estate before God And that hath made way now to a treatise of conâcience which will shew us what estate âe are in before God I desire to handle common-place-wise And first I will ââl you in brief what the conscience of âery man is I say of every man For ângels and devils have a conscience âo ye may see it in the speech of the ângel to John when John would have âorshipped him Rev. 19.10 I am thy fellow-serâant saith he see thou do it not Mark He had a conscience that could say I am a servant and therefore must not taââ worship to me So for the devils Wheâ our Saviour bade them come forth oâ the possessed Matth. 8.29 they say Art thou comâ to torment us before our time See theâ had a conscience that told them therâ would be a time when they should bâ further tormented But I am not tâ speak of such consciences but of thâ conscience of man Now the conscience of man is the judgement of maâ upon himself as he is subject to God judgement Divines use to expresse iâ in this Syllogisme He that truly believeth in Christ shall be saved My conscience telleth me this is Gods word But I believe truly in Christ My conscience telleth me this also Therefore I shall be saved And so also on the contrary side So that conscience is a mans true judgement of himself 1. Cor. 11.31 If we would judge our selves that is If we would bring our selves before the tribunal of conscience to receive its judgement Foure propositions are conteined in that portion of Scripture which I have chosen to make the subject of this ensuâng treatise Rom. 2.15 1. Foure Propositions That there is in every man a conscience Their consciences bearing them âitnesse Every one of them had a âonscience bearing them witnesse 2. That the light which conscience directed to work by is knowledge written in their hearts 3. That the bond that bindeth a mans conscience is Gods law which âhew the effect of the law written in their ââarts 4. That the office and duty of conâââence is to bear witnesse either with our selves or against our selves accusing or excusing our selves or actions bearing witnesse and their thoughts acâusing or excusing one another I begin âith the first Proposition I. There is in every man a conscience THere was a conscience in all these heathen in the text 1. There is in every man a conscience their consciences âring them witnesse There was a conscience in the Scribes and Pharisees John 8.9 being convicted of their own consciences There is a conscience in good men as in Paul 2. Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience There is a conscience in wicked men Tit. 1.15 their mind and conscience is defiled As it is impossible the fire should be without heat so it is impossible that any man should be without â conscience Indeed we use to say Such an one hath no conscience buâ our meaning is that he hath no good conscience But every one hath a conscience either good or bad The Lord engraved conscience in man when he created him at first True it is since the fall of man conscience is miserably corrupted but man can never put it off Conscience continueth for ever in every man whether he be in earth or heaven or hell The most base and devilish profanelings in the world have a conscience Let them choke it or smother it as much as they can let them whore it or game it or drink it away as much as they are able for their hearts yet conscience will continue in spite of their teeth 1. No length of time can wear this conscience out What made Josephs brethren to remember the cruel usage they shewed him but conscience It was about twenty years before yet âhey could not wear it out 2. No violence nor force is able to âuppresse conscience but that one day ââr other it will shew it self What made Judas go and carry back the money that he betrayed our Saviour for ând also to cry out I have sinned but conscience No question but he laâoured to suppresse it but he could âot 3. No greatnesse nor power is able do stifle conscience but that it will one âay like a band-dog flie in a sinners face What made Pharaoh crie out I am âicked but conscience He was a great King and yet he was not able to overâower conscience 4. No musick mirth or jovializing âan charm conscience but it will play âhe devil to a wretched soul for all âhat What was the evil spirit of meâancholy that came upon Saul but conscience He thought to allay it with instruments of musick but it still came again 5. Death it self is not able to part conscience from a sinner What is that worm that shall never die but onely conscience and in hell conscience is as that fire that never goeth out I confesse some seem to have lost conscience quite They can omit good duties as though they had no conscience at all they can deferre repentance and turning to God as though they had no more conscience then a beast but one day conscience will appear and shew plainly that it was present with them every moment of their lives and privie to all their thoughts and all their wayes and set before them all the things that they have done Be men never so secure and senselesse and seared for the present conscience will break out either first or last Either here or in hell it will appear to every man That he hath and ever had a conscience Reasons Now the reasons why the Lord did plant a conscience in every man living are 1. Because the Lord is a very righâous Judge And as he commandeth ârthly judges not to judge without âitnesse so he himself will not judge âithout witnes and therefore he planteth a conscience in every one to bring in evidence for him or against him at Gods tribunall 2. Because the Lord is very merciââll We are wonderous forgetfull and ândlesse of God and of our own souls and have need to be quickned up to our duties therefore the Lord hath âiven every one of us a conscience to ââe a continuall monitour Sometime âe forget to pray and then conscience ââtteth us in mind to go to God someââme we are dull in the duty and conâââence is as a prick to quicken us someâne our passions are distempered and âen conscience checketh commandââh us to bridle them We should neâr be kept in any order if it were not âr conscience Therefore hath the âord in mercy given us a conscience Vse 1 The first use is to condemn that diabolical proverb common among men Conscience is hanged a great while ago No no Achitophel may hang himself buâ he cannot hang his conscience Saâ may kill himself but conscience cannoâ be killed Mar 9.44 It is a worm that never dieth As the reasonable soul of man
it self neither the promises of this life nor of that which is to come Conscience crieth This belongeth not to me This mercy this comfort is not my portion Secondly In a terrour and anguish of mind from these three heads 1. From the guilt of sin 2. From the apprehension of Gods wrath 3. From fear of death and of judgement This is the three-stringed whip wherewith conscience is lashed These ye shall find upon the conscience of Adam and Eve when they had sinned against God Their conscience was whipped 1. With the guilt of sinne they saw they were naked Gen. 3.7 2. With the apprehension of Gods wrath they hid themselves from the presence of God verse 8. 3. With the fear of some vengeance which they began to look for I was afraid saith Adam verse 10. This three-stringed whip ye may see also was upon the conscience of Cain after he had slain his brother His conscience was whipt 1. With the guilt of sinne My sinne is greater âhen can be forgiven 2. With the apprehension of Gods wrath From thy face O Lord am I hid 3. With the expectation of death and of judgement It shall come to passe that every one that findeth me shall slay me Thus I have shewed you what a troubled conscience is The degrees of a troubled conscience II. THe next thing I promised to shew is the degrees of a troubled conscience A troubled conscience hath divers degrees For some conscience are more troubled then other some 1. The first degree is such a degree as may be in Gods children and this ariseth not so much from the apprehension of Gods wrath as from the guilt of sinne Their consciences grieve anâ are troubled to think that they have sinned and offended the Lord God Thuâ we see David could not be at quiet Although Nathan had told him from Goâ that his sinne was forgiven yet his conscience still troubled him Psal 51.4 Against the onely have I sinned and done this evil iâ thy sight saith he I grant the consciences of Gods children are troubled aâ the apprehension of Gods anger but then it is his fatherly anger not the anger of an enemy Though for a sââ they may seem to apprehend that too yet mostly it is for that they have provoked their loving Father to anger against them A father may be angry with his child out of love and so the Lord may be with his dear children The Lord was angry with me too saith Moses Deut. 1.37 O let not my Lord be angry saith Abraham the father of the faithfull O God of hosts Psal 80.4 how long wilt thou be angry with thy people that prayeth saith the Psalmist Sometimes âhe Lord is angry with the prayers of his people but it is in love because he would have them pray better and obey better and look to their standing âetter Now the consciences of Gods âeople are very much troubled when âhe Lord is thus angry with them 2. The second degree of trouble of âonscience is such as is in the wicked ând yet not altogether without hope The conscience is troubled but yet so âs it conceiveth hope God is merciâull and Christ died for poore sinners âc Thus many a wicked man is trouâled and affrighted in conscience not âor sinne but for the wrath of God against it yet he conceiveth for the present that the sinne is pardonable and may be forgiven Christ may forgive God may pardon It is indeed but a poore ground of hope comfort upon possibilities but yet this lightneth the trouble in the mean time and it may be within a while shaketh it quite off Like the wicked Jews Isa 57.10 who were worried and wearied most grievously yet they said not There is no hope There may be much horrour and disquiet in these consciences for a time but there is a higher degree yet a worse troubled conscience then this 3. The third degree of a troubled conscience is when it is for the present altogether hopelesse such a conscience as is swallowed up in despair when men thinking of their manifold sinnes of the direfull wrath of God of the dreadfull torments of hell for everâ their consciences make them despair of all hope or possibilitie of avoyding this bringing such thoughts as these Whaâ a deal of time have I spent in sinne wherein I might have made my peace with God anâ have prevented all this What a great and omnipotent God have I offended What an infinite Judge have I provoked who is able to revenge himself on me and who will be my foe to eternitie conscience also bringing in thoughts of the torments and unsufferable pains to be endured in hell and such swallow up in despair without all hope for the present or the future Like the wicked man which Eliphaz speaketh of Desperatio est homicida animae Aug. He believeth not that he shall return out of darknesse Job 15.22 So these have no hope of escaping expect to perish as Spira O saith he I envy Cain and Judas I vvould I vvere in their cases They are damned but I shall be vvorse for evermore Now though to these all hopes be gone for the present yet some of these troubled consciences scramble up again with vain hopes and some do not Cain got âp again it should seem but Judas did not Those that never get up again eiâher 1. they live in intolerable horrour and vexation of spirit Desperare est in infernum descendere Isid as if they had a devil in them to put them to anguish and often being weary of their lives do make away themselves and so leap quick into hell or else 2. they runne desperately into all abominable courses Their consciences telling them there is nothing to be expected but damnation they give themselves desperately to commit sinne with greedinesse saying with them in Jeremie There is no hope therefore we will wall after our owne devises Jer. 18.12 Or else 3. they grow senselesse of it They see they are wrong but they are not sensible of it It may be they pray and reade and heare but their consciences secretly whisper All is to no purpose Conscience eateth and eateth like a worm and they pine away in their iniquities Ezek. 4.23 as thâ prophet speaketh A kind of sorroâ they have but they cannot mourn â kind of sad dolour but they cannoâ weep Ye shall not mone nor weep bââ pine away in your sinnes saith the text I confesse there be more presumers iâ the world who promise themselves that all shall be well with them but yet there be despairers too and very many whose consciences are troubled with secret despair though it may be not apparently to others Now the causes of these despairing consciences are these 1. The greatnesse of sinne when the heart thinketh secretly thus Certainly the Lord cannot find in his heart to forgive me As it was with Cain When he had lived in earthly-mindednesse and then in formality
Whosoever calleth upon the Lord shall be saved Rom. 10.13 Hence the wicked may falseây conclude I call upon the Lord and I pray unto him therefore I shall be saved And so on the contrarie a weak Christian who findeth not in himself those degrees of grace which some places of Scripture seem to require concludeth from thence against himself Therefore I have no grace at all This is a second âcause of mistaking Reas 3 3. A third cause is the not trying ând examining our own hearts Some âre loth to trouble themselves about it They are loth to think so bad of themselves as that they are in such a course as wherein God will not love them Nay they cannot endure that others should discover their hearts unto them They had as lieve they should shew them the pit of hell as shew them themselves They look to some common gifts and graces that are in them such gifts and graces as may be in a reprobate but they will not think so as illumination knowledge the gift of prayer of temperance c. These they look to and these they speak of though they have reigning lusts within in their hearts As Jehu Come see my zeal saith he 2. Kings 10.16 He doth not say Come see my pride and hypocrisie but my zeal Jehu looked at his zeal and so thought he was right So on the contrarie weak Christians may sometimes look onely at their sinnes and infirmities and take no notice of Gods graces that are in them and so may mistake their own selves and conclude amisse of their estates Thus I have shewed you the reasons why men are mistaken about their estates Now I will shew you the reasons why men are mistaken though conscience do tell them 1. Because the speeches of conscience in the wicked many times yea most times are low speeches The gnawings of conscience whereby they are told they are in a bad and a damned estate are like the gnawings of a very little worm that a man can hardly feel Where their worm dieth not Isa 66.24 The word in the originall ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã signifieth a very little worm that breedeth in scarlet that a man can very hardly see or perceive so men sometimes do hardly see or perceive the condemning and gnawing of conscience Again conscience biteth suddenly as I told you it giveth a little nip and away Like a sparrow that flieth by it flieth so fast by a mans eye that he can scarce tell whether it be a sparrow or no So it is not easily perceived whether it be a condemning conscience or no it giveth such sudden nips and away that men seldome take notice Beloved there is never a wicked man under heaven unlesse he be delivered up absolutely to a reprobate sense but hath a thousand of these sudden momentany nips every day in the yeare Had he the heart to observe them but he hath not he might see his wretched estate to trouble him and provoke him to Christ and to be converted that God might heal him I say had he a heart he might see it but these nips are so secret and sudden that he doth not So likewise it is with the godly in regard of true comfort Their conscience suddenly flasheth in comfort and they many times do not observe it As Job speaketh of God Lo Job 9.11 he goeth by me and I see him not he passeth on also and I perceive him not So doth the Lord go by his children in the sudden flashes of comfort in their conscience but many times they see him not perceive him not 2. Because the devil blindeth mens eyes therefore they do not see what their consciences do shew them Ye may reade this of the wicked people in Corinth 2. Cor. 4.2 St Paul saith he commended himself and the Gospel to every mans conscience in the sight of God that is He did so preach and so live that every mans conscience could not choose but say Certainly Paul preacheth the truth and Paul liveth right and we must live as he speaketh and doeth He made their consciences say thus and to tell them they were not right if they did not But mark what followeth Some did not see this Why The god of this world saith he hath blinded their eyes So the god of this world blindeth the eyes of the wicked that what their consciences shew them they do not see it nor observe it So for Gods people Though they be in a good and a blessed estate and their consciences can say it yet Satan oftentimes hindreth them that they do not perceive their own comfort 3. Men do not love conscience We should love conscience better then the dearest friend we have under heaven We would do much for a friends sake but we should do a thousand times more for conscience sake Rom. 13.5 Obey Magistrates for conscience sake suffer disgrace reproches any thing for conscience sake It is better then all the friends in the world But the wicked they do not love conscience let conscience speak they care not to heare it They will heare friends but they will not heare conscience Let their lusts call and their profits and pleasures call for this and that thing they heare all but they love not to heare conscience Nay many wicked men are angry to heare talk of it When Paul had made mention of conscience Ananias commanded he should be smitten Acts 23.1 Men and brethren saith Paul I have lived in all good conscience before God untill this day Smite him on the mouth saith the high Priest Ananias He was angry to heare him talk of a good conscience This is most certain men do not love conscience nor to be curbed by conscience nor informed by conscience They had as lieve see the devil as that their consciences should inform them of their estates and tell them thus and thus they are They are told rightly and yet they are mistaken because they do not love to heare conscience of that theme Of a good and bad conscience YE have heard concerning the witnesse-bearing of conscience about our estates The next thing to be spoken of is that welknown distinction of â Good and a Bad conscience This diâtinction we reade of in Scripture Concerning a good conscience see Heb. 13.18 We trust we have a good conscience Concerning a bad conscience see Heb. â0 22 Having our hearts sprinkled from ân evil conscience There be both the members Of the distinction of them both briefly and in order and first of a good conscience The goodnesse of conscience is two-fold naturall and renewed Concerning a good conscience 1. The naturall goodnesse of conscience consisteth in those reliques of goodnesse which it reteineth since the creation Ye know man depraved and corrupted his conscience by his fall yet there be some reliques left as reason and knowledge and reflexion I do not mean reliques of any spiritual goodnesse in conscience For as there is no
of this faithfull servant of God by making this book a means to bring thy soul to those heavenly joyes which are at Gods right hand for evermore which are joyes unspeakable and glorious so great that * Tanta est dulcedo coelestis gaudii ut si una guttula difflueret in infernum totam amaritudinem inferni absorberet as S. Augustine saith If one drop of the joyes of heaven should fall into hell it would swallow up all the bitternesse of Hell And that God would make you heirs of this joy is the prayer of your soul-friend Edm. C. An Enquiry after a mans estate before God Coloss 4.8 WHat a mans estate before God is pag. 1 Ministers are to enquire after the estate of their people pag. 4 Every man is either in an estate of grace or sinne pag. 11 This estate may be known pag. 16 Why every man ought to enquire after his own estate pag. 20 Means whereby a man may come to know what estate he is in pag. 23 Impediments which hinder this knowledge pag. 27 Motives to be diligent in this enquirie pag. 29 2. A treatise of Conscience Rom. 2.15 WHat conscience is pag. 31 I. Proposition There is in every man a conscience pag. 33 Why the Lord did plant a conscience in every man pag. 36 II. Proposition The light that conscience acts by is knowledge 1. of Gods law 2. of our selves pag. 41 The great necessity of knowledge pag. 43 III. Proposition The office of conscience is to bear witnesse accusing or excusing pag. 49 1. Foure properties of this witnesse-bearing It is 1. Supreme pag. 51 2. Impartiall pag. 52 3. Faithfull pag. 53 4. Privie pag. 55 2. The parts of this witnesse-bearing I. It s single witnessing 1. What we have done pag. 57 2. What we intend to do pag. 58 3. What is the bent of our hearts ibid. II. It s judiciall bearing witnesse pag. 64 1. About things to be done or omitted Where are considered 1. It s Office 1. To judge pag. 68 2. To counsel pag. 69 2. Its Adjuncts It is either 1. Illightned pag. 76 2. Erroneous pag. 78 3. Doubting pag. 85 4. Scrupulous pag. 88 5. Faithfull pag. 95. or 6. Vnfaithfull pag. 104 2. About things alreadie done or omitted and here also 1. It s Office is 1. To approve pag. 116 2. To absolve pag. 117 3. To mislike pag. 119 4. To condemne pag. 121 2. Its Affections It is either 1. Tender pag. 125 2. Sleepie pag. 126 3. Benumbed pag. 127. or 4. Seared pag. 128 From all these proceed two other Adjuncts I. A quiet conscience concerning which is considered 1. What it is pag. 132 2. How that in the godly differeth from that in the wicked pag. 137 3. How to know whether we have it or no pag. 152 Where is handled Whether a child of God may fear death and how farre pag. 159 Whether a wicked man may be desirous to die and in what cases pag. 164 The great benefit of peace of conscience pag. 167 II. An unquiet conscience What it is and the causes of it pag. 173 The degrees of it pag. 178 The difference of it in the godly and in the wicked pag. 184 How a man may keep peace of conscience pag. 200 How it dependeth upon obedience pag. 205 What manner of obedience that is which peace of conscience dependeth upon pag. 211 What a man must do to be freed from a burdened and troubled conscience pag. 215 As conscience beareth witnesse of our actions so of our persons pag. 222 It can and doth inform every man what estate he is in pag. 223 How it doth this pag. 229 When it doth this pag. 232 Why many neverthelesse are deluded about their estate pag. 239 What a good conscience soundly renewed is pag. 247 What a weak and infirm good conscience is pag. 256 IV. Proposition The bond of conscience is the law of God pag. 267 1. The Primarie and supreme is Gods word pag. 270 Gods law bindeth the consciences of the regenerate pag. 281 2. The Secondarie and relative others or ourselves pag. 296 1. Others may bind our consciences as Magistrates Superiours and how farre pag. 297 2. We may bind our own consciences by lawfull vows and promises pag. 314 What vows are unlawfull and not binding pag. 315 Of the vow made to God in baptisme how great it is and how much to be regarded pag. 318 An Enquiry after a mans estate before God COLOSS. 4.8 Whom I have sent unto you for the same purpose that he may know your estate and comfort your hearts THE estate of a man before God is the relation that he standeth in unto God What a mans estate before God is as God is the free fountain of spirituall life and salvation and the âterminer of mens everlasting condiâons either in heaven or hell So that âen we question about a mans estate ãâã question Whether he be in Christ ãâã not Whether he have true grace ãâã or no Whether he be one of Gods âldren or no or whether he be yet ãâã better then a reprobate There be three things to be considered in this definition of every man estate First it is a relation unto God not as a man is in himself it may bâ rich it may be poore in the world buâ I speak here as he is in relation toward God Whether he be rich toward God yea or no. I do not speak as man is in regard of others it may bâ he is a father or a sonne a master oâ a servant a king or a subject but iâ relation to God Whether Gods servant or no Rom. 16.10 Gods child or no. Saluâ Apelles saith Paul and he telleth us iâ what estate Apelles was in before Goâ namely in an estate of approbatioâ approved in Christ And the same Apostle speaketh on the contrary of thâ unconverted Gentiles that they werâ strangers from the life of God Ephes 4 18. Ephes 4.18 Secondly As it is a relation untâ God so it is a standing relation Thaâ wherein he standeth towards God thaâ is a mans estate before God There a difference between one that doth ãâã and one that is in the state of sin ãâã child of God may sinne but he is nââ in a state of sinne you cannot call hiâ a wicked man So also there is difference between one that doeth some good actions and one that is in a good estate A carnall man may do some good âhings but he is not in a good estate The estate of a man is a standing thing it is the relation that he standeth in towards God Thirdly It is the relation that a man standeth in towards God as he is the free fountain of spirituall life and salvation It is not every standing relation towards God For a man may be considered in relation to God as a Creatour and so the heavens and the earth and the very brute beasts stand in relation to God as they are his
own estate before God I do not mean Whether he be in the state of election or reprobation but he may know Whether he be in the state of salvation or damnation that is Whether he be in the way that leadeth to heaven oâ hell Whether he be in such a case thaâ if he die now he shall be saved or noâ saved Every man may thus know in what estate he is Reasons I 1. Because the word of God sheweth a man this 1. John 3.8 As for example He thaâ committeth sinne is of the devil Mark the Apostle telleth us what estate that man is in that liveth in sinne in a very bad estate 1. John 3.3 So on the contrary He that hath this hope purgeth himself Mark the Apostle telleth us what estate that man is in who purgeth himself he is in very good estate in a state of true hope in Christ And so 1. Cor. 6.10 the Apostle nameth divers who are not ân the state of salvation but of damnaâion if they die in such case they canâot inherit the kingdome of heaven So âhat if a man will but search the word ând believe that God doth say true he may know his estate Reasons II 2. Without this knowledge a man âannot have an accusing or an excusing âonscience in respect of his estate but âen may have yea many men have a âonscience accusing them of being in a âery bad estate and many men have ân excusing conscience that plainly âoth witnesse that they are in a very âood and gracious estate Exod. 9.27 I and my peoâle are wicked saith Pharaoh His conâcience did accuse him of being in a bad âtate I am holy saith David Psal 86.2 I am thy ârvant His conscience told him he âas in the state of grace So that ye âeed not go farre to know what estate âou are in there is that in your boâome that can decide the matter Reasons III 3. Men cannot desire nor flie from an unknown estate But men are commanded to flie from a bad estate and seek out a good one Therefore they may know the one and the other Matth. 3.7 8. O generation of vipers who hath warned you to flie from the wrath to come Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance saith John to the Pharisees He supposeth these men might easily know that they were in a very bad estate or else how could he say thus unto them Before I come to the Uses let us consider these three things 1. That every man living is born in a very bad estate We all know it well but oh that we would consider it Eph. 2.3 We are all by nature children of wrath Now here lieth the question When did we change our estates We are in the same state of damnation wherein we were born except we are come out of it I say here lieth the question Whether we are come ouâ of it or no whether we have mended our estate 2. Consider that the greatest part oâ the world never mend their estates But as they were born in a cursed estate âo they live and die in it And I speak âot this of heathen onely but alas âow many in the visible church do so âow many were there in the church of Philippi whom the Apostle could not âhink of without weeping when he âonsidered in what estate they were Phil. 3.17 So ân the church of Corinth 1. Cor. 1.26 not many wise not many rich not many noble âalled but commonly the meanest in âhe eye of the world were in the best eââate towards God Nay more then so Many of them who seek to get into a âood estate misse of it and perish See âuke 13.24 Strive to enter in at the strait âte Mark it 's a strait gate and letteth âut few in for many shall seek to enter in âad shall not be able Here and there a few âen where the constant ministery is 3. Consider that it is a marvellous âârd thing to passe from state unto ââate from a bad to a good estate There ãâã a very vast gulf between the state of ânne and the state of grace and it is âarvellous hard to passe it These âhings premised the uses follow estate they were in a state of justification from the knowledge thereof they had peace We are bound to get truâ peace to our consciences Oh what â lamentable maze are we in till our consciences have peace and this they cannot have untill we are fully acquainteâ in what case we stand before God Job 22.21 Acquaint thy self with God and be at peace 3. Thirdly we can never be fit foâ any duty of Gods worship as long aâ we know not what estate we are inâ We can never be fit for any holy duty to heare pray receive the sacrament Let a man examine himself 1. Cor. 11.28 and so let him eat c. First he must examine in whaâ estate he is before he can be fit for thaâ high service Lam. 3.40 So for repentance Leâ us search and try our wayes and turne gain to the Lord first find our selves iâ an ill estate and then return So foâ joy It is a duty to rejoyce in thâ Lord But we are never fit for rejoycing till we have proved what estate wâ are in Gal. 6.4 Let every man prove his ouâ work so shall he have rejoycing We caâ never be fit for any duty until we know ân what estate we are in because every duty varieth according as the estate of every man is To instance in prayer He that is not in the state of grace must âray one way and he that is in the âtate of salvation must pray another way the one that he may be converted and brought home to God the other that he may be strengthened and encreased in grace And so for the duty of hearing c. The second use is for direction Vse 2. Of Direction Means to know what estate we are in to let us understand by what means we may know what estate we are in There be foure means to know this 1. By our outward and inward actions I do not say by our outward actions For a man may be in the state of hypocrisie and yet his outward actions may be good Neither do I say by our inward actions alone For a man may be in the state of self-deceit and yet say his heart is good and his meaning and mind good But I say by them both put together Our Saviour setteth it out by a tree Matth. 7.17 Every good tree bringeth forth good fruit but a corrupt tree bringeth forth corrupt fruit So if the hearâ bringeth forth the fruit of righteousnesse joy in good things patience meeknesse gentlenesse love obedience godly conversation c. these evidence a good estate but if the heart bringeth forth deadnesse earthlinesse impatience evil conversation c. these are corrupt fruits and signes of a very bad estate 2. Ye
all the Angels in heaven should come and bear witnesse their witnesse is not so uncontrollable as conscience is There is no appealing from the witnesse of conscience we must be tried by it If conscience do accuse and condemn us the Lord onely is greater then our conscience 1. John 3.20 and will give judgement with it when it doth its office And if our conscience do not and commend us and applaud us when we are naught and call us good men and good women when we are nothing so but this will tell us plainly how vile and sinfull we are and if we say we are good when we are not it will tell us plainly we lie 1. John 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandments is a liar Mark though he say it yet his conscience giveth him the lie It is faithfull again in excusing It beareth witnesse of every good dutie we perform and of whatsoever good is in us Though all Jobs friends spake evil of him and God himself by his outward judgements seemed to condemn him for a wicked man yet still his conscience like a faithfull witnesse did not forsake him nay it offered to reason with God himself Job 13.3 I would reason with God I know I shall be justified and I will never forsake mine innocency till I die Still his conscience stood for him and excused him Thus on both sides conscience is a faithfull and sincere witnesse it will not be corrupted to speak otherwise then it knoweth the matter is 4. It is most privy to what it doth witnesse It is more privy to what we have done then all the world It can say more for us or against us then all the world Thou knowest all the wickednesse that thy heart is privy unto saith Solomon to Shimei 1. Kings 2.44 The use of all this is Vse Seeing conscience is so supreme so impartiall so faithfull so privy we should take heed âow we do any thing that might give ât advantage against us If we were to âppear before an earthly judge to anâwer for our behaviour and should have a companion present continually with us marking every thing in us telâing us of every fault and witnessing it âgainst us unto the judge how carefull would we be of doing any thing that might give him advantage against us Lo we have conscience as a continuall watch-man espying out all our wayes âetting down what-ever we do amisse âhecking us for it for the present and one day accusing us before God and âetting all things in order before our faces Oh how should we then labour it two years after Gen. 41.9 I remember my faults this day saith his conscience Adonibezek had forgot his cruelty but his conscience brought it to his mind As I have done so God hath requited me Judg. 1.7 saith his conscience 2. Conscience beareth witnesse of what we intend and purpose to do whether against God or man It will testifie every purpose and project of the heart though it be never acted though it die in the heart and never come to light Men little think of this Tush saith one I never did such a thing though I once intended it or had some thoughts about it Mark those very thoughts will conscience bring forth and testifie what they were Heare the Apostle Rom. 2.16 in that day God shall judge the secrets of men c. The most hidden things conscience shall bring to light and Christ shall judge them 3. Conscience beareth witnesse of the bent and frame of our hearts what we affect most and love most and rejoyce and delight in most and desire most and grieve for most what our affections runne upon most whether upon God or the world whether upon heaven or the things of this life Conscience bare witnesse to David Psal 119.77 that his delight was in the law of the Lord that God was his portion that Gods statutes were his counsellers Conscience bare witnesse to the false teachers in Christs time that they affected vain-glory and the prayse of men more then the prayse of God Conscience bare witnesse to Demas that notwithstanding his fair profession his heart was set upon the world Conscience bare witnesse to Jehu that for all his seeming zeal his heart was not upright But it may be objected Obj. 1. Jer. 17.9 How can this be The heart is deceitfull above all things who can know it Who can know it That is Answ Who else can know it but a man himself None under God can know the heart of man but a mans own conscience the spirit of man that is in him I confesse a man may be ignorant of some secret and particular deceit in his heart but who knoweth not the generall standing of God small and so we are deceived noâ seeing the radicall power of this love of God which in regard of its vertue is stronger then the other As a fool if he should feel hot water would conclude that there is no cold at all in it whereas there is radicall cold in that water such as will expell all that heat in a little space Or else this ariseth from anguish of spirit which so disturbeth the mind that it cannot see its own condition nor be capable of the comforts belonging unto it as it was with the Israelites Exod. 6.9 otherwise doubtlesse we may know our own hearts and when our conscience beareth witnesse its witnesse is right Vse 1 I. Use of reproof to those who stand out against the witnesse of their conscience and like hard-hearted felons plead still Not guiltie though never so much evidence come against them though conscience oft tell them this they have done thus they do such they are Oh stop not your eares against conscience stand not out against it but believe its testimony and make use of it to repent of the evil it accuâââh of while mercy may be had before âod himself cometh and joyneth with conscience to condemne for ever Vse 2 II. It serveth for singular encouragement to all to abound in good works Conscience will bear witnesse of them all to our unspeakable comfort in the time of afflictions yea at death and judgement Job felt it a sweet thing to have conscience give in testimony of his integrity and uprightnesse When his friends proved miserable comforters and God himself seemed to write bitter âhings against him yet his conscience witnessed that he had been eyes to the âlind and feet to the lame he had fed âhe hungry and clothed the naked and comforted the fatherlesse There is not â good thing that ever we do but conscience will afford us the sweetnesse and comfort of it in our troubles Isai 38.3 Rememâer O Lord saith Hezekiah that I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart We have spoken of consciences single bearing witnesse Now followeth its now onely of those who drown their consciences in their cups and fear
foure 1. A tender conscience 2. A sleepie conscience 3. A benumbed conscience 4. A seared conscience First a tender conscience 1. A tender conscience that is a conscience touched with the least sin ând checking us for the least sinne as for vain thoughts exorbitant passions âdle words and the like 1. Sam. 24 5. Such was Davids conscience which smote him for âutting off the lap of Sauls garment Such was Zaccheus his conscience which troubled him for supposed sins âf I have wronged any man saith he He âid not know but his conscience was so âender that it made him carefull of Ifs. This tender conscience is a singular blessing of God And if we desire to âttein unto it we must labour to see the âdiousnesse of sinne yea the malignity ând exceeding evil there is in the least âinne this will make us tender of it Secondly we must labour to mourn for very sinne though it seem little this âlso will keep our consciences tender And we have great cause to prise a tender conscience What got the Bethshemites by not being tender in conscience They looked into the Ark and because they durst venture upon it thâ Lord smote fifty thousand of them aâ once 1. Sam. 6.19 Numb 15.32 36. What got the man that gathered sticks on the Sabbath for not being tender in conscience He was stoned tâ death Conscience should tender thâ least commandment of God and so bâ tender of the committing the least sinâ This conscience is a great blessing The second affection of consciencâ is sleepinesse A sleepy conscience 2. A sleepy conscience iâ not so quick in smiting us as it ought either it checks not or else with sucâ faintnesse that it worketh not upon us it maketh us never the more watchfulâ against sinne This we see by many whâ can commit such sinnes without trouble or disquiet as would bring others on their knees and make theâ walk heavily long after This sleepâ conscience is very dangerous it maketh men as ready to fall into the same sinneâ tomorrow as to day and next day as tomorrow it letteth them see their faults but amendeth none because this is such a conscience as doth not cause men to feel the burden of their sinnes A man can never come to Christ as long as he hath a sleepy conscience because it doth not cause sinne to be burdenâome They who have this conscience âan sleep for all it and eat and drink and âe merry for all it Now a man can neâer come to Christ that is not burdenâd with his sinne that he cannot bear ãâã cannot be quiet for it cannot sleep âor it then Christ calleth him Come unâo me Matth. 11.28 all ye that are weary and heavy laâen and I will ease you A benumbed conscience that is 3. A benumbed conscience ââch a conscience as is in a deep sleep This differs from the former in degree You know there is a lesse sleep and âere is a greater sleep There is a lesse âeep when onely the outward senses ââe bound and there is a sleep when ââe inward senses are bound too Now benumbed conscience is a conscience âhat is in a deep sleep Preach to it it âourneth not cry to it it listeneth not This is a benumbed conscience Nor the greatnesse of sinne nor the wrath of God denounced against it can move it Men can know themselves guilty of such and such sinnes and yet not lay them to heart conscience never telleth them about it Thus the Apostle speaketh of those who knew thâ judgement of God Rom. 1.32 that they which commiâ such things are worthy of death yet noâ onely do the same but have pleasure iâ them that do them Their conscienceâ though informed and in some measure knowing the evil of their courses and the severitie of Gods judgement yet leâ them go on still and not onely commiâ the evil themselves but delight to seâ others as bad as themselves Such arâ our swearers and drunkards and company-keepers c. This is a verâ wretched conscience the Lord deliveâ us from it 4. A seared conscience Fourthly a seared conscience thaâ is such a conscience as speaketh not ãâã jote seared with a hot iron as the Apostles phrase is 1. Tim. 4.2 a sense lesse conscience a past-feeling conscience when men can swallow down sinne like drink oathes contempt of God his word and worship mockage of Gods servants hating to be reformed such as sin without any remorse This kind of conscience is in foure sorts of men 1. In dissolute and profligate persons who like common strumpets have their souls lie open to every sinne that cometh by 2. In obstinate sinners such as like Ahab have sold themselves to work wickednesse in the sight of the Lord. 3. In scoffers and jeerers who speak evil of them who runne not in the same excesse of riot with themselves and nickname the godly 4. In Apostates and backsliders who speak lies through hypocrisie and have fallen from the profession of the truth All these men have a conscience seared with a red-hot iron This is a great judgement of God greater then this there cannot âe No outward judgement that can fall upon us is like unto it not the plague nor shame nor beggery no nor any curse besides hell it self is equall to it By this the onely means under God of repentance is taken away Such may come to repent but it is a thousand to one if ever they do It is like a grave-stone lying upon their consciences which keepeth them under untill the day of judgement at which time God will awaken their consciences and then they will be more furious in tormenting then the very devils themselves Vse Ye that are not yet fallen upon this wretched conscience I beseech you take heed that ye never do But ye will aske me How may we avoid it Avoid it alas ye may avoid it if ye be carefull for conscience never seareth it self If ever it be seared it is ye your selves that do fear it Indeed the mind of man may blind its own self and the heart of man may corrupt its ownself and the affections of man may defile their own selves but conscience never corrupteth it self never seareth it self But you will say What must I do to avoid this searing of conscience First listen to conscience well that whatever it saith to thee from God thou maist do it This was the course of the Psalmist I will hearken what the Lord God will say in me so some translate it Heare then and listen what the Lord God will say in thee what thy conscience illightened saith in thee and do it Secondly whenever this conscience is quick follow it Nothing more seareth conscience then suffering quickneings to die Blow the coles if they do but smoke As the Apostle saith quench not the Spirit so quench not conscience I have hitherto shewed you that every man hath a conscience and the
reasons why God hath given us a conscience the light that it acteth by the offices of it and the affections of it Now from all these proceed two other adjuncts of conscience 1. A quiet conscience 2. An unquiet conscience A quiet conscience COncerning a quiet conscience three things are to be considered 1. What a quiet conscience is 2. How it differeth from that quiet conscience which is in the wicked 3. The examination whether we have this quiet conscience or no. I. For the first What a quiet conscience is It is that which neither doth nor can accuse us but giveth an honourable testimony of us in the course of our lives and conversations ever since we were regenerate I put that in too for 1. we do not begin to live till we be regenerate and 2. we can never have a true quiet conscience till then Such a quiet conscience had good Obadiah 1. Kings 18.12 I fear the Lord from my youth saith his conscience This was a very honourable testimony that his conscience gave him Such a quiet conscience had Enoch Heb. 11.5 Before his translation he received this testimony that he pleased God Dicente scripturâ inquit ille Haymo saith this testimony was the testimony of scripture Gen. 5.24 where it is said that he walked with God This is true but this is not all The text saith not there was such a testimony given of him but he had it and that before his translation but the testimony of Moses was after his translation Therefore it was the testimony of his conscience that bore witnesse within that he pleased God So that this is a quiet conscience which neither doth nor can accuse us but giveth an honourable testimony of us in the whole course of our life and conversation Now to such a quiet conscience there be three things necessary 1. Uprightnesse 2. Puritie 3. Assurance of Gods love and favour First uprightnesse is when a man is obedient indeed Many will be obedient but they are not obedient indeed not humbled indeed not reformed indeed What it is to be obedient indeed ye may see Exod. 23.22 But if thou shalt indeed obey his voyce and do all that I shall speak c. Mark that is obedience indeed when we do all that God speaketh and are obedient in all things This is an upright conscience when the heart is bent to obedience in all things An example we meet with in Paul Acts 23.1 I have lived in all good conscience before God untill this day His conscience could not accuse him of any root of wickednesse and corruption allowed and cherished in him That is an upright conscience Hast thou such a conscience as this My conscience can truly bear witnesse there is no sinne I favour my self in allow my self in but condemne all strive against all Thus David proveth that his conscience was upright If I regard iniquitie in my heart the Lord will not heare my prayer The regarding of any iniquity will not stand with uprightnesse A second thing required to a true quiet conscience is puritie Though ouâ heart be upright and stand generally bent to do the Lords will yet if we be guiltie of some particular sinne this will hinder the quiet of our conscience Therefore saith Paul 1. Cor. 4.4 I know nothing by my self that is no thing to acoâ me no corruption no root of unbeliââ reigning in him Infirmities he haâ many and frailties he had many and hâ knew them but he knew nothing ãâã accuse him Whatever was amisse iâ him his conscience told him he useâ all holy means against it If thy conscience can truly say thus also of thee then hast thou a truly quiet conscience Thirdly Assurance of Gods love favour and pardon Though we have fallen into great sinnes yet our consciences may have quiet if we can be truly assured of Gods love and favour in the pardon of them Heb. 10.2 The Apostle proveth that the sacrifices of the law could not purge away sinne but onely Christs bloud can do it His argument to prove it is this Because those sacrifices could not free a man from having conscience of sinne they could not purge the conscience but Christs bloud can After assurance of pardon in Christs bloud conscience can no more condemne for sinne how many or how great soever the sinnes were which have been committed These are the three things required to a true quiet conscience Furthermore a quiet conscience implieth two things 1. A calmnesse of spirit 2. A chearfull merry and comfortable heart These two I mean when I speak of a quiet conscience 1. A calmnesse of spirit or a quietnesse of mind not troubled with the burden of sinne nor the wrath of God nor terrified with the judgements due unto sinne This quietnesse and calmnesse of spirit is promised to all them that truly hearken unto Christ and obey him Prov. 1.33 Whoso hearkeneth to me shall be quiet from fear of evil 2. A chearfull merry and joyfull heart When our conscience giveth a comfortable testimonie of us it cannot but make our hearts joyfull 2. Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing the testimonie of our conscience saith Paul The comfortable testimonie which his conscience gave of him made him to rejoyce A wicked man cannot truly rejoyce no though he be merrie and joviall and laugh yet his carnall estate is a snare he can have no true joy but the righteous sing and rejoyce Prov. 29.6 No mirth like the mirth of a good conscience All other joy is but outside painted seeming joy That is onely true joy that is rooted in the comfortable testimonie of an upright good conscience which telleth a man his peace is made with God and that whether he be in sicknesse or in health God loveth him whether he live or die he is the Lords Thus ye see what a quiet conscience is How a quiet conscience in the godly differeth from the quiet conscience that is in the wicked THe second thing propounded to be considered about a quiet conscience is How it differeth from that quiet conscience which is in the wicked 1. I confesse that the wicked seem to have a very quiet conscience Many thousands of carnall people seem to live and the in quiet Look into alehouses lewd houses into all places who so merrie and brisk and heart-whole as they say as they who have no saving grace Job 21.23 Yet 2. this quiet conscience in them must needs differ from the quiet conscience of the children of God Certainly the Lord will not give the childrens bread unto dogs neither will he smile upon their souls neither doth he pardon the sinnes nor accept the persons of the ungodly And therefore if they have a quiet conscience it must needs differ from that iâ the godly Must not copper needs differ from gold And we who are the Lords messengers must teach you the difference Ezek. 44.23 They shall teach my people thâ
Ahab âd a quiet conscience but onely when âicaiah did preach Felix had a quiâconscience no doubt yet he tremâd to heare Paul preach of death and ãâã judgement Acts 24.25 One would we thought that Paul a prisoner âould rather have been afraid but âul had true peace of conscience and âerefore he could think and speak of âath with great comfort and of judgeâent with joy So could not Felix Beloved this is a strong signe of a saâ peace when some points of Gods woâ lay us flat and bereave us of our holâ Ye shall have many say O they haâ such peace and they have such a good coâscience as quiet as can be and as heaâ whole as can be By and by a souâ searching point cometh and ransackeâ them to the quick and they are goâ I confesse they go and get some unteâpered morter or other and dawb ãâã their consciences again but they ãâã gone for the time This is a stroââ signe of a rotten peace But a child â God can heare any point heare â death of judgement of any thing coâteined in the word with delight aâ comfort It is true he may be aâzed thereat but he is glad at heart tââ he heareth it and will make use ofâ be it mercy or judgement Sweet ãâã bitter points all are welcome to hiâ even the bitterest points are sweet ãâã him because God and he are at peaceâ and therefore he knoweth there is ãâã news from God but it is good IV. If our peace of conscience ãâã good it will heal that base fearfulnesse âhich is in many who dare not be in âe dark dare not go through a âurch-yard in the night Some will âake at the very shaking of a leaf as âe wicked in Job Job 15.21 which is nothing ât a guiltie conscience I grant this ârfulnesse is naturall to some yet I ãâã the true peace of conscience will âre it I do not say this is a reciproâll signe of true peace of conscience âr many wicked men may be bold âough but I say true peace of conâence will cure this immoderate fearânesse in the godly But here two questions are to be askâ I. Whether every true child of âod that hath true peace of conscience ân think of death with comfort and ãâã desirous to die Answ 1. Peace of conscience doth ât take away naturall fear It is the âture of every living creature to be veâ fearfull of death The Philosopher âlleth death ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã the fearâllest thing of all fearfull things Bildad âlleth it the king of terrours Job 18.14 Nature loveth its own preservation and thereforâ feareth the destruction of it Peace oâ conscience doth not take away all thâ fear 2. Besides peace of conscienââ doth not take away alwayes all degreâ of slavish fear of death The reason iâ because peace of conscience may ãâã weak mixed with much troubles ãâã conscience For as faith may be veâ imperfect so peace of conscience mâ be in some very imperfect Good oâ Hilarion was very fearfull to die Hâ cried out to his soul when he lay on hâ death-bed O my soul hast thou servâ Christ these fourescore years and art thâ now afraid to die Again a mans loâ may be very imperfect 1. John 4.18 Perfect love iâdeed casteth out fear but imperfeââ love doth not Hezekiah had peaâ of conscience Remember Lord saith ãâã I have walked before thee in truth 2. Kings 20.3 ãâã with a perfect heart Mark He had tâ peace of a good conscience his coâscience told him he had a sincere heaâ and that his wayes pleased God yâ he was afraid to die I do not thinkâ was onely because he had no issuâ though that might be some reason of it â When a child of God is afraid to âie it is not so much for love of this âife as out of a desire to be better prepaâed This made David cry out O âpare me that I may recover strength Psal 39.13 beâore I go hence and be no more And so âob Let me alone Job 10.20 21. that I may take comâort a little before I go whence I shall not âeturn These good men were then âomething unwilling to die They âight have many reasons most likely âis was one That they might be betâer prepared and more fit and ready for âeir departure 4. Some of Gods âeople as these Job and David at âther times I say some of Gods peoââe have such marvellous peace with âod as that if it were Gods will they âad much rather die then live Phil. 1.23 I desire ãâã be dissolved saith Paul and to be with âhrist which is farre better It may be â regard of the church or the care of âeir children and charge God hath laid ân them they could be content to reâain still in the body neverthelesse âhey account their state after death much better and were it put to them whether to die or to live longer here they would choose death rather of the twain 1. Kings 19.4 Nay Elias requested for himselâ that he might die It is enough Lordâ take away my life Not that they lovâ death it self for death is evil in its owâ nature contrary to nature a badge oâ sinne but for the love they have to anâ the assurance they have of eternall lifâ after death 5. Nay there is no chilâ of God but may truly be said to lovâ death and to love the day of judgement and the appearing of Christ Jesus Divines use to put this as a signe of Godâ children Nay the Apostle maketh thiâ as a propertie of Gods children to lovâ Christs appearing I have fought a gooâ fight saith Paul I have finished mâ course There he telleth us of his owâ peace and then he telleth us of his reward 2. Tim. 4.8 From henceforth is laid up for ãâã a crown of righteousnesse which the Lorâ the righteous Judge shall give me in thââ day and not to me onely but to them also that love his appearing that is to alâ his children For all the children oâ God love the appearing of Jesus Christ to judgement Though all do not desire it with the same strength of faith âet all desire it with faith They beâieve that Christ hath destroyed him that âath the power of death Heb. 2.14 which is the deâil they believe Christ hath taken âway deaths sting which is sinne 1. Cor. 15.56 57. and ãâã allowed death up in victory and may âl say Thanks be unto God who hath giâen us victory through our Lord Jesus âhrist Neither do they so much queâon this as their faith to believe it âying Lord help our unbelief 6. Gods âildren have good reason to do so âd to check their own hearts whenâer they do otherwise Whenever any âstrust cometh they should check it âwn again whenever any fear ariâh they should say What I fear ââth which is a thing so precious Psal 116.15 Preâus in the sight of the
Lord is the death âhis Saints Is death precious and shall I âso vain as to fear it Thus ye see ãâã answer to the first question Wheâer every child of God that hath true âace of conscience can be desirous to âe II. Quest Whether a wicked man that hath no peace of conscience may not be desirous to die too Answ 1. The horrour of conscience man make a wicked man desirous to die Hâ may have so much horrour of conscience as that he may think certainly heâ cannot be worse Hell is infinitelâ worse but he may not think so Thâ Judas was desirous to die Matth. 27.5 when he weâ and hanged himself Thus many in dâspair do make away themselves I coâfesse some in despair may be fearfuâ to die as Cain was fearfull to die â was fear of death made him speaâ thus unto God It shall come to passe thâ every one that findeth me shall slay mâ Gen. 4.14 The reason was becausâ though he were in despair yet he wâ not so sensible of his horrour as Judââ was for Cain could go and build ãâã all this and train up his children ãâã musick and the like for all this bâ Judas was in a case more sensible of hâ misery 2. Dolour of pain may maâ a wicked man desire to die Thus â was with Saul Saul had received bâ deaths wound and was in most grieâous pain he could not die presently âeither could he live but lying in very âreat pain between both desired the Amalekite to stand upon him and slay âim 2. Sam. 10.9 though Osiander âhink the Amalekite lyed unto David âo curry favour with him but Joseâhus and others think he spake the âruth Sure it is that many wicked âretches having no peace of consciânce to sweeten and allay their torâents have been desirous to die nay âome have hastened their own death â Malecontentednesse and shame and âisappointment of their aims may also âake wicked men desirous to die and ãâã death come not soon enough of it âelf to dispatch away themselves with âruel self-murder Thus it was with Aâhitophel 2. Sam. 17 23. when he saw his counsel was was not followed he haltered himself He had no peace of conscience to comâort him against all his dumps and disâontents and therefore he was desiâous to die 4. Wicked men being âexed at something for the present may seem to be desirous to die and yeâ if death should come indeed they would be of another mind and be content death should be further off Nay Jonas that strange man of a good manâ O for a fit he would be dying yea thaâ he would Jon. 4.3 Lord take my life from meâ for it is better for me to die then to live â suppose if God had taken him at hiâ word he could have wished his wordâ had been in again But thus it is ofteâ in the mouthes of wicked people â would I were dead and I would I were oâ of the world not for any peace of conscience they have nor for any desire oâ death but onely for a momentany pangâ If they were to die indeed they would be loth enough to it Like the man iâ the Fable who being wearied with his burden of sticks lay down and called for Death but when Death came indeed to take him and said What shalâ I do man thou calledst me I pray thee said he help me up with my burden of sticks When he was to die indeed then he would rather have his own wearisome burden It is but a fable but this is the fashion of many 5. When wicked men are desirous to die indeed âometimes not out of discontent or âny such like reason yet it cannot be out of any true peace of conscience They may go away like lambs as we âay but it is in a fools paradise It may be whilest they lived they thought âo go to heaven but when they die then âll their thoughts perish as the Psalmist âpeaketh in another case To return therefore where we left O beloved is there any of you that want the peace of a good conscience ând do ye know what you want what â great benefit and blessing That ye may see this and fully know it and by ânowing it earnestly desire it conâider First That it is the very head of all âomforts A worthie Divine calleth it Abrahams bosome to the soul Ye know what a blessing it was unto Lazarus to be taken from his sores into Abrahams bosome The peace of a good conscience is like this bosome of Abraham Who would not gladly lie in it Such a man who hath it can never look upon another mans comfort but a good conscience will say Yea and I have my comfort too When Paul was commending of Timothie see how his own conscience spake of himself at the same time 1. Cor. 16.10 He worketh the work of the Lord as I also do Mark his conscience would be putting in comfort for himself Doth Timothie work the Lords work yea and so do I too saith his conscience It is Musculus his observation upon the place Secondly A quiet conscience maketh a man to tast the sweetnesse oâ things heavenly and spirituall It maketh the word to be to him as to David Sweeter then hony yea then the hony-combe I have not departed from thy judgements O Lord saith he thus saith his conscience now what followeth next Psal 119.103 How sweet are thy words unto my tast yea sweeter then hony unto my mouth A good conscience maketh a man tast sweetnesse in prayer when his conscience telleth him he prayeth aright It maketh him tast sweetnesse in a Sabbath when his conscience telleth him he sanctifieth it aright so also in the sacrament when his conscience can witnesse he receiveth aright What is the reason so few of you tast sweetnesse in these things The reason is this Because ye have not the peace of a good conscience It would find sweetnesse in every good dutie in every good word and work Thirdly A good quiet conscience maketh a man tast sweetnesse in all outward things in meat in drink in sleep in the companie of friends it putteth a Better upon a very morsel Prov. 17.1 Brown bread and a good conscience there is a Better upon it then upon all the costly fare of the wealthie without it Bernard calleth a good conscience a soft pillow An other calleth it a dear bosome-friend Solomon calleth it a continuall feast It maketh a man tast sweetnesse in every outward thing The healthy man onely can take pleasure in recreations walks meats sports and the like they yield no comfort to those that are bedrid or sick or half-dead But when the conscience is at peace the soul is all in good health and so all things are enjoyed with sweetnesse and comfort Fourthly It sweetneth evils to a man as troubles crosses sorrows afflictions If a man have true peace in his conscience it comforteth him in them all When things
of some wicked men who are enemies to God then we might see and understand the true weight and burden of this troubled conscience Cain crieth out of more then he can bear Judas thought to find more ease in hell then in his own heart So terrible was the torture of his troubled conscience that he murdered himself thinking verily that hell could not be worse Vse 2 2. See here what an infinite misery every sinner shall one day be in Though he be not troubled with this harpye for the present though he be not yet gastered with this furious hag yet the day will come when he shall I say the time will come when all ye that are wicked shall be haunted with this hellish agony of a troubled conscience either here before ye die or when ye die or at furthest when your souls are departed out of your bodies This is unavoydable to all that live and continue in sinne Though for a while ye live in mirth and pleasure and securitie and conscience letteth you alone though like Nabal to day ye feast and make merry yet there is a conscience within you an Abigail which to morrow will tell you of it and then your hearts will die within you and be like stones 1. Sam. 25.37 as cold and as heavie as a stone within you As Samuel met with Saul 1 Sam. 15.26 Because thou hast forsaken the Lord the Lord also hath forsaken thee so conscience will find you out However for a while ye slight and neglect it or else perhaps suppresse it yet it will find you out as Eliah did Ahab and then ye will say as he did Hast thou found me 1. Kings 21.20 O mine enemy yea I have found thee Thou hast sold thy self to work wickednesse in the sight of the Lord thou hast been a profane beast thou hast run against heaven and against God and Christ and thy life hath been full of rebellions c. now I have found thee out The day will come when thy conscience shall be like Jobs messenger Ye know what news the messengers brought Job first news of one great evil and then of another greater and then of a third worst of all cattel and goods taken away servants dead sonnes and daughters dead I onely am left alive to tell thee So I say the time will come when conscience shall thus report Thy pleasures are dead thy profits are dead thy comforts are dead thy heart is dead thy soul is cursed and must die for ever and I onely am left alive to tell thee And then he shall crie our Cursed was I that ever I was born and cursed be the womb that bare me and the paps that gave me suck Then shalt thou mourn at the last when thy flesh and thy bodie are consumed and thy conscience shall say How have I hated instruction and my heart despised reproof I have not obeyed the voice of my teachers nor enclined mine ears to them that instructed me Such dolefull messages conscience will bring in one day and then it shall hisse like a snake in thy bosome Know now that for all these things thou shalt come to judgement And so thy conscience shall bray thee like a fool in a mortar as it were with a pestill and it shall pounce thee and beat thee and distresse thee for evermore This is the moth that getteth into the cloth and doth eat it Psal 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquitie thou makest his beautie to consume away like as when a moth fretteth a garment This will make thy face gather blacknesse and thy spirit be overwhelmed for evermore I must adde another use yet For all this is the law and untill ye be in Christ ye are all under the law the curse of it the rigour of it And we are bound to tell you how ye shall find it if ye do not submit to the righteousnesse of Christ But though we do preach the law yet we do preach it in the hand of a mediatour saith Paul Gal. 8.19 a terrible killing law but yet in a mercifull hand in the hand of a mediatour to drive us to seek for mercie and therefore Vse 3 The third use shall be to call upon you to be humbled and to see that there is no living for you in your sinnes Go and stoop to Christ Jesus who onely can purge your guiltie consciences by his bloud I beseech you consider ye who yet abide in your sinfull estates and are yet in the flesh I beseech you consider what the event will one day be If ye will not look out your consciences will find you out at the last and then wo be to you Your consciences will make all things grievous and bitter to you even those things which in themselves are most sweet and good When ye heare of heaven of mercie of the bloud of Christ these will but encrease your miserie conscience will say You have no part in them When you heare the word any promise or comfortable passage in it your conscience will say Yea this is my miserie I have no share in these things This will be a hell unto you and will torment you before your time This will also make all outward good things bitter unto you When you see wife and children and friends then conscience will whisper and say I shall not have these long ere long I shall have none but damned companie When you see your goods estates and the like conscience will mutter Alas ere long I shall be in a place where a drop of water shall not be afforded me to cool my tongue When you see the light and other comfortable objects O wo is me I shall shortly be in a place where I shall see nothing but darknesse utter and everlasting darknesse Conscience will make your afflictions intolerable your sicknesse intolerable your death-bed intolerable the face of death intolerable I beseech you brethren consider these things you that have not felt a troubled conscience untill this houre Ye hardly know yet what it is ye will know it to your sorrow if you do not consider it There is a phrase in Ezek. 30.24 where God saith he will make Pharaoh grone with the gronings of a man deadly wounded So it will be with you if you will not hearken and submit to Jesus Christ conscience will make you grone with fearfull grones O wo is me I am undone without hope without remedie Consider this therefore and be wise before the things which concern your peace be hidden from you And let me the rather exhort Exhortation you to this in regard of the danger of the times The Lords wrath is gone out and his judgements do flie through the earth and his plagues do fall on every side of us What will your guiltie consciences do now oh you can never endure them Ye had need of purged consciences now lest ye be quite comfortlesse in the day of visitation
can say ye are wicked ye did not feed nor clothe nor visit me Go your wayes to hell So for the righteous Your consciences can say ye are righteous Go ye to heaven Thus the Lord will do Now this could not be if conscience could not inform every one that is godly that he is so If conscience could not witnesse what estate they are in this could not be Thus ye see the truth of the first thing II. The second thing that I promised to shew you is How conscience doth this 2. How conscience doth this Ye have heard that it is able to inform every one what estate he is in before God Now it followeth to consider how conscience doth it This it doth by comparing the word of God with our hearts and our hearts with the word As for example Psal 119.6 They who have respect to all Gods commandments shall never be ashamed saith the word But saith conscience I desire to know all my dutie to God and man and to perform all that I know and therefore I shall not be ashamed Prov. 11.18 To him that soweth righteousnesse shall be a sure reward saith the word But saith conscience I plough up my nature and all the fallow-ground of my heart and I sow righteousnesse and therefore to me shall be a sure reward So To be spiritually minded is life and peace saith the word But saith conscience I am spiritually minded my mind is set upon things that are spirituall therefore I have life and peace So conscience also judgeth of the state of sinne Rom. 8.6 Those that live after the flesh shall die saith the word But saith conscience my life is led after the flesh and the lusts of it therefore I shall die Rom. 8.13 He that believeth not is condemned already saith the word But saith conscience I do not believe therefore I am in the state of condemnation The word saith John 3.18 A good tree bringeth forth good fruit and a corrupt tree bringeth forth corrupt fruit But saith conscience My works and my courses are corrupt and naught therefore so is my heart Thus ye see that conscience doth it by reasoning And this conscience can very well do 1. Because conscience hath a very good judgement It is a very wise and judicious facultie in the soul of man Some make it an act of judgement We do not take it so It is not an act of judgement but it is a reflexive facultie of the soul having a very good judgement Whether it be right to obey you rather then God judge ye saith Peter Acts 4.19 appealing to their own consciences to judge in the point So that conscience is a facultie of a good judgement Now if it be judicious it must needs be able to reason and to argue about our estates and find out whether they be good or no. It is the judgement of man that is able to argue and able to hold an argument We thus judge saith the Apostle that if one died for all then are all dead 2. Cor. 5.14 Mark His proposition he would prove was That all the believers in Christ are dead to themselves and alive unto God Now ye may see how his judgement maketh here an argument If Christ died for them all then they are all dead but Christ died for them all therefore they are all dead Judgement is able to make arguments and therefore if conscience be a reflexive facultie that hath a very good judgement it must needs be able to frame arguments and so make out what our estates are 2. Because there is naturall logick in every mans conscience It can frame syllogismes thus As many as be led by the spirit of God are the sonnes of God saith the word But saith a godly mans conscience I am led by Gods spirit and I am carefull to follow the leading of Gods holy spirit therefore I am one of Gods sonnes And so on the other side Ye will say How can a countrey-mans conscience make syllogismes It is onely for scholars and such as have studied logick in the schools to make syllogismes I answer It is true Artificiall logick is onely among scholars But there is naturall logick in conscience which doth not stand upon forms The godly people at Rome were never brought up at Universitie yet the Apostle telleth them they had logick enough to argue themselves to be dead unto sinne and alive unto God through Christ Rom. 6.11 Likewise also saith he reckon ye your selves to be dead indeed unto sinne but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. The originall is ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Exercise so much logick in your selves Like good logicians prove your selves to be dead unto sinne and alive to God So that ye see there is naturall logick in conscience and therefore conscience is able to frame arguments about our estate and to inform us what it is 3. When conscience doth this III. The third thing I propounded to consider is When conscience doth âhis This is a very necessarie point ând indeed so they are all but this âore especially I have shewed that âonscience is able to inform us what âstate we are in whether of grace or âature but when doth it perform this â answer I need not so much speak of âhe godly because they do mark âonscience But let me speak of such âs are foolish disobedient serving diâers lusts who never had yet the washâng of regeneration nor the renewing âf the holy Ghost I answer about âhem 1. Their conscience must needs âave a time when to do it I do rememâer my faults this day saith Pharaohs âutler Gen. 41.9 His conscience did ânform him and there was a time when âis conscience did inform him 2. Conâcience would choose a time by it self â would inform a wicked man solemnây and punctually of his rotten and curâed estate he is in I say it would have â solemn time by it self for this if it âould have it but a wicked man taketh ân order with his conscience that it âhall not tell him solemnly how it is with him neither will he find a time tâ suffer it As it was with Felix Wheâ his conscience began to grumble against him when Paul had told him â righteousnesse and of judgement hâ trembled his conscience began to stirre and would then have solemnly deaâ with him indeed but he shuffled it oâ and would not find time Acts 24.25 Go thy way â this time saith he to Paul I will heaâ thee at a more convenient time And â he said to his conscience too Conscience would take a solemn and set timâ to inform men what their estates anâ but men will not suffer them anâ therefore conscience is fain to takâ such sudden times as it can get Yâ will ask What times be they I answer First when conscience interlineth Conscience interlineth As for example in the heaâing of the word While men are hearing the word it
other text is 1. Pet. 3.21 The answer of ãâã good conscience towards God by the resurrection of Jesus Christ Where the Apostle first giveth this title to a renewed conscience to be called a good conscience Secondly he nameth the cause that maketh it to be good the power of Christs resurrection When the resurrection of Christ Jesus is powerfulâ upon us then conscience becometh good 5. The fifth is quietnesse By nature âothing is so fierce and violent if it be ânce awaked as conscience is O it is ânspeakably furious Thus is consciânce by nature and therefore it can neâer be good untill we get it appeased with the assurance of the pardon of our âinnes and so true peace and comfort âstablished in it This is the reason why âhe Scripture joyneth a good consciânce and faith so often together as â Tim. 3.9 Holding the mysterie of faith ân a pure conscience It cannot be a pure or good conscience if faith be not held ân it As long as the conscience is not ânderpropped by faith the conscience must needs be in a wildernesse Perhaps my sinnes are imputed unto me perhaps âhey are pardoned Perhaps they are coverâd perhaps not As long as the conscience lieth under these uncertainties it cannot be firm and foundly good indeed therefore we must labour for assurance of pardon by faith Thus much of a good renewed conscience that is perfectly and soundly renewed An infirm conscience II. Secondly There is a good conscience renewed but not soundly renewed very much as yet defective and imperfect The former conscience is called conscientia firma a firm conscience This is called conscientia infirma an infirm conscience Rom. 15.1 We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak This infirm conscience is a good conscience too and renewed but cumbred with sundry imperfections which in processe of time by growth in grace are for the most part conquered in the godly True faith is required unto this For the Apostle calleth such an one a brother in Christ one that hath this infirm conscience Rom. 14.21 It is good neither to eat flesh nor to drink wine nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth And we must not set such an one at nought Tush what care I for him I know I may lawfully do thus and this is my Christian liberty and shall I lose it for him because of his conscience Nay saith the Apostle Rom. 14.10 Why dost thou set at nought thy brother Mark The Apostle counteth such an one a Christian brother and not to be set at nought and therefore this is a good conscience too differing as much as white from black from such consciences as are weak through superstition of mind and through pride of heart because they will not be otherwise or through affected ignorance because they love not to be better informed These weak consciences are wicked I speak not of these I speak of a good conscience a conscience renewed but renewed imperfectly having yet sundry defects and imperfections The imperfections of it are 1. Imperfection of knowledge It doth not yet soundly and clearly understand what is lawfull and what is pure and what is by Christian liberty indifferent Paul saith Rom. 14.14 I know and am perswaded by the Lord Jesus that there is nothing unclean of it self but to him that esteemeth any thing to be unclean to him it is unclean He speaketh of things that are indifferent The Apostle had knowledge but there were others who did not know this O I may not eat this meat I may not play at bowls or use any other recreation I should sinne if I should c. This is one weaknesse in this kind of conscience weaknesse of knowledge 2. The second imperfection is to be grieved where it needeth not be grieved As when it seeth other do that which it self through mistake doth judge to be evil it is apt to be grieved and troubled to see it Rom. 14.15 If thy brother be grieved with thy meat now walkest thou not charitably It may be thou thinkest it lawfull to eat such meat but he thinketh otherwise and so is grieved to see thee eat This is another imperfection in this conscience to be grieved and offended without just cause 3. A third imperfection is in judgement It is apt to judge and condemn another mans liberty 1. Cor. 10.29 Why is my liberty judged of another mans conscience He speaketh of a weak conscience It is apt to be judging and condemning my liberty saith he but why so This is a fault and an imperfection indeed O such an one sinneth he doeth so and so yet it may be the thing is not unlawfull but a weak conscience is apt so to judge it and to condemn him that doeth it Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not and let not him that eateth not judge him that eateth Rom. 14.3 4. A fourth imperfection is this A weak conscience is apt to be misled So the Apostle intimateth Take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours become a stumbling-block unto them that are weak for if any man see thee who hast knowledge sit at meat in the idoles temple shall not the conscience of him that is weak be emboldned to eat those things which are offered to idoles and through thy knowledge shall thy weak brother perish for whom Christ died 1. Cor. 8.9 10 11. Where ye see that weak consciences are apt to be misled The reason is this Because when they see others whom they know to be more learned and judicious then themselves to do so and so that may soon tempt them to do it though their conscience be against it Vse 1 The first use is this If any have weak consciences let them labour to strengthen them Ye see what imperfections are in a weak conscience how apt it is to be offended and to judge other mens liberty how prone to misleading therefore let every good soul labour to be strengthened Vse 2 The second use is this Those that be strong must be carefull that they offend not the weak Though they do believe such and such Christian liberties they have yet if they know the use of them will offend their weak brother they should be carefull to abstein Rom. 14.13 Let no man put a stumbling-block or an occasion to fall in his brothers way Vse 3 Thirdly if it be such a sinne to sinne against the conscience of the weak then what a sinne is it to sinne against the conscience of all that are godly whether weak ones or strong ones Ye who walk after the flesh and can have disorders in your families and vanity in your mouths and apparent corruptions in your lives Ye who can drink and be drunken and keep company and prophane the Lords dayes ye offend the consciences of all that are godly it is a grief to their souls to see it Let me tell you It is a sinne to be wicked
however and the high-way to hell but to be wicked when ye have godly neighbours about you your sinne now is double For as you offend God so you offend them too Ye may remember what Christ saith Whosoever offendeth one of these little ones which believe in me it were better for him that a milstone were hung about his neck and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea Matth. 18.6 Ah ye vile wretches ye little imagine what fearfull vengeance ye pull on your own heads It were better for you that a milstone were hung about your necks and ye thrown into the sea then that ye should offend one of these little ones Ye may call them what ye will call them puritanes precisians uncharitable people censurers ye may call them as Satan teacheth you to call them but it is certain it were better a milstone were hung about your neck and ye thrown into the sea then that ye should offend any one of Christs little ones The Lord open your eyes that ye may repent and believe the gospel your selves and be saved 4. Lastly be exhorted brethren to labour after a good conscience How excellent a thing is it that hath so many good ingredients Illumination is one ingredient and Faith is another and Tendernesse another and Purenesse another and Quietnesse another and the Bloud of Jesus Christ another It is like Aarons composition which smelt sweetly when he went into the sanctuarie It is compounded of excellent conditions such as smell sweeâ when we come before God the Lord loveth that such should come neaâ him We may come with assurance tâ speed if we come with a good conscience Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near with assurance oâ faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience Mark we may draw near with assurance if we come with tâ good conscience It will comfort us in all troubles and support us in all dangers It maketh us happie nay there is no happinesse without it It will make us with quietnesse and contentednesse of spirit undergo whatever it shall please God to lay upon us How can they want comfort that have this It is a spring of comfort within them This will remain with us when all other comforts will forsake us When friends fail and estate faileth when credit and health and strength and all fail then a good conscience if we have it will speak peace to us yea and it will effect it in us comfort us and fasten comfort upon us Friends may speak words of comfort and peace to us but it may be we are not able to receive it the minister may preach peace but it may be we are not able to take it But a good conscience speaketh peace and effecteth it it doth not onely speak it but it putteth it into our hearts It proppeth us up in all miseries in sicknesses yea in death it self A good conscience then maketh us hold up our heads when all the world shall be confounded A good conscience will bear us out against the King of terrours It is onely a good conscience that can look death in the face 1. Cor. 15.55 57. and say O death where is thy sting thanks be to God who giveth us victorie through our Lord Jesus Christ Yea at the day of judgement when the whole world shall be burning before us when the great men of the world who go in silks and scarlet and broidred hair shall fear and shiver as a reed shaken with the wind this will make us with boldnesse undergo the terrour of it This will make us happie in all our distresses When crosses pelt us and sicknesse paineth us and death attacheth us we are happie men What if we have the tokens of Gods wrath upon our bodies so we have the marks of his love upon our souls What outward calamitie soever happeneth to us yet if we have this good conscience we are happie O then let us labour to get it by faith and a holy life If we would be safe in the floud-time in the day of Gods wrath we must be busie now about the ark we must provide beforehand for it Nothing but this ark will save us in the deluge of Gods anger It is in vain to trouble our selves about other things Jubal was a merrie man Gen. 4.20 he made pipes and organes Jabal built tents others planted vineyards but Noah provided his ark Many desire comfort in sicknesse in death but they do not provide for it beforehand They look after their sports or businesses in the world but this ark is neglected this good conscience without which all mens labour is vain Be they what they will be in never so much credit and esteem they are yet most miserable when troubles and afflictions come on them as one day they shall and shall not tarrie then all their comforts will forsake them When death looketh them in the face then their hearts die within them How full of pride and haughtinesse soever they were before yet when they come to die if their consciences be awaked they will with Saul fall down to heare the name of death 1. Sam. 28.20 and no spirits be left in them Nay if we want a good conscience when we lie on our death-beds desire good people to pray for us Good sir I beseech you let me have the benefit of your prayers to God for me Alas if thou hast not a good conscience all the prayers under heaven will not help thee See Heb. 13.18 Brethren pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience Mark The Apostle telleth them they may pray for him with comfort because he had a good conscience As if he had said If we had not a good conscience it were in vain for you to pray for us If ever God heare the prayers made for us we must have a good conscience Those that have not this good conscience shall never enter into the kingdome of heaven Though they had Moses Daniel and Job to pray for them yet all their prayers could not help them in the time of their distresse The bond of conscience NOw we must look back unto the foure propositions which at the beginning I observed in the text I am upon 1. That there is in every man a conscience 2. That the light which directeth conscience is knowledge 3. That the bond which bindeth conscience is Gods law 4. That the office of conscience is to bear witnesse to accuse or excuse I have in the handling of these a little altered the method and spake of the two first and the last Now followeth the third and that is consciences bond which is Gods law which shew the work of the law written in their hearts c. It is onely the work of Gods law that it beareth witnesse of that it accuseth or excuseth for The bond of conscience is Gods law The law of God is consciences bond Neverthelesse we must here distinguish The bonds
is immortall so conscience also is immortall Vse 2 Secondly this condemneth such a go about to suppresse conscience Theâ conscience maketh them melancholicâ and lumpish now and then and they gâ about to shake it off Alas why do yâ go about that which is utterly impossible Ye may suppresse it for a while and gagge it for a while but ye can never shake it off Conscience sticketh sâ close that a man may as soon shake oâ himself as his conscience And indeeâ his conscience is himself 1. Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself that is his conscience Judge in your selves verse 13. that is Judge iâ your consciences Vse 3 Thirdly this confuteth that drunke opinion That conscience is nothing âut a present fit of melancholy No It causeth it may be the present melancholick fit but it is not it Conscience ãâã a standing power in a man that is eâermore with him and will evermore âdge him and condemn him if he be âuiltie before God It will be with him when his dumpish fit is over Let him laugh and be merry yet conscience lies ãâã the bottome of all and will spoyl all the mirth Prov. 14.13 Let the drunkard be neâer so joviall I will not believe but âonscience in the midst of that drunken mirth causeth some sadnesse within and telleth him this is a very wicked life Let the carnall hypocrite daub up the matter with good duties and good prayers and good hopes I cannot believe but âhere is a conscience lieth at the botâome and telleth him he is rotten for all âhis You may see this in Cain Gen. 4.5 He had âeen at a good duty sacrificing to the Lord but his countenance fell when âe had done conscience did lie at the bottome and did tell him God did not accept him Conscience is with evil men at church at sermon at sacrament and telleth them secretly that they anâ not the persons to whom the blessinâ of these ordinances belong Vse 4 Lastly this may be for exhortatioâ to the godly That they would consider this that they have ever a conscience within them and that thereforâ they would labour alwayes to keep iâ void of offense which was Pauls exercise Acts 24.16 Take heed you offencâ not your consciences in duties of piety towards God in your prayings hearings c. no nor in your callings eatings drinkings liberties recreations Look alwayes to your consciences that yoâ offend them not because they are eveâ with you When two live ever together they had need not offend one another else there will be no quiet You and your consciences must ever live together if ye offend them ye are like to have very ill lives Better live with a curst scold then live with an offended conscience ye had better offend the whole world then offend conscience There are none whom ye are alwayes to live with but conscience ye are alwayes to live with Ye are not alwayes to live with your husbands âr alwayes with your wives nor alâayes with your parents or masters âere is a time when you must part but âonscience and you will never part âherefore labour to keep it void of ofânse And thus much of the first proposition There is in every man a consciânce Proposition II. The light that conscience acteth by is knowledge THis knowledge is twofold II. Proposition 1. Of Gods law 2. Of our selves 1. The knowledge of Gods law To know Gods will what is good what is âad what God coÌmandeth what he forbiddeth Every man under heaven hath this law of God in some measure writ in his conscience I confesse Gods children onely know Gods law to purpose âas it is a light to guide them in the way of salvation but all the world have some measure of knowledge whereby they may gather that there is a Goâ and that he ought to be worshipped aâ obeyed and that he hath power ovâ life and death All the world haâ knowledge in some measure what ãâã good and what is not what is to bâ done and what not what is accordinâ to conscience and what not All thâ world have this knowledge in somâ measure I do not say enough for salvation but enough to make them inexcusable before God for not following that light and not living according to that knowledge which they have Iâ there were not some light in this behalf some knowledge of the law oâ God in every man conscience could doâ nothing 2. Knowledge of our selves This also is the light that conscience acteth by There is in every man some measure of knowledge of himself according to the measure of knowledge that he hath of Gods law Our consciences look backward and forward forward to Gods law and backward on our selves Whether we be such as Gods law requireth yea or no. First ye may find this in good men This light did the conscieââe of David go by Psal 18.23 I was upright beâe God saith his conscience and I kept ãâã self from mine own iniquitie His âânscience had a light whereby he âew what he did Secondly ye shall âd this in wicked men This light the conscience of Achan went by Josh 7.20 I have âed against the Lord God of Israel and âus and thus have I done These are the two lights that every âans conscience goes by It hath light in some measure to know the law of God what he should do and what he should not do and it hath light in some measure to know himself what he hath done or not done whether he hath done âs he should yea or no. Now these two âights are necessary as thus I prove First the knowledge of Gods law is necessary For else conscience cannot work A drunkard might be drunk every day in the year and yet conscience could not trouble him nor condemn him of sinne unlesse he knew the law That God hath forbid drunkennesse And so the swearer And so evil woâ and bad thoughts conscience cannot aâcuse for unlesse there be so much ligâ as to know they are forbidden Aâ therefore Divines do all say that thâ Synteresis is necessary to the exercise ãâã conscience The Synteresis is this Wheâ a man keeps in his mind the knowledgâ of the things conteined in Gods law namely That we must obey God honour our parents not commit adultery not kill not steal not lie not covet c Unlesse the knowledge of these be kepâ in mind conscience cannot work And therefore when we would stirre a manâ conscience we appeal to his knowledge 1. Cor. 6.9 Know you not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God As if he had said Your own consciences may condemn you to the pit of hell if ye be unrighteous because your Synteresis can tell you that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God This is the reason why we say that there is a naturall conscience and there is an illuminated conscience because some have no