• Bio
  • Summary
  • Transcript
  • Download
James Nayler

James Nayler (1618 – October 21, 1660) was an English preacher and Quaker leader whose calling from God propelled him into a prominent role among the Valiant Sixty, spreading the gospel with fervor across mid-17th-century England. Born in Ardsley, near Wakefield, Yorkshire, to a yeoman farmer father, he grew up in a modest family with a good English education. Converted around 1651 after hearing a divine voice while plowing his fields—prompting him to abandon his possessions—he joined the Religious Society of Friends in 1652 upon meeting George Fox, embracing Quakerism without formal theological training beyond his army-honed independence and personal Scripture study. Nayler’s calling from God led him to itinerant preaching starting in 1652, traveling with Fox and the Valiant Sixty, where his eloquent sermons called thousands to the Inner Light, notably in London (1655) and the north. Ordained informally by his Quaker conviction, he faced imprisonment in 1653 at Appleby for 20 weeks and again in 1656 at Exeter, culminating in a notorious re-enactment of Christ’s entry into Jerusalem at Bristol on October 24, 1656—riding a horse with followers singing “Holy, holy, holy”—resulting in a blasphemy conviction by Parliament. Punished with branding, tongue-boring, and two years in prison, he emerged repentant in 1659, reconciled with Fox, and resumed preaching. His writings, like A Collection of Sundry Books (1716), called for spiritual purity and unity. Married with three daughters—Mary, Jane, and Sarah—he passed away at age 42 near Huntingdon, England, after a robbery left him fatally injured, buried at King’s Ripton Quaker ground.