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A93060 A good conscience the strongest hold. A treatise of conscience, handling the nature acts offices use of conscience. The description qualifications properties severall sorts of good conscience. The excellency necessity utility happiness of such a conscience. The markes to know motives to get meanes to keep it. By John Sheffeild, Minister of Swythins London. Sheffeild, John, d. 1680. 1650 (1650) Wing S3062; Thomason E1235_1; ESTC R208883 228,363 432

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who shall therefore walk in white for they are worthy these we may call the Phaenixes of the World The good Conscience saith Bernard is Rara Avis in Terris sed quò rarior apud homines eò charior apud Deum These men are the Noahs Lots Calebs and Joshuahs of their Generations for whom the World fares the better and of whom God takes special care when times are worst These are indeed the Chariots and Horsmen of Israel How happy is he that can say with Hezekiah Remember O Lord how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart 2. Kin. 20. 3. and have done that which was good in thy sight Or with Paul My rejoycing is this the Testimony 2. Cor. 1. 12. of my Conscience that in simplicity and godly sineerity I have had all my Conversation in the World I can stand up and say I have corrupted no man defrauded no man circumvented no man Let all the world stand up and say whose Oxe or Asse I have taken Premat corpus Secura cum corpus morie ur Secura cum anima coram Deo praesentabitur Secura cum utrumque in die judicij ante terrisic●m judicis Tribunal statuitur De Consc c. 3. Bern tremat mundus fremat Diabolus illa semper erit secura This man hath his house built on a Rock he remains secure whatsoever winds blow and when the rain falls and the flouds arise He is secure in Sicknesse and secure in Death when body and soul are dissolved He is secure in Judgement when Heaven and Earth shall be dissolved and secure to Eternity when the wicked are destroyed He hath the Ark pitcht within and without he hath the Hid Manna and the white Stone He hath bread to eat others know not of His Candle go●s not out by night His Gleanings better than the Worldlings Vintage His dry morsel sweeter than a house full of Sacrifices with strife and contenton His Corner of the house top or Wildernesse more delightfull than the fair and large house where that clamourous and contentious Shrew the unquiet scolding Conscience is continually dropping or scalding rather This man his walks are in the wood dropping with Hony his dwellings upon the mountains of Myrrhe his lodging upon beds of Spices This man hath the best fare and merriest life in the 〈◊〉 1● 15 16. World A continual Feast Feasting yo● know is not ordinary fare it is for no man● ease to Feast every day Some great me● have Feas●ed may be once a year as rich Nabal Kings and Princes on their Birth-dayes as Pharaoh and Herod Job had a great State to set out his Children withal they Feasted often but not every day at the same house but took their turns Ahasuerus had a Feast of an hundred and fourscore dayes lasting the longest that we read of yet he was King of an hundred twenty and seven Provinces God appointed his People should Feast of old yet but three times in the year except it were the Sabbatical year and the Jubile then all was Festival the whole year throughout and in the Jubile for two years one after another No man ever Feasted alway but that Glutton Luk. 16. 19. This man exceeds them all he hath not one great Dinner as at a Christmas Feast or one good Supper as at an Vniversity Commencement and away But every day is Festival with him his whole life is a Sabatical or Jubile life He is ever either Feasting or Feasted at home or abroad Either he is Feasted abroad and Supping with Christ or Feasting at home Christ Supping with him Yea this good Conscience is to Jesus Christ and to the Soul too both the feasting room and the feasting fare it is the Chamber and it is the Chear Christ will come into no other room but this This Sit Conscientia pura ut Deum perducat a● hospitium nostrum Bern. de iu. domo is his Vpper Chamber furnished and made ready where Christ will sit down with his Disciples and Servants and this the fare Give me thy heart saith he The Purity of Conscience is our best Dishwhich we can Feast him withal and the Peace of Conscience is Christs best Dish which he Feasts us withal Thus you see what a good House-keeper the good Conscience-keeper is He hath a continuall Feast saith Solomon Pro. 15. 15. And in the two following verses he answereth two Objections of the worldly mans making First they ask Hath he so much feasting I pray you what is his State first And secondly What good Chear hath he at his Table To the first he answereth ver 16. He may be but a poor man to see to yet he keepeth such a good house for Better is his little with the Fear of the Lord than great treasure and trouble therewith And for his good Chear on his Table it may be it is but homely yet his Dinner of Herbs where Love is the Love of God is is better than a stalled Oxe and Hatred therewith So that Solomons meaning in those three verses is that a Good Conscience is a Feast alone and Riches alone and Mirth alone and that all good is contained in a good Conscience which is a most comprehensive good CHAP. XXIV Of the Vse of Examination HAving already shewed what good Conscience is in general what his Nature what his Offices what is the Excellency Necessity Utility Benefit Comfort and Happinesse of it what the several kinds of good Conscience in particular are and what their Marks and Characters and what is the Mischief and Misery of an ill Conscience and what the Difficulties of getting and keeping the good and escaping the bad Let it now be every mans care to Try and Examine himself how much of Consciis in him and what the constitution of his Conscience is How much of Faith Purity Sincerity Tendernesse Quick-sightednesse Well-spokenness Honesty Inoffencivenesse Passivenesse and Charity is in his Conscience that he may take his part in the Promises Comfort Happinesse and Priviledges belonging to the good Conscience or whether he never had yet any good Conscience at all or have lost what he had or whether that he takes for good be not bad whether he be not the man that hath onely a natural Conscience or an ill troubled or an ill quiet whether his Conscience be not an erroneus or scrupulous or stupid or Lethargick or seared Conscience And so whether those former Reproofs Terrors Threats and miseries are not like to pursue and overtake him I shall not need here to come to any more new marks of discovery if you have well attended what was spoken all along in handling those particular good Consciences with their properties whereto I now refer you Only let every one remember that of the Prophet Malachie Therefore take heed to Mal. 2. 15. your Spirit saith he let evey one be well versed in himself There are three Books well studied and compared one with
to dissert the faith of Christ yet afterwards by his wives means she being an Arrian he was perverted and being Co-Emperour with his Godly Brother Valentinian he grew a Pseudo-Christian first nec Arrianus nec Christianus propemodum visus est He was neither perfect Arrian nor a perfect Christian afterwards grew a Persecutor at last he went to enquire of the Devill who should be his successor and upon the Ambiguous answer of the Diabolicall Oracle that his successours name should begin with Theod He put to death many a man all such whose name began with those letters as Theodorus Mag Cent. 4. cap. 3. Theodotus Theodoulus Theodosiolus and the like The third kind of Faith necessary to good 3. A particular warranting Faith Conscience is that particular warranting saith as I may call it to legitimate our actions which particular warranting faith may be also called a kind of Justifying faith in a certain sense I mean not justifying the person from all guilt but that action from sin Every action that is good in it self hereby becomes sanctified to the use of Conscience by the word of God the word of faith as it is called Of this particular warranting faith the Apostle speaks when in things of an indifferent and doubtfull nature he saith Let Every Rom. 14. 5. one be fully perswaded in his own mind that is let him be fully satisfied in his Conscience concerning his wayes whether for practising or forbearing this or that Whatsoever is not of this faith is sin that is whatsoever a man doth practise Conscientià fluctuante or much more Conscientiâ reclamante his Conscience wavering or gain-saying must needs be sinful in him though it be not sinful to another Of this that Aphorism also in the same Chapter is to be understood He that Rom. 14. 23. doubteth is damned if he eat he meaneth not that in what ever faith laying hold on Gospel and saving promises there is not full assurance but many doubts yet arising and fears yet remaining that soul hath no true faith and therefore is in the state of Damnation but his meaning is that he who is bold in practising what he yet sees no warrant for in the word doth wound his Conscience having not that sincerity and tendernesse of Conscience which he ought to look after and therefore is justly condemned and blamed Secondly Repentance and the daily renewing 2. Means Repentance thereof is the next means to get and keep the good Conscience This ever goes along with true faith Mar. 1. 15. Repent and beleeve the Gospel Repentance is as necessary to be taught and practised as Remission of sins to be preached and beleeved Luk. 24. 47. Paul where he came taught both this was the total sum of all he taught Act. 20. 21. They who would set your Conscience free to the commission of sin and yet keep it free from confession and contrition for sin while they promise you liberty they proclaim themselves the very servants of all corruption The Scripture rule is Job 11. 14 15. If Iniquity be in thy hand put it far away and let not wickednesse dwell in thy Tabernacles For then shalt thou lift up thy face without spot yea thou shalt be stedfast and thou shalt not fear But if thou do evil sin will lie at the doors not to be driven away but by repentance and there it will lie to keep in Terror to keep out Comfort If sin and guilt have not yet come in they lie at the door when thou steppest out at death they will fly at thy face and tear out thy throat therefore if thou lovest thy own peace and safety put it far away from thy Tabernacle saith Zophar Conscience must shut all known sin out of doors or sin will soon thrust Conscience out of doors Conscience well maintained resists and disarmes sin sin once entertained and a while maintained grows too hard for Conscience Take heed then of harbouring this Guest or turning in to this Host sin it will Jael-like after soft language sugred entertainment in thy sleep assault thee and fasten thee to the ground Take not in this Jonah at a venture though he pay his fare when he comes in he will raise a storm ere he be gotten out Revive this discontinued duty and work of repentance Dream not of lodging sin and peace together in the same heart or at most with a small partition to have Peace within doors and Sin without doors David once thought without the labour of repentance to have secured himself from the trouble and infamy of his foul Adultery what doth he he sends for Vriah pretends businesse with him and after discourses past dismisseth him home to his house Vriah would not be gotten from Davids door To prevent the shame that David would have smothered sin must be added to sin next day Vriah is made drunk yet at the door he lies again Then must he be made away to send the shame packing But did not Davids sin find him out break in upon him and at last made his bed too hot to hold him and too we● for him to sleep in He may now too late swim in tears and wash his defiled bed with weeping ere he recover his Peace So dangerous it is to play neer this Cockatrices Den and to put the finger upon the hole of the Asp See the like again in Amnon the son of David who having committed that villanous act of an incestuous rape upon his Sister Tamar thought it was but driving her down stairs and shutting the door upon her and the sin and danger was over But did not his sin lie at the door and after two years come up and stab him Conscience may be unkindly dealt withall and turned out of doors as the Levite did his Concubine and then forced ravished abused yet it will come home to thee again and though it cannot get in will lie at thy door and be at thy Threshold if it cannot go it will creep and if it cannot cry out Jud. 19. 27. there it will lie and in the morning when thou art to go out there thou shalt find it lying to accuse thy unkindnesse and to terrifie thee for thy ill usage of such a bosome friend Zophar tels Job that sin though sweet in Youth will lie downe with thee when old and sick and will not be beaten away This makes a miserable sicknesse and death when sin is in thy bed This is an unquiet bed-fellow Sin and guilt is the worst bed-fellow better death should be thy bed-fellow than sin Sicknesse poverty yea death it self may lie with thee in the same bed and thou take no hurt so that sin and an ill Conscience lie not in the middest between thee and Sicknesse or Death an ordinary bed may hold these two but what bed can hold these three Observe if thou wouldest have a good The third Means Conscience what hints at any time thou hast from
200. 2. Ecclesiasticall or Christian charity the more excellent p. 201. In what it is to be shewed p. 202. The great and dolefull want of it in these times p. 206. CHAP. XV. The reasons of the point p. 212. Three generall heads of reasons whereof the first is taken from the excellency of good Conscience and shewed in five particulars p. 213. CHAP. XVI The second reason from the danger and mischief of an evill Conscience p. 225. This set out in foure Particulars p. 225. 226. CHAP. XVII The third reason from the difficulty of getting and keeping a good Conscience and escaping an evill p. 232. This made plaine in three particulars p. 233 CHAP. XVIII The application of the Doctrine p. 237 A seven-fold application propounded ibid. First by way of information ibid. This information looketh two waies 1. To discover errors 2. To assert Duties and Truths 1. Error discovered that to preach Conscience and presse duty is legall preaching p. 238. 239. 240. 2. That Conscience is a snare not security p. 243. Third mistake of such who judge thier conscience good when it is yet but a naturall conscience p. 244. Naturall conscience may have some good in it yet cannot be call'd a good conscience p. 244. What good may be in naturall conscience shewed in 8. particulars p. 244. 245. What is wanting in naturall conscience to make it truly good shewed in four particulars p. 246. 247. Fourth mistake To judge conscience therefore good because quiet p. 247. Foure quiet consciences never an one of them good p. 248. 1. The ignorant mans conscience p. 248. 2. The unawakened conscience p. 249. 250. 251. 3. The deluded conscience p. 252. 253. 254. 4. The hardened conscience p. 255. A six-fold hardnesse of heart or conscience p. 255. 1. Naturall hardnesse p. 255. 256. 2. Voluntary and attracted p. 256. Eleven steps to hell discovered p. 256 257. 3. Judiciall hardening by Impostors and Seducers p. 259 4. Ministeriall hardening by Ministers and Ordinances p. 259. 260. 5. Divine hardening by God himselfe ibid. 6. Satanicall by the prevailing efficacy of Satan p. 261. 5th Mistake of such who judge conscience therefore good because troubled p. 263. Three notes of an ill troubled conscience p. 264. Six notes of a good troubled conscience p. 271 A sixth Mistake to judge erroneous conscience a good conscience p. 273. Seven common and ordinary notes of an erroneous conscience p. 274. A seventh mistake to judge scrupulous Conscience a good Conscience p. 278. The eighth mistake to judge the conscience of and for liberty a good conscience p. 280. Sinfull liberty of conscience branded and decyphered p. 281. Right liberty of conscience asserted p. 282. Set out in five particulars p. 283. CHAP. XIX The other part of the use of information to assert Truths p. 285. 1. That good conscience is the Christians greatest charge ibid. 2. To looke after conscience in selfe and others the ministers greatest charge p. 286. 3. Conscience decaying is the decay of State p. 290. 4. Conscience decaying grace decayes p. 292. 5. Tolleration not to be granted to all sorts of consciences p. 293. 6. Whence the world is so poysoned with corrupt Doctrines and blasphemous errors p. 249. 7. Whence many have lost former peace and comfort ibid. 8. Whence many come to dye Tragically and dispairingly p. 296. 9. Whence men come to commit the sin against the Holy Ghost p 298. CHAP. XX. The use of Lamentation p. 299. The generall want of conscience lamented ibid. The generall losse of conscience more lamented p. 303. CHAP. XXI The use of reproofe p. 309. Want of conscience reproved ibid. Want of conscience the greatest want p. 313. Losse of conscience reproved p. 314. Losse of conscience the greatest loss p. 315. CHAP. XXII The use of terror to foure sorts of men p. 317. 1. Such as are regardlesse of conscience ibid 2. Such as have an accusing gnawing conscience 318. 3. Such as have a stupified and feared conscience p. 320 4. Such as are falling into the consumption of conscience p. 321. CHAP. XXIII The comfort and happiness of such whose care is to get and keepe a good conscience p. 323. CHAP. XXIV The use of examination p. 327. CHAP. XXV The use of exhortation p. 333. 1. By way of Dehortation ibid. 1. By way of Adhortation to All Christians Ministers chiefly p. 334. This exhortation backed with Motives perswading p. 335. Meanes directing p. 349. Motives to perswade foure p. 345. c. Meanes directing two-fold principall Subservient p. 349. Principall meanes two The blood The spirit p. 350. Subservient meanes 13. whereof 6. prescribe what is to be had and done 7. what is to be avoided p. 352. 1. Meanes to get and keepe good conscience faith 353. Three-fold faith necessary for a good conscience Justifying for the heart p. 354. Orthodox for the judgement 355 particular warranting faith for our particular actions p. 356. 2d. Meanes To exercise and renew repentance p. 357. Repentance a Gospell duty ibid 3d. meanes To attend the Hints and Items given by Christ and his Spirit p. 360. 4. To attend and observe the hints and motions of our own Spirit p. 361. 5. To confer our conscience with Scripture p. 365. 6. The last meanes to be used Prayer p. 366. 2. The evills to be avoided are seven p. 370. 1. Beware of the smallest sinne allowed ibid. 2. Of one sinful Act deliberately committed p. 373 3. Beware of living under a loose cold freezing ministery or an unsound ministery p. 375. 4. Take heed of an ill companion p. 381. 5. In things doubtfull forbeare to Act or chuse the safer part p. 382. 6. Shun worldly mindedness p. 383. 7. Beware of erroneousness of conscience p. 385 2. The other part of the exhortation concerneth ministers especially p. 387. Ministers have a double charge given them concerning conscience 1. Personall 2. Doctrinall His personall charge is that he be a man Exemplary a man of conscience ibid Here 1. A particular encouragement to younger Timothyes p. 389. 2. An Item to Hymenaeus p. 390. His Doctrinall charge is that he bee aman for Conscience in all his ministery applying himselfe to the conscience of his hearers p. 396. A Good Conscience THE Strongest Hold. 1 Tim. 1. 19. Holding faith and a good Conscience which some having put away concerning Faith have made Ship-wrack THese two Epistles to Timothy and that to Titus may well be called the Ministers Directory made up of Canons clearly and undubitately Apostolicall Directing the Minister how to Govern himselfe and how to Guide his People The Ministers charge is looked upon by all as the greatest and the Apostle who best knew what it was doth not spare to lay it home to him and to give it him to the full Each Minister hath a double charge The one ad extra concerning others The other ad intra which concernes himselfe Both are 1 Tim. 4. 16. summed up in those few words 1 Tim. 4.
16. Take heed to thy selfe and to thy Doctrine And you may see the Apostle through this Epistle doth frequently inculcate both and doth straightly charge both upon his Conscience As for that part of his charge ad extra you may see it pressed upon him Chap. 1. ver 3. 4. and Chapter 5. ver 21. Chap. 6. 13 17 20. Strict charges all and so in the second Epistle Passim Whereby it appeares that the Minister besides those things concerning himselfe stands charged with the care of the whole Churches businesse for what concernes both Persons and Doctrines and Truths and Errors and Opinions and Practices Then for that other part That ad intra for what concernes himselfe and his owne Personall Demeanour He hath his Directions Chapter 4. 12 Be thou an example of the Beleevers in word and in Conversation in Charity in Spirit in Faith and Purity And Chap. 6. 11 12. But thou O man of God fly these things and follow after Righteousnesse Godlinesse Faith Love Patience Meekenesse Fight the Good Fight of Faith c. The Text is part of a Charge as you see v. 18. Yea it is a compendious summe of his whole double charge Tam ad intraquam ad extra Both as to himselfe and to his Doctrine Verse 18. A straight charge is laid upon Timothy This charge I commit to thee that thou war a good warfare the Ministers employment is no other then a warfare neither better nor worse A warfare no better A good warefare no worse This weighty charge is carryed home and Pursued 1. With the affections of a Father 2. With the arguments of an Apostle 1. With the affections of a Father Sonne Timothy 2. With the arguments of an Apostle Here are two arguments urged 1. The first is more Comfortable and respecteth Timothy himselfe according to the Prophecies which went before of thee There were some in those dayes who had the gift of Prophecy and could foretell things to come some such had given out great hopes of Timothy when he was young and of his instrumentallnesse to the Church when he should come to be put in employment Now gracious and hopefull young men in the Ministery especially must see to it that what hopes expectations and good opinions others have had of them and what Prayers Promises and Engagements have beene made for them may be all made good not void by them in the whole course of their life Therefore Timothy thou must war a good warfare 2 The other argument is more sad But respecteth others who had fearefully miscarryed He instanceth in two viz. Hymeneus and Alexander It is the same Hymeneus spoken of 2 Timothy 2. 17. There joyned with Philetus alwayes unhappy in his company and Alexander the same in all Probability with That Alexander Act. 19. 33. lived at Ephesus this also did therefore Timothy residing Pastor at Ephesus is warned of him 2 Tim. 4. 15. him mentioned Acts 19. 33. There you finde him in his best but mentioned also 2 Timothy 4. 14 15. There a man much altered a deadly enemy to Paul and his Doctrine for whom before he had so much appeared a friend and Champion both were formerly faire Professors but now degenerated into foule Apostates both of forward and then hopefull Disciples now flown so high as to become too forward but Dangerous Teachers even denying common received Doctrines as for instance that Article of our faith concerning the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2. 17 18 And broaching new loose and pernicious Doctrines whereby they blew up the 2 Tim. 2. 17 18. faith of such as hearkned to them 2 Timothy 2. 18. Whose black fowle and Tragick story is here compendiously set downe in two verses 19 20. and holds forth foure remarkable passages as touching them Being the foure steps to their utter ruine and eternall predition The two first of which set out their sin●e the two last their punishment Their sinne is set out First in the Originall and beginning of it They put away good Conscience the worst beginning à quo Principio provenit omne malum 2. In the Perfection and Conclusion of it They came at last to Blasphem The worst end and conclusion that could be Here is nothing but sin in these 2 passages and sin upon sin In the two remaining there is nothing but judgement judgement upon sinne and judgement upon judgement a double judgement upon their double sinne The one Divine and secret for their secret sinne they had put away good Conscience And they are shattered and ship-wracked in their faith for their punishment They having repudiated Conscience and given her a bill of divorce presently commit Adultery with prodigious Errors and Opinions The late English Annotation upon the place is very good That God doth punish men for giving raines to a licentious course of life against the dictates of their owne Consciences By taking away the light of his Spirit from them that in the midst of their course they should lose their most precious spirituall Merchandise and be drowned in Error and Heresie after the manner of those who in a Sea Tempest suffer shipwrack The other judgement that befell them was Humane and Open for their open sinne in publishing Blasphemous assertions It was the judgement of the Church watching over their Members who observing some to become so Putrid and infectious as to endanger the whole body of the joyning Congregation deliver these over judicially in a way of Church Censures to Sathan They are now cut off by excommunication which is the plaine meaning of that Phrase delivered up to Sathan which Phrase is also used 1 Cor. 5. 5. Here you see their sinne and punishment They put away and reprobate Conscience They never thrive after in their soule either for Grace or Peace for Knowledge or Comfort They become reprobate concerning the Faith They excommunicate Conscience out of themselves and themselves are excommunicated out of the Church They first deliver up Faith and good Conscience to Sathan voluntarily And are now by the Church Officers delivered up to Sathan judicially The end of which Church censure is set downe in these words That they may learne not to Blaspheme that is to say that they may if God see good to give Repentance recover themselves out of the 2 Tim 2. 26. Ne impune ferant suas blasphemias sed ut suo malo discant quid sit blasphemare Beza snare of the Devill or otherwise that they may be restrained that others may not be leavened and infected and consequently the like blasphemies for the future may be prevented Where by the way as we goe along the Gleaner may fill his hand with some Observations before we come to the standing Shock where he that bindeth Sheaves may fill his Bosome 1. How dangerous it is for professed Christians to grow wanton in matters of Faith and carelesse of their Conscience 2. How dangerous is it to the Church and Alexander was a Coppersmith it
to get keepe use two weapons especially Faith and a good Conscience get both or neither faith in the one hand good Conscience in the other thou hast many enemies to resist and fight with thou must use both hands not faith alone without good Conscience nor good conscience alone without Faith Both make thee compleately armed and will make thee more then a Conqueror But hold them fast throw down neither but should thy weapons be beaten through violence of persecution to thy head never suffer them through cowardize to be beaten out of thy hands The latter especially he giveth charge abovt viz. a good conscience without this if thou shouldest be all faith all faith cannot save thee nor save it selfe without this second good conscience But faith either stands or swims with a good Conscience or falls and sinkes with a bad Conscience Hence the point intended is In the most Perillous tempests of corrupt and dangerous Obs times wherein we often see others losing their Lives their Graces their Comforts their former Peace their future hopes that our selves may not eternally miscarry and loose all we have on earth for Grace and comfort and all we look for in heaven for glory and happiness Our continuall care must be to get and keepe to have and hold faith and a good conscience If thou lose not these two thou shalt never have cause to complaine of losing times keepe these they will keepe thee In times of common Naufrage and Shipwracke when we see abroad Church-wracks State-wracks Faith-wracks Truth-wracks take heed then of the worst Ship-wrack of all at home Conscience-wrack Our life here is set out by a double Metaphor 1. Of a warfaring condition v. 18. 2. Of a Seafaring condition v. 19. Is our life a warfare These are our principal weapons Faith and good Conscience if faith be the Shield good Conscience is the Brestplate of Righteousnesse Ephe. 6. 14. or the golden Eph. 6. 14. 16. Girdle of truth and sincerity v. 16. Is our condition a Land fight and not of a single combate but of common interest These two Faith and a good Conscience are the two strong holds we must secure our selves in and hold out to the last drop of blood and gaspe of life These two like Jonathan 1 Sam. 14. 13. and his armour bearer will disco mfit an hoast of Enemies and carry all before them and break through the most insuperable difficulties 1 Pet. 3. 16. Having a good conscience 1 Pet. 3. 16 saith the Apostle that whereas they speake evill of you as of evill doers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ q. d. Though they encampe against you beset your houses shoot their arrowes and bullets bitter words and as bad deeds yea should they discharge their murdering Peeces upon you and thinke by firing and storming to carry all before them stand you your ground quit your selves like men retire you like the Cony to this Rock like the Bird to this Hill your Brazen walls of Faith which indeed without any Hyperbole as Jerichoes walls reach up to heaven and that Adamantine Inworke of a good Conscience founded on a Rock no Gates or engines of Hell shall prevaile against But they shall be ashamed when they behold your good and unblameable conversation They shall draw off with dishonour and infamy as Abimeleck when he attempted to fire the Tower of Thebez to which they fled for safety a woman threw a Jud. 9. 51. 52. piece of a Milstone upon his head and sent him packing These indeed shall never be ashamed Ps 127. 5. when they speake with any Enemies in the Gate Is our life a Seafaring condition A good Conscience is the Arke not like that wherein Moses was exposed to drowning and danger Ex. 2. 3. an Arke of Bulrushes daubed with slime and pitch But like that of Noah Pitched Gen. 6. 14. Et Seq within and without with pitch made by Gods own direction wherein thou mayst adventure as he did the whole world both Church and State thereinto God bad him enter therein God shut him and kept him safe it preserved that second Adam and all the reserve of the Creation from that universall Deluge A window it had in the top to let in the light of Heaven not the lest Crevise below to let in a drop of water to endanger it It did shoot off all the Showers that fel downwards and all the Floods that raged upwards The like figure whereunto even Baptisme doth now save us not the putting away the filth of the flesh 1 Pet. 3. 20 21. but the answer of a good Conscience towards God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ 1 Peter 3. 20. 21. Is our Life a Sea-fight These two Faith and good Conscience are our men of warre which we must never yeeld up to any Enemy but chuse rather to perish and sinke in defending them and maintaining our Trust See what Trophees a Christian brings home by making good these two above all Trophees of honour a Conqueror can get from a spoiled Enemy 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this 2 Cor. 1. 12 the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisedome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world but more abundantly to you-wards It had been now an ill time with the Apostle his sufferings did abound v. 5. He was pressed above measure and above humane strength Even to dispaire of life yet even under the sentence and stroke of death He had consolations abounding as much as his afflictions and joyes running over above measure if afflictions above measure And all from this Magazine and Treasury of a good Conscience In pursuite of this point I shall first shew The five particulars to be handled what Conscience is 2 What this good Conscience is 3. Give the particular kinds and sorts of good Consciences 4. Give the reasons of the point and duty 5. Deduce the inferences arising hence by way of Application CHAP. I. Chap. 1. What Conscience is What conscience is TO the first What conscience is This I shall shew in two particulars 1. Explaining what the word Conscience signifies 2. What the thing Conscience is 1. What the word conscience signifies Notatio nominis praemittenda notationi Rei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word in Greeke and Conscientia in Latine and Conscience in English are all compound words and signifie a knowing together and imply two things 1. Some competent measure of knowledge or there can be no conscience Hence the word so translated 1 Cor. 4. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I know Nullius rei mihi conscius sum Beza So. Nil conscire sibi Horat. nothing by my selfe Prov. 8. 12. Wisdome saith Ego sapientia cum Prudentia cohabito I Wisdome dwell with Prudence So Ego Conscientia cum scientia I Conscience dwell with
Christs head is his glory good conscience sets the crowne on faiths head is faiths glory For though there be two great preheminences which faith hath above Conscience the same that the man hath above the woman 1. That the man is not of the woman but the woman of the man hoc est taken out of man so faith is not out of conscience but conscience out of faith 2. Neither was the man created for the woman but the woman for the man Nor was faith created for consciences use but conscience for faiths Yet he concludes v. 11. Neverthelesse neither is the man without the woman nor the woman without the man in the Lord So neither is faith without good conscience nor can good conscience be without faith in the Lord For the Relation is Reciprocall and the dependance and benefit mutuall ver 12. For as the woman is of the man so is the man also by the woman but all things originarily and primarily of God So also here it is as good conscience is of faith so faith is by good conscience but both of God for mutuall comfort and delight And from this couple the Church is propagated and increased to this day These two as Leah and Rachel build up the house of Israel faith bearing children to the Church on good consciences knees and good conscience bringing up those children which faith hath borne at her breasts as Ruth brought forth children for the comfort of Naomi and Naomi brought up those children for the ease of Ruth Hold Faith and you are sure of a good Conscience CHAP. VI. Of a pure Conscience THe second good conscience is the Pure The Conscience of purity Conscience The fine Linnen clean and white Rev. 19. 8. is the righteousnesse of Saints and the Lambes wifes ornament The pure cleane and undesiled conscience is the inherent and internall righteousnesse of the Saints and the Ornament of the Christian Of this good conscience the Apostle speaketh often to Timothy 1 Tim. 1. 5. The pure heart and good conscience and faith unfeigned put together and 3. 9. Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience 2 Tim. 1. 3. I serve God from my forefathers with a pure conscience The former goodnesse of conscience by meanes of faith makes the conscience good before God the justified conscience This of purity makes it good before men the sanctified and renewed conscience that was by the blood of Christ this is by the Spirit and Grace of Christ Of this wee have spoken somewhat already chap. 2. therefore shall need to say the lesse here Blessed are these pure in heart they shall see God Mat. 5. 8. And 1 John 3. 3. He that hath this hope of seeing God as he is must purifie himselfe as God is pure God is a God of pure eyes and cannot Good conscience is of Hab. 1. 13. pure eyes and must not behold iniquity Great are the comforts benefits and priviledges of this pure conscience and high are the promises made to it With whom will God shew himselfe pure but to and with the pure And to the froward he will shew himselfe Psal 18. 26. Lev. 26. 23 24. as froward To them that walk contrary to him he will walke contrary to them Who is he that shall ascend the hill of the Lord Or who shall stand in his holy place He that hath the cleane Psalme 24. 3 4 5. hands and the pure heart who hath not lift up his soule unto vanity This is the man who shall receive the Blessing of the Lord and righteousnesse from the God of his salvation In the pure water thy face may be seen which cannot in muddy water In a pure conscience Gods face is to be seene no where else in earth and by none in heaven but by the pure in heart This is the Mountaine of transfiguration where Mar. 9. 1 2. alone the Kingdom of God is seene coming with power This is the only Isle Patmos where Rev. 1. are the Revelations and Visions of the Sonne of man Here is Gods Booke with seven Seales unsealed This is the Sanctum Sanctorum beyond that in Solomons Temple all overlaid with pure Gold in which God doth dwell sit upon a Mercy-Seat and make known his minde giving answers whensoever consulted with and enquired after herein The pure conscience is the Heart after Gods heart who is all for purenesse he loveth Righteousnesse and hateth all uncleannesse No Sacrifice in which was any Blemish or Spot Psal 11. 7. 45. 7. was to be offered no Sacrifice with Leaven no Priests sonne might come neere to Officiate Lev. 1. 3 10 Lev. 2. 11. Lev. 21. 18. in whom was any blemish no High Priest presume to sacrifice in any legall uncleannesse on him But his standing Rule is I will be sanctified in them that draw neere to me Lev. 10 3. None were to come in to the Persian King but such as were first purified and had passed through twelve whole moneths in a course of purification Esth 2. 12. What manner of persons ought they to be then that shall come before God either to waite on the Ministery or to partake of Ordinances And what measure of Purification should we come addressed withall Now this Purification is that of Conscience especially Heb. 9. 14. and 10 22. Therefore wash thy heart O Jerusalem that thou J●r ● 14. Mat. 23. 26. mayest be saved Let not vaine thoughts lodge in thee Purge the inside of the cup and platter O Pharisee that thy outside may be cleane also But in these dayes there is much of Liberty little of Purity of Conscience Shall we call them pure with the bag of deceitfull weights and with the wicked Ballances as the Prophet Micah saith Micah 6 10 11. Are there yet the Treasures of wickednesse in the house of the wicked and the scant measure which is abominable and shall these be counted pure There is a Generation indeed pure in their own eyes who are yet not washed from their filthinesse There is such a Generation O how lofty are their eyes and their eye-lids lifted up Prov. 30. 12 13. speaking too lively of such a generation as ours is Shall we say such have any thing of conscience or grace in them who can live loosely speak scurrilously and scoffe at purity holinesse strictnesse and all piety Where shall the wicked and ungodly appeare if onely the pure in heart are blessed Take heed then of all impurity and defilement by any allowed sinne whatsoever weakneth Purity wasteth Peace Conscience is the Temple of God whosoever defileth this 1 Cor. 3. 17 Temple destroyes it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is and him will God destroy The cra●●●r flaw in the Bell not so much lesseneth the soundnesse as marreth the sound of the Bell. How few good Consciences are there then in these impure and licentious dayes to be found when purity and strictnesse is exploded as a badge of
kinswoman 7. This man will sooner suffer any prejudice himself then prejudice his neighbour Hee sweareth to his own hurt and damage but changeth not No Prejudice valuable to the wronging Psal 15. 4. of his Neighbours exspectation and his own Conscience It was a famous speech of that noble Pomper when in a time of a great dearth at Rome hee was chosen Curator Annonae and had now made great provision of Corn for the relief of his Citizens being readie to set forward there arose a storm the Pilot persuaded him to stay because of the danger It matters not saith hee hoist up sail put out to Sea it is necessarie for us to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sail to live is not necessarie To stay and reserve our selves is less agreeable with our honour then to go and releeve our countrey is agreeable to our dutie CHAP. XII The tender Conscience THe next good Conscience is the tender The Tender Conscience Conscience a disposition which the world calls Niceness Simpleness Peevishness Timorousness Scrupulousness and what not But it is the Right Temper ever of the gratious heart it is that heart of flesh promised in the New Covenant Ezek. 36. 25. and is that new Divine Nature wrought in the New Creature when once the old heart of stone is taken out it is that Tremulous and Contrite Spirit in which God delights to dwell Isai 57. 15. next to the Companie of an Angel or a glorified Saint Thus saith the High and loftie One that inhabiteth Eternitie whose Name Isa 66. 1 2. is Holie I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the Spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones This was that gracious disposition for which Josiah was praised and spared Because thy heart was tender and thou hast humbled thy self when thou heardest what I spake against this place c. and hast rent thy clothes and wept before mee behold I will gather thee unto thy fathers in peace and thine eies shall not see the evil which I will bring upon this place saith the Lord 2 King 22. 19 20. This was that self-smiting that was still observed in David's heart which shewed him to bee of a right tender Conscience When hee had done a verie small injurie to his deadly enemie Saul the Lords Anointed not touching his life but his lap not cutting his Throat but his Coat his Heart smote him much hee wished it had been to do again hee would not then have done it 1 Sam. 24. 5. and 2 Sam. 24. 10. when hee had committed that other sin of pride in numbering the people His heart smote him again hee cries out I have sinned greatly I have done very foolishly This is that tenderness in converted Ephraim Jer. 31. 19. who smote on his thigh when sensible of his sinful miscarriage and in the penitent Publican who smote himself on his breast Luke 18. 13. A gracious and blessed frame of heart it is But opposite hereunto is that temper of the wicked and graceless heart which the Scripture brands with many ignominious names The Heart of Stone Ezek. 36. 26. The heart of Adamant Zech. 7. 12. The Brawny dedolent Conscience Eph. 4. 19. The spirit of slumber or Lethargie Rom. 11. 8. Eies without sight set in the head The whores forehead Jer. 3. 3. The stiff neck iron sinew and brow of brass Isai 48. 4. The seared Conscience 1 Tim. 4. 2. Greediness of sin Eph. 4. 19. Isai 56. 11. The Enlarged Capacious Grave-like or Hell-like conscience which is as an Open sepulchre receiving all that comes near it entertaineth the most stinking carcase Hab. 2. 5. and is not sensible or offended A whole man at one morsell and is not satisfied Hee is as Hell saith the Prophet that cannot bee filled Prov. 1. 12. or as the daughter of the hors-leach crying unsatiably Give give yet never saith Enough can swallow a whole house yea it may bee a widows house yet can make a Long Praier after all But hath no remorse before nor makes any Restitution after This rusheth furiously into the Battle cryeth Aha at sin as the Job 39. 25. horse at danger This Conscience could drink up Jordan is as impenetrable as Leviathan which esteemeth iron as straw brass as rotten wood when sharp stones are under him he plaies upon them He laughes at the shaking of the speare his heart is a● the nether milstone Job 41. Per totum This hath made a Covenant with Death and is at agreement with Hell He regards neither one nor other nor feareth either God or man But eates the bread of wickedness and drinks the wine of violence whose sleep is less that night when he hath done no mischief in the day Prov. 4. 16 17. No surer note of one going to hell in all the world then this temper This is Satans flesh-brand or the mark of Cain as there is no one surer note of the state and truth of Grace then tenderness of Conscience wheresoever it is found These are past knowledge Psal 14. 4. Past shame Jer. 8. 12. Past feeling Eph. 4. 19. Past sorrow Rom. 2. 5. yea Past fear Psal 36. 1. and at last after these many steps to Hell come to bee Lamech-like Gen. 4. 24. Past hope in this life Jer. 2. 25. And past Recovery or past salvation in the next To prevent this labour after tenderness of Conscience which is that that doth make and keepe and manifest a good Christian A two-fold tenderness But here I must distinguish of tenderness it is two-fold one Culpable faulty and diseased Laudable necessary and from soundnes There is a tenderness of body sometimes which proceeds from Soreness sickness infirmity As there is a lively sen●ibleness proceeding from health and a right constitution So there is a faulty and vicious tenderness and imbecillity of spirit which is five-fold There are five tender Consciences thus A faultie tenderness of Conscience and never an one of them good 1. When one is so tender that he cannot endure to be touched with a reproofe This is a tenderness indeed but an unsound and discased tenderness not so tender but that hee dare adventure on a sinne but he must not be told of his sinne The man who hath a byle when you touch him saith gently I pray it is tender when indeed it is sore and putrifi'd and harbors much filth within it This is an ill tenderness Thus onely wicked ones are tender and squeamish prophecy to us smooth things say they Isa 30. 10. Give us of your softest Pillows Ez. 13. 18. Oh how tender was Amaziah the priest of Bethel Amos 7. 10. He complaines of Amos as a turbulent and factious Preacher The Land is not able to bear al his words he must be restrained How tender were Jeremies accusers Jer. 38. 4. We beseech thee let this man be put to death
to suffer for Conscience onely one thing they could not endure viz. to suffer in and from Conscience And here might I write a whole Volume of the sufferings of Primitive and later times or transcribe many large Volumes of Ecclesiastical Histories treating of this subject in their Martyrologies They were deprived of States degraded of Offices yet did bear it they were imprisoned they were exiled yet did endure it they were slain racked tortured yet did they suffer it Some were hanged some headed some were burned some drowned some devoured of wilde beasts some pull'd in pieces by men more savage then beasts yet they did all bear it and rejoyced they suffered for Conscience and for God Attalus and Alexander were twice bayted with wilde beasts to be torn in pieces Eccl. Hist l. 5. cap. 1. by them as Eusebius reports Attalus escaping the beasts was reserved to other torments to be burnt to death in an iron chair heated red-fire-hot yet did hee bear all Macedonius Theodulus and Tatianus laid Socrat. hist l. 3. cap. 13. upon a Gredyron and broiled to death yet did they bear it Marcus Arethusius was stripped naked then had his bodie all over daubed with Broth Butter and Honey then hung up in a Cage in the hot scorching Sun to be eaten up with flies and stung to death with wasps yet did he suffer all rather then give one half-peny to re-edifie that Idol Temple in his diocess which he had formerly plucked down To be eaten up with flies and stung with wasps he did account farre more desirable that he might preserve his Theodoret. Lib. 3. cap. 6. Conscience in Puritie and Peace then to bee eaten up of horrour and stung with Hornets if to preserve his life he had delivered up his Conscience There were many Christians together stopt up in Lakes or Caves artificially made close which Lakes or Ditches were filled with a companie of Dormise kept hungrie to gnaw and feed upon the poor Christians they all the while bound hand and foot that they could not keep off those hunger-starved creatures which were kept Mag. Cent. 4. cap. 3. Ex Theodoreto without meat also purposely that they might fasten upon the bodies of those godly men which lingring and miserable death they under-went yet was not their faith and patience at all born down saith the Historian They chose much rather to lie in such a Lake artificially stopt and to be eaten up alive with those Vermin their Conscience being preserved then to yeeld up this Fort of Conscience for fear of any earthly torments to be eaten up while alive with guilt and horrour of Conscience And when dead to be bound hand and foot and cast into an infernal Lake of fire and brimstone eternally stopt up there to be conversant with filthy spirits and to be eaten up with those hellish furies Yea to make an end for it is impossible to mention all Lactantius saith not onely the men among the Cbristians and those of stronger years and hearts but even our women and little children saith he have Latrones robusti corporis viri ejusmodi lacerationes perferre nequeunt exclamant gemitus edunt Nostri autem ut de viris taceam pueri mulierculae tortores suos taciti vincunt expromere illis gemitum necignis potest Lact. 1. 5. cap. 13. endured all torments and been too hard for their Tormentors no rack no fire could fetch so much as a groan from them which the stoutest Theeves and Malefactors among their Persecutors could not undergo but they would roare and crie out through impatience and disabilitie to endure them But how little of this good Conscience is to be found now adaies when Christ saith Who is on my side who Our times have brought forth many a degenerate Christian silken and satten Christians Christians for the right hand and the left if Christ have any Kingdoms Mannours or Honours to bestow But if a Cross they all forsake him and fly and shift for themselves as the terrified Disciples did the night of his Passion Luther call's some of the Divines of his Time Theologos Gloriae they would not suffer Some faithfull Ones were called Theologi Crucis so have we many Saints now adaies who are rather Triumphant Saints then Saints militant Well we know who hath said He that is ashamed of me I shall one day be ashamed of him he that loveth his life shall lose Mar. 8. 38. it but he that loseth his life for my sake shall finde it Joh. 12. 25. There is no condition or sort of men have in Scripture more abundant and more excellent Promises then these that suffer And none in Scripture have more Cautions and Rules given then those set down to regulate and circumscribe our sufferings for all that suffer cannot say they suffer for Conscience and for God and then what thank can they exspect from God if they suffer for their own default they must as we say thank themselves There be four kindes of sufferings which a Four ill kindes of sufferings good Conscience can have no comfort in therefore must seek to avoid 1. That we put not our selves upon Voluntarie and Arbitrarie suffrings and place Religion and Conscience in it when we have done thus did the Baalists of old who did cur and lance themselves that the bloud followed 1 Ki. 18. 28. Thus do the blinde Papists at this day Pennance and Discipline themselves out of a superstitious opinion of merit or satisfaction but they have no thank of God because though it may proceed from some kinde of Conscience yet it is a blinded and deluded Conscience not that Conscience towards God which Peter spake of Therefore 2 Pet. 2. 19. God will say to them Who required this at your hands Isai 1. 12. And as to them who offered their sons and daughters to Moloch It never came into my heart neither did I command them saith the Lord Jer. 7. 31. These things have indeed a shew of wisdom in will-worship and humilitie and neglecting of the Col. 2. ult bodie not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh But these are not the sufferings of Christians nor can these say They bear these as the marks of the Lord Jesus in their bodies Gal. 6. 17. 2. That we pull not upon our selves Vnnecessarie and unwarrantable sufferings by a preposterous and precipitate intermedling in businesses out of our way and calling This is to suffer as busie-bodies in other mens matters But that in the Apostles Language is clean another thing then to suffer as a Christian therefore he doth oppose them and is all one as to suffer as an evil doer therefore they are joyned together 1 Pet. 4. 15 16. 3. That we pull not upon our selves Necessarie but deserved evil sufferings from the hand of Justice for our evil doings These may say with the Thief suffering with Christ we have the same Crosses that he
first begins to li●e and the man ceaseth to live when once he ceaseth to feel So it is in the Soul the life of grace appears sooner in the sensibleness of Conscience spiritual Compunctions Heart-smitings and Heart-prickings for sin and guilt spirituall fears of his danger sorrow for his sin and miscrie then by any other tokens whatsoever 2. Tactus as Origine primus so it is Necessitate maximus usu summus of greatest use and absolute Necessitie It is first in the Original of life appearing and the most necessarie above all the other senses in the continual course of life A man may want his sight yet be a healthful and understanding man he may want his hearing yet bee a very active and apprehensive man he may want smell and taste yet be a strong man but if he want his feeling he is a dead man These serve more to the bene esse of natural life then to the simple being So is Conscience absolutely necessarie to the very being of a Christian a man may be short in parts defective in knowledge weak in duties have lost his comforts never had the Ornaments of Abilities Expressions Experiences that some others have yet a very good Christian But if he have lost his Conscience he is a dead Christian altogether 3. Tactus they say is Hominis Optimus The other senses other creatures excel man in Vultur odaratu the Dog and Vulture in smelling in sight the Eagle in hearing the mastiff c. But in feeling man which is the most noble and excellent Creature excelleth most he hath the most quick and tender Touch which considered I know no sufficient reason to say of it that Tactus is digniute ultimus when they confess it is Origine primus necessitate maximus So the best Christian excells in the tenderest and quickest Touch of Conscience Others may out-go him in Excellencie of speech and wisdom of words worldly men may have stronger brains to out-wit and over-reach the childe of God who is not so wise in his generations as the children of this world they have Luk. 16. 8. the finer wits stronger memories sharper inventions the better expressions he hath still the better part and is the better man because he hath the better Conscience 4. Whereas other Senses have a particular Organ of their own and lie confined to a narrow roome Hearing lies in the Ear only Seeing in the Eie Taste in the Tongue or Palate Smell in the Nostrils Feeling hath no such narrow confinement but is extended all the bodie over within and without So is Conscience of vast and universall extent over the whole man over all our actions intentions words motions from first to last Faith looks to Promises Fear to Threats Hope to futures Obedience looks to duties Repentance to sins Conscience looks to all This is the great Superintendent and oversees all all Graces duties all sins and snares Therefore saith one well Conscience is not confined to any one part of the Soul it is not in the understanding alone not in the memorie will affections alone but it Dyke hath place in all the parts of the Soul Conscience is the great Mistress of the hous she as soon as she is up calls up all her maids sets them all about their work and calls Pro. 31. 15 27. them to their account 3. The virtue and worth of a good Conscience is most excellent above all other things because it most fortifies the soul with strength against and gives victorie over all Adversities it carries the soul unwounded through the greatest afflictions It 's like Oile that alwaies swims aloft whatsoever waters of distress are below It is as the Ark which hath a window open in the Top to let in the light of Heaven This like Elias Mantle hath divided the waters and earried godly souls through a floud of miseries as on drie land This hath encouraged them in the midst of fire and faggots hath accompanied them in Dens and Caves and made Martyrs sing in midst of Prisons and flames It overcomes all his tormenting Persecutors It 's like the Anvile which breaks all that is beat upon it but is it self by all strokes made more firm It makes a man like a brazen wall Jer. 1. 18. All may fight none can prevail against it at sight of fear it saith Aha At destruction and famine it doth laugh and fears not the beasts of prey Job 5. 22. This like Noahs Ark to which it is compared 1 Pet. 3. 21. is pitcht within and without Ideo bituminata intrinsecus ne aquam emitteret suam extrinsecus ne admitteret alienam Aug. It is pitcht within that it may not let out any of his own water of comfort laid in for his own necessities and relief And pitcht without that it may not let in any thing from without that may endanger the safetie of the ship It keeps in all that may do Good it keeps out all that may do hurt It is the Christians Armourie or Magazine like the Tower of David furnished with a thousand Bucklers Cant. 4. 4. or like the house of the forest of Lebanon wherein Solomon put three hundred shields of beaten gold 1 King 10. 17. This will inable a man with undaunted courage to hold up his head before any Judgement seat Act. 23. 1. yea before God's Tribunal 1 Joh. 3. 21. Keep but Conscience safe it will keep thee safe Keep it in puritie and it will keep thee in peace It will make Tranquilla Conscientia tranquillat omnia thy face to shine as Stevens did The chearful Conscience maketh the chearful Countenance Prov. 15. 13. This will bee a drie house to thee in a wet daie it will make alwaies fair weather within doores what ever weather it is abroad Thou shalt sub tecto imbrem exaudire and thou shalt ever finde it fair above head what ever it is under foot This makes nothing of the Viper of Detraction Envie and Malignitie at which another man would have swoln or sworn but without any more ado shakes it off into the fire whence it came Premat corpus fremat Diabolus trahat mundus illa semper erit secura Let men world and divels do their worst Bernard de Consc ca. 8. they cannot hurt Conscience This is the whole skin which it is good sleeping in for a torn Conscience is the worst rent The wounded spirit who can bear If Prov. 18. 14. thou suffer Conscience to be torn to keep thy skin whole the rent is made worse if thou lose thy Conscience to save thy life thou art a Loser not a Saver and if thou lose thy l●fe to save thy Conscience thou art the greatest gainer by that which the world calls greatest loss Skin for skin and all that I have to save my life saith the world in Satans Language Job 2. 4. Skin for skin and life for life to save my Conscience saith the godly man 4. Good
be not regarded in his two first Offices he will be known in his two last if his Ministeriall reproofs and Magistraticall rods be slighted he will as a witness against thee and a Judge over thee chasten thee with Scorpions Did not I speak to you will Conscience say as Reuben to his brethren Gen 42. 22 and you would not hear then see now what is come on it Now his bloud is required 4. I might adde in the fourth place that which followes in the Text that when once any have betraied their trust and delivered up this Fort to Satan they are ever after cashiered God's service and are by him delivered up to Satans custodie and an evil Consciences mercie either to be misled by an erroneous Conscience or terrified with an accusing Conscience He that is filthy let him Rev. 22. 11 Zech. 11. 9. be filthie and that which perisheth let it perish saith the Lord in his fiercest anger as they had no love to the truth so they shall have no Judgement to discern lies but be given over to strong delusions to beleeve any lying doctrines That all they may be damned who received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 2 Thes 2. 10 11 12. Thus it befell these Hymeneus and Alexander who having once renounced Conscience and forfeited their faith they were discharged any more emploiment They have no more part in Christ nor lot in the Church but are delivered up to Satan among blasphemers CHAP. XVII Of the difficultie in getting and keeping a good Conscience and escaping a bad WE have alreadie spoken of the excellency The third Reason from the difficultie of getting the good Conscience and escaping the bad and benefit of the good Conscience and the danger and mischief of the bad But here we shall see the difficultie of getting and keeping the good Conscience is as great as the excellencie or benefit when had and the difficultie of escaping an ill Conscience is almost as great as the danger of it What can be so hardly got or kept as the one what so hard to scape and misse as the other Consider it in these three respects 1. First in respect of Satan it is hard to get and keep the one and escape the other Satan all his spite is at good Conscience all his aim is to make a bad He envies a man nothing but his good Conscience not riches not honours no learning parts duties not mirth pleasure not his peace but onely a good Conscience He envied not the Serpent his subtilty he could make use of it not Pharaoh his Kingdom not Ahithophel his Policy Gen. 3. nor Absalom his Beautie nor Haman his Court-honours or State-offices nor Dives his wealth and good cheer He could tell how to make use of all Yea he will offer his help to men to get them riches honours offices learning so they will quit good Conscience He will grant any Articles you can propound so he may gain this Fort. He can make use of all other things parts power policie but a good Conscience is never for his turn in a Magistrate or Minister or in a private person but it is constantly against him and he against it and therefore he despairs of doing any good on it as they said of Luther when some perswaded the Pope to attempt to take him off by offering him some great preferment and Church promotions it was answered it was in vain to trie Germana illa bestia aurum non curat That German beast Mel. Adain vita Luther said they cared not at all for all their gold Yea if a man be plundered of all his estate and stormed out of all his out-works his riches friends children power places yea stormed out of his nearer comforts out of his faith and hopes out of his prayers and promises all on the sudden surprized if he retreat to a good Conscience and make good this last hold by a still retaining of his integritie Satan will be repelled with shame and losse and draw off with dishonour wearie of laying his siege against so impregnable a Fort. Job had lost all but keeping good Conscience alone and manfullie defending this piece he recovered all again he had lost and his Job 42. 12 13. last state was double to his first 2. In respect of thy self or of the work it self thou wilt finde a hard task of it to get or keep a good Conscience in an evil age it will require thy greatest skill and utmost diligence So the Apostle found it Act. 24. 16. therefore he saith Herein do I exercise my self Mr. Harris Mr. Ward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 meditari exercere se in re aliqua Gagnei In genere notat severius exercitium Religionis Christianae sive praeparare se ad certamen Vid. Leigh Crit. Sacr. to keep alwaie a Conscience void of offence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word signifies saith one I use all my skill diligence and constancie together I lay my policie or bend my wit saith another godly Divine All which tell us it is the Christians master-piece to look well to a good Conscience A work of continuall exercise to an Apostle himself Look but well into it and thou wilt f●nde there is work enough in it as much as thou canst turn thee too To keep a Merchants book is a piece of art requiring skill and care To keep this book well is the art of arts To keep thy Masters accounts if thou be a servant thy Lords if thou be a steward thy Shop-book if thou be a tradesman requires much care and diligence What is it to keep thy soul-book to keep Gods book to keep this Dooms-day-book for so Conscience is 3. Look yet further and in respect of others thou wilt see it more difficult still How many hast thou seen miscarry in it who is sufficient for this work How should we fear This is much insisted on in the Text and given in charge to Timothy Timothy see thou war a good warfare and look well to thy charge hold fast faith and a good Conscience for all have not done so Of many that have run in a race most have lost but one ohtained the prize of many that have fought most have been foiled or wounded or slain or fled but one crowned Run not uncertainly fight not saintly look well to thy Conscience And here are many Items couched together in this place 1. Some Not one single person in an age but it is the case of many not one mans onely many have miscarried and it is incident to all Look well to it Be not high-minded but fear Rom. 11. 20. 2. Some have put away Conscience A monstrous vile act for men sometimes of better principles to send Conscience packing like a vagabond or to thrust it out of doors as if it were the Son of the Bondwoman It is the most unkinde and ungracious act that can be to disclaim Conscience
Ce●titudo Sal●tis non e●t ab aliis neque alias per●ipitur ni● ab iis qui una●um fide ●●tinent bo●am Conscienti●m idque dwn eam retinent sine graviore aliquo vulnere quod à peccatis iis infertur quae vastare solent Conscientiam Dr Ames in this respect Look saith he how much thy Faith and good Conscience do rise or fall so is thy Comfort and Assurance of Salvation more or less Therefore saith he Assurance of Salvation is neither had by other men nor by any other manner then by those who together with Faith do keep a go●d Conscience and that onely while they keep Conscience from any greater wound which is usually given by those sins which do waste and make havock of Conscience And at last he concludes Qui igitur sine ulla fidei Resipiscentiae sensu aut cu●â certò sperant Salutem praesumendo sperant sperando pereunt Whosoever without care had of Faith Repentance and good Conscience persuade themselves they have Assurance of Salvation that Perswasion is their Presumption and that Presumption will be their Perdition Conscience doth not use to collogue and flatter any man it will tell every man his own If you make it sad it will make you as sad And if you be found to it what you should not wonder not if you finde that to you what you would not who can make me glad but the same who was made sorrie by me said the Apostle in another case 2 Cor. 2. 2. When thou hast put away Puritie of Conscience wonder not if thou wantest Peace of Conscience The Bell when cracked loseth not onely his former soundness but the pleasantness of his former sound The crackt Conscience makes but harsh musick What man could exspect a song of the Lord in a Babylon of sin There was no voice of Bridegroom or Bride or sound of Harp to be heard any more Revel 18. 23. But the Harpers and Singers are onely to be found upon Mount Sion Revel 14. 1 2. 8. This informs us whence it is that many come to die so Tragically despairingly and to make such fearfull ends They have like Zimri set their own house of Conscience afire and now must perish in it Some have attempted to make away themselves some have done it as Saul Judas and Abithophel some have accursed themselves as Spira some have blasphemed God as Cain and they mentioned Revel 16. 11. All fruits of this shipwrack of Conscience All these fierie and devouring flames break out of the AEtna of a sulphurie and hellish Conscience Maxima violatio Conscientiae maximum peccatum Ames The more thou doest wound another mans Conscience thou dost offend against Charitie and therefore dost the more wound Christ 1 Cor. 8. 12. The more thou woundest and grievest thy own Conscience thou offendest against Pietie and therefore thou sinnest against and grievest the holy Ghost Paul while a Pharisee had done worse acts then Judas he had been a raging Persecutor a desperate blasphemer of Christ a compeller of others to blaspheme he had his hand in the bloud of holy Martyrs Judas did none of these hideous Acts yet Paul saved Judas damned Paul found mercie because what he did he did ignorantly in unbelief he had never gone 1 Tim. 1. 13 against the light of his own Conscience Therefore he said Act. 23. 1. he had walked in all good Conscience before God to that day The like 2 Tim. 1. 3. I thank God whom I serve from my forefathers with a pure Conscience But as for Judas he could have no cloak for his sin he went fully against the clear light of his own Conscience therefore he had the more sin and the more horrour The consumption of Conscience doth not onely bring the outward state into a consumption that such die beggers or bankrupts but it as usually brings the inward man into fits of Convulsions which are hardly cured and at last they die in one of those fits in great horrour When Conscience hath been often fretted and grated upon by known and allowed sins at length it breeds an Vlcer in Conscience which is the most tormenting disease in the world beyond any Vlcer in Bowels or Bladder These live and die in great extremities of Miserie The stroke at Conscience is the stroke at the fift Rib the fatall and deadly stroke 9. Lastly it informs us whence it is that some have arrived at the highest pitch of impietie to commit that sin of sins that sin against the holy Ghost It is ever first by muzzling and snubbing their Conscience and afterwards intreating it worse wasting worrying and stabbing of it No other way of coming up to this incurable disease and unpardonable state but by violation of Conscience Keep this fierie sword in thy hand The Word of God turning every way in the door of Conscience and the Tree of Life is guarded The Gate of Paradise kept no danger of committing the sin against the holy Ghost But on the other side when thou dost cross the Line and swim through and over and beyond thy Conscience then is the Gulf fixed and the Gate of Hell shut that there is no coming thence for them that would as no coming thither but over this Gulf. CHAP. XX. Of the second Application of the Point by way of Lamentation THe second Use is of Lamentation And it may 1. Be a Generall Lamentation carrying a Wo in the mouth of it for the Generall want of Good Consciences in this age And I may justly make it as large as that of our Saviour Matth. 18. 7. Wo to the world saith he because of offences All the world is faultie in this kinde more or less So may we say Wo to the world because of ill Consciences All the world in generall and most called Christians in particular herein being blame-worthy Run to and fro into the Cities of Israel and in the streets of Jerusalem Jer. 5. 1. and enquire and see if you can finde a man of Conscience in this Generation We may change Job's Quaere Vbinam invenienda est sapientia Job 28. 12 20. ubinam est locus Intelligentiae Where is wisdom to be found and where is the place of understanding into ubinam invenienda est Conscientia ubinam est Locus Integritatis where is Conscience to be found and what is the Place of Integritie The best of men that make Enquirie after her complain that shee is not seen so much abroad as she was wont to be The most of men say that shee is either departed or drawing on toward her departure And prophane ones say that Conscience was hanged many a day ago indeed my Text tells us that shee was drowned long ago and perished in shipwrack but they are much mistaken to say it was good Conscience for it was the ill Conscience that perished The Good Conscience fears neither the Gallowes nor Hell it is the best Preservative against both But sad it
far from me vanitie and lies With David Deliver my soul O Lord from lying lips Pro. 30. 8. Psal 120. 2. and from a deceitfull tongue Lord cast out this unclean Spirit and Create in me a clean heart and renew in me a right spirit No shipwrack so perilous no disease so dangerous no deceiver so deceitfull n abysse so deep no death so deadly no hell so dark no pit so steep to fall into and so narrow to get out of as the evill Conscincee But I come to the Exhortation which contains a double charge The text is no other then an Apostolicall Exhortation or divine charge therefore this Use must be made or the chiefe Use is not made yet First to each Christian secondly to the Minister especially First to each Christian who makes Conscience of any thing that he especially make it his care to get a good Conscience and to keep it As Solomon of Divine Wisdome so I of Conscience wherein is all practical Wisdome Above all thy getting get that saith he Pro. 4. 5. 7. So say I above all gettings whatsoever get a good Conscience and whatsoever thou gettest more get it still with a good Conscience and with all keeping keep thy conscience keep it pure keep it clean keep it in peace keep it thy friend keep it as thou wouldest keep the apple of thine eye Life and Death are in the power of Conscience it is the principal thing therefore above all getting and keeping look to this exercise thy self daily with the Act. 24. 16. Apostle herein to have thy Conscience alwayes on thy side and have it without offence both to God and man What the Orator answered to one demanding what was principally necessary to make a good Orator Pronounciation said he What second Pronounciation What third Pronounciation he answered still as if Pronounciation did chiefly and wholly make a compleat Orator So do you ask what is most necessary to make a good Christian I answer Conscience And what next if you ask I answer still Conscience And what again Conscience still say I. As of the Scholler comming from the University when he hath been a Student for many years the best Testimony which can be given him is that he hath profited Tam doctrinâ quam moribus In Learning and Religion So the best Testimony that can be given of a Christan going from the Church when he hath been a frequent hearer is That he hath profited tam scientiâ quam Conscientiâ both in science and in Conscience To back and strengthen this exhortation I shall first lay down some Motives to inforce then some Means to direct to the better attaining and retaining a good Conscience Let this move first that God doth weigh Motive 1 and try the Conscience of a man The Lord weigheth the Spirits saith Solomon Gold and Pro. 16. 2. Silver men do weigh Grace and Spirits men cannot God weigheth not Gold or Silver or Honours or Estates but he onely weigheth the Spirits and Consciences of men So much of Conscience as is in any person or duty or action or suffering so much of thank and worth with God This is thank-worthy with God if a man for Conscience suffer and take it patiently That ●ction is denominated good that proceeds from a principle of Conscience that suffering good which is for Conscience So much Conscience toward God so much Comfort is coming to thee from God So much Conscience before God so much confidence before God But on the other side if Conscience be Motive 2 wanting a man shall suffer losse of all he hath and lose the thing he hath done or suffered or expended When a man shall say with Jehu See my zeal for the Lord I have fasted I hove fought I have been active I have suffered God will say Have you fasted at all to me have you done all this out of Conscience When you fasted was it not to your selves and when you did eat was it not to your selves therefore walk in the sparks which you have kindled If you have done well and truly Conscientiously and Religiously as Jotham said once do you then rejoyce in Jud. 9. 19. Conscience and let Conscience rejoyce in you but if otherwise a fire will break out of that bramble the evil Conscience and consume you and all your works What a mighty stickler was Jehu a man of an active and impetuous spirit yet he lost his reward for all his pains and seeming zeal his Conscience was not right Ananias lost his cost charges after he had contributed so much Alexander lost his reward and comfort after he had suffered so much Judas lost al after he had followed Christ so long and preached Christ to others so often Mot. 3 This leads a man to perfect and compleat happinesse both here and hereafter Here in this world it brings two the greatest benefits being the onely way Ad bene beatèque vivendum Ad bene beatèque moriendum In Life Ad bene beateque vivendum A good Conscience is the onely way to the good and blessed life This makes the good dayes whether thou be in prosperity or in adversity First if in Prosperity this will be as a hedge about all thou hast As the Candle of God in thy Tabernacle as the widdowes Cruse and Barrel will never fail of somewhat to supply and support thee 2. If in Adversity this will be like the good Houswifes candle that goes not out by night Or like Israels pillar of fire that will not leave thee in a wildernesse This like Ruth to Naomi will stick to thee stay by thee goe with thee where thou liest it will lie and as thou farest it will take part with thee when all other comforts and dearest friends like Orpah lift up the voyce and weep and take their leave of thee This like Ittai the Gittite to David saith 2 Sam. 15. 21. as the Lord liveth in what place soever thou art be it in life or death there will I be This turns Reproach into Honour takes up a stigmatizing invective as if it were a Garland throwes the viper into the fire and feels no harm This fears neither fury of Tyrants nor fire of furnace It dreads neither Anakim nor Emim nor Zamzummim This makes a man more than a Conqueror Rom. 8. 37. which is a very high and bold expression of a poor Paul why Paul who art thou A Conquerour is the highest Title he gives Laws to Kingdomes his place is above that of a King it hath been held more glory to make a conquest than to wear a Crown Al Kings have been crowned all Kings have not been Conquerours yet are we Conquerours and more than Conquerours First The Conquerour may overcome to day yet be overcome to morrow of the same enemy Victorem a victo superari saepe videmus Secondly The Conquerour may find the same enemy increasing by new Associations and then shake of his Yoke Thirdly The Conquerour
cannot say though he have the better Sword but his enemy may have the better Cause that the other cause may after carry it Fourthly The Conqueror may pay so dear for his victory that he doth not greatly joy in it Ezek. 32. 27. Fifthly The Conqueror may when all is done go down to Hell with his sword by his side and his weapons of war under his head though he was the terror of the mighty in the land of the living and then his iniquity shall lie heavie on his bones But we are more than Conquerours we have overcome to day and shall to morrow our cause is a victorious cause carries not Fortunam Caesaris but Honorem Christi therefore shall go forth conquering and to conquer and let Satan and all his Confederates unite their forces Principalities Powers height depth we fear them not all we are secure of victory and safety O glorious and happy condition when a man hath lost all he is as if he had gained all the world when killed all the day long as if he was triumphing all the day long I suffer and am bound saith the Apostle but the word of God is not bound my Cause is not bound my Conscience Dr. Stoughton in his Sermon before K. James is not bound a man takes no hurt while Conscience is safe Excellently Dr. Stoughton to this purpose Job was more happy when he fate upon the dung-hill than Adam when he sinned in Paradise because though his body were dissolved into worms and every worm acted by a Devill as Origen would have it to increase his torment yet he had not eaten the forbidden fruit which bred this worm of Conscience and made him fly from God The Bride that hath good Chear within and good musick and a good Bridegroome with her may be merry though the hail chance to rattle upon the tyles without upon her wedding-day Though the world should rattle about his ears a man may sit merry that sits at the Feast of a good Conscience Nay the Child of God by virtue of this in the midst of the waves of affliction is as secure as that child which in a Shipwrack was upon a plank in his mothers lap till she awaked him securely sleeping and then with his pretty countenance sweetly smiling and by and by sportingly asking a stroke to beat the naughty waves and at last when they continued boystrous for all that sharply chiding them as though they had been but his play-fellowes O the innocency O the comfort of Peace O the tranquility of a spotlesse mind There is no Heaven so clear as a good Conscience So that learned Doctor Good Conscience is to a man his closest and dearest friend that like Baruch to Jeremy will visit him in prison and will keep his Evidences safe for him in a time of common conflagration and calamity Jer. 32. 11 14. Or rather it is that Earthen vessel wherein alone our Evidences of our heavenly state are put and preserved from being corrupted both our Evidences our sealed Evidence and our open Evidence for a Christian must have two the sealed Evidence of Justification and the open Evidence of Sanctification are kept in this Vrne as Baruch was commanded to put both Jeremies Evidences of his purchase the sealed and the open in an Earthen vessel Yea good Conscience is not onely the Non est utilius remedium nec certius testimonium futerae beatitudinis bonâ Conscientiâ Bern. de in t domo preserver of Assurance but is a part of it for what is Assurance of Salvation but in the originall an Act of Grace passed in favour of a poor repenting and beleeving sinner in the Court of Heaven entred and ingrossed in the Book of Life which because procured by the Price of Bloud is written out in the precious Blood of Christ signed and sealed by the impresse of the Spirit of promise which is the Fathers and the Sons Agent on this behalf and attested by good Conscience as that which sets to his his seal next God and is then delivered into the hand of Faith as Gods Act and Deed for the sole Use and Benefit of a rightly purified Conscience Or Assurance is a Transcript taken out of the book of life that sealed book sealed in the bosome and counsell of the Father now unclasped by the hand of the Lamb written fair out in his Bloud attested by the Spirit of God within and endorsed without with the graces and fruits of the Spirit and at last passed in the Court and entred in the Office of good Conscience This this is the Assurance of the Saints when Gods Spirit attests to our Spirit and again our Spirit doth withal consent with the Spirit of God The other benefit of good Conscience 2 At Death here is at death when as it enables and directs ad benè beatèque moriendum an undertaking that all Philosophy could never make good nor did attempt but did onely promise the way ad benè beatèque vivendum yet fell short of that Conscience is the way to well-living it is the onely way to well-dying This gives rejoycing as the Apostle saith to him that is under the sentence and stroke of death and is now despairing altogether of this life 2 Cor. 1. 9. Good Conscience as it is sweeter than life so it is stronger than death and the good man and his Conscience are like Saul and Jonathan lovely in their life and which is above all in death they are not divided Hujusmodi comparandae sunt opes quae cum naufragio simul enatent Prideaux History pag. 247 The goods embarqued in good Conscience are the onely goods which will be saved when there is any shipwrack of State or Life And those are the goods we should get said the Emperour Lewes of Bavyer which in a shipwrack can swim out as well as thy self A saying also which Q. Mary is said to have Englished and much delighted in These are two great Benefits in this Life here But there are two greater for hereafter Conscience helping Ad tutò intrepidèque comparendum Ad Gloriosè aeternèque triumphandum 3 At judgment Conscience hath two other kindnesses which it will doe for the Soule beyond those two fore-named in life and death It will stand a man in stead when he is to make his appearance before the Tribunal of God Where Courage dares not shew his face nor Eloquence open his mouth where Majestie hath no respect and Greatnesse no favour and as the Martyr said Where money bears no mastery There good Conscience is known and befriended there it dares appear thither it doth appeal when the King and the Captain and the Great man and the Mighty man and the Chief Commander and the Rich and the Bond and the Free cry to the mountains to hide them and to the rocks to fall Rev. 6. 15. 16. on them that they may not appear Then doth good Conscience lift up
his head this is the day it hath longed for and the place where it desires to be heard 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. Hereby we know saith the Apostle that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him for if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence or boldnesse before God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Libertatem aut audaciam quid vis dicendi This will make the Godly man in that great Audit to give up his account with joy and not with grief 4. To all Eternity Conscientia bona perfectè tranquilla et lae●a est formalis essentialis beatitudo sanctorum in vita futura Ames de Cons l. 1. c. 15. Lastly which is above all it leads him the way ad Gloriosè Regnandum aeternùmque Triumphandum It is the step to the highest glory and is the state of highest Beatitude To be feasted with the fruits of a good Conscience this is Angels food and one of the sweet-meats of Heaven As the evil accusing and tormenting Conscience is one of the greatest miseries in Hell causing the fire never to be quenched because their worm never dieth So the good Conscience is one principal Delicate in Heaven Therefore in that day Christ will not onely tell the Godly how much he hath done and suffered for them but he will tell his Father what they have done and suffered for him I was hungry these have fed me thirsty these gave me drink These have kept the word of my Patience These were not ashamed of my Name where Satan had his Throne These have kept their Garments unspotted therefore they shall walk with me in white Hence it is that the Crown of Glory is not onely called a Crown of Grace because the gift of God But the Crown of Righteousnesse because the Reward of this warfare for faith and good Conscience Then shall the Godly be satisfied from himself and the fruit of his hands shall be given him Then shall flow Pro. 12. 14 forth from the belly of each Beleever River● of living water rivers of Peace Joy Comfort to all Eternity where Repentance and Faith and Hope and Patience and Knowledge and Tongues and Prophecying shall cease there shall good Conscience continue and in it Life and Joy and Glory Consider on the other side the miseries of an ill Conscience in every condition both in Mot. 4 life death and after both First in life In midst of prosperity he can have no security Job 20. per totum read especially ver 16 17 22 23 24. He shall suck the poyson of Asps the Vipers tongue shall slay him He shall not see the Rivers the Flouds the Brooks of Honey and Butter In the fulnesse of his sufficiency he shall be in straights Every hand of the wicked shall come upon him when he is about to fill his belly God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him and shall rain it upon him while he is yet eating c. and so Job 15. 21. A dreadful sound is in his ears in prosperity the destroyer shall come upon him As Adonijah in the day of his Coronation riseth from the table he and all his Guests fly and shift for themselves a short Reign a mourning Feast Or as Belshazzar in his Banquet when he sees the Hand-writing dread and horrour seizeth on him And as the Syrians upon a secret noise God caused 2 Kin. 7. 6. them to hear fled disorderly from their Tents leaving all their wealth and good chear a booty to the hunger-famished Israelites What torment like that of an ill Conscience of which that forenamed Authour Dr. Stoughton ubi supra excellently speaks All outward blessings saith he cannot make that man happy that hath an ill Conscience no more than warm cloathes can produce heat in a dead carkasse if you would heap never so many upon it There is no peace to the wicked Aut si pax bello pax ea deterior For this man in his greatest fortunes is but like him who is worshipt in the street with cap and knee but as soon as he is stept within doors is cursed and rated by a scolding wife Like him that is lodged in a Bed of Ivory covered with cloth of Gold but all his bones within are broken Like a book of Tragedies bound up in Velvet all fair without but black within the leaves are Gold but the lines are bloud O the rack O the torment O the horrour of a guilty mind There is no hell so dark as an evill conscience Secondly but much more in adversity ill Conscience that hath long lien silent and quiet is apt to cry out and fly in the face as Josephs Brethren in their distresse were forced to cry out Gods hand was just upon them Their sin which was before Peccatum susurrans is now Peccatum clamans such cry out as Saul in his distresse I am sore distressed the Philistims make war upon 1 Sam. 28. 15. me and the Lord hath forsaken me and answers me no more then poor soul he goes to hell for comfort and accordingly he sped Such have neither Joy in Life nor Hope in death Vtrinque timidi as Eusebius Euseb l 6. cap. 42. speaks of some in the time of the Persecution under Decius Cowardly and unsound Christians who were timidi cum ad moriendum ●um ad sacrifi●andum A lamentable case neither would their Conscience serve to let them Sacrifice to the Heathen Idols nor would their heart serve them to die for refusing So were they in a miserable strait between two dangers of losing Life and wounding Conscience and could no way satisfy themselves whereas good Conscience had seen in such a case what was presently to be chosen Ill Conscience never made good Martyr yet But there are three times especially wherein ill Conscience proclaimeth Terror and Rev. 8. 13. as the Angell in the Revelation flies over the head of a sinner crying Woe Woe Woe First One Woe in life Secondly Two Woes at death Thirdly But Three Woes at the day of Judgement 1 Woe in this life The first woe is in this life But this how dreadfull soever is the least because the shortest and hath an end in a little space of a few dayes or years therefore it is said the first woe is passed but behold two worse woes come shortly upon it Rev. 9. 12. The Second woe is at death This is a great 2. Woe at death woe double to the former the furnace is heated seven times hotter than it could be in this Life And as the Apostle saith of the Godlies afflictions all the sufferings of this present time are not to be compared to that Glory that is to follow so may we say all the sufferings of this life to the wicked whether in Body or in Spirit are nothing to be compared to those that follow This is a long lasting woe But yet of the second woe it is also said
his Wine to wash cleanse and search it if defiled his Oyl to mollifie supple and heal it if bruised festered This is the first and great Experiment to be used The second is like unto it namely this 2. The Spirit of Christ to get and seek the Spirit of Christ which is the next principal ingredient in or efficient of a good Conscience It is the Spirit of God with our Spirit that makes the good Conscience In this sense we may allow that of Origen That Conscience is another Spirit in the soul therefore the Apostle saith of his Conscience that it did bear him Rom. 9. 1. witnesse in the Holy Ghost The single Testimonie of natural Conscience is not much to be regarded in many cases but when Conscience is cleared by the Spirit and seconded with the Spirit the Testimony of these two is great and weighty the Spirit of God witnessing thus to our spirit is the clearest Testimony of Rom. 8. 16. of our Adoption and Salvation which thy Conscience alone is not to be credited in for what could the light of our body the eye see and discern if it were not for the light of the Heaven the Sun we should have a continuall Night So without the Spirit the light of God what can Conscience our light see and discern of the things of God Therefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. that God doth reveal unto his servants the deep mysteries of the Gospel by his spirit for the spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God For what man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him So the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we may know the things which are freely given to us of Cod c. So that wheresoever the spirit of God is there is the good Conscience where it is wanting Conscience cannot be good Where the naturall enlivening Spirit is absent or departed there is no life or vegetation or sense or reason or motion but all death darkness coldnesse c. So where the enlivening Spirit of Grace is wanting to the soul there is no life sense motion comfort but all is dead within and all the works are but dead works But where the Spirit is there is life there is light there is liberty and there is purity there is peace and there is grace there is comfort and there is Conscience there is indeed all 2 Subservient means The subservient means are thirteen whereof the first six direct us what to do the other seven what to avoid First of all those subservient means next to Christ Jesus himself and his Spirit which are the principal Faith is to be sought to 1. Faith make thee a good Conscience Thefore how often do we find faith and good Conscience joyned This next to the bloud of Christ and the purifying water of the Spirit hath the greatest cleansing virtue Act. 15. 9. Christ hath given faith for this end to purifie the heart Where faith is pure the Conscience is pure this makes the good and mends the bad Conscience Faith and good Conscience are made one for the other as the woman and the man to be fellow-helpers each to other Faith is Consciences Keeper Conscience again is Faiths These two like Jonathan and his Armour-bearer may discomfit a whole Hoste 1 Sam. 14. of Philistins when they keep together nothing is hard for them to undertake or like Saul and Jonathan lovely in life and undivided in death Faith and good Conscience do many a good office each for other and are forced to unite in a league offensive and defensive In an offensive league as Simeon and Judah Jud. 1. 3. the one must help the other to expell the Canaanites out of his Coast first and then proceed to expell them out of the others Coasts after Good Conscience helps to expel the Canaanites of fear distrust and despair out of Faiths coasts and to slay Sheshai Ahiman and Talmai these Jud. 1. 10 three sons of Anak and faith again layes to his helping hand to expel the Canaanites of fear guilt deadnesse dulnesse erroneousnesse and Scrupulousnesse out of Consciences coasts And in a defensive league they are joyned as David said to Abiathar Abide with me fear not so saith Faith to Conscience Abide with me Conscience for he that seeketh my life seeketh thy life but with me thou shalt be in safety 1 Sam. 22. 23. Faith is the white Alabaster-box in which Consciences pretious Oyntment is put Faith is the bottle into which the wine of good Conscience is poured So again Conscience doth as much for Faith Faith is the light good Conscience is Faiths lanthorn the lanthorn shews forth the light within the lanthorn defends the light from winds and weather without that it be not blown out Conscience holds forth the light of Faith to be seen of men Conscience defends faith that it be not put out Faith is the Apple or sight of the eye Conscience is the eye-lid no eye-lid can see or doth it profit the body at all without the sight within nor can the eye see long if it have not the eye-lids to defend it from Sun dust smoak and the like annoyances and to keep the sight clear So what is Conscience without Faith but a blind and blundering Conscience And what is Faith without Conscience but as a naked weak raw sore eye A three-fold faith necessary to good conscience 1 Justifiing Faith Now this Faith that makes and keeps a good Conscience is three-fold First Justifying Faith there must be apprehending and applying the bloud of Christ Act. 15. 9. This is principally necessary to be sought this fides quâ creditur is the fides qua vivitur the fides quae creditur is not sufficient without this Secondly Doctrinal faith this is the faith 2 Doctrinal Faith here spoken of Hold faith and a good Conscience that is the sound Orthodox faith contend for it continue in it From this Hymenaeus and Alexander swerved and then left the plain path of good Conscience Say not any man is sound in faith and of a good Quam tu secretus es Deus solits magnus lege infatigabili spargens paenale ●caecitates super illicitas cupidita●e● Aug. Conf. l. 1. Conscience who is unsound in Judgement and opinions Corrupt opinions breed corrupt Consciences and corruption in morals usually follows the corruption in intellectuals Here begins commonly the first step backward to all Apostacy and the first step forward to all impiety It is a sad story of the Emperour Valens who while he was among the Orthodox had gained much Glory in the Church he had stood firme in the time of Julian the Apostate together with his Brother Valentinian chusing rather to lay down all his Military Honours and imployments than
whose cause if thou wilt plead thou shalt have double fees but if thou be of Counsel against he● or by thy opposition silence craft or negligence she be cast and overthrowne thou shalt never be able to stand in the Judgement but be disabled pleading before the Lord Chief Justice at that Upper Bench. Art thou a Physitian Conscience must be thy Patient whom thou must attend most be sure to keepe her out of a Lethargy and a Consumption to which diseases she is naturally most inclined if this Die under thy hand and miscarry thou art an undone man and all thy skill and practise nothing worth If thou be a Rich man Conscience will furnish thee with Baggs which wax not old of Treasure that will not waste If Poor it will furnish thee with a Cruse and Barrel that will not fail If thou hast a good Conscience it will be a staff to support thee If an evil it will turn in to a Serpent to sting thee If thou art an Israelite it is the Red Sea fear not to go into it it will secure thee if an Egyptian thou art drowned if thou go into it If thou be a woman Conscience is thy Glasse into which thou must looke and by which thou must dresse thy self saith Bernard that thou mayest please Christ thy Spouse If a Maid this thy attire If a Bride this thy Ornament If a Mother this thy Child which thou must nurse thy self not put out of doors as Moses Mother did him for any danger or benefit Take heed of starving and overlaying thy Conscience Thou must be as tender of this as of thy only Child for it more concerns thee Whosoever thou art I have two things more to beg the one for thee that what is here all along spoken of Conscience may be also spoken effectually to thy Conscience and tend to the clarifying and fortifying to the purifying pacifying and preserving of thy Conscience and the other from thee that thou wilt joyne in thy prayers endeavours that the Lords banished may be brought home that banisht Conscience may be restored to his liberty and that deposed Conscience may be Re-in-throned in his full power and soveraigne authority commanding in the heart and lives of all professors and Christians that while Conscience reignes the peace of God which passeth all onderstanding may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beare rule in our hearts and minds So I remit thee to the Conscience of God and commit thee to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pe. 2. 19 God of Conscience that thou maist live full of Conscience so dye full of comfort and rise full of glory So prayes he who is The meanest servant of thy Faith and Conscience J. S. THE CONTENTS THe sum and scope of the Epistle to Timothy is the Ministers duty page 1. The sum of the Text the Ministers greatest charge p. 2. 11. The words opened observations raised p. 3 4 c. The maine point of Doctrine Propounded p. 11. Expounded p. 12. Confirmed p. 13 14 CHAP. I. What Conscience is shewed two wayes p. 15. 1. By opening the word Conscience p. 15. Conscience is more then a bare and single knowledge ibid. Conscience implyes a four-fold knowledge with God p. 16. with self p. 17. with others p. 18. with things themselves p. 20. Four Corollaries and Deductions p. 22. 2. What the thing Conscience is described p. 24. CHAP. II. Two kinds of Conscience Evill Good A two fold evill Conscience Quiet Troubled A double goodness in Conscience of Sincerity Security p. 26. The full definition of a good Conscience viz. when 1. It is rightly Purified 2. Rightly Pacified 3. And doth ●egularly performe all his offices ibid When Conscience is rightly purified p. 27. Three things Conscience must be purified from Ignorance p. 27. Error p. 28. Hardnesse p. 31 Three things Conscience is purified by The Word of Christ The Blood of Christ The Spirit of Christ p. 33. CHAP. III. Of the Conscience rightly pacified p. 37. Three things Conscience must be pacified from The raigne of sin p. 37. The rage of Satan p. 39. The wrath of God p. 41. Three things Conscience is pacified by The Word p. 42. The Blood p. 43. The spirit of Christ p. 44. CHAP. IV. The Offices of Conscience p. 45. Conscience hath a four-fold Office Ministeriall or Propheticall Regall or Magistratuall Testimoniall or of a witness Judiciall or of a Judge p. 46. To which is added a fifth Office viz. Registeriall Wherein Conscience is a Minister p. 46. Wherein Conscience is a King p. 48. Wherein Conscience is a witnesse p. 49. Wherein Conscience is a Judge p. 51. Wherein Conscience is a Register p. 52. Five Corollaryes p. 54. CHAP. V. Ten particular sorts of good Conscience propounded First of the Conscience of Faith ibid p. 60. CHAP. VI. Of the Conscience of Purity p. 66 CHAP. VII Of the Conscience of Sincerity p. 72. Ten notes of Sincerity p. 75. CHAP. VIII Of the Inoffensive Conscience p. 93 Inoffensivenesse twofold Not taking Not giving Offence p. 93. 1. Inoffensiveness in not giving offence respects either God or Man ibid. What is it to be inoffensive before God p. 94. How any can be said so to be inoffensive ibid. Foure markes of this inoffensivenesse p. 95. Offence not to be given to men Others Godly p. 97. or Those without p. 105. Our selves p. 107. Six cautions given to prevent offence giving p. 98. Six rules prescribed to avoid offence giving p. 102. 2. Inoffensivenesse in not taking offence from God p. 109. The Godly p. 110. The wicked p. 111. CHAP. IX Of the well sighted Conscience p. 112. CHAP. X. Of the well spoken Conscience p. 115. 1 Pet. 3. 21. Opened The answer or interrogation of a good Conscience p. 115. 116. CHAP. XI Of the honest dealing Conscience p. 120. Seven notes of an honest Conscience p. 124. CHAP. XII Of the tender Conscience p. 129. A double tenderness of Conscience Sinfull and diseased Lawfull and Sound p. 132. Five kinds of diseased and faulty tenderness p. 132. 133 Right tendernesse respects 1. God 2. Others 3. Our selves p. 140. 1. Tendernesse in respect of God seen in six things p. 141. 2. In respect of Men. 1. To all Godly in generall 2 Weaker ones among them especially 3 To all men whatsoever 4. To those who are related to us principally p. 151. Sequ. 3. In respect of our selves this tendernesse seen in 14. Notes p. 157. Sequ. CHAP. XIII Of the passive or suffering Conscience p. 181. Foure sorts of sinfull uncomfortable sufferings p. 187. Six markes of honourable and conscientious suffering p. 189. CHAP. XIV Of the Conscience of Charity p. 194. Charity two-fold Externall or civill Ecclesiasticall or christian p. 195. 1. Externall charity respecteth The Poore The Neighbour Our Enemy To the poor is to be shewed charity of beneficence p. 196 To the Neighbour a charity of benevolence p. 199. To an Enemy the charity of forgiveness p.
is certaine whatsoever Trade the other was of how ominously fatall is it to the undertakers themselves when private Mechanickes do presumptuously invade the Ministery and become publique Preachers 3. There is no dividing between Faith and a good Conscience leave Orthodox Faith and farewell good Conscience or let go good Conscience and you have seene the last of Faith it sinkes it shipwracks 4. How true is that of 2 Tim. 3. 13. That evil men and Seducers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waxe worse and worse deceiving and being deceived seldome staying when they begin to shrinke from their former sincerity and strictnesse till they arrive at the highest of impiety going from sinne to sinne and from Error to Error till by the just judgement of God they are given over to become open Blasphemers and outragious Persecutors 5. Every vicious and infectious Teacher and every bold Broacher of Doctrines corrupting and staining the simplicity of the Faith and every Member of a corrupt and dissolute Conscience are not to be Tollerated and permitted in a new Testament Church but all such are deservedly excommunicated the Church who have once excommunicated Conscience and they justly suffer in being delivered up to Sathan who have wickedly sinned in delivering Doctrines of Sathan No liberty here you see for every kinde of Conscience 6. Yet are not visible and open censures but for visible and open sinnes not for Errors in judgement concealed but published not for want Publice declarantur pertinere ad regnum Satanae quippe qui non pertineant ad regnum Christi Piscator of faith but for opposing it 7 Excommunication Clave non errante is a solemne and dreadfully operative Ordinance a shutting out of Heaven a shutting up in Hell him who is justly cast out of the Churches fellow●hip by that censure He is delivered up to Satan 8 The end of Excommunication and all Church censures is not to serve to the destruction 2 Cor. 10. 8 13. 10. 1 Cor. 5. 5. of the Censured or Private revenge of the Censurers but to edification onely That the offender may be terrified and reclaimed The Traditi sunt ad emendandum non ad perdendum Sedul in locum flesh destroyed that the soule may be saved and that others may be warned and so the infection stayed That they may learne not to blaspheme Vt Castigatione hac adducti desinant falsum suum dogma spargere Piscator But none of these doe I intend to stand upon though I shall have occasion to meet with them in prosecuting the intended Doctrine To the words Holding Faith and a good Conscience c. Holding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Piscator It signifies properly Having and so translated 1 Pet. 1 Pet 3. 16. 3. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Having a good Conscience here Holding To have and to hold in our English speaking are usually put together It is not enough once to have or for some while to have Had unlesse we ever have and hold them Faith Either take it first for that which we call Grace-faith Fides quâ creditur That hee should Hold Act Maintaine Exercise the grace of saving and lively Faith Or Secondly for the Doctrine of Faith Fides quâ creditur In which sence it is used Chap. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. Jud. v. 3. And Expositors do generally understand it so here that Timothy should 1 Tim. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. ●ud v. 3. hold the whol●some forme of sound words and still retaine the old received Faith in Orthodox Doctrine for the grace of saving Faith will not be long kept in the heart unlesse we keepe the Doctrine of sound faith and principles in the head And a good Conscience Conscience you seldome 1 Tim. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19 see it without an Epethite and this usually is his Epethite Good Conscience so in many places Cap. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19. Faith had no Epethite of Good you doe not Ordinarily see other Graces called Good as good Love good Repentance Zeale Hope Patience or the like But ever good Conscience The other graces are commonly Nemo tam perditus est ut sit omni conscientia planè expers Ames good or few have them but those that are good But Conscience is a thing which all have though a good Conscience but few therefore get and hold a good Conscience or have none at all Which some having put away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua repulsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de trudo depello arceo ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trudo pello Act 7. 27. 39 Beza Expulsa Piscator quam Repellentes Vulgar Transl thrusling it away This word is used Acts 7. 27. He that did his Neighbour wrong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trust Moses away as a busie body and an intruding intermedler so did these thrust away Conscience as if it had been a troublesome usurper over them So after Act 7. 39. The rebelling Israelites thrust him from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They would cast off and eashiere Moses no more receive his Dictates nor obey his directions but would set up another Captaine whom they would follow or lead rather into Egypt Thus did these in the Text cashiere and throw off conscience from his be trusted employment and would follow their owne swinge This word is used also Rom. 11. 1. 2. Hath God cast away Ro. 11. 1. 2 his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and v. 2. He answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath not cast away or reprobated his people whom he foreknew But these did reprobate Conscience and would make it a cast away as not to be retained in times of Gospell Light and liberty So that in this place the Translation is with the softest and more gentle it is here then in any other place when it is rendered they put away good Conscience It might have been read they thrust off threw away cashiered disclaimed and even reprobated it Concerning faith made Shipwrack Fide Vacui facti sunt They were emptied and eased of their faith Syriack transl Their souls are Shipwrack'd their Faith Grace Ship-wrack'd aleak being sprung in Conscience the Vessel they lost all they had and saved not the use Comfort Confidence Joy or feeling of former Faith and beleeving Nor did they preserve their former simplicitie and integrity of judgement in matter of Doctrine and Truth But as Conscience was reprobated to their judgement their judgement is now wholly reprobate concerning the Faith Now the words being opened you see they are a Magazine or Panoply of Armor and Ammunition to furnish Timothy and each good Minister yea every Christian with the most necessary and usefull armes both to warre that good warfare v. 18. And to prevent this evill shipwracke v. 19. Timothy thy charge is that thou war a good warfare thy duty is
knowledge 2. It implies a knowing together not a common single abstracted Theoretick knowledge but a double or multiplied knowledge it must be Hence the learned say Conscientia est Aqninas Ri vet alij cum alijs scientia In this sence it intends a four-fold knowledge Conscire 1. cum Deo to know together 1. with God 2. cum seipsis 2. with our selves 3. cum alijs 3. with others 4. cum rebus ipsis 4. with things themselves In all which Idem est conscire consentire The Conscientious man is ever a Consentientious man 1. Cum Deo scire Conscience is first to know Conscientia est notitia vel sensus internus judicij proprij vel alieni praecipue Dei de nostris bene vel male factis Paraeus in Ro. 13. together or consent together with God whence commonly Divines say Conscientia is cum deo scientia When we have the same Idaea apprehension and esteeme of things in our minde that is in Gods when we allow or disallow thinke speake doe according to the rule of Gods word when wee are not swayed by mans judgement or the wisedom of the world But what God commendeth is approved what God commandeth is obeyed what he promiseth is beleeved what hee threatneth is avoyded what ever God propoundeth is regarded and received this is conscience when we light our Candle at the Lampes of the Sanctuary Hence we say Vox conscientiae is vox dei The voyce of a right enlightned Conscience is the voyce of God so saith Solomon Pr●v 20. 27. The spirit of a man is the Candle of the Lord Lumen ex ipsius Prov. 20. 27. lumine lighted at his Word then searching the inner parts of the Belly and the secrets of the heart and is become a discoverer of the secret thoughts nothing being hid from the view of these two heart-searchers What is Conscience other then the hewing and squaring our Tables according to the Tables delivered to us from the hand of God Mr. Burroughs Moses selfe denyall p. 39 As it is reported of Boleslaus King of Poland who used to weare the Picture of his Father in a plate of Gold hanging about his neck and whensoever he was to do or speake any thing of importance he would take his Picture and kissing it say Deare Father I wish I may not do any thing remissely unworthy of thy name c. So Conscience still hath a remembrance of God before his eyes and when any thing is to be done saith Lord Col. 1. 10. Give me to walke worthy of God to all Pleasing fruitfull in every good worke This is to have our works to be wrought in God Jo. 3. 21. And as in the sight of God 2 Cor. 2. ult 2 Conscire is cum seipso scire aut consentire Conscience is the knowing of a man with himselfe Cor quando se novit appellatur conscientia quando praeter se alia scientia Bern. Conscience maketh an identity in the same man throughout Hence it is that Bernard often calls Conscientia Cordis Scientia When the head and heart are agreed Knowledg in the head alone is barely Science oft so falsely called Knowledge in the heart too is then Conscience rightly so called In this respect I may say Ecl. 10. 2 Let thy right hand know whatsoever thy left hand doth Thy heart must lye at thy right hand yea and lye neare thy mouth too That is to say to Weigh Trye Examine Observe Order all that thy mouth speaketh or hand acteth or thought intendeth Caleb spake as it was in his heart Joshu 14. 7. And in the next verse he saith I fully followed the Lord. Here is nothing but Conscience in both these expressions His heart followed the Lord there is cum Deo Scire And he fully followed his heart There is cum seipso scire Psal 15. 2. The Godly man speaketh his Conscience he speaketh the truth in his heart So the Apostle Ro. 9. 1. I speake the truth in Christ and lye not there is cum Deo scientia My conscience also bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost There is the other Cordis Scientia There is conscience when these two meet happy is the man who condemneth not himselfe in his heart for what he alloweth approveth in practise Hic murus ahaeneus esto Nil conscire sibi That little quantity of Ayre which wee breath in at our nostrils which goes into the man even to the heart and which thereafter is breathed out thence againe is more to a man it is indeed his life then all the three regions of Ayre which fill up that vast space between Earth and Heaven However Philosophers conceive there is purer Aire in the highest Region Certainely that lesser proportion of Knowledge of Divine truths which we take downe and sucke into the heart and after draw out and deliver thence is more to a Christians life and Comfort then all your ref●ned speculations even of the third and highest Region 3. Conscire cum alijs To know together with others and consent with them This is Conscience to put our Soules into their Soules Iob. 16. 4. stead as Job speaketh Then to doe to others as wee would they should do to us Mat. 7. 12. To know the heart of a stranger Ex. 23. 9. that thou doe not oppresse him Cognoscit justus Animam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jumenti sui Prov. 12. 10. The righteous man is Arias Montan Conscientia est notitia sensus internus judicij proprij alieni c. Paraeus ubi supra mercifull to his Beast Because hee considereth the heart and condition of the poore dumb Creature with Sympathy much more doth he know and consider the case of the poore of the oppressed in the Gate of the Orphan of the widdow when as Job said of himselfe Job 31. 18. they were still with him either in his presence to releeve and support them or in his Bowels to commiscrate and condole with them The conscientious man saith who is weake and I am not weake who offended and I burne not How can I wound my Brothers conscience and sinne against him but I wound my 2 Cor. 11. 29. 1 Cor. 8. 12 selfe and sinne against Christ O what a worthy speech was that of Hadrian a heathen Emp. Emperatorem Erga unum Cent. Mag. Cent. 2. Cap. 3. quemque debere esse talem qualem si privatus esset sibi vellet esse imperatorem The Emperour should so carry himselfe to every private person as he would desire were he in that poore mans case the Emperour should deale with him This is to approve our selves to every good mans conscience in the sight of God 2 Cor. 4. 2. This is cum alijs scire Be ye as I am I am as you are Gal. 4. 12. This is to provide things honest Not onely in our owne sight or in Gods Bernard lib. 2. de consc sight in seeret
This rectifies errour being as a voyce behinde us Esay 30. 21. Thine ear shall hear a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it when ye turn to the right hand and when ye turn to the left This ends all controversies Esay 8. 26. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them This resolves all doubts How is it written in the law how readest thou Luke 10. 26. 3. This removes deadnesse of conscience and hardnesse Is not this word an hammer to soften the heart and is not this the immortall seed by which we Jer. 23. 29. 1 Pet. 1. 23 Psal 119. 25. are begotten again Therefore David finding his conscience in a dead frame prayed My soul cleaveth to the dust quicken me according to thy word Again verse 50. It is my comfort in my affliction for thy word hath quickened me So verse 93. I will never forget thy precepts for with them thou hast quickened me The word is the first thing by which conscience is purified and set right This makes the man of God perfect and thorowly furnished to every good work 2 Tim. 3. 17. Secondly By the blood of Christ is the conscience 2. By the blood of Christ further purified we must not rest in the word alone without this blood which cleanseth both the book of Conscience and is sprinkled on the book of Scripture to give vertue to it Heb. 9. 14. Shall not the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God This is it that purgeth the defiled and guilty conscience from all his diseases and filthinesse Christs spittle opened the eyes of two blinde men once His blood openeth the eye of Mark 8. 23 Joh. 9. 6. blinde conscience ever This is the blood of sprinckling which alone purifies the heart from an evil conscience Heb. 10. 22. So that the soul may now draw nigh to God with boldnesse and much assurance Other blood and observances Read the 9. and 10. chap. to the Hebr. might serve to make an Israelite under the Law legally pure as to the flesh Onely this blood of Christ typified by the purification water the hyssop scarlet blood of bulls and goats can make a Christian Evangelically pure before God and Internally in the court of Conscience The book and people and all things pertaining to the Tabernacle were consecrated with blood Heb. 9. 22. And almost all things by the Law were purged with blood And without shedding of blood there is no remission To teach us what is more plainly expressed 1 Joh. 1. 7. The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin Wash me O Lord with this hyss●p and I shall Psal 51. 7. be clean Purge me with this blood and I shall be whiter then the snow Thirdly Conscience is purged by the Sperit 3 By the spirit of Christ of Christ together with the word and blood without there be a concurrence of all three the work is not done not the word alone without the blood and spirit can effect it no● the blood without the word and spirit nor yet the spirit without both the former The word is sprinkled on the Conscience to inform satisfie and purifie it The blood of Christ is sprinkled on the word as Exod 24. 8. compared with Heb. 9. 20. which it was not sufficient to have read but sprinkled with the blood of the Covenant to give vertue to it And the blood it self must be applyed by the spirit that the vertue of it may be brought home to the conscience The blood of Christ without the spirit is no better then his flesh without the spirit The flesh profits nothing It is the Spirit that quickeneth The principall Jo. 6. 63. part of the work of purifying Conscience belongs to the Spirit It was that eternal Spirit whereby Christ offered his Blood Heb. 9. 14. which did commend our conscience to God And this Spirit applying the blood offered doth commend and seal Gods Covenant to our Consciences Thus the spirit heals those three diseases It properly removes Ignorance being the Spirit of Illumination Eph. 1. 17 This rectifyes Errour being the spirit of Truth Joh 14. 17. This removes Deadness being the spirit of life Rom. 8. 2. This is the great Purifyer this the Refiners fire this the Fullers soape Malach 3. 2. whereby Christ doth refine and purifie the sons of Jacob. This the Spirit of Judgement and Spirit of burning wherewith God hath promised to wash away the filth of the daughter of Zion Esay 4. 4. CHAP. III. Of the Conscience rightly pacifyed Conscience rightly pacified II. A Right pacifyed Conscience This is the second property and part of the good Conscience laid down in the Definition Purity indeed is the more excellent kinde of goodnesse it being essentiall to the very being of good Conscience Peace is but an additional and a secondary part of that goodness and conduceth more to the bene esse then to the bare esse of good conscience It is a spirituall good but of a temporary nature not standing and immovable Peace is so far good as that the Conscience is not perfectly well without it but right Peace it must be or it is not good at all which that it may enjoy There are three things which Conscience must be 1. Pacifyed from 2. Pacifyed by Three things it must be pacified from 1. The three things Conscience must be pacifyed from are 1. The Reign of Sin 2. The rage of Satan 3. The displeasure of God 1 It must be at peace from the dominion of sin So long as Adonijah Reigneth Solomon is in danger while Sin is in his Power and Throne 1 From the raigne of sinne Conscience cannot be in safety Our Peace therefore which we should seek is not such a Peace as we are born unto or are possessed of while the strong man is Armed but is a recovered Peace regained by deposing the Usurper Like Israels Peace after the seditious commotion 2 Sam. 20. 22. was quietly setled when Shebahs head was off No peace to conscience while a Sheba up in Armes There is a Peace indeed when Sin and Satan are strongly armed and keep the house Luk. 11. 21. This is no good Peace this is the peace of a sleepy not an awakened conscience No war so miserable as Pax est sed Bello pax ea deterior such a peace when the soul is at ease in it self at peace with Sin at peace with Satan at agreement with Hell but at war and enmity with God Conscientia pacatè optima may be vitiosè pessima In tali pace amaritudo mea amarissima as Bernard or Ad pacem advenit Amara mihi Amaritudo as Junius reads that of Hezekiah in Is 38. 17. Wo to these that ●laugh now they
eat the Kings salt have our salary from the King therefore we must be true to our trust Much more saith the godly heart I have my dependance wholly on God I am thy very Creature the work of thy hands I am salted with the salt of the Sanctuary I eat the Lords bread wear his given clothes breath in his ayre dwell in his Tenement he gives me lodging living breath being and all I have I must be true to his interest I must not be silent at or unsensible of his dishonour All mine are thine said our Saviour and thine are mine Any hypocrite will say and make good the latter all thine are mine all wil consent to Joh. 17. 10 take away Tuum but sincerity takes away Meum not Tuum between God and him All mine is Gods saith he as to subordinate all to him improve all for him All Gods is mine as to be solicitous for his things as for my own yea above my own not his are mine to be subservient and subordinate to my ends as the hypocrite saith Da mihi fallere Lord let me make use of thy Name and Honour and Cause and Interest and Servants and Scriptures to build my own house and so attain my own ends But saith he all mine is thine Lord serve thy self of me and mine all my parts studies interests abilities designes ayms are for thee and for thy service Thus in all your actions if you would have comfort in them you must consider with what conscience you do them so much of conscience as is in your actions so much of comfort and so much of sincerity so much of conscience and so much regard to your principles to your rule to your end so much you may conclude of sincerity And so much of this most excellent conscience the conscience of sincerity CHAP. VIII Of the inoffensive Conscience Of the inoffensive conscience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tum activè tum passivè potest significare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut nec ipsi scandalizent quempiam nec scandalizentur à quopiam Paraens in 1 Cor. 10. 32. In eandem sententiam Eras Cor. à Lap. tam inoffensus quā non offendens Bez. passivè Phi. 1. 10. activè 1 Cor. 10. 32 THe fourth good Conscience we are to speak of is the inoffensive conscience of which the Apostle shewed how much reckoning he made when he said Act. 24. 16. Herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence toward God and toward man This is a conscience necessary to be sought especially in these times This inoffensiveness is twofold implying that we avoid 1. Giving any offence 2. Taking any offence 1. The inoffensive conscience must avoid giving offence for this is alway evil and sinfull though offence be often taken without sin yet never given without sin Our Saviour took offence at Peter Mat. 16. 23. Thus God is offended every day When it is only our fault to give the offence but Gods holiness and perfection to take the offence This giving offence may be either To God or To man Act. 24. 16. 1. We must chiefly take heed of giving offence to God This is the principall care of a conscientious person I exercise my self to have 1. Inoffensive conscience gives no offence to God alway a conscience void of offence to God What were it if we did so carry our selves that all men should speak well of us and that we were as much in the worlds books for amiablenes and in offensiveness as ever were Titus or Trajan or any other yet we begin at the wrong end if we did not study more to be without offence before God It is meet to be said to God I have borne chastisement I will not offend said Elihu Job 34. 31 32. That which I see not teach thou me and if I have done iniquity I will do no more Object But who can say he lives without offence-giving to God For in many things we sin all Jam. 3. 2. Who knoweth how oft he doth offend c. Psal 19. Answ None liveth indeed without sin yet some are without offence Because 1. This inoffensive person striveth to prevent offences he keepeth himself he takes up purposes Psal 17. 3. 1 Jo. 5. 18. I am purposed that my mouth shall not offend said David He hath integrity in his purposes ever although he may fall short in performances sometimes 2. He is counted inoffensive because for what is past what was an offence to God is now an offence to him if in any thing God was displeased with him before he is now displeased with himself for it what was a burden to God before is now his burden Ephraim was ashamed and confounded Jer. 31. 19. Job did abhor himself Job 42. 6. The truly penitent do ever loath themselves Eze. 6. 9. 36. 31. Now when our sin begins to be matter of offence to us it ceaseth to be matter of offence to God when it becomes the object of our indignation 2 Cor. 7. 11. it is no more matter of provocation to God In this respect the penitent is accounted without offence 3. When for time to come he is carefull to break off his sin by Repentance and saith as before Job 34. 31 32. I will offend no more that which I see not teach thou me and if I have done iniquity I will do no more This is the highest inoffensiveness we can here attain unto Job 40. 4. 5. Behold I am vile saith Job to God what shall I answer thee I will lay my hand upon my mouth Once have I spoken but I will not answer yea twice but I will proceed no further When a man hath throughly smarted with godly sorrow for sin and saith I will venture no further for a world what fruit have I now of all my former vile ways but shame I will turn from all my sins and become a new man this man is accounted a non-offender Ro. 6. 21 all his sins shall be no more so much as mentioned to him But he shall live in his righteousness wherein he now walketh Ezek. 18. 21 22. 4. He is said to live without offence to God who resolveth rather to offend all the world passively then to offend God actively If they be offended let them be offended saith he If they take offence it is their sin not mine so that God be not offended Am I to perswade men or God said the Apostle Gal. 1. 10. Or must I seek to please men If I yet pleased men I should not be the servant of Christ Inoffensive Conscience saith I would if I could please both God and man I would not offend either I would please all offend none by my good will But if it must be so whether it be better in the sight of God to please God or man whether worse to offend God or man judge ye All the Prophetical Apostolical and Ecclesiastical Histories are full of examples in this
follow the example of all sufferings Jesus Christ who being 1 Pet. 2. 21 22 23. reviled reviled not again when he suffered be threatened not but committed his cause to him who judgeth righteously yet had he done no evil neither was any guile found in his mouth 6. Lastly be sure thou commit thy self to God when thou art suffering according to the will of God in well doing so is the Apostles rule 1 Pet. 4. 19. Suffering times had not need bee sinning times he will never make good Martyr that is not a good Saint first The Israelites were warned not to go Ex. 2. 22. out of their doors but to be within at their Sacrifice when the Destroyer was abroad Daniel was within at his Prayers when the Inquisitors came to apprehend him Many cautions are to be kept in suffering times and many ingredients must be in our sufferings that they may be comfortable sufferings 1. It is not poena but causa was said of old Cum boni malique pariter afflicti sunt non ideo ipsi distincti non sunt quia distinctum non est quod utrique perpessi sunt manet enim dissimilitudo passorum etiam in similitudine passionum licet sub eodem tormento non est idem virtus vitium Aug. de Civit. Dei l. 1. c. 8. that is true but not enough 2. I may say it is not poena and causa too that makes a Martyr but conscientia 3. Nor is it every conscientia but conscientia Dei 4. Nor is it poena causa conscientia but vita that makes the Martyr 5. But poena causa conscientia vita patientia aut modus patiendi makes the compleat Martyr A good cause a good conscience a good life a good death a good matter to suffer for a good manner to suffer in make the happie sufferer and the honourable Martyr Thus much of the Passive or suffering Conscience CHAP. XIIII Of the last Good Conscience the Conscience of Charitie THus are we come to speak of the last of Of the conscience of charity those ten particular good Consciences which we propounded at first that is the Conscience of Charity which I have reserved this last place for not because it is of the last or least worth but because the world hath put it in the last place if so be yet it hath left it any place at all This is that which the Apostle speaks of 1 Tim. 1. 5. As the end and perfection of the Law and Gospel too Charity out of a pure heart and of a good Conscience and faith unfaigned Whereever you see truth of Charity question not there the truth of Conscience The more of Charity the more of Conscience And the now totall want almost of this in the world argues the generall want of good Conscience in this Iron Age of the world These are the daies foretold by our Saviour wherein all iniquity doth abound Mat. 24. 12 and vice increase because Conscience doth decrease and Charity wax cold The world was never more full of knowledg nor emptie of Charitie 1 Cor. 8. 1. All have that knowledg which puffs up few that charity which should build up and while Conscience in most men calls for freedom Charity is by all left bound But it is by this badge of Charity that you may know a Disciple of Christ better then by the Joh. 13. 35 Language of a Galilean Now this Charity is twofold Charity of two kinds Externall or Civill Ecclesiasticall or Spirituall and Christian And this Externall Charity is threefold respecting three sorts of persons 1 Poore 2 Neighbours 3 Enemies 1. To the poore is to be shewed the love or Outward or civil and that first to the poor charity of beneficence To the neighbour and friend a love of benevolence and to the enemie a love of forgiveness Tranquilla Conscientia est omnibus dulcis nulli gravis utens amico ad gratiam inimico ad patientiam cunctis ad benevolentiam quibus potest ad beneficentiam Bernard de Consc 1. To the poore is to be shewed the charity of beneficence and well-doing This kinde of charity is the worlds grand Benefactor the poores great Almoner the widows Treasurer the Orphans Guardian the oppressed mans Patron This lendeth eyes to the blinde feet to the lame deals out bread to the hungry clothing to the naked maketh the widows heart sing for joy and brings upon the Donour the blessing of him who was ready to perish How did Zacheus shew the truth of the work of grace upon his Conscience but by those first-fruits of his charity Behold Lord the half of my goods I give to the poor Luk. 19. 8. How did Job vindicate his conscientiousness and sincerity against all his friends detracting calumnies Job 30. 12 13 14 15 16. but by such unquestionable demonstrations of his charity I delivered the poor that cried the fatherless and him that had no helper The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me and I made the widows heart to sing for joy I was eyes to the blinde and feet was I to the lame I was a father to the poor c. Religious Obadiah left it to Elias to judge of his sincerity and whether he truly feared God or no 1 Kin. 18. 13. Was it not told my Lord what I did when Jezabel slew the Prophets of the Lord how I hid an hundred men of the Lords Prophets and sed them by fifty in a cave with bread and water Nehemiah that matchlesse pattern of a self-denying Magistrate had much comfort in relating what oppressions he had removed and what ease he had procured to his Country how chargeable others had been how charitable he not so much as ever requiring the Governours bread nor his ordinary allowance but had at his own charge redeemed many Captives relieved many impoverished and when he hath done concludeth to the comfort of his Conscience Nehem. 5. 19. Think upon me my God for good according to all that I have done for this people To be short it is one of the good mans Characters Psal 112. 5. That he is mercifull and giveth and of the good womans That she stretcheth out her hand to the poor and in her heart and mouth is the law of kindness Prov. 31. 20 26. Abraham and Lot so famous of old for faith and piety were persons as eminent for their charity liberality and hospitality What should I speak of the Alms of Cornelius who hath a compleat description of a god●y man applied to him That he was a devout man one that feared God with all his house who gave much Almes to the People and prayed to God alway These Alms of his are said to come into remembrance with God Acts 10. 2 4. Yea Every liberall soul deviseth liberall things and by liberall things shall he stand Isai 32. 8. When the Instruments of the Churle are evil he deviseth wicked devices
Therefore Satan commonly begins here and seeks Entrance for less sins upon the Conscience as House-robbers put in their less boies into the windowes to set open all the doors of the house for all the companie to enter Nemo repente fuit Turpissimus No man arrives at the height of impietie at once And this is commonly the first step One unclean spirit entertained makes room Mat. 12. 45. for seven worse to follow When Conscience likes not to retain the knowledge of God God gives up to vile affections at length to a reprobate minde at last to be filled with all manner of unrighteousness Rom. 1. 26 28 29. The hopefull Professour by this meanes soon becomes a dangerous Apostate and at last a down-right Atheist in life as the Apostle saith Titus 1. 15 16. when once the minde and Conscience is defiled they may profess still to know but in works they denie God being abominable disobedient and to every good work as any reprobate When the wormwood star falls into the fountain of Conscience all the rivers become bitter the sun beginning to set in Conscience night hastens on in the affections Then farewell Grace And when the sun goes back in the heaven of Conscience the shadow must needs go back as many degrees in the Diall of Comfort Then farewell Peace 2. As the first decay is here commonly begun so it proves the worst decay and danger that can befall a man a breach in Conscience is like a breach in the Sea banks proves desperate or like the Leake sprung in the ship drowns men in utter perdition after a crack in Conscience a man proves an utter Bankrupt after other shipwracks one may recover and get up again there are post naufragium Tabul● but this is a fatall and commonly irrecoverable shipwrack Some sins and slips are like breaking of a Leg or an Arm which may be set again this is like breaking the Neck few recover to take hold of the paths of life after this Judas brake his Conscience Neck and that brake his Neck Enquire as oft as you will by what degrees any is come up to the highest sins As for instance how some came to give themselves over to lasciviousness to the committing of all uncleanness even with greediness Ephes 4. 19. The Apostle tells us they had been practising upon their Conscience first they had first blinded their mindes and had stunted their Conscience to bring them to that dedolencie that they might bee past feeling Again do you wonder and enquire how it is that in these last daies so many do depart from the faith and give heed to seducing spirits yea to the very doctrines of devils as was foretold 1 Tim. 4. 1. the answer is at hand in the next verse They had first seared and stupified their Conscience Do you enquire again how it comes that some most hopefull Professours become at last most violent and enraged Persecutors and as bold broachers of accursed errours you have the answer in the Text Hymeneus and Alexander laid down their Old-Testament weapons Faith and a good Conscience then became filled with new wine then grew corrupt themselves then vented blasphemies then were delivered up to Satan as fitter for Hell then the Church They fell into prodigious opinions and conceits making a fable of the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2. 17. At last this Alexander came to be an open enemie to Paul and Persecutor of his doctrine whom he praieth against more then he doth against any other 2 Tim. 4. 14. This is indeed the readie way nay the onely way to sin that unpardonable sin the sin against the holy Ghost which never hath forgiveness because it never hath Repentance A man that hath lost his Conscience is like a Bee that hath lost his sting becomes a Droan ever after and is at last expelled the Hive The beginning of the Decaie of Conscience is like the beginning of the Hectick feaver which at first as the Phisitian saith were easily cured but that it is hardly known but at last it is easily known but hardly cured 3. The third danger and mischief is that either thou must resolve to make this Good warfare required in the Text for a Good Conscience or to suffer an ill warfare made upon thee from an ill Conscience either thou must make this Tree good and his fruit good or else make the tree corrupt and his fruit corrupt but Mat. 12. 33. know that this war is the worst war which can bee made All wars are bad and end in bitterness but of all wars civil wars are the most dreadfull worse when it is between Citie and Citie then if it were Nation with Nation and of all civil wars domestical in the same Familie when divided is worse then when a Kingdom divided And in the same familie again Matrimonial war when in the same bed is worse then any other war in the same house between father and son for where the Relation is nearest division there is unkindest But there is one war yet worse then all these the personal division is worse then any division between man and wife This is to speak properly the onely Intestine war when two are divided against three and three against two Vnderstanding and Conscience joyning together to keep in order Will Affections and Practises but these joyntly rise up to suppress their Legall and Rightfull Superiours Vnderstanding and Conscience It is a sad Storie to read that of the father and his two sons who separating from our Churches in England kept together a while but ere long the two brothers divided among themselves again and when the father could not reconcile them he left the one childe to adhere to the other but after that differences grew between the father and this one son and they must Anathematize each other Here was a lamentable Example to see in three persons of nearest naturall Relation such an Enmitie each stood aloof from the rest all three stood excommunicated and accursed by each other But this separation and difference I speak of is beyond that when a man doth separate from his Conscience and excommunicate it first then after doth Conscience separate from him and accurse him yea and he shall be cursed Many have thought that they have been able to make offensive war against Conscience none have ever been able to make the defensive To fight aginst Conscience is to fight against God and who hath ever hardened himself Job 9. 4. against him and prospered Pharoab would begin with God and make an offensive war Who is the Lord I know him not I will not let Israel go but he was wearie of the defensive Exod. 5. 2. Let us flie for the Lord fighteth against us So if thou thinkest it a light thing to Exod. 14. 25. challenge and provoke Conscience while it would be at peace with thee know thou wilt finde it next God himself the heaviest adversarie that thou couldst have had If Conscience
They ever who take more care to get great States then good Consciences do but consult shame to their Honours and ruine to their Houses They are like the foolish woman who puls down her house with her own hands Wo to him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness and his chambers by wrong That v●eth his neighbours work without wages That saith I will build me a wide house and large chambers and cutteth him out windows and Jer. 22. 13 14 15 16. it is ceiled with Cedar and painted with Vermilion Shalt thou reign because thou closest thy self in Cedar Did not thy father eat and drink and do Judgement and Justice and then it was well with him Was not this to know me saith the Lord How many Examples do we see continually before our eyes of them who gather riches and not by right who are taken from them in the midst of their dayes and in the end die like fooles Jer. 17. 11. Jeroboam would never be beholden to Conscience or Pietie to secure his State and Crown Policie should do it but did not his State-designes become a sin and a curse to the whole house of Jeroboam to root them out of the Land Ahab must not scruple the way of getting Naboths Vineyard to get it was the thing but did he joy it The Prophet meets him with a cold Gratulation Hast thou killd and also taken possession where the dogs licked the bloud of Naboth the dogs shall lick thy bloud also Did Achan thrive any better with his stolne wedge of gold Or Gehazi with his two bags of silver of two Talents The Consumption in Conscience breeds ordinarily a consumption in the state This maketh the furrowes in the field cry out and the stone in the wall and the beam out of the timber answer Wo to him who addeth house to house field to field and pound to pound till they are alone Doth not this leave great houses without inhabitant and fair houses without any to dwell in them This makes all fly at last the beam from the timber the timber from the wall the wall from the house the house from the name and the name it self from the face of the earth His sentence is Write this man childless a man that shall not prosper all his dayes for his heart and Jer. 22. 30. his eyes are onely for covetousness and oppression and violence to do it Who●e Grand-childe doth the third Generation call happie in that Patrimonie dearly purchased by the expense of his Ancestors good Conscience what house stands long that is founded on the ruines of integritie and righteousness whoso gathereth by labour increaseth whoso by indirect courses undoeth himself It is godliness which is the great gain it is the name and memoriall of the godly which shall be blessed it is the posteritie of the righteous which alone is happie Godliness hath the Promise of this life also as well as of that to come Noahs Ark we know was not onely the Preserver of the Church but of the whole Universe So shall we finde good Conscience not onely the best Keeper of the Soul but of the State Trust this thou maist with all that thou ●rt worth 4. This discovers yet a worse decaie then that of temporall States the Ground of that Decaie in Grace whence it is that there are so many broken Professours bankrupts in Religion and decaied Apostates in the Church Hymeneus and Alexander this broke their backs They were men sometimes of as good account and great esteem as any other men in all that rich and mightie Citie Ephesus forward men very likely to make eminent Ones in time They let fall puritie and strictness of Conscience then were corrupted then corrupt others then denie Fundamentals then broach blasphemies then turn Persecutors then were as a Pest and Gangrene to the Church then out of Communion thereof they are cast and at last miserably they ended When good Conscience once departs the unclean spirit comes in and takes possession brings in seven unclean spirits into a house formerly emptie swept and garnished they dwell and stay there till the last state of that man is worse then the first Break once these Old Bottles of good Conscience and all the wine of Grace and Comfort runs out all is marred the man is a lost man From prophane and vain babbling men proceed at last to Highest ungodliness as the Apostles Advertisement is u●on the lapse and downfall of these miserable seducers 2 Tim. 2 16 17. 5. This doth also clearly demonstrate That by Apostolical Rules and the Primitive Discipline Toleration is not to be granted nor Church-Fellowship allowed to men who are of loose and profligate Consciences and corrupt opinions they who cease to be members of Christ and act for Satan are to have no longer Com-membership with the Church but are to be delivered up to Satan as we see in the Text. Notice is to be given of them and of their Errors to the Church their mouthes to be stopped their Companie to be avoided and the godly warned to beware of them 2 Tim. 4. 15. 6. This resolves us how the world comes to swarm with foul and pestilent opinions this chief stone is laid aside by the most of unskilfull builders Wood hay and stubble is brought in to litter the Church in stead of gold silver and precious stones 1 Cor. 3. The first decaie is commonly here still Hymeneus and Alexander laying aside Conscience as legal and servile and Old-Testament ware become soon tainted with noisom opinions at last come up to open blasphemies and professed detestation of Paul God doth expose unconscionable Christians to errors in Faith Dr Twisse Zech. 11. 10 14 15. and all such like sound Teachers God in his just judgement smites such Teachers in their right eye and in their right hand they are corrupt both in judgement and practice and become no better then idol-Teachers coming before God with the idols of their hearts and laying stumbling blocks of iniquitie before the peoples face And indeed whensoever the Teacher layes by the Staffe of Beautie Faith and breaketh the Staffe of Bands Good Conscience what hath he left to take but the instruments of a foolish shepherd some absurd and dangerous opinions which drown men in perdition and errour while they speak high sounding swelling words of vanitie 2 Pet. 2. 18 19. and promise others Libertie themselves are the captive servants of all corruption 7. This informs us whence it ordinarily ariseth that many have lost that former Peace and those sweet soul-Soul-Comforts they have sometimes had they have lost or wounded their Conscience The Lamp being broken the Oile is lost and the light goes out of it self Men little minde this but here is the common bane of all They are excellent Observations of Learned Ames Med. Theol. lib. 1. cap. 30. Prou● fides Conscientia vigent aut languent in hominibus si● 〈◊〉 certitu●o aug●tu● aut dimi●●●●ur