He was born in York, according to the Worthies of Thomas Fuller. Fuller also says he gained the nickname “green-head” when a young preacher at Paul's Cross, attacking inequality. He preached against the Lord Mayor, too, in 1603, when he was a lecturer at St Augustine Watling Street in London.[1]
At All Hallows, he was the young John Milton's parish priest, and may have had a say in choosing his teachers. Thomas Young may have been recommended by Stock, or Gataker.[6] Later Stock may have had a hand in choosing Milton's replacement college tutor Nathaniel Tovey.[7]
Works
Ten Answers to Edmund Campion, the Jesuit (1606), English translation of a Latin work of William Whitaker
The Doctrine and Use of Repentance (1610) sermons
A Commentary upon the Prophecy of Malachi (1641)
A Stock of Divine Knowledge: Being a lively description of the Divine Nature. Or, The Divine Essence, Attributes, and Trinity particularly explained and profitably applied. London, 1641
The Church’s Lamentation for the Loss of the Godly: A Sermon Preached at the Funeral of the Lord Harington on Micah 7:1,2
A Sermon Preached at Paul’s Cross, November 1606, on Isaiah 9:14-16.
Notes
^Richard L. Graves, Society and Religion in Elizabethan England (1981), p. 553.