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A09400 A discourse of conscience wherein is set downe the nature, properties, and differences thereof: as also the way to get and keepe good conscience. Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1596 (1596) STC 19696; ESTC S110415 85,171 182

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is supernaturall II. Presumption is in them that make no account of the ordinarie meanes of saluation This testimony comes by the reuerent and carefull hearing of Gods worde III. Presumption is in them that use not to call on the name of God but this testimony of conscience is ioyned with the spirite of adoption which is the spirite of prayer IV. Presumption is ioyned with loosenesse of life this testimony brings with it alwayes an happy change and alteration For hee which hath a good conscience hath also care to keepe good conscience in all things V. Presumption is without doubting wheras the testimony of conscience is mingled with manifold doubtings Mar. 9. 24. Luc. 17. 5. yea otherwhiles ouercharged with them Psal. 77. 7 8. VI. Presumption will giue a man the slippe in the time of sicknesse and in the houre of death and the testimony of good conscience stickes by him to the end and euen makes him say Lorde remember now how I haue vvalked before thee in truth and haue done that which is acceptable in thy sight Isai. 38. 1. The duties of conscience regenerate are two in special maner to giue testimony to excuse The speciall thing of which conscience giues testimony is that wee are the children of God predestinate to life euerlasting And that 〈◊〉 peares by these reasons I. Rom. 8. 16. The 〈◊〉 of God witnesseth togither with our spirit that wee are the sonnes of God Now the spirit of man here mentioned is the mind or conscience renued sanctified To this purpose saith Iohn He that beleeueth hath a witnes in himselfe 1. Ioh. 5. 10. II. That which gods spirit doth ●…y to the conscience the cōscience can again testifie to vs but Gods spirit doth ●●s●●●y to the cōsciēce of a man regenerate that he is the child of God 1. Cor. 2. 12. Therefore the conscience also doth the same III. Hee which is iustified hath peace of conscience Rom. 5. v. 1. Now there can be no peace in conscience till it tell the man which is iustified that he is indeed iustified IV. That which the conscience may know certenly it may testifie but conscience may know certenly without revelation the mans election and adoption as I haue before prooued therefore it is able to giue testimony of these Againe the regenerate conscience giueth testimony of a certaine kinde of righteousnesse being an unseperable companion thereof and for this cause it is called of some the righteousnesse of a good conscience Now this righteousnesse is nothing ●ls but unfained earnest and constant purpose with endeauour answerable therto not to sinne in any thing but in all things whatsoeuer to please God and doe his wil. Heb. 13. 18. Pray for vs for vvee are assured that vve haue good conscience in all thinges de●●●ing to live honestly 2. Cor. 1. 12. Our reioycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in s●…licitie and godly p●renesse and not in f●eshly wisdome vvee haue bad ●●r conversation in the worlde 1. Cor. 4. 4. I know nothing by my selfe Isai. 38. 2. Lord remember no● how I haue walked befor● thee with an vpright heart and haue done that which is acceptable in thy sight I adde this clause in all things because that obedience which is the signe or fruite of good conscience of which also it giues testimonie is generall shewing it selfe in all and euery commandement of God Philosophers haue saide that Iustice is universull because he which hath it hath all vertues But it is more truely saide of this christiā righteousnes o● new obedience that it is vniuersall and that he which can performe true obedience in one commandement can doe the same in all Actcs 23. 1. Men and brethren I haue in all good conscience se●…d God till this day Psal. 119. 6. Then shall I not be confounded when I shall haue respect to all thy comm●●●dements Act. 24. 16. In the meane season I endeavour my selfe or take pains to have a conscience without offence towards God and ●●●●●des men This shewes that there is a great number of men professing the Gospell that want good conscience For though they shewe themselues very forwarde and willing to obey God in many things yet in some one thing or other they will follow the swinge of their owne wills Many are diligent to freque● the place of gods worship to heate the word preached with liking to receiue the sacraments at times appointed to approoue of any good thing all this is very comendable yet these men ofred when they depart home from the congregation say in effect on this manner Religion stay thou here 〈◊〉 the Church do●● till the next Sabba●h For if 〈◊〉 looke into their priua●● conuersations the gouernment of their families or their d●●lings in their particular callings we shall with gre●●e 〈◊〉 much disorder and litle conscience It is a common practise of sick men when they make 〈◊〉 willes on their death beds in the very first place to commend their bodies to the graue and their soules to God that gaue them in hope of a better resurrection and all this is well done but afterward they b●queath their goods gotten by fraud oppression and forged ca●illation to their owne friends children without making any recompence or satisfaction But alas this should not be so for obedience that goes with good conscience must be performed to all gods commandements without exception and if if it be done but to some alone it is but counterfeit obed●●ce he that is guilty in one is guilty in all As regenerate conscience giues testimony of our new obedience so it doeth also by certaine sweet motiōs stirr men forward to perform the same Psal. 16. 7. my reines that is the mind and conscience inlightned by the spirit of god teach me in the night season Isai. 30 22. And thi●●●●res shall heare a ●●●d behind th●● saying This is the way walk ye 〈◊〉 it when thou 〈◊〉 to the right hand 〈◊〉 thou t●rnest to the le●t Now this word is not only the voice of ●●s●ors teachen in the open ministery but also the voice of r●…ed conscience inwardly by many secret ●●gitations s●ibb●●● them that are about to sinne A christian mā is not only a priest a prophet but also a spirituall king euen in this life and the Lord in mercy hath vouchsafed him this honor that his conscience ●…ed within him shall be his solli●…r to put him in mind of all his 〈◊〉 and duties which hee is to per●… to God yea it is the controller to see all things kept in order in the heart which is the 〈◊〉 and habitation of the holy ghost The second office of conscience ●●generate is to excuse that is to ●…eare defend a man euen before God against all his enemies both bodily and ghostly Psal. 7. 8. Iudge thou 〈◊〉 O Lord according to my righteousnes according to mine i●…ie in me Again 26. 1 2. Iudge me O Lord for I
indifferent so farre foorth as they shall further us in godlinesse For we ought to doe all things not only to the edification of others but also of our own selues And therefore it is a flat abuse of christian liberty for men so to pamper their bodies with meate and drinke that thereby they disable themselues to heare Gods word to pray to giue good counsell to doe the ordinary works of their callings The fourth things indifferent must be used within the compasse of our callings that is according to our ability degree state and condition of life And it is a common abuse of this liberty in our dayes that the meane man will be in meate drinke apparell building as the gentlemans the gentleman as the knight the knight as the lord or Earle Now then things indifferent are sanctified to vs by the worde when our consciences are resolued out of the word that we may use them so it be in the manner before named and according to the rules here set downe They are sanctified by prayer when wee craue at Gods handes the right use of them and hauing obtained the same giue him thanks therefore Coloss. 3. v. 17. Whatsoever yee doe in worde or deede doe all in the name of our Lorde Iesus giving thankes to God the father by him Thus much of Christian liberty by which wee are admonished of sundry duties I. to labour to become good members of Christ of what estate or condition soeuer we be The liberties of the citie of Rome made not onely Romanes borne but euen the men of other countreyes seeke to be citizens thereof Act. 22. 28. The priuiledges of the Iewes in Persia made many become Iewes Hest. 8. 17. O then much more should the spirituall liberty of conscience purchased by the blood of Christ mooue us to seeke for the kingdome of heauen and that we might become good members thereof II. Againe by this we are taught to study learne and loue the scriptures in which our liberties are recorded Wee make account of our charters wherby we holde our earthly liberties yea wee gladly reade them and acquaint our selues with them what a shame then will it be for vs to make no more account of the word of God that is the law of spirituall liberty Iam. 2. v. 16. III. Lastly we are aduertised most heartily to obey and serue God according to his worde for that is the ende of our liberty the seruant doeth all his businesse more chearefully in the hope and expectation he hath of liberty Againe our liberty most of all appeares in our seruice and obedience because the seruice of God is perfect freedome as on the contrary in the disobedience of Gods commandements standes our spirituall bondage The second property of conscience is an vnfallible certenty of the pardon of sinne life euerlasting That this point may be cleared I will handle the question betweene vs and Papistes touching the certenty of saluation And that I may proceede in order we must distinguish the kindes of certenty First of all Certenty is either Vnfallible or Conjecturall Vnfallible wherein a man is neuer disappointed Conjecturall which is not so euident because it is grounded onely upon likelihoodes The first all Papiste● 〈◊〉 but the second they 〈◊〉 in the matter of saluation Againe certenty is either of faith o● experimentall which Papistes call ●●rall Certenty of faith is whereby any thing is certenly beleeued and it is either generall or speciall Generall certenty is to beleeue assuredly that the word of God is trueth it selfe and this both wee and papistes allow Speciall certenty is by faith to apply the promise of saluation to our selues and to beleeue without doubt that remission of sinnes by Christ and life euerlasting belongs unto us This kind of certenty we holde and maintaine and Papists with one consent deny it acknowledging no assurance but by hope Morall certenty is that which proceedes from sanctification and good workes as signes and tokens of true faith This wee both allowe yet with some difference For they esteeme all certenty that comes by workes to be uncerten and often to deceiue but wee doe otherwise if the workes be done in uprightnesse of heart The question then is whether a man in this life may ordinarily without reuelation be vnfallibly certe● of his owne 〈◊〉 first of all ●●d principally by faith and then secondly by such workes as are unseperable ●…panions of faith We hold this for a cleare ●tudent principle of the ●●●ord of God and ●●●trariwise the Pepists deny it wholly I will 〈◊〉 pr●… the trueth by some ●ewe arg●… and then answer the common obiections Arg●●●●t 1. That which the spirit of God doth first of all testifie in the heart and conscience of any ●●n and then afterward fully confirme is to be beleeued of the same man as vnfallibly cert●… but the spirite of God first of all doeth testifie to some men namely true beleeuers that they are the sonnes of God and afterward confirmes the same unto them therfore men are unfillibly to beleeue their owne adotion Now that the spirit of God doth giue this testimony to the conscience of man the scripture is more then plaine Rom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●e have received the spirit of adoption whereby vvee cry A●●a F●ther The same spirit beareth witnes vvith our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Answere is made that this testimony of the spirite is giuen onely by an experiment or feeling of an inward delight or peace which breeds in vs not an infallible but a coni●cturall certenty And I answere againe that this exposition is flat against the text For the spirit of adoption is said here not to make vs to thinke or speake but to cry Abba Father and crying to God as to a father argues courage confidence boldnesse Againe the same spirit of adoption is opposed to the spirit of b●●dage causing feare therefore it must needs be a spirit giuing assurance of liberty by that means driuing away distrustfull feares And the end no doubt why the holy ghost comes into the heart as a witnes of adoption is that the truth in this case hidden therfore doubtful might be cleared and made manifest If Gòd himself haue appointed that a doubtfull truth among men shal be confirmed and put out of doubt by the mouth of two or three witnesses it is absurd to thinke that the testimony of God himselfe knowing all things and taking vpon him to be a witnes should be coniecturall S. Bernard had learned better diuinity when he saide who is iust but he that being loved of God returnes love to him againe which is not done but by the spirit of God reuealing by faith vnto man the eternall purpose of God concerning his salvation in ti●● to come which revelation vndoubtedly is nothing else but an 〈◊〉 of spirituall grace by which whilest the dee●es of the flesh are mortified the man is prepared to the
reason yet because they want true reason they want conscience also Secondly from God the creator who beeing righteousnes it selfe needeth not conscience to order gouerne his actions And wheras Peter saith 1. Pet. 2. 19. that men must indure griese wrongfully for conscience of God his meaning is not to shewe that God hath conscience but that men are to suffer many wrōgs because their cōsciences do bind thē in so doing to obay Gods wil which conscience directly respecteth And I say that conscience is in all reasonable creatures that none might imagine that some men by nature haue conscience in them some none at all For as many men as them are so many consciences there be and euery particular man hath his owne particular conscience The proper ende of conscience is to determine of things done And by this one thing conscience is distinguished from all other gifts of the min●… as intelligence opinion science faith prudence Intelligence simply conce●… thing to be or not to be science iudgeth it to be certen and sure faith is a perswasion whereby we beleeue things that are not 〈◊〉 discerneth what is meete to be done what to be left vndone but conscience goes further yet then all these for it determines or giues sentence of things done by saying vnto vs This was done this was not done this may be done this may not be done this was weldone this was ill done The things that conscience determines of are a mans owne actions his owne actions I say To be certen what an other man hath saide or done is commonly called knowledge but for a man to be certen what he himselfe hath done or saide that is conscience Againe conscience meddles not with generals onely it deales in particular actions and that not in some fewe but in all The manner of consciences determination is to set downe his iudgement either with the creature or against it I adde this clause because conscience is of a diuine nature and is a thing placed by God in the middest betweene him and man as an arbitratour to giue sentence and to pronounce either with man or against man vnto God For otherwhiles it consents and speakes with God against the man in whome it is placed other whiles againe it consents with him and speakes for him before the Lord. And hence comes one reason of the name of conscience Scire to know is of one man alone by himselfe and conscire is when two at the least know some one secret thing either of them knowing it togither with the other Therefore the name 〈◊〉 or Conscientia conscience is that thing that combines two togither and makes them partners in the knowledge of one and the same secret Now man and man o● man and Angel can not be combined because they can not know the secret of any man vnlesse it be reucaled to them it remaines therefore that this combination is onely betweene man and God God knowes perfectly all the doings of man though they be neuer so hid and concealed and man by a gift giuē him of God knows togither with God the same things of himselfe and this gift is named Conscience CAP. II. Of the duties of conscience THe proper actions or duties of conscience are twofold to giue testimonie or to giue iudgement Rom. 2. 15. Conscience giues testimonie by determining that a thing was done or it was not done Rom. 2. 15. Their conscience also bearing witnes 2 Cor. 1. 12. Our reioycing is the testimonie of our conscience that in c. Here we must consider three things I. of what things conscience beares witnes II. in what manner III. how long For the first conscience beares witnesse of our thoughts of our affections of our outward actions That it beares witnes of our secret thoughts it appeares by the solemne protestation which at some time men vse In my conscience I never thought it whereby they signifie that they think something or they thinke it not and that their consciences can tell what they thinke Neither must this seeme strange For there must be two actions of the vnderstanding the one is simple which barely conceiueth or thinketh this or that the other is a reflecting or doubling of the former whereby a man conceiues and thinkes with himselfe what he thinks And this action properly pertaines to the conscience The minde thinks a thought now conscience goes beyond the minde and knowes what the minde thinks so as if a man would go about to hide his sinnefull thoughts from God his conscience as an other person within him shall discouer all By meanes of this second action conscience may beare witnes euen of thoughts and from hence also it seemes to borrow his name because conscience is a science or knowledge ioyned with an other knowledge for by it I conceiue and know what I know Againe conscience beares witnes what the wills and affections of men be in euery matter Rom. 9. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lie nos my conscience bearing me witnes in the holy Ghost that I haue great ●ea●ines and continuall sorrow in my heart for I could wish my selfe to be separate from Christ for my brethren Lastly it witnesseth what be mens actions Eccles. 7. 24. Oftentimes also thine heart knoweth that is consciēce witnesseth that thou likewise hast cursed others The manner that conscience vseth in giuing testimonie standes in two things First it obserues and takes notice of all things that we doe secondly it doth inwardly and secretly within the heart tell vs of them all In this respect it may fitly be compared to a notarie or a register that hath alwaies the penne in his hand to note and record whatsoeuer is saide or done who also because he keepes the rolles and records of the court can tell what hath bin said and done many hundred yeares past Touching the third point How long conscience beares witnes it doth it continually not for a minut or a day or a moneth or a yeare but for euer when a man dies conscience dieth not when the bodie is rotting in the graue conscience liueth and is safe and sound and when we shall rise againe conscience shall come with vs to the barre of Gods iudgement either to accuse or excuse vs before God Rom. 2. 15. 16. Their conscience bearing witnes at the day when God shall iudge the secrets of men by Iesus Christ. By this first dutie of conscience we are to learne three things The first that there is a God and we may be lead to the sight of this euen by very reason For conscience beares witnesse Of what Of thy particular doings But against whome or with whome doth it giue testimonie thou maist feele in thy heart that it doth it either with thee or against thee And to whom is it a witnesse To men or Angels that can not be for they can not heare the voice of conscience they can not receiue consciences testimony nay they can
duties of loue partly to God partly towards our neighbour ●t is contained in the decalogue or 10. commandements it is the very law of nature written in all men● heart● for substance though not for the m●ner of propounding of it in the creation of man therfore it binds the consciences of all men at all times euen of blind and ignorant persons that neither knowe the most of it nor care to know it Yet here must be remembred 3. exceptions or cautions I. When two commandements of the morall law are opposite in respect of v●so as we can not do them both at the same time then the lesser commandement giues place to the greater doth not bind for that instant Example I. God commands one thing the magistrate commaunds the flat contrary in this case which of these two commandements must be obeyed Honour God or Honour the Magistrate the answer is that the latter must giue place to the former the former must only be obeyed Act. 4. 19. Whether it be right in the sight of God to obey you rather the● God judge ye II. The 4. commandement prescribes rest on the Sabbath day now it 〈◊〉 out that at the same time a whole tow●… 〈◊〉 set on fire and the sixt commandement requires our help in sauing our neighbours life goods Now of these two cōmandements which must be obeyed for both can not The answer is that the fourth commandement at this time is to giue place the sixt commandement alone binds the conscience so as then if need should require a man might labour all the day without offence to God Matt. 9. 13. I will have mercie not sacrifice And the rule must not be omitted That charity towards our neighbour is subordinate to the Loue of God therfore must giue place to it For this cause the commandement concerning Charity must giue place to the cōmandement cōcerning loue to god when the case so fals out that we must either offend our neighbour or God we must rather offend our neighbour then God II. Caution When God giues some particular cōmandement to his people dispensing with some other cōmandement of the moral law for that time it binds not For all the 10. cōmandements must be cōceiued with this conditiō Except god cōmand otherwise Exāple I. The sixt commandement is Thou shalt not kill but God giues a particular commandemēt to Abraham Abrahā offer thy sonne Isaac in sacrifice to me And this latter cōmandement at that instant did bind Abraham he is therefore commended for his obedience to it II. And when God commanded the children of Israel to compasse Ierico seuen daies and therfore on the Sabbath the fourth commandement prescribing the sanctifying of rest on the Sabbath for th●● instant and in that action did not bind conscience III. Caution One and the same commandement in some things binds the conscience more straitly and in doing some other things lesse 〈◊〉 6. 10. Doe good to all men but sp●… 〈◊〉 them that be of the houshold of faith Hence it ariseth that though all sinnes be mortall and deserue eternall death yet all are not equall but some more grieuous then others Iudiciall lawes of Moses are all such as prescribe order for the execution of iustice and iudgement in the common-wealth They were specially given by God directed to the Iewes who for this very cause were bound 〈◊〉 conscience to keepe them all and if the common-wealth of the Iewes were now standing in the old estate no doubt they should continue still to bind as before But ●●uching other nations and specially Christian common wealths in these d●●es the case is otherwise Some are of opinion that the whole iudiciall law is wholly abolished and some againe runne to the other extreme holding that Iudiciall lawes binde Christians as straightly as Iewes but no doubt they are both wide and the safest course is to keepe the meane betweene both Therefore the Iudiciall lawes of Moses according to the substance and scope thereof must be distinguished in which respects they are of two sorts Some of them are lawes of particular equity some of common equity Lawes of particular equity are such as prescribe iustice according to the particular estate and condition of the Iewes common-wealth to the circumstances therof time place persons things actions Of this kind was the law 〈◊〉 brother should rais● vp seed to his brother and many such like none of them bind vs because they were framed and ●…pered to a particular people I●…als of common equity are such as are made according to the law or instinct of nature common to all men and these in respect of their 〈…〉 nce binde the consciences not onely of the Iewes but also of the Gentiles for they were not giuen to the Iewes as they are Iewes that is a people receiued into the 〈◊〉 aboue all other nations brought from Egypt to the land of Canaan of whome the Messias according to the flesh was to co 〈…〉 but they were giuen to them as they were mortall men subiect to the order and la 〈…〉 s of nature as all other nations are Againe iudiciall la 〈…〉 so farre forth as they haue in them the generall or common equity of the lawe of nature are morall and therfore binding in con●… 〈◊〉 the morall law A Iudiciall law may be knowen to be a law of common equity if either of these two things be found in it First if wise men not onely among the Iewes but also in other nations haue by naturall reason and conscience iudged the same to be equall iust and necessary and withall haue testified this their iudgement by inacting lawes for their common-wealthes the same in substance with sundry of the Iudiciall lawes giuen to the Iewes and the Roman● Emperours among the rest haue done this most excellently as will appeare by conferring their lawes with the lawes of God Secondly a Iudiciall hath common equitie if it serue directly to explane and confirme any of the tenne precepts of the Decalogue or if is se●… directly to maintaine and vphold any of the three estates of the family the common-wealth the Church And whether this be so or no it will appeare if we doe but consider the matter of the lawe and the reasons or considerations vpon which the Lord was mooued to giue the fame unto the Iewes Now to make the point in hand more plaine take an example or two It is a Iudiciall law of God that murderers must be put to death now the question is whether this law for substance be the common equity of nature binding consciences of Christians or not and the answer is that without further doubting it is so For first of all this law hath bin by common consent of wise lawgiuers enacted in many countries and kingdomes beside the Iewes It was the lawe of the Egyptians and olde Grecians of Draco of Numa and of many
obstinate that Lent fast was not commaunded in the Primitiue Church but was freely kept at mens pleasures in seuerall Churches diuersly both in regard of space of time as also in respect of diversity of meats Ireneus in his epistle to Victor ●…ed by Eusebius saith Some have thought that they must fast o●… day some two daies some more some 40. houres day and night which diversitie of fasting commendeth the vnitie of faith Spiridion a good man did eate flesh in Lent and caused his guest to doe the same and this he did upon iudgemēt because he was perswaded out of Gods worde that to the clean all things were cleane And Eusebius recordes that Montanus the hereuke was the first that prescribed solemne and set lawes of fasting And whereas this fast is called an Apostolicall tradition it is no great matter for it was the manner of the ancient Church in former times to tearme rites and orders Ecclesiasticall not set downe in scriptures Apostolicall orders that by this meanes they might commend them to the people as Ierome testifieth Every province saith he may thinke the constitutions of the ancestours to be Apostolicall lawes And whereas it is said to be a sinne not to fast in Lent as Augustine speaketh it is not by reason of any commandement binding conscience for Augustine saith plainly that neither Christ nor his Apostles appointed any set time of fasting Chrysostome that Christ neuer commanded vs to follow his fast but the true reason hereof is borrowed from the ende For the Primitiue Church vsed not the popish fast which is to eat whitmeate alone but an abstinence from all meates vsed specially to morufie the flesh and to prepare men before-hand to a worthy receiuing of the Eucharist And in regarde of this good ende was the offence And whereas it is said that auncient fathers taught a necessitie of keeping this fast euen Hierome whome they alledge to this purpose saith the contrary For confuting the errour of Montanus who had his set times of fast to be kept of necessity hee saith We fast in Lent according to the Apostles tradition as in a time meete for vs and wee doe it not as though it were not lawfull for vs to fast in the rest of the yeere except Penticost but it is one thing to doe a thing of necessitie and anothing to offer a gift of free-vvill Lastly excommunication was for the open contempt of this order taken vp in the Church which was that men should fast before Faster for their further humiliation preparation to the sacrament So the 29. canō of the councill of 〈◊〉 must be understood As for the Canons of the Apostles so falsely called and the 8. councill of Toledo I much respect not what they say in this case Arg. 14. Gods authority binds conscience magistrates authority is Gods authority therefore magistrates authority binds conscience properly Ans. Gods authority may be takē two waies first for that soueraigne and absolute power which he useth ouer all his creatures secondly for that finite limited power which he hath 〈◊〉 that men shall exercise ouer men If the minor 〈◊〉 that Magistrates authority is Gods authority be taken in the first sense it is false for the soueraigne power of god is mooue●…ic able If it be taken in the second sense the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 false For there be sundry authorities ordained of God as the authority of the father oner the childe of the master over the servant the authority of the master ouer his scholler which doe not properly and 〈◊〉 bind in conscience as the authority of gods lawes doth By these arguments which I haue now answered by many other being but lightly 〈◊〉 it will appeare that necessary obedience is to be performed both to ciuil ecciesiasticall iurisdiction but that they haue a constraining power to bind conscience as properly as gods laws do it is not yet prooued neither can it be as I will make manifest by other arguments Arg. 1. He that makes a law binding consciēce to mortal sinne hath power if not to saue yet to destroy because by sin which follows upon the transgressiō of his law comes death dānation But God is the only lawgiuer that hath this priuiledge which is after he hath giuē his law vpō the breaking or keeping thereof to save or destroy Iam 4. 12. There is one lawgiuer that can saue or destroy Therfore God alone makes laws ●inding cōscience properly no creature cā do the like Answer is made that S. Iames speaks of the principall law-giuer that by his own proper authority makes lawes doth in such manner saue destroy that he need not feare to be destroied of any that he speaks not of secondary lawgiuers that are deputies of god make laws in his name I say again that this answer stāds not with the text For S. Iames speakes simply without distinctiō limitatiō or exceptiō the effect of his reason is this No mā at all must slander his brother because no man must be iudge of the law no man can be iudge of the law because no man can be a law-giuer to saue and destroy Now then where be those persons that shall make lawes to the soules of men binde them unto punishment of mortall sinne considering God alone is the sauing destroying lawgiuer Arg. 2. He that can make laws as truly binding conscience as gods lawes can also prescribe rules of Gods worship because to bind the consciēce is nothing els but to cause it to excuse for things that are well done and therefore truely please God to accuse for sinne wherby god is dishonoured but no man can prescribe rules of gods worship humane lawes as they are humane laws appoint not the seruice of God Esai 29. 13. ●●●ir fear towards me was taught by the precept of 〈◊〉 Mat. 15. 9. they worship me in vain teach●●● doctrines which are the commandements of 〈◊〉 Papists here make answer that by lawes of men we must understand such lawes as be unlawfull or unprofitable being made without the authority of God or instinct of his spirit It is true indeed that these commandements of men were unlawfull but the cause must be considered they were unlawfull not because they commanded that which was unlawful against the will of God but because things in themselues lawfull were commanded as parts of gods worship To wash the outward part of the cup or platter to wash hands before meat are things in respect of civill use very lawfull yet are these blamed by Christ no other reason cā be rendred but this that they were prescribed not as things indifferent or ciuill but as matters pertaining to Gods worship It is not against Gods worde in some politike regards to make distinctions of meats drinks times yet Paul calls these things doctrines of deuils because they were commāded as things
the Lord for the p●…ting of periurie Matth. 5. 33. Next let vs consider the time when an oath bindeth or bindeth not An oth bindeth thē when it is made of things certen possible in ●●uth iustice iudgemēt for the glory of God the good of our neighbour Question I. Whether doeth an oath binde conscience if by the keeping of it there followe losses and hinderances Answ. If it be of a thing that is lawfull and the domages be priuate to him that sweareth then doth it bind conscience For example A man makes a purchase of lande at the sea side his bargaine is confirmed only by oath and it falles out that before he doe enter possession the sea breakes in and drownes a part of that purchase Now he is in conscience to stand to his bargaine because the thing is lawfull the domage is priuate great reuerence must be had of the name of God which hath bin used in the bargaine making Dauid makes it the property of a good man to sweare to his owne hinderance and not to change Psal. 15. v. 4. Question II. Whether the oath which a man hath taken being induced thereto by fraud and guile doeth bind conscience Answ. If it be still of a thing lawfull and bring nothing but priuate losses it is to be kept When the Gibe●●ites had by a fraud brought Iosua to make a league with them and to binde it with an oath hee and the princes of the people answer them thus Wee have sworne vnto them by the Lord● God of Israel now therefore wee may not touch them Ios. 9. 19. And 300. yeres after when Saul slewe certaine of the Gib●onites against this othe the plague of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was upon the people of Israel three yeeres and was not staied till certaine persons of Sauls family for a recompence were put to death 2. Sam. 21. v. 7. Question III. Whether an oath made by feare or compulsion bind in conscience For example A thiefe disappointed of the bo●●y 〈◊〉 he looked for bindes the true man by solemne oath upon paine of present death to fetch and deliuer vnto him some portion of mony at one 100 or 200 crownes for the redeeming of his life Well the oath is taken and the question is whether it bind him or not to perform his promise An answer may be this some protestant diuines thinke it doth bind some againe thinke no but I take it the safest course to bolde the meane betweene both on this manner The oth seemes to bind and is to be perfourmed neither is it against the good of the cōmon-wealth 〈◊〉 then it were unlawfull but it is rather a furtherance in that a member therof is preserued and the losses which follow are only priuate to the man rather to be endured then the losse of life Yet that a remedy may be had of this priuate iniury that a publike mischiefe may be preuented the party is to reueale the matter to the magistrate whose office it is to punish robbers and to order all things according to equity for the cōmon good But if the case fall out that the mā through exceeding feare doe further sweare to keep silence I see not how his oth may be kept except he be sure that nothing will ensue therof but a pri●… domage to himself For otherwise perpetu●●●●…ence seemes to be a secrete consenting to the robber an occasion that others fall into the like danger and hazard of their liues Ag●●ne in six cases an oth binds not conscience at all I. If it be made of a thing that is flat against the word of God For all the power of binding which it hath is by the word of god therfore whē it is against Gods will it hath no power to constraine And it is an old receiued rule that an oth must not be a bonde of iniquity Hereupon Dauid when he had made a rash oth to kill Nabal 〈◊〉 his houshold reioyced when he had an occasion offered by Abigail to break the same 1. Sam. 25. 32. And though he sware to Shemi that he would saue his life 2. Sam. 19. 23. yet afterward upon better consideration as it may seem he commanded his son Salomon to put him to death as one that had long agoe deserued the same 1. King 2. 9. And Herod was far deceiued that thought he was bound by his oth to giue to the dāsell Iohn Baptists head in a platter Mat. 14. 7. II. Is it be against the good and wholesome lawes of any kingdome or countrey whereof a man is a member it bindes not at all because on the contrary Gods commandement bindes vs to keepe the good lawes of men III. If it be made by such persons as want sufficient reason and discretion as young children fooles madde men For the conscience can not indeed be bounde where the understanding can not discerne what is done IIII. If it be made of such as haue no power to bind themselues it bindes not because it is made against the lawe of nature which is that he which is ot in his owne power can not binde himselfe Hence it followes that papists erre grossely when they teach that a childe may enter into any rule or order of religion yea binde himselfe thereto by oath and the oath to be good flatt against his parents consent Num. 30. 4. If a woman vow vnto the Lord bind her selfe by a bond being in her fathers house in the time of her youth c. 6. If her father disallow her the same day that he heareth all her vowes and bondes they shall not be of value And an ancient councill decreed that all children that vpon pretence of Gods worship should depart from their parents and not doe them d●e reverence should be accursed Secondly they erre in that they teach that the promise made priuately by a childe in way of marriage without and against consent of wise and careful parents bindes them whereas indeede if this promise were further bound by an oth it could not stand because children under gouernment and tuition of parents can not giue themselues V. It bindes not if it be made of a thing that is out of a ●●ns power as if a man sweare to his friend to giue him another mans goods VI. If at the first it were lawfull and afterwarde by some meanes become either impossible or vnlawfull it binds not conscience For when it becomes impossible then wee may safely thinke that God from heauen frees a man from his oath And when it beginnes to be unlawfull then it ceaseth to bind because the binding vertue is onely from the worde of God For example a king bindes himselfe by oath to a forraine Christian prince to find him men money to defende his people against all enemies This oath is lawfull Well afterward the prince becomes a professed enemy to him his religion people and then the kings oth becomes unlawful and binds him
not because the word forbids that there should be any league of amitie with Gods enemies though there may be leagues of concord with them Seeing a lawfull oath must bind conscience though a man be deceiued and great losses follow it shews in how great reuerence we should haue Gods name and with what care and consideration take an oth And by this we must be aduertiseo to take heed of customable swearing in our common talke whether our oathes be great or small We must thinke of an oth as a part of Gods worship nay the H. ghost often puts it for the whole worship of God Isai. 19. 18. In that day shall five cities in the lande of Egypt speake the language of Canaan and shall sweare by the Lorde of hostes that is acknowledge and worship him Ierem. 12. 16. If they will learne the waies of my people to sweare by my Name The Lorde liveth then shall they be built in the middest of my people This serues to shew unto us that such as giue them-selues to swearing want religion good conscience that those families in which there is risenesse of othes abandon all care of religion and banish God out of their houses And indeed it is a very hard thing for the common swearer to auoide common periury If we see a man holde up his hand at the barre of an earthly iudge we pity him and are sorry for him on then why doe we not pittie blasphemers and common swearers For with God they are no better then rebeis that hold up their hands at the barre of his iudgement seate as guilty malefactours Exod. 20. 7. Augustine saith well They that worship stockes and stones feare to svveare falsely by stones and doest not then feare God that is present God that liveth God that 〈◊〉 God that taketh revenge of contemners but of bad custome vvhen thou art beleeved thou svvearest vvhen none requires it thou svvearest and vvhen men cannot abide it then svvearest Thus much of an Oath now followes a promise which is either to God or man the first is called a vow the second a single promise A vowe is taken three waies First generally for a promise of morall obedience and this vowe is first made in Baptisme and continued in the Lordes Supper as also in the spirituall exercises of invocation and repentance It is called of Peter 1. Epist. 3. 21. the stipulation which a good conscience makes to God This kinde of vowe bindes all and euery member of the Church of God And the not keeping of it is the common sinne of the worlde for most men make not conscience to perfourme that which they haue promised to God in Baptisme and therefore their Baptisme is become unto them the sacrifice of fooles Ecclesiast 4. 17. But considering we are bound in conscience by this vowe let vs hereafter endeauor to be as good as our word and that shall be when we begin to die to our sinnes and rise to newnesse of life we will seeme to haue care to keepe touch with men what a shame is it for us then not to keepe couenant with God Againe a vow is taken for a promise of ceremoniall obedience whereof reade Num. 6. and 30. and Levit. 27. This vow is peculiar to the old Testament and did not bind all men but only such as had peculiar occasion to vowe and thereupon bound themselues as the Nazarites and some other Thirdly a vow is taken for the performance of some outwarde and bodily exercises taken up of a mans owne accord as being things in a mans owne liberty without any commaundèment of God as the keeping of set times of fast of praying or reading the performance of set taskes almes giuing abstinence from certaine meates and drinkes in the use whereof through our owne weakenesse we feare any occasion of sinne And this kind of vow is more peculiar to the new Testament In the making of it that it may be warrantable foure things must be obserued I. It must be agreeable to the worde of God II. It must not be against a mans generall or particular calling III. It must be in a mans power and not against Christian liberty IIII. It must be so made and be obserued without any opinion of ●●●rit or worship of God to this end alone that it may be a means to exercise and cherish repentance and inuocation temperance patience and to shewe forth thankfulnesse to God A vowe thus made binds conscience by vertue of Gods commandement Eccles. 5. 3. When thou hast 〈◊〉 a vow to God 〈◊〉 not to pay it And the vow once made continues to binde so long as the thing is in force which was the 〈◊〉 of the vow For example A man desirous to practise sobrietie and temperancy finds that drinking of wine is hurtful to him hereupon he vowes to God to drinke no wine now 〈◊〉 vow once made 〈◊〉 him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 estate of his body alter and he feele no inconvenience in wine and then 〈◊〉 ceaseth to bind any longer Question Whether Papists are bound in conscience to keepe the vowes of single life and voluntary pouerty which they make or no. Ans. No. Reasons I. They are 〈◊〉 against Gods cō●… 〈◊〉 if they cannot abstaine let them 〈◊〉 for it is better to marry then to 〈◊〉 1. Cor. 7. 9. This we warned 〈◊〉 of that if there were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would not 〈◊〉 they should not 〈◊〉 2. Thess. 3. 10. II they are not in the power of him that voweth as the promise of 〈◊〉 chastity in single life III. they abolish christian liberty in the vse of the creatures and ordinances of God as riches and mariage meat drinke appar●● making that necessary which God left to our liberty IV. They are made that men may thereby merit life eternall worship God whereas Paul saith 1. Tim. 48. Bodilyexercise profiteth little but godlinesse 〈◊〉 profitable for all things Therefore they are better broken then kept As for a single promise it also bindes a man according as he will to whome the promise is made though he be an heretike or an infidell As for the purpose of the mind it binds not but may upon conuenient cause be altered Yet we must remember that there are so●… cases in which a promise made binds not I. If it be against Gods word One saith well In evill promises cut off thy faith It is a 〈◊〉 promise which cannot be perfourmed without an offence II. If he which makes it want reason or sufficient discretion III. If he make the promisae who can not bind himselfe as a child under the gouernment of his parents IV. If a man be induced to make his promise by fraud guile V. If the promise being at the first lawfull become afterward either impossible or unlawfull And though men be bound in conscience to keepe their promises yet this hinders not but that there is and may be a good and lawfull use of Indentures and obligations For
the bonde of conscience is betweene man and God but the bonde of an obligation is onely betweene man and man Abraham when hee bought a purchase of Ephron the Hi●●●te hee payed his money and made it sure before witnesse Gen. 23. vers 17. Here we must consider the generall sinne of this age which is to speak deceitfully euery one to his neighbour It is an hard thing to find a mā that will stand to his word and lawfull promise It is a rule of Machi●vell that a man may practise many things against his faith against charity and humanity and religion and that it is not necessary to haue these vertues but to counterfait and dissemble them But let all such as feare God make conscience of their word because they are bound so to do and hereby they shall resemble their heauenly father who is true in all his promises and they shall also bring soorth a notable fruite of the spirite Galat. 5. vers 22. Hitherto I haue spoken of the cause that maketh conscience to giue iudgemente Now followeth the manner of iudgement Cōsciēce giues iudgemēt in or by a kind of reasoning or disputing called a practicall syllogisme Rom. 2. 15. their reasonings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excusing 〈◊〉 other In the making of this reason conscience hath two assist●… mind and memory The mind is the storehouse and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all manner of rules and principles It may be co●…pared to a booke of law in which are 〈◊〉 down the penall statutes of the lande The of it it is to preferre and present to the conscience rules of diuine law whereby it is to giue iudgement Memory serues to bring to mind the particular actions which a mā hath done or not done that conscience may determine of them Now conscience assisted by these 〈◊〉 proceeds in iudgement by a kinde of argumentation an example whereof we may take from the conscience of a murderer thus Euery 〈◊〉 ●…er is 〈◊〉 ●ed saith the minde Thou art a murderer saith conscience assisted by memory ergo Thou art accur sed saith conscience and so giueth her sentence To proceed Conscience giues iudgement either of things past or things to come Of things past two waies either by accusing cond●ning or by excusing absoluing Ro. 2. 15. To accuse is an action of conscience giuing 〈◊〉 that this o● that thing was ●…ll don 〈◊〉 that still by reasoning on this manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a 〈◊〉 This thy action is 〈◊〉 der 〈◊〉 This thy action is a 〈◊〉 To 〈◊〉 is another action of the conscience ●●yned with the former whereby it giueth iudg●…t that a man by this or that sinne hath deserued death on this maner ●…ry 〈◊〉 ●●rer 〈◊〉 serveth a double death Th●● art a 〈◊〉 ●●rer ergo Thou hast de served a double death These two actions are very sorcible and terrible for they are the ●…ctions and prickings that be in the heart Act. 2. 37. they are the stripes as it were of an iron rodde wherewith the heart of a man smiteth it selfe 2. Sam. 24. 10. And by reason of them conscience is compared to a wo●●e that neuer dieth but alwayes lyes gnawing and grabbling and pulling at the heart of man Marc. 9. 42. and causeth more paine and anguish then any disease in the wo●ld can The time when conscience perfourmes these actions is not before the sinne or in the acte of s●●●ing but specially after the sinne is done and past Reason I. Before a man sinne the deuill doth extenuate the fault make sinne to be no sinne II. Corrupt affections doe for a time so blind and ouercast iudgement that it doeth not see or at the least consider what is good or bad till afterward Neither doth conscience ●ccuse conde●… only for time present but also long after a thing is done The consciences of Iosephs ●…hren accuse them 22. yeres after they had solde him into Egypt Gen. 42. 21. The effect of the accusing and conde●ning conscience is to stir vp sundry passions and ●otions in the heart but specially these five The first is sha●… which is an affection of the heart whereby a man is gr●eued and displeased with him-selfe that hee hath done any euill and this shame showeth it selfe by the rising of the bloode from the heart to the 〈◊〉 Yet wee must here remember that 〈◊〉 such as haue the pardon of their sinnes and are not guilty may be ashamed and b●●sh Rom. 6. 21. What fr●… had yee in those things wherat ye now blush or be ashamed Whereas those which are most guilty may be without all shame Ierem. 6. 15. were they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they had ●…itted 〈◊〉 ●●y ●●y they vvere not ashamed 〈◊〉 they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they are growen to some great height in sinne Eph. 4. 18. The second passion is sadnesse and sorrowe which is commonly thought to be nothing else but Melancholy but betweene them twa●●e there is great difference Sorow that comes by melancholly ariseth onely of that humour annoying the body but this other sorrow ariseth of a mans sinnes for which his conscience accuseth him Melancholly may be cured by phi●…e this sorow 〈◊〉 not be cured by any thing but by the blood of Christ. The third is feare in causing whereof conscience is very forcible If a man had all the delightes and pleasures that heart can wish they can not doe him any good if conscience be guiltie Belshazzar when hee was in the middest of all his delights and saw the hand writing vpon the wall his countenance changed his thoughts trouble● him his ioy●ts loosed and his knees smote togither Dan. 5. 6. Yea the guiltie conscience will make a man afraid if hee see but a worme peepe out of the ground or a silly creature to goe crosse his way or if hee see but his owne shadowe on a sudda●… or if he do but forecast an euill with himselfe Proverb 28. 1. The vvicked flyeth vvh●● no man pur sueth him Terrors of ●ōsciēce whē they are more vehecause other passions in the body as exceeding heare like that which is in the fi●t of an ag●e the rising of the entrals towardes the mouth and swounding● as experience hath often shewed And the writer of the booke of Wisedome saith truly cap. 17. vers 10. It is a 〈◊〉 full thing vvhen malice is condemned by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 test●monie and a conscience th●● is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ever fore-cast cruell things For feare is nothing else but the betraying of the succ●… that reason offereth c. they that did 〈◊〉 the night that was ●…llerable c. sometimes vvere troubled vvith mon●…s visions and sometimes they s●●●ned as though their 〈◊〉 soule should betray them for a sudden feare 〈◊〉 looked for came upon them The fourth is desperation whereby a man through the vehement and constant accusation of his conscience comes to be out of all hope of the pardon of his sinnes This made Saul Achitophel and Indas to hang them selues this
it is a certaine awe or r●●erence vnto God in whose presence we doe whatsoeuer we doe Feare of distrust is when men tremble at the iudgemēts of God for their sinnes because they haue no hope of mercie Of these three the first was good by creation and therfore it was in our Sauiour Christ but since the fall it is defective The third is a vice called sl●●ish feare And the second is that which is commaunded in these and the like places of Scripture the intent whereof is to make vs circumspect and fearefull least we should offend God by any 〈◊〉 our owne weaknesse considered and the ●●vineible iudgements of God And this kinde of feare as also the first may stande with c●r●●ntie of faith Rom. 11. Thou standest by faith be not high minded but feare Psal. 2. Ser●e the Lord in feare and reioyce in trembling Obiect 6. Where there is no word there is no faith For faith and the word of God be relatiues But there is no word of God that saith to particular men Cornelius or Peter or Iohn thy sinnes are pardoned excepting 〈◊〉 few persons as M●… Magd●… and the p●… 〈◊〉 c. Therefore there is no particular faith Ansvv. Though there be no word set downe in Scripture touching the saluation of this or that particular man yet there is set downe that which is equivale●● to a particular word and as much in effect For the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting is giuen with a comm●undement that euery man applie the promise to himselfe as I haue before prooued and this is altogether as much as if euery mans particular name had beene put in the promise I adde further that the promises of the Gospel must be considered two waies first as they are generally set downe in Scripture without application to any person secondly as they are ●●●ght and published in the ●●inisterie of the word the end whereof is to applie them to the persons of men partly by pr●●ching and p●●tly 〈◊〉 administ●ing the sacraments of baptisme and the Lords supper which are seales of righteo●●●●s of faith Now the promise applied and as I may say particularized to the members of the Church is by the vertue of Gods ordinance as much as if God himselfe had giuen the promise particularly and ●…dment names vnto it It is further ●nswered that the promise of remission of sinne is preached not simply but vpo● condition of 〈◊〉 faith 〈◊〉 which 〈◊〉 be 〈◊〉 knowne I answer againe 〈◊〉 I haue alreadie prooued that he which truly beleeueth and rep●…th knoweth that he doth certenly beleeue and repe●t Obiect 7. To beleeue the pardon of a mans owne sinnes is ●one of the articles of faith propounded in any Creede either of the Apostles or the Nice●e fathers or Athanas●●s or any other Creede Answer This faith is contained vnder these words I beleeue remission of s●…es and I prooue it thus These words are an article of Christian faith and therefore they must in sense containe more then the deuill doth or can beleeue nowe the deuill beleeueth thus much that God giues remissiō of sinnes to his Church Christian men therefore must goe one steppe further and beleeue particularly the remission of their owne sinnes Otherwise if the Papists will haue the Catholicke faith to beleeue no more in this point then the damned spirits beleeue let them take it to themselues But they replie further that if there were any such article of faith then some persons must beleeue that they are iust though they willingly commit mortall sinne which is an euident falshood Ansvver He that beleeues the pardon of his owne sinnes by true faith hath the spirit of God in him and a constant purpose not to sinne against God and therefore if he sinne it is against his purpose and without any full consent of wil and it is not he that doeth it but the sinne that dwelleth in him But if it so fall our that the child of God be ouertaken with any actual sinne then his case standeth thus He hath by his fall wounded his conscience weakned his faith bereaued himselfe of Gods fauour as much as in him lieth made himselfe guiltie of a sinne and worthie of damnation and God for his part accordingly turnes the woonted signes of his sauour into signes of anger and displeasure and the sinne though it be pardoned in the purpose of God yet is it not actually pardoned till the partie repent Things standing thus we teach not that men must beleeue the pardon of their sinnes while they liue and lie in them for that were ●●●tly to teach falshoode for truth but our doctrine is that such persons must first of all humble themselues and say with the prodigall childe that they haue sinned against God and are not worthie to be called his children any more and againe renew their decaied faith and repentance that they may beleeue as before their perfect reconciliation with God Obiect 8. In respect of God who is truth it selfe we are to beleeue the promise in particular yet if we respect our owne vnworthines and indisposition we are to feare and in some part to doubt For the promise of remission of sinnes is not absolute but depends vpon the condition of our workes Therefore our certentie is onely coniecturall Answer I answer first that in respect of our owne vnworthines we are not to doubt of our saluation but to be out of all doubt yea to dispaire before the iudgement seate of God For they which are of the workes of the lawe are vnder ●he curse Gal. 3. 10. and Paul saith of his owne workes of grace in this am I not iustified 1 Cor. 4. 4. And Dauid being out of all doubt of his owne deserued damnation in regard of his owne vnworthines saith freely Enter not into indgement with thy servant O Lord for no flesh shallbe i●stified in thy sight Againe the consideration of any vnworthines in our selues doth not hinder a resolution concerning Gods mercy in Christ. For true faith makes an entrance vnto God vvith boldnes I say with boldnes euen for those persons that are vnworthy in themselues Eph. 4. 12. And Abraham whose faith is to be followed of vs did not vpon the consideration of his olde decaied bodie rest himselfe with bare hope vpon alikelihood of the accomplishment of Gods promise but he beleeued vnder hope euen against hope Rom. 4. 18. Lastly I answear that the ground of the former obiection is erronious namely that the promise of saluation depends on the condition of our workes because the Scripture saith it is made and accomplished on mans part freely I graunt indeede that to the promise there is annexed a condition of faith yet faith here must not be considered as a worke but as an instrument apprehending Christ with his benefits and withall ●epentance with the fruits thereof are on our part required yet no otherwise but as they are necessaric consequents of faith and the signes
of the reward of their perseverance yet they are founde to be vncerten of the perseverance it selfe for vvhat man can knovve that hee shall persevere in the practise and increase of righteousnesse vnto the end except he be assured of it by some revelation IV. Some places must be understoode of experimentall certenty when the euent is accomplished Hieronym booke 2. against Pelagians Call●o man blessed before his e●de for as long as vvee live here vve are in the fight and as long as vvee are in the fight vve ha●● no 〈◊〉 victory V. Some places speakes of the uncertenty of other mens sal●●●tion which we grant The authour of the booke de v●● 〈◊〉 G●… 〈◊〉 clast saith we ca● pr●…ce of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before his end that hee shall be in the glory of the 〈◊〉 August lib. 〈◊〉 Per sever c. 13. Men are not vv●… any 〈◊〉 asseveration to 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this calling VI. Some speake of that 〈◊〉 which comes by reuelation without the worde Greg. lib. 6. 〈◊〉 2● 10 Gregoria Whereas you adde in your epistles that you will be earnest with me till I write that it hath bene made knowen unto me that your s●●nes are forgiven you haue required a hard and unprofitable thing Harde because I am unvvorthy to vvhome a revelation should be made Vnprofitable because you must not be made secure touching your sinnes vnlesse it be in the last day of your life for then you should not be able to bewaile the same sinnes VII Some places denie unto man that certentie which is proper to God which is to discerne in himselfe all things to come plainly as they shal come to passe without helpe of testimonies and outward signes Bernard serm 1. de Septuages Who can say I am of the elect I am of the predestinate to life certenly we haue none as yet but the affiance of our hope comforteth vs. Conferre these wordes with those that follow For this cause certaine signes and manifest tokens of salvation are given that it may be a thing out of doubt that he is in the number of the elect in vvhome these signes are Thus I haue in some part made manifest that an unfallible certenty of pardon of sinne and life euerlasting is the property of euery renued conscience Now therefore I will proceede further to consider how this certenty is caused and imprinted in the conscience The principall agent and beginner thereof is the Holy ghost in lightning the minde and conscience with spirituall and diuine light and the instrument in this action is the ministery of the gospell wherby the worde of life is applyed in the name of God to the person of euery hearer And this certentie is by little and little conceiued in a forme of reasoning or practicall syllogisme framed in the mind by the holy ghost on this manner Euery one that beleeues is the child of God But I ●●e beleeve Therefore I am the child of God The proposition is made by the minister of the worde in the publike congregation and it is nothing else but the promise of eternall life applyed to the particular hearer The second part or the assumption is the voice of conscience regenerate or the voice of Gods spirite in the same Now Papistes write and auouch that the assumption is false but the reasons which they use to prooue the same are of small moment First they alledge that many are deceiued in their perswasions thinking they haue that which they haue not I answere againe that many doe falsely presume of Gods mercy and imagine they haue that faith which they haue not and in all such the assumption is false yet in all them that are chosen to saluation and truely called it is vnfallibly true For such as haue receiued the gift of true faith haue also another gift of discerning whereby they see and know their owne faith It is further obiected that Ieremy saieth 17. 9. The heart is deceitfull and vvicked above all things vvho can knovve it But the intent of this place is onely to shew that no man can search his heart to the very bottome to see all and euery want infirmitie and wicked inclination that is therein For originall sinne wherewith the heart of man is tainted is a pronenesse or disposition to all the sinnes that are or may be And though men can not discerue all their sinnes yet many of them are certenly knowen why may not then many of the graces of God be certenly known specially those which be of the principall as faith sanctification repentance Againe it is alledged that Peter beleeued that he was able to lay downe his life for Christs sake and yet indeede was not as the euent declared for when the time came he denyed Christ. Ansvv. Peter at this time was but weake in faith and hee was much carried away with a confidence of his owne strength which made him speake these wordes of presumption and though he failed in this one particular action yet failed hee not in the principall that is in the perswasion of the pardon of his owne sinnes and of life euerlasting In a word it is certen that many perswade them-selues of Gods mercy and yet are deceiued neuerthelesse all such as doe truly beleeue are not deceiued The holy ghost making them to see that in themselues which by nature they can not discerne as Paul signified when he said I speake the truth I lie not my conscience bearing me witnesse by the Holy Ghost Rom. 9. v. 1. Againe the same testimony is giuen otherwise thus Euery childe of God hath the pardon of his sinnes saith Gods word But I am Gods child and therefore have the pardon of my sinnes saith the renewed conscience by the direction of Gods spirit Rom. 8. 16. Gal. 4. 6. After that this testimony is once begun it is confirmed by the same meanes as also by prayer and the sacraments Now it may be demanded how a bodily element as bread wine water should be able to confirme a perswasion of our adoption that is in the conscience Ansvv. The element in the sacrament is an outwarde seale or instrument to confirme faith not as a medicine restores and confirmes health whether we thinke on it or not whether we sleepe or wake and that by his owne inherent vertue but by reasoning in syllogisme made by the good conscience the 〈◊〉 thereof beeing the outwarde signe in the sacrament By means of which syllogisme the Holy Ghost mooues and stirres the mind yea cherisheth and increaseth faith on this manner Hee which vseth the elements aright shall receive the promises But I do or I haue used the elements aright Therefore I shall receive the promises Whereas presumption and the illusion of Satan will as well tell a man that he is the childe of God as the true testimony of regenerate conscience the way to put difference betwene them is this I. Presumption is naturall and from the very wombe but this testimony of conscience
damnation Dauid saith The wicked man that is euery man naturally blesseth himselfe Psal. 10. 3. he maketh a league with hell and death Isai. 28. v. 15. This appeareth also by experience Let the ministers of the Gospel reprooue sinne denounce Gods iudgements against it according to the rule of Gods word yet men wil not feare stones will almost as soone mooue in the walls and the pillers of our Churches as the 〈◊〉 hearts of men And the reason hereof is because their minds are forest●lled with this absurd conceit that they are not in danger of the wrath of God though they o●●end And the opinion of our common people is hereunto answerable who thinke that if they haue a good meaning doe no man hu●● God will haue them excused both in this life and in the day of iudgement The third is a iust and serious examination of the conscience by the lawe that we may see what is our estate before God And this is a duty vpon which the Prophets stande very much Lam. 3. 40. Man suffereth for sinne let us search and trie our hearts and turne againe to the Lord. Zeph. 2. 1. Fanne your selues fanne you O nation not vvorthie to be loued In making examination we must specially take notice of that which doth now lie or may hereafter lie vpon the conscience And after 〈◊〉 examination hath beene made a man comes ●o a knowledge of his sinnes in particular and of his wretched and miserable estate When one enters into his house at midnight he findes or sees nothing out of order but let him come in the day time when the 〈◊〉 shineth and he shall then ●●p●● many faults in the house and the very motes that flie vp and downe so let a man search his heart in the ignorance blindnes of his minde he will straightway thinke all is well but let him once begin to search himselfe with the light and lanterne of the law and he shall sinde many foule corners in his heart and many heapes of sinnes in his life The fourth is a sorrovv in respect of the punishment of sinne arising of the three former actiōs And though this sorrow be no grace for it befalls as well the wicked as the godly yet may it be an occasion of grace because by the apprehension of Gods anger we come to the apprehension of his mercie And it is better that conscience should pricke vs and wound vs and doe his worst against vs in this life while remedie may be had then after this life when remedy is past Thus much of preparation now follows the remedie and the application of it The remedie is nothing else but the bloode or the merits of Christ who specially in conscience felt the wrath of God as when he said my soule is heavy vnto death and his agonie was not so much a paine and torment in bodie as the apprehension of the feare and anger of God in conscience and when the holy Ghost saith that he offered vnto God praiers with strong cries and was heard frō feare he directly notes the distresse and anguish of his most holy conscience for our sinnes And as the blood of Christ is an all sufficient remedy so is it also the alone remedie of all the sores and wounds of conscience For nothing can stanch or stay the terrours of conscience but the blood of the immaculate lambe of God nothing can satisfie the iudgement of the conscience much lesse the most seuere iudgement of God but the onely satisfaction of Christ. In the application of the remedie two things are required the Gospel preached and saith the Gospell is the hand of God that offereth grace to vs and faith is our hand whereby we receiue it That we indeede by faith receiue Christ with all his benefits we must put in practise two lessons The first is vnfainedly to humble our selues before God for all our wants breaches and wounds in conscience which beeing vnto vs as a paradise of God by our default we haue made as it were a little hell within vs. This humiliation is the beginning of all grace and religion pride and good conscience can neuer goe together and such as haue knowledge in religion and many other good gifts without humilitie are but vnbridled vnmortified and vnreformed persons This humiliation containes in it two duties the first is confession of our sinnes especially of those that lie vpon our consciences wherwith must be ioyned the accusing and condemning of our selues for then we put conscience out of office dispatch that labour before our God in this life which conscience would performe to our eternall damnation after this life The second dutie is Deprecation which is a kind of praier made with grones and desires of heart in which we intreat for nothing but for pardon of our sinnes and that for Christs sake till such time as the conscience be pacified To this humiliation standing on these two parts excellent promises of grace and life euerlasting are made Prov. 28. 13. He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper but he that confesseth for saketh thē shall find mercy 1. Ioh. 1. 9. If we acknowledge our sinnes he is faithfull iust to forgiue vs our sinnes to clense vs frō all vnrighteousnes Luk. 1. 35. He hath filled the ●ūgrie with good things sent the rich emptie away which are also verified by experience in sundrie examples 2. Sam. 12. 13. Dauid said to Nathan I have sinned against the Lord. And Nathan saide to Dauid The Lord also hath put away thy sinne 2. Chr. 33. 12. When Manasses was in tribulation he praied to the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his fathers and prayed vnto him and God heard his prayer Luk. 23. 43. And the thiefe said to Iesus Lord remember me vvhen thou commest to thy kingdome Then Iesus saide vnto him Verely I say to thee to day shalt thou be with me in paradise By these and many other places it appeares that when a man doth truly humble himselfe before God he is at that instant reconciled to God and hath the pardon of his sinnes in heauen shall afterward haue the assurance thereof in his own cōscience The second lesson is when we are touched in conscience for our sinnes not to yeeld to natural doubtings and distrust but to resist the same and to indeauour by gods grace to resolue our selues that the promises of saluation by Christ belong to vs particularly because to doe thus much is the very commandement of God The third thing is the reformàtion of conscience which is when it doth cease to accuse and terrifie and begins to excuse and testifie vnto vs by the holy Ghost that we are the children of God haue the pardon of our sinnes And this it will doe after that men haue seriously humbled themselues and praied earnestly and constantly with sighes and grones of spirit for recōciliation with God in Christ.
For then the Lord will sende downe his spirit into the conscience by a sweete and heauenly testimonie to assure 〈◊〉 that we are at peace with God Thus we see how good conscience is gotten and because it is so pretious a iewell I wish all persons that as yet neuer laboured to get good conscience now to beginne Reasons to induce men thereto may be these I. You seeke day and night from yere to yere for honours riches and pleasures which ye must leaue behinde you much more threfore ought you to seeke for renewed and reformed consciences considering that conscience will be with you in this life in death at the last iudgement and for euer II. He which wants a conscience purged in the blood of Christ can neuer haue any true and lasting comfort in this life Suppose a man araied in cloath of tishue set in a chaire of estate before him a table furnished with all daintie prouision his seruants Monarches and Princes his riches the chiefest treasures kingdoms of the world but withall suppose one standing by with a naked sword to cut his throat or a wild beast readie euer and anon to pull him in pieces nowe what can we say of this mans estate but that all his happines is nothing but woe and miserie And such is the estate of all men that abounding with riches honours and pleasures carrie about them an euill conscience which is as a sword to ●lay the soule or as a rauenous beast readie to sucke the blood of the soule and to rend it in pieces III. He which wants good conscience can doe nothing but sinne his very eating and drinking his sleeping and waking al he doth turnes to sinne the cōscience must first be good before the action can be good if the roote be corrupt the fruits are answerable IV. An euill conscience is the greatest enemie a man cā haue because it doth execute all the parts of iudgement against him It is the Lords sergeant God neede not send out processe by any of his creatures for man the conscience within man will arrest him and bring him before God It is the gayler to keepe man in prison in bolts irons that he may be forth-comming at the day of iudgement It is the witnes to accuse him the iudge to condemne him the hangman to execute him and the flashings of the fire of hell to torment him Againe it makes a man to be an enemie to God because it accuseth him to God and makes him flie from God as Adam did whē he had sinned Also it makes a man to be his owne enemie in that it doth cause him to lay violent hands vpon himselfe and become his owne hangman or his owne cut-throat And on the contrarie a good conscience is a mans best friend when all men intreat him hardly it wil speak faire and comfort him it is a continual feast and a paradise vpon earth V. The scripture sheweth that they which neuer seeke for good cōsci●ce haue terrible ends For either they die blocks as Nabal did or they die desperate as Cain Saul Achitophel Iudas VI. We must consider often the terrible day of iudgement in which euery man must receiue according to his doings And that we may then be absolued the best way is to seeke for a good conscience for if our conscience be euill and condemne vs in this life God will much more condemne vs. And wheras we must passe through three iudgemēts the iudgement of men the iudgemēt of our cōscience the last iudgement of God we shal neuer be strengthened against them and cleared in them all but by the seeking of a good cōscience After that man hath got good conscience his second dutie is to keepe it And as in gouerning the shippe on the sea the pilot holding the helme in his hand hath alwaies an eye to the compasse so we likewise in the ordering of our liues and conuersations must alwaies haue a speciall regard to the conscience That we may keepe good conscience we must doe two things auoide the impediments thereof and vse conuement preseruatiues Impediments of good conscience are either in vs or forth of vs. In vs on● owne sinnes and corruptions When mens bodies lie deade in the earth there breed certaine wormes in them whereby they are consumed For of the flesh come the wormes which consume the flesh but vnles we take great heed out of the sinns corruptions of our hearts there wil breed a worme a thousand folde more terrible euen the worme of conscience that neuer dieth which wil in a lingering maner wast the conscience the soule the whole man because he shal be alwaies dying neuer dead These sinnes are specially three Ignorance vnmortified affectiōs worldly lusts Touching the first namely ignorance it is a great and vsuall impediment of good conscience For when the minde erreth or misconceiueth it doth mislead the conscience and deceiue the whole man The way to auoide this impediment is to doe our indeauour that we may daily increase in the knowledge of the word of God that it may dwell in vs plentifully To this ende we must pray with Dauid that he would open our eyes that we might vnderstand the wonders of his law and withall we must daily search the scriptures for vnderstanding as men vse to search the mines of the earth for gold ore Prov. 2. 4. Lastly we must labour for spiritual wisedō that we may haue the right vse of Gods word in euery particular actiō that being by it directed we may discerne what we may with good conscience do or leaue vndone The second impediment is vnsta●ed and vnmortified affections which if they may haue their swinge as wild horses ouerturne the chariot with men and all so they ouerturne ouer carrie the iudgement conscience of man and therfore when they beare rule good cōscience takes no place Now to preuent the danger that comes hereby this course must be followed When we would haue a sword or a knife not to hurt our selues or others we turne the edge of it And so that we may preuent our affections from hurting and annoying the conscience we must turne the course of them by directing them from our neighbours to our selues our owne sinnes or by inclining them to God and Christ. 〈◊〉 example choller and anger directs it selfe vpon euery occasion against our neighbour and thereby greatly indamageth the conscience Now the course of it is turned when we begin to be displeased and to be angry with our selues for our owne sinnes Our loue set vpon the world is hurtfull to the conscience but when we once begin to set our loue on God in Christ and to loue the blood of Christ aboue all the world then contrariwise it is a furtherance of good conscience The third impediment is worldly lustes that is the loue and exceeding desire of riches honors pleasures Euery man is as Adam his good conscience is his