21 April 2026

Diary Extract 1661 April 21

JosephCaryl
Caryl (Contemporary portrait, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)
April 21. I had a comfortable night's rest, and found myself much better this morning; I have reason to be thankful that I have been kept, during my indisposition, from murmuring and discontented thoughts. I have been reading several useful authors, and particularly Mr. T. Rowe's life*, and some passages in "Caryl on Job,"** which has unexpectedly been put into my hands. I hope it will be of great service to me. "O Lord, I will praise thee; for though thou wast angry with me, thine anger is turned away and thou comfortest me."
*Thomas Rowe (1657–1705) was an English nonconformist minister, a Calvinist significant as the teacher of the next generation of Dissenters, particularly in philosophy, in one of the first of the dissenting academies, St Helen's
**.Joseph Caryl (1602-1673) was born in London, educated at Merchant Taylors' School and a graduate of Exeter College, Oxford. He became preacher at Lincoln's Inn and frequently preached before the Long Parliament. A Westminste Divne, he was ordered by parliament to attend Charles I in Holmby House and in 1650 was sent with John Owen to accompany Cromwell to Scotland. In 1662, following the Restoration, he was ejected from St Magnus-the-Martyr near London Bridge. He continued to minister to an Independent congregation in London until his death in March 1673, when Owen succeeded him.

20 April 2026

Diary Extract 1661 Aoril 20

Monday, April 20, 1761. I had been for some time much indisposed, but was something better on Saturday. Yesterday, being Lord's Day, I went to the public meeting, not without some apprehension of taking cold, which I believe was the case; for in the afternoon I felt extremely ill, and was overwhelmed with sickness. The sorrows, and, as I thought, the pains of death, appeared to take hold upon me. I was ready to conclude that my useless life was drawing towards an end, and that the Lord was about to cut me off in the midst of my days. I had a deep sense of my past sins, which are many and grievous. I saw myself deserving of the Divine displeasure, and that if I am ever saved, it must be through the mercy and grace of Jesus Christ. Many of my Christian friends discovered great sympathy with me. I could not forbear shedding tears at the sight of them. Having taken something to drink, after one of my brethren had offered up to God a fervent and suitable prayer, I attempted to walk home, and reached, after a little time, by the assistance of some kind friends. Having perspired a little during the night, I found myself this morning much relieved, for which I desire to bless God with all my heart, and would earnestly implore that he would sanctify this affliction to the benefit of my soul. Psalm cxix, 74: 'It is good for me that I have been afflicted, that I might learn thy statutes.'
I think it is good for me,
1st. Because I now see more into the emptiness and vanity of all earthly enjoyments, and into the frailty and uncertainty of life.
2dly. Because I have had a discovery of, and I hope some genuine sorrow for, my unfruitfulness, unwatchfulness, and many other sins of which I never repented as I ought to have done before. 'Before I was afflicted I went astray; but now may I keep thy word! Psalm cxix. 67.
3dly. I see great reason to be importunate with the Lord for the pardon of my sins, and strength and grace to enable me to keep the way of the Lord more perfectly.

Diary Extract 1661 April 21

Caryl (Contemporary portrait, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons) April 21. I had a comfortable night's rest, and found myself much b...