plot” to fund Charles II’s restoration, he was convicted of treason despite denying the charges and executed on Tower Hill at age 33, leaving a legacy of over 20 published works, including The Christian’s Duty and Safety in Evil Times.