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A00643 The souls looking-glasse lively representing its estate before God: with a treatise of conscience; wherein the definitions and distinctions thereof are unfolded, and severall cases resolved: by that reverend and faithfull minister of the Word, William Fenner, B.D. sometimes fellow of Pembroke-hall in Cambridge, and late parson of Rochford in Essex. Fenner, William, 1600-1640.; Calamy, Edmund, 1600-1666. 1640 (1640) STC 10779; ESTC S101939 116,565 318

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peace also If we know once that God loveth us then we may set our hearts at rest As long as we doubt of his love our conscience can never have true peace And therefore if we would maintein true peace of conscience let us labour to be assured of Gods love Answ 3 Thirdly We must use the exercise of faith in applying the bloud of Christ we must labour to purge and cleanse our consciences with it If we find that we have sinned we must runne presently to the bloud of Christ to wash away our sinne We must not let the wound fester or exulcerate but presently get it healed As there is a fountain of sinne ●n us so there is a fountain of mercie ●n Christ Zech. 13.1 set open for Judah and Jerusalem and for every poore soul to wash ●n As we sinne dayly so he justifieth dayly and we must dayly go to him for ●t As every day we runne into new debts so the Lords prayer teacheth us every day to beg forgivenesse We must every day eye the brazen serpent Justification is an ever-running fountain and therefore we cannot look to have all the water at once A fountain ever runneth anew so justification ever floweth anew and we must go to it Christ is a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec O let us sue out every day a dayly pardon of course Let us not sleep one night without a new pardon Better sleep in a house full of adders and venemous beasts then sleep in one sin O then be sure with the day to clear the sinnes of the day Then shall our conscience have true peace Object But how if I have relapsed what shall I do then Sol. I answer Every man that falleth doth not fall on all foure as we use to say he doth not fall quite There be degrees of falling As in a sick man though he be ill yet he is not by and by dead some life remaineth still which will look out towards health again so there is so much life in justification as to recover thee again Be constant therefore in this course Ever go to Christ ever wash in this fountain ever bring thy soul hither to be cleansed and then thy conscience ever shall have peace Answ 4 Fourthly If we would maintein our peace then let us labour to be constant in obedience to Jesus Christ Whosoever keepeth his word in him verily is the word of God perfected and hereby know we that we are in him 1. John 2.5 Mark Hereby our conscience may tell us that we are right and speak peace to us if we keep his word II. Question How the peace of our conscience doth depend upon our care and our obedience The reason why I raise this question is this Because as our justification is onely in Christ so our peace is onely in him how then doth the peace of our conscience depend on obedience The place of scripture that occasioneth the doubt is 1. Pet. 3.21 The answer of a good conscience towards God by the resurrection of Jesus Christ It is by Christ how dependeth it then on our obedience Answ 1. A good conscience doth not depend upon our obedience as the principall cause of it but upon justification which we have by Christ if we be in him Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Ye see then that our peace is grounded upon our justification as the principall cause of it If we should seek for peace from our works and obedience alas they are sinfull and defective there is no peace to be found in them Our conscience would be troubled at our best duties at our weaknesse in prayer our frailties in hearing our slips in every holy service There is nothing we do but our conscience might find fault with it and pick a hole in it and therefore we had need to flie unto Christ for true peace No wonder then that Papists have not true peace but professedly say that every man must doubt and no man can be sure of his salvation They must needs doubt indeed who trust to their own works which can never bring true peace The conscience must ever be quarrelling and finding of fault and be without peace if we trust to the best works So that this is the first answer All true peace dependeth upon justification by faith in Christ as the principall cause Secondly We answer That our peace dependeth upon our obedience in this sort that we can have no peace except we be given to obedience Those men that can sinne and yet be at peace were never justified in their lives A child of God when he sinneth as for example if he should be tempted to lie or to omit a good dutie which he knoweth he is bound to perform yet this would much trouble his conscience his soul would be ashamed his heart perplexed he would not know how to look the Lord in the face I have sinned what shall I do unto hee O thou preserver of men When David had sinned against God Psal 38.6 I am troubled saith he and I go mourning all the day long And therefore peace of conscience doth depend thus farre on obedience as that a man cannot have peace ●nlesse he be obedient and take heed of sinne and labour in all things to be up●ight before God Now if you ask me But how doth our peace depend upon our obedience I answer Dub. Sol. It dependeth upon obedience as the removing cause It removeth that which would hinder our peace Sinne would interrupt our peace now obedience removeth sinne To this purpose the Apostle speaketh 1. John 3.18 19. My little children let us not love in word and in tongue but in deed and in truth For hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before God Hereby we shall assure our consciences that we are in him if we take heed of hypocrisie If we love in truth and be obedient in truth we shall thereby remove all our doubts and our fears our troubles and perplexities of conscience So that peace doth depend on obedience as the removing cause It removeth that which otherwise would hinder peace This is the first Again our peace of conscience dependeth upon our obedience as the witnessing cause of it Obedience is one of the witnesses of true peace it witnesseth that we have peace with God 2. Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing even the testimonie of our conscience that in simplicitie and godly sinceritie we have had our conversation in the world See here it is the witnessing cause of it Paul had peace of conscience his conscience was able to make him rejoyce How Because it gave testimony that his conversation was godly and simple and gracious Though we be in Christ yet we can have no peace unlesse holy obedience doth witnesse the same Obedience is not the cause of the peace of our consciences before God
difference between the holy and the profane Now the question is this Where in lieth the difference between the qui● conscience of the righteous and th● quiet conscience of the wicked Answ The difference between them lieth i● foure things 1. In the thing it self 2. In the cause 3. In the effect 4. I● the continuance I. In the thing it self The quiet conscience in the godly is double not onely apparentiall and nominall but rea● and substantiall It is quiet and qui● too Isai 57.19 peace and peace too I create t● fruit of the lips peace peace Mar● peace and peace too peace in appearance and peace in truth and substance also But the peace and quiet of conscienc● which the wicked have is not such peace It is peace and no peace peace ●n appearance but no peace in truth Their god is the god of this world ●nd he perswadeth them they have peace But my God saith the prophet ●peaketh otherwise vers 21. There is no peace to ●he wicked saith my God They talk of a good conscience sometimes and boast they have a good conscience but the ●ruth is they cannot have true peace within for saith the prophet the wick●d is like the troubled sea which cannot ●est whose waters cast up mire and dirt So doth a wicked mans conscience se●retly cast up mire and dirt in his face His peace can onely be outward and apparentiall II. There is a difference in the cause The quiet of a good conscience ariseth ●rom one cause and the quiet of a bad ●onscience ariseth from another 1. The quiet of a good conscience ●riseth from a distinct knowledge of the word of God and of the precepts and promises conteined in it But the quiet of an evil conscience ariseth from ignorance When men know not Go● nor his holy word which should bin● conscience they fear nothing becaus● they see nothing they know not th● danger of sinne Like a blind ma● standing before the mouth of a cannon he feareth no danger because h● seeth none so carnall men fear not because they know not what cause the● have to fear Their very prayers th● they make are an abomination to Go● and they know it not their good duties they do are all like cockatrices eg● and they know it not they know no● that they are in the bond of iniquitie i● the snare of the devil Their conscience● are quiet because they know not wha● cause they have to be otherwise Thi● is one difference The quiet and peac● of a good conscience ariseth from ligh● and from knowledge the quiet an● peace of an evil conscience from darknesse and ignorance Heb. 10.22 2. The quiet of a good conscienc● ariseth from a due examination of ou●selves by the word and purging of ou● consciences Conscience never can be● good without purging and sprinkling ●o nor without a due examination the ●uiet of a good conscience ariseth from ●is Whereas the quiet of a wicked ●ans conscience ariseth from want of ●is He never examineth his consci●ce but letteth it sleep till God awake ● with horrour I say a wicked mans ●onscience sleepeth and that maketh it ●uiet and he is not troubled nor mo●sted with it Like a baillif or sergeant ●●llen asleep by the way the desperate ●btour whom he lieth in wait for may ●sse by him then and find him very ●iet and not to offer to arrest him ●r like a curst dog fallen asleep a ●anger may passe by him then and not 〈◊〉 meddled with Such like is this quiet ●il conscience 3. The quiet of a good conscience ●iseth from a good ground from the ●ork of Gods Spirit from true saving ●ace from righteousnesse Rom. 14.17 ●e reade of righteousnesse and peace ●rue peace of conscience ariseth from ●ghteousnesse Whereas the false peace ●f the wicked ariseth onely from vain hopes and conceits They are not guil● of such and such great sinnes or Th● are not so bad as some others As the Ph●risee's conscience was quiet why ● God I thank thee I am not as other m●● are no drunkard extortioner nor li● this publicane Or perhaps from thi● ground their peace ariseth The Lor● is very mercifull and The Lord Jes●● died for sinners Or perhaps this i● their plea They are good comers to churc● They have prayers in their families Th● have been professours of Christ Jesus 〈◊〉 many yeares From hence they drea● of peace upon false grounds when ● the way of peace they have not know● When conscience shall be awaked the● it will tell them how they have by flatery deceived their own souls and tha● having no true righteousnesse they could have no true peace 4. The quiet of a good conscienc● ariseth from tendernesse and from life Therefore the Apostle joyneth together life and peace Rom. 8.6 Tru● peace of conscience ariseth from life ● whereas the quiet of a wicked conscience ariseth from searednesse and be●mbednesse and deadnesse when men ●eing past feeling of sinne are not trou●ed at the committing of it Thus ye ●e the second thing wherein the diffe●nce lieth namely in the cause III. They differ in the effect First ●he effect of the quiet of a good con●cience is comfort and rejoycing Rom. 5.1 Be●●g justified by faith we have peace with ●od through our Lord Jesus Christ What followeth By whom we have ac●sse by faith rejoycing c. Mark The ●eace of conscience bringeth forth re●ycing And so in other places peace ●nd joy are joyned together Rom. 15.13 Gal. 5.22 But the ●vil conscience though quiet wanteth his rejoycing If carnall men had no ●ore mirth then what the quiet and ●eace of their consciences doth help ●hem to they would not be so merrie ●s most of them be Secondly Ano●her effect of true peace of conscience ● It sanctifieth the soul it purgeth the ●eart purifieth the life and reformeth ●he whole man It is the instrument whereby God sanctifieth his people more and more 1. Thess 5.23 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly Observe the title which the Apostle there giveth unto God when he sanctifieth his people he calleth him the God of peace he sanctifieth his people by peace It maketh them think thus We must not do thus or thus as others do we shall lose the peace of our conscience if we do This maketh them strive against sinne denie their own wills and carnall appetites If I should not do so I should have no peace This peace sanctifieth But the peace which carnall men seem to have doth not sanctifie the soul they are never the more holy for the same Again another effect of the peace of a good conscience is to put life into us in the performance of good duties it maketh us with gladnesse and delight perform the duties of our generall and particular callings But the false peace of an evil conscience suffereth the wicked to be dead and dull to good duties The true peace keepeth our hearts and our minds We should
he hath given us consciences to guide us so also he would give our guides eyes that they may be able to direct us aright The truth is it is God onely that can soundly illighten our consciences and therefore let us pray unto him to do it All our studying and reading and hearing and conferring will never be able to do it it is onely in the power of him who made us to do it Psal 119.73 Thy hands have made and fashioned me O give me understanding that I may learn thy commandments He who made our consciences he onely can give them this heavenly light of ●rue knowledge and right understanding and therefore let us seek earnestly to him for it 2. We must seek it in humility alwayes suspecting our own knowledge We are not too confidently and presumptuously to trust to our ●wn judgement and despise or neglect ●he judgement of others Psal 25.9 The humble ●od will teach Pride and self-conceited●esse blindeth exceedingly 3. We must ●eek with sobriety alwayes contenting ●ur selves with that knowledge which ●s most necessarie and not be curious a●out vain and idle-braind questions or solicitous to answer every objection ty offendeth conscience and conscience will keep a grudge a long time and will give many a secret wound deading the heart to duty making faith and confidence in God dull we cannot pray with courage nor come before God with boldnesse If our hearts condemn us not we have confidence saith John 1. John 3.21 An erroneous conscience will defile you a doubting conscience distract you a scrupulous conscience unsettle you but above all other an illightened conscience if it have any thing against you will exceedingly disable you this stabbeth at the heart your confidence towards God Go then and labour to purge conscience else conscience will hinder you whether you pray or heare or receive the Sacrament c. it will deprive you of comfort Matth 5.23 If thou bring th● gift to the altar and there remembrest tha● thy brother hath ought against thee leav● there thy gift before the altar first go an● be reconciled to thy brother and then com● and offer thy gift The case is greater an● more dangerous when conscience hat● something against us there is no offering will be accepted untill conscience be satisfied If thou shouldest be about to pray and conscience should stand up against thee as an adversary and tell thee thou hast been vain and loose and carnall all this day thou hast not set thy self to keep close to God this day thou hast fallen into this and that sinne this day thou art not fit to pray till thou hast reconciled thy self to conscience Alas thy conscience will secretly undermine all thy praying First ●herefore reconcile conscience by hum●ling thy self and breaking thy heart and resolving I have sinned I will do no more When conscience can say thy sorrow and repentance and resolution for new obedience is sincere then thou ●●rt fit to pray but not before So what●ver other duty thou goest about be ●ure to reconcile conscience else all will miscarry V. A faithfull conscience THus I have expounded the adjuncts of conscience which shew themselves in the discharge of its duty every motion and inclination to evil it is awake to see when evil is conceived to tell us of it to oppose it and to disswade us from it like a watchman on the top of a tower alwayes awake to see when any danger approcheth It is Gods minister with eyes on every side to espie seasons of good and stirre up to make use of them and of evil and give warning to avoid them 2. As a faithfull conscience is watchfull so also it is rigid and severe 2. It is severe In every cause it delivereth its judgement nothing can escape its sentence it will not favour our lusts in any particular If there be any opportunity of duty to God or man it maketh us to heare of it though it be such a duty as none other will call upon us for or it may be dare not put us in mind of as of love and care and help towards inferiours yet conscience will It titheth mint and cumine and will tell us of the least duty And so on the other side it will not swallow the least sinne As it will not swallow a camel Luke 16.10 so it will strain at ●gnat A faithfull conscience is faithfull in the least If David sinne but in the lap of a garment conscience smiteth him for it It made Abraham so precise to a thread or a shoe-latchet he would not take so much as that of the king of Sodom It made Moses strict to a very hoof It made Paul find fault with the Corinthians about their hair It made Augustine condemn himself for an apple 3. As a faithfull conscience is watchfull and severe so also it is importunate 3. It is importunate 〈◊〉 all its counsels It doth not onely deliver its judgement but doth with importunitie urge the following of its counsel It will have no nay but will be obeyed It leadeth us bound in the Spirit to do it as Paul said Acts 20.22 I go bound 〈◊〉 the spirit See how importunate this ●●ithfull conscience was with the Psal●ist I will not give sleep to mine eyes Psal 132.4 nor ●●mber to mine eye-lids untill I find out a ●●ace for the Lord. It will not take any ●●y say we what we will say we be ●●epie say we be busie say we be loth ●●d full of excuses it will be importu●●te and that with vehemencie It will omitting good or committing evil will not let thee slumber and sleep in securitie but continually joggeth and awaketh thee Hath he given thee a severe a precise conscience that will not favour thee in the least evil It is a most comfortable signe that the Lord meaneth well unto thy soul Vse 3 III. Labour to be a friend unto conscience that it may continue faithfull unto thee True friends will deal faithfully and plainly one with another and will be importunate to do one anothe● good Conscience will not deal thus with thee unlesse thou be a friend unto conscience Now then are we friends unto conscience when we do what conscience requireth As our Saviour said to the Disciples John 15.14 Ye are my friends if y●● do whatever I command you So I may say of conscience For conscience if i● be truly illightened will command nothing but what Christ commandeth I● we deal so in our constant course with conscience be willing to hearken to it and be ruled by it then if we be out o● the way now and then conscience will be true to us and be importunate with us for our good Vse 4 IV. Be sure thou stand not out a●ainst conscience when once it is im●ortunate It is a great sinne to stand ●ut against conscience though it be not ●mportunate but it is a sinne a thousand ●●mes greater to
abroad do disquiet us how comfortable is it to have something at home to chear us so when troubles and afflictions without turmoil and vex us and adde sorrow to sorrow then to have peace within the peace of conscience to allay all and quiet all what a happinesse is this When sicknesse and death cometh what will a good conscience be worth then Sure more then all the world besides If one had all the world he would then give it for a peaceable conscience Nay what think ye of judgement and the tribunal of Christ Do but think what a good conscience will be worth then When Paul was accused and hardly thought of by some of the Corinthians this was his comfort I know nothing by my self 1. Cor. 4.3 4. saith his conscience I count it a very small thing to be judged of you Nay he goeth further His conscience telleth him he hath the Lord Jesus who justifieth him to judge him he hath a sweeter Judge then his own conscience even his Saviour to judge him O there is no created comfort in the world like the comfort of a peaceable conscience The heathen Menander could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conscience is a little pettie god We may not give it such a big title but this is most certain The conscience is Gods echo of peace to the soul in life in death in judgement it is unspeakable comfort Is there any then that want this Exhortation Let them above all things labour to get it It is more worth then all things else Whatever we neglect let us not neglect this It is safer to neglect bodie health means maintenance friends and all that ever we have in the world then to neglect this The more we have the worse it is for us if we have not this Had we all this worlds good it is like a stone in a serpents head or a toads head or a pearl in an oyster not our perfection but our disease Again you who have a peaceable conscience 1. Labour to maintein it Be often in communion with God be not strangers to him the light of whose countenance is the peace of your souls It is the walking with God that breedeth true peace and preserveth it It is said of Levi Mal. 2.6 that he walked with God in peace O let us stirre up our selves to walk close with God that so we may have peace No sweet peace but in so doing 2. We must take heed we do not trouble nor disquiet it that we do not resist it or offer violence unto it by committing sinne against the peace of it but endeavour to maintein the peace of it by obeying the voyce of it Get the fear of God which is wisdome and to depart from evil which is true understanding All her paths are peace Prov. 3.17 We cannot walk in any one path of true wisedome but we shall find in it peace There is peace in humilitie and peace in charity and peace in godlinesse and peace in obedience c. Break any of these things and ye break the peace Ye heare what an admirable thing the peace of conscience is O then if ye have it make much of it nay if ye have it ye will for certain make much of it The very having of it will teach you the worth of it and learn you to prise it and make you above all things unwilling to leave it And thus much of the first viz. a quiet conscience An unquiet conscience I Have already handled a quiet conscience I come now to speak of a troubled and unquiet conscience Concerning which I shall shew you three things 1. What it is 2. The degrees of it 3. The difference of the trouble that may be in a good and that may be in a bad conscience I. What a troubled conscience is What it is It is a conscience accusing for sinne and affrighting with apprehensions of Gods wrath And here I would have you consider two things 1. What are the causes of it 2. Wherein it consisteth First The causes of it are these five 1. The guilt of sinne When a man hath done evil and his conscience doth know it then doth the conscience crie guiltie Lev. 5.4 when he knoweth it saith the text then he shall be guilty This is it which woundeth and pierceth conscience this is the sad voyce of conscience Like Judas I have sinned in betraying the innocent bloud Like Cain My sinne is greater then can be forgiven So the brethren of Joseph Gen. 42.21 We are guilty say they concerning our brother It is like the head of an arrow sticking in the flesh or like a dreadfull object continually presenting it self before our eyes My sinne is ever before me Psal 51.3 saith David When we have transgressed Gods law and our conscience can cry guiltie when the guilt of sinne lieth upon conscience this is one cause of the trouble of it 2. Another cause is the apprehension of Gods wrath for sinne When knowing that we have sinned and offended God we apprehend his wrath in our minds and behold the revenging eye of his justice against us This is a very grievous thing so terrible that no man or angel is able to abide it As we see the kings and potentates the mighty men of the earth call for the mountains ●o fall upon them and the hills to cover ●hem from the wrath of God Rev. 6.15 16. When we have incurred Gods displeasure and our consciences see it when his anger resteth upon us and our ●onsciences feel it this is another cause of the trouble of conscience 3. A third cause of the trouble of ●onscience is the fear of death and of ●ell When we know we have offended Gods law and we know also what our sinnes do deserve namely death and ●udgement and damnation for ever ●his doth most trouble and disquiet conscience when it fastneth on the apprehension of it The Apostle calleth ●t a fearfull looking for of judgement When conscience looketh for nothing else but for hell and damnation this must needs trouble conscience 4. Another cause is privative want of supportance when God doth withhold from conscience the help of his Spirit Ye know the Spirit can inable conscience to undergo all its troubles the Spirit can prompt it with mercies and the promises of God and hold it up but when the Lord bereaveth the conscience of this help and doth no● at all support it this must needs also trouble conscience V. When God doth fasten on the conscience such thoughts as may affright and terrifie it as thus God doth not love me Christ will not own me 〈◊〉 have sinned I am a reprobate past hope c. When such thoughts as these fasten o● the conscience it cannot choose then but be troubled Thus I have shewed you what are the causes of the trouble of conscience Secondly This trouble of conscience consisteth in two things First in want of comfort It cannot apply to
spirituall goodnesse left in the other faculties of the soul so neither in conscience But the naturall goodnesse which I mean is nothing else but the veracity of conscience whereby it is inforced according to the knowledge it hath to tell the truth Thus every wicked man hath a good conscience Their conscience is good in that sense their conscience hath this naturall goodnesse that it telleth them the truth how it is with them Nay it is essentiall to conscience to be good in this sense It is the essentiall property of conscience to speak according to its knowledge It is the best faculty a wicked man hath it is better then his mind or heart or will There is more goodnesse in a wicked mans conscience then in any other of the powers of his soul His conscience speaketh more for God then himself doth and standeth more for God then himself will Not but that as all the powers of the soul are desperately corrupted by sinne so conscience is desperately corrupted as well as any of them but I speak of the essentiall goodnesse of it which can never be lost The de●ls in hell have not lost the goodnesse ● their essence Nay their essence is ●etter then the essence of Gods Saints ●●eir essence must be good because that ● God 's creature nay better then any ●ans essence because the Lord made ●●em a degree above man And as man ● a degree above beasts so angels are degree above man so conscience is a ●egree above other powers of the soul ● its naturall goodnesse That consci●ce hath such a naturall goodnesse in it ●e it in those cursed Scribes and Phari●es hypocrites who brought the wo●an taken in adultery to Christ Their ●onscience was good John 8.9 they were convict●● of their consciences their conscien●es dealt honestly with them and told ●hem the truth that they were wicked ●●nners themselves This is the naturall ●oodnesse in conscience 2. A renewed good conscience I ●ll it a renewed good conscience be●ause when a man is renewed all the ●an is renewed all his mind and the ●pirit of it is renewed Ephes 4.23 That ye may be renewed in the spirit of you mind If the man be renewed all th● mind must be renewed and therefo●● the conscience must be renewed too for the mind and the conscience ever g● together nay conscience is mainly seated in the mind and therefore if th● mind be renewed so is the conscience and if the mind be defiled so is the conscience Tit. 1.15 To them that are defiled is nothing pure but their minds a● consciences are defiled Mark When the● are defiled they are defiled together so when they are washed and renewed they are washed and renewed together Now this renewed conscience is eithe● perfect or defective 1. Perfect I mea● not perfect in every degree of goodnesse For so no mans conscience in th● world is perfect But I mean perfect i● every part and condition of goodnesse 2. A defective good renewed conscience is that which faileth in some conditions of goodnesse We call it a we● conscience which is apt to be pollute● and defiled again 1. Cor. 8.7 Their conscience being weak is defiled This is a defective good conscience a conscience ●ewed but imperfectly renewed I. To a good conscience A firm conscience that is ●ndly renewed five things are neces●●●y ● Knowledge of Gods will and ●t which doth follow the true know●●●ge of his will namely true humilia● and fear By nature the conscience ●lind and sturdy and venturous and ●●●refore it is necessary that it should be ●ghtened to understand the will of ●d and to presse it and again it is ne●●●sary that the heart should be hum●d or else it will not stoop to Gods ●l and it is necessary also that this ●y fear should fall upon the heart ●t it may not dare to transgresse St●●●ter being to speak of a good consci●●ce premiseth all these as necessarie ●●●reunto First he adviseth that Chri●●●●ns have knowledge to be able to give ●●ason of the hope that is in them and ●n that they should have meeknesse and 〈◊〉 for to do it 1. Pet. 3.15 16. with meeknesse and ● saith he having a good conscience ●●rk Knowledge and meeknesse and fear are required to make a good conscience without them the conscienc● cannot be good By nature we are al● blind and stubborn and fearlesse of sinning and therefore till we be cured o● these evils our consciences cannot be good 2. The second thing is a watchfulnesse and warfare against sinne Thi● is required too to a renewed good conscience By nature we are drowsie and carelesse and secure and do not stand upon our guard to wage warre against our lusts and the desires of our flesh and so long our consciences can never be good and therefore this spirituall watchfulnesse and mainteining warre against sinne is required to the having a good conscience That thou maist warre a good warrefare saith Paul to Timothie having faith and a good conscience 1. Tim. 1.18 19. Some who seemed to have a good conscience because they did not maintein this holy warfare against sinne and the flesh they have lost it Therefore this is another requisite required to a good conscience 3. The third is tendernesse of conscience By nature our hearts are seared ●nd dead and unclean and therefore we must get us tender and pure hearts ●f we would have good renewed consciences The end of the commandment is ●ove out of a pure heart and good conscience ●nd faith unfeigned 1. Tim. 1.5 See ●ow the Apostle compoundeth them ●ogether a pure heart and a good consci●nce We must get our hearts purged ●nd quickened that they may be sensible of the least evil and then our consciences will be good and be as a bridle to hold us from evil A hard heart and a good conscience can never stand together 4. The fourth is the cleannesse of conscience by the washing of Christs bloud This is the main and the principall of all Yea indeed the bloud of Christ is the sole and onely cause of a good conscience I would not be mistaken I named indeed other causes Knowledge and Humbling and a holy Fear a Combat against sinne and Tendernesse but I do not mean as though a good conscience were part beholding to them and partly to Chri●● bloud For it is wholly and onely b●holding to Christs bloud for its goo●nesse his bloud is the onely price of ● But my meaning is this That thoug● Christs bloud be the one onely cause ● redemption yet in the application of r●demption the Lord useth all those fo●● named graces while he applieth it ● the conscience Therefore this now 〈◊〉 adde The washing of Christs blou● this is chiefly required to the goodnes●● of conscience We have two places o● Scripture to prove it The one Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the bloud ● Christ purge your consciences from dea● works It is that onely can do it Th●
other text is 1. Pet. 3.21 The answer of 〈◊〉 good conscience towards God by the resurrection of Jesus Christ Where the Apostle first giveth this title to a renewed conscience to be called a good conscience Secondly he nameth the cause that maketh it to be good the power of Christs resurrection When the resurrection of Christ Jesus is powerful● upon us then conscience becometh good 5. The fifth is quietnesse By nature ●othing is so fierce and violent if it be ●nce awaked as conscience is O it is ●nspeakably furious Thus is consci●nce by nature and therefore it can ne●er be good untill we get it appeased with the assurance of the pardon of our ●innes and so true peace and comfort ●stablished in it This is the reason why ●he Scripture joyneth a good consci●nce and faith so often together as ● Tim. 3.9 Holding the mysterie of faith ●n a pure conscience It cannot be a pure or good conscience if faith be not held ●n it As long as the conscience is not ●nderpropped by faith the conscience must needs be in a wildernesse Perhaps my sinnes are imputed unto me perhaps ●hey are pardoned Perhaps they are cover●d perhaps not As long as the conscience lieth under these uncertainties it cannot be firm and foundly good indeed therefore we must labour for assurance of pardon by faith Thus much of a good renewed conscience that is perfectly and soundly renewed An infirm conscience II. Secondly There is a good conscience renewed but not soundly renewed very much as yet defective and imperfect The former conscience is called conscientia firma a firm conscience This is called conscientia infirma an infirm conscience Rom. 15.1 We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak This infirm conscience is a good conscience too and renewed but cumbred with sundry imperfections which in processe of time by growth in grace are for the most part conquered in the godly True faith is required unto this For the Apostle calleth such an one a brother in Christ one that hath this infirm conscience Rom. 14.21 It is good neither to eat flesh nor to drink wine nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth And we must not set such an one at nought Tush what care I for him I know I may lawfully do thus and this is my Christian liberty and shall I lose it for him because of his conscience Nay saith the Apostle Rom. 14.10 Why dost thou set at nought thy brother Mark The Apostle counteth such an one a Christian brother and not to be set at nought and therefore this is a good conscience too differing as much as white from black from such consciences as are weak through superstition of mind and through pride of heart because they will not be otherwise or through affected ignorance because they love not to be better informed These weak consciences are wicked I speak not of these I speak of a good conscience a conscience renewed but renewed imperfectly having yet sundry defects and imperfections The imperfections of it are 1. Imperfection of knowledge It doth not yet soundly and clearly understand what is lawfull and what is pure and what is by Christian liberty indifferent Paul saith Rom. 14.14 I know and am perswaded by the Lord Jesus that there is nothing unclean of it self but to him that esteemeth any thing to be unclean to him it is unclean He speaketh of things that are indifferent The Apostle had knowledge but there were others who did not know this O I may not eat this meat I may not play at bowls or use any other recreation I should sinne if I should c. This is one weaknesse in this kind of conscience weaknesse of knowledge 2. The second imperfection is to be grieved where it needeth not be grieved As when it seeth other do that which it self through mistake doth judge to be evil it is apt to be grieved and troubled to see it Rom. 14.15 If thy brother be grieved with thy meat now walkest thou not charitably It may be thou thinkest it lawfull to eat such meat but he thinketh otherwise and so is grieved to see thee eat This is another imperfection in this conscience to be grieved and offended without just cause 3. A third imperfection is in judgement It is apt to judge and condemn another mans liberty 1. Cor. 10.29 Why is my liberty judged of another mans conscience He speaketh of a weak conscience It is apt to be judging and condemning my liberty saith he but why so This is a fault and an imperfection indeed O such an one sinneth he doeth so and so yet it may be the thing is not unlawfull but a weak conscience is apt so to judge it and to condemn him that doeth it Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not and let not him that eateth not judge him that eateth Rom. 14.3 4. A fourth imperfection is this A weak conscience is apt to be misled So the Apostle intimateth Take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours become a stumbling-block unto them that are weak for if any man see thee who hast knowledge sit at meat in the idoles temple shall not the conscience of him that is weak be emboldned to eat those things which are offered to idoles and through thy knowledge shall thy weak brother perish for whom Christ died 1. Cor. 8.9 10 11. Where ye see that weak consciences are apt to be misled The reason is this Because when they see others whom they know to be more learned and judicious then themselves to do so and so that may soon tempt them to do it though their conscience be against it Vse 1 The first use is this If any have weak consciences let them labour to strengthen them Ye see what imperfections are in a weak conscience how apt it is to be offended and to judge other mens liberty how prone to misleading therefore let every good soul labour to be strengthened Vse 2 The second use is this Those that be strong must be carefull that they offend not the weak Though they do believe such and such Christian liberties they have yet if they know the use of them will offend their weak brother they should be carefull to abstein Rom. 14.13 Let no man put a stumbling-block or an occasion to fall in his brothers way Vse 3 Thirdly if it be such a sinne to sinne against the conscience of the weak then what a sinne is it to sinne against the conscience of all that are godly whether weak ones or strong ones Ye who walk after the flesh and can have disorders in your families and vanity in your mouths and apparent corruptions in your lives Ye who can drink and be drunken and keep company and prophane the Lords dayes ye offend the consciences of all that are godly it is a grief to their souls to see it Let me tell you It is a sinne to be wicked