was an English clergyman, widely regarded as "the most popular Puritan preacher of Elizabethan London."
His sermons at St. Clement Danes drew enormous crowds, and earned him a reputation as "Silver Tongued" Smith.
The collected editions of his sermons, and especially his tract, "God's Arrow Against Atheists," were among the most frequently reprinted religious writings of the Elizabethan age.
Probably born in Leicestershire around 1560, Smith may have enrolled during the 1570s in colleges at both Cambridge and Oxford, but seems not to have taken a degree.
He was, in any case, by 1589 among London's most popular preachers; however in that year, Smith seems to have contracted an illness which according to Charles Henry Cooper's Athenae Cantabrigienses caused him to devote his remaining time to preparing his writings for publication: During his sickness, being desirous to do good by writing, he occupied himself in revising his sermons and other works for the press.