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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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restlesnesse by the grievous distempers of the body or failing of their senses being for the time as Iob saith brought under the king of terrours Iob 18.14 What a wofull case Belshazzar was in you may reade Dan. 5.9 These terrours are the fansies the Gentiles so much dreamed of The fourth is desperation An evill Conscience in sinne many times brings them to hellish despaire of all mercy and pardon thus Cain rageth and blasphemeth like a frantick man And these effects of an evill Conscience are so mu●h the more great 1. Because the Conscience can lash a man without noise it can secretly inflict torments when no eyes shall pity him 2. Because there is no escape from Conscience a man can neither drive it away nor run from it it cleaves to the offender inseparably From a tyrant or ill master some men run away but from an ill Conscience there is no flying 3. Because Conscience it selfe is a thousand witnesses to prove the fault though never so secret and the offender is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemned of himselfe and goes up and downe with a heavie sentence upon him in his bosome though all the world should account him innocent 4. Because an evill Conscience is such a damnable disease and the griefe raised by Conscience is such and so lasting that the grieved dies before the griefe can be removed yea so violent is the confusion which despaire bringeth into the thoughts that out of the grievous mistaking and impatience many times the offender makes away himselfe as Saul Achitophel and Iudas did and many in our times doe 5. Because death it selfe doth not abate the torments of an evill Conscience but the living worme gnawes them even in hell for ever and with so much strength and power there that one said wittily Hell were not hell if it were not for the gnawing of this never-dying and never-ceasing worme 6. Because unto the making up of the compleat misery of the impenitent sinner the sentence of Conscience and the testimony of it shall be heard and admitted at the last day before the Tribunall of Christ. For though an evill conscience shall never disgrace for some effects as for that of working despaire of mercy yet for the maine body of the proceedings of Conscience it shall be not only allowed but justified by the voice of Christ to the eternall shame and confusion of the offender And though it be true that the worst of the effects before mentioned arise from a stirring Conscience yet is not the man safe that hath a still Conscience if it bee evill For first hee is in continuall danger of the awaking of that conscience of his that now is asleep What ease can that mans heart be at if he had all pleasures round about him if he were tied to a Beare or Lion or mad Dog though he were then asleep for hee may awake every moment and then where is hee The stilnesse of an ill conscience is but like the sleep of a frantick man Secondly there can be no true peace unto the man that lieth in sinne without repentance Isa. 57. There is no peace to the wicked saith my God Though hee bee friends with himselfe for a time yet God is not friends with him nor is sinne and Satan at peace with him though there be an uncertaine truce for a time Thirdly the danger of a still conscience is the greater for the terrours of a troubled conscience may prepare a man for Christ and compell a man to seeke helpe from Christ but in the case of a still conscience there are these two usuall miseries the one that men take a still conscience to be a good conscience and the other is that a man runnes onely blindefolded so long till death and hell may seaze upon him Thus of the effects of an evill conscience the meanes how conscience may be made good follow That an evill conscience may be made good two things must bee looked into first that wee get a right medicine to heale it secondly that we take a right course in application of the medicine First the medicine for the curing of an ill conscience is onely the bloud of Christ the disease of conscience is of so high a nature as all the medicines in the world are insufficient nothing but sprinkling it with bloud will serve the turne and it must be no other bloud than the bloud of the immaculate Lambe of God as the Apostle shews Heb. 9.14 The reason of this is because conscience will never be quiet till it see a way how Gods anger may be pacified and sinne abolished which cannot be done any way but by the bloud of Christ which was powred out as a sacrifice for sinne Now unto the right application of this medicine foure things are requisite First the light of knowledge Secondly the washing of regeneration Thirdly the assurance of faith Fourthly the warmth of love First knowledge a man must have both Legall and Evangelicall for they must know by the law what sinnes lie upon the conscience and trouble it and they must know by the Gospel what a propitiation is made by Christ for sinnes And for the second an evill conscience will never bee gotten off unlesse our hearts be sprinkled and washed from the filth and power of the sinnes which did lie upon the conscience Heb. 10.22 1 Tim. 1.5 Now unto such removing of such sinnes from the heart two things are requisite First that by particular confession wee doe as it were scratch off the filth of those sinnes that soule the heart and trouble the conscience Secondly and then that wee wash our hearts and daily rinse them with the teares of true repentance and humiliation before God for those sinnes Thirdly assurance of faith is necessary to the cure of an ill conscience because faith is the hand that layes on the medicine A man must apply the sufferings of Christ to himselfe and beleeve that Christ did satisfie for those sinnes that lie upon the conscience and must accordingly all to besprinkle the conscience with that bloud of Christ and then of an evill conscience it will presently become good but men must looke to one thing and that is that their faith be unfained For conscience will not be satisfied with the profession of faith they must beleeve indeed and with their hearts and with sound application of the promises of the Gospel concerning the bloud of Christ or else conscience will not be answered Heb. 10.22 1 Tim 1.5 Fourthly the heat of love must be added a man must so apply the bloud of Christ as that his owne bloud be heated in him affection with both towards God and Christ and Christians Christian love doth put as it were naturall heat into the conscience and makes it now receiving life by faith to bestirre it selfe in all the workes either of service to God or duty to men 1 Tim. 1.5 Heb. 9.24 knowledge bringing it light mortification making it cleane faith
curing it and putting life into it by sprinkling it with the bloud of Christ and love infusing or rather inflaming it with the heat of life All these things are requisite though I stand not upon the precise order of the working of every one of these Thus how conscience may bee made good Now I might adde a direction or two how conscience may doe her worke aright that is a good conscience and not doe ill offices in the soule Two things I say are of great use for the guiding of a good conscience First that in all her proceedings she must follow the warrant of Gods word Secondly that she doe not mistake in judging of particular actions she must bee sufficiently informed about our Christian liberty for unlesse the conscience discerne that wee are freed from the malediction of the law and from the rigorous perfection of obedience and have restored unto us a free use of all things indifferent and the like shee may be over-busie and troublesome disquieting the heart and restraining the joyes should refresh and support a man Thus of the meanes how conscience may be made good the signes of a good conscience follow First by the opposition it makes against the remainders of sinne in the godly It maintaines a constant combating against the law of the members having at command the law of the minde It doth not only resist grosse evils but even the most secret corruptions in the heart of man This Paul discerned in himselfe Rom. 7. of doing God service Secondly by the manner of exacting of obedience for a good conscience First doth incline a man to doe good duties not by compulsion but a man shall find that he doth them by force of an internall principle in himself Secondly it cannot abide dead works a good conscience abhors all cold and carelesse or luke-warm or counterfeit serving of God it puts life into all good dutes it exacteth attendance upon God in doing them Heb. 9.14 Thirdly it more respecteth God than all the world or the man himselfe and therefore will compell a man to obey against profit and pleasure and liking of the world 2 Cor. 1.12 Fourthly it requires an universall obedience it would have all Gods commandements respected and therefore Paul saith I desired in all things to live honestly Heb. 13.18 The allowing of one sin shewes the depravation of the conscience if it bee a knowne sinne and still tolerated As one dead flie will spoyle a boxe of pretious oyntment I say one dead flie though many living flies may light upon a boxe of oyntment and do it no great hurt so a godly man may have many infirmities and yet his conscience be sound but if there be one corruption that lives and dies there that is such a corruption as is knowne and allowed and doth by custome continue there it will destroy the soundnesse of the best conscience of the world and doth usually argue a conscience that is not good Fiftly a good conscience doth require obedience alwaies thus Paul pleads I have served God till this day It doth not command for God by fits but constantly Acts 23.1 A third signe is that a good conscience is alwayes toward God it still desires to bee before God it seekes Gods presence it reckons that day to be lost and that it did not live as it were when it found not the Lord or had no fellowship or conversation with God A good conscience is like a good Angell it is alwayes looking into the face of God Acts 23.1 Thus of the signes The benefits of a good conscience are many and great for First it is the best companion a man hath all the daies of his life it is ever with him and speakes good unto him and comforts him A man that hath no company needs not to be alone for he may converse with much delight with his owne conscience and it is the surest friend a man can have for it will neither hurt him by flattery nor forsake him for any carnall respects and being an internall agent is out of the watch of all outward hinderances and is alwaies a messenger of good things to a man and fits him and fills him with peace that passeth all the understanding of all men that want a good conscience Secondly it gives a man assurance of the best treasures it makes a man certaine of his salvation for a good conscience will not be quiet till it know the love of God and the promises of grace in Christ and the assurance that conscience gives is a better assurance than any man can have for his lands or any estate on earth because it is so highly honoured that Gods owne Spirit doth not disdaine at any time to witnesse with it and to it Rom. 8.15 16. Thirdly by reason of that new acquaintance and affinity it hath with the holy Ghost it brings us into a familiar friendship with God as being an immediat Agent with the holy Ghost in all things that concerne us for Gods Spirit treates with the conscience and the conscience treates with the Soule Fourthly it is a continuall bulwarke against the divell and all his fiery darts whether he tempt us to sinne or to feare and doubting for so soone as the temptation is cast in a good-conscience by her reasoning presently throwes it out reserving principles both of precept and promise alwaies in a readinesse to that end so as by contrarious reasoning within us it both hinders us from yeelding to sin and supports us against all doubts and feares Prov. 28.1 Fiftly against all afflictions and disgraces and reproches of the world a good conscience still comforts a man and makes him rejoyce by the force of the testimony thereof 2 Cor. 1.14 So as it is most true that a good conscience is a continuall feast he never fares ill that hath a good conscience Psal. 7.8 Acts 24.16 Rom. 9.10 Sixtly and the greater is the comfort of a good conscience because it will comfort us and stand by us and for us when all other comforts faile It will never leave us in sicknesse or in death and so is better than a thousand friends or wives or children yea it will goe with us to the Judgement feat of Christ with this assurance that as a good conscience speakes to us now so will Christ speake to us at that day Rom. 2.16 Thus of the sorts or kindes of consciences The last point is about the bond of conscience what it is that can binde a mans conscience and the doubt ariseth from this and other Texts because here a servant is bound in conscience to submit himselfe to a froward master both to his command and to his punishments and other Scriptures speake of his obedience to superiours for conscience sake For answer hereunto we must know that God and his law have power simply and absolutely to binde conscience that is to urge it to require obedience of a man or to accuse
of mercy from God noted by the sprinkling of the mercy seate 7. times 2. The intercession of Christ noted by the incense heated by the burning coales of his owne ardent affection Ver. 12 13. 3. The perfection of Christs mediation in that no man is joyned with him nor must any man be present Ver. 17. 4. The extent of the benefits to all the Elect noted by the sprinkling of the blood upon the foure hornes of the Altar The Use of all may be briefly both for instruction and consolation For instruction 1. To the people who should be above all things carefull to seeke the comfort of the application of Gods favour in Jesus Christ oh wee must above all things by faith keep this sprinkling of blood as is said of thē Heb. 11.28 2. Ministers should hence take notice of the maine end of preaching which is to sprinkle blood upon the hearts of the people that they may both be setled in the knowledge and assurance of their right in Christ and the covenant of grace and likewise purged in their consciences from dead workes we doe little by preaching if we beget not reformation and assurance in the hearts of the people he preacheth not that sprinkles not 2. For Consolation Be not fearefull Christs blood will protect thee as safely as ever did the blood of the paschall lambe the children of Israel Be not doubtfull of the efficacy of it For if the blood of buls and goates c. could purifie in respect of legall cleansings how much more shall the blood of Christ who by the eternall spirit offered up himselfe to God purge thy conscience from dead workes and make attonement for all thy sins cleansing thee from all unrighteousnesse Heb. 9.13 14 15. 1 John 1.7 Be not discontent with thy condition thou hast what was merited and purchased with blood how little soever it seeme in thy eyes But especially be not unthankfull for such a singular way of mercy but with all gladnes of heart rejoyce above all things in Christ him crucified for thee Hitherto of the persons saluted the forme of the salutation follows Grace and peace be multiplied to you It was the maner in their salutations to wish to their friends that which they accounted a chiefe happinesse to them So doth the Apostle here wishing the multiplying of grace and peace Grace and peace Grace must be considered two wayes 1. First as it is in God and so it is his free love and gracious disposition to shew mercy in Christ. 2. Secondly as it is in man and so it notes either the gifts of their minde or their condition or estate in Christ and so the faithfull are said to be under grace and not under the Law Peace is both inward and outward Inward peace consists in the contentation and rest of the soule and so it is both the rest of the conscience from terrors and the rest of the heart from passion● and perturbations Outward peace is nothing else but prosperity or an estate free from unquietnesse and molestation and adorned with needfull blessings Grace and Peace are the two principall things to be sought and wished in this world when Christ comes to inrich the world hee comes with grace and truth Iohn 1. he cannot be miserable that hath th●se two nor happy that wants them altogether Which may be a singular comfort to a Christian in grace and peace is his portion and he may goe boldly to the throne of God in the intercession of Christ to beg either of these in his need Heb. 4. ult God may deny him other things but he will never deny him grace peace And therefore also Christians should joy in the grace of God wherein they stand Rom. 5.3 and be resolved in themselves that the grace of God is sufficient for them 2 Cor. 12.9 Especially they should praise and esteeme and glorifie the grace of God It is all God askes for as it were at our hands even to honour him by praising his grace and free love to us Ephes. 1.6 Woe unto wicked men that neglect the grace of God what shall it profit them to gaine the world which yet they doe not and want grace and peace but especially why doe they not let Christians alone with their portion why doe they trouble them in their peace and despight them for their grace can they not follow their pleasures lusts profits honors c. and let Christians live quietly by thē who desire but liberty to enjoy grace with peace There is something also to be noted from the order of placing grace must bee had before peace there can bee no peace to the wicked and hee is undoubtedly wicked that hath not the grace of God Be multiplied Grace and Peace is multiplyed 1. First when the number of gracious persons is increased This is to be sought and prayed for 2. When the kindes of grace and peace are all had For there is the manifold grace of God 3. Thirdly when the measures and degrees are augmented The Husbandman would faine have his seed increase and the tradesman his trade so would the ambitious man his honors and preferments c. Even so should the Christian be ambitious and covetous in his desires that his grace and peace might increase Quest. What should we doe that grace and peace might be multiplied Answ. 1. Be sure it be true grace else it will never increase 2. Thou must increase in ●eeknesse and humility For God will give more grace to the humble Iam. 4.8 and the meeke shall have abundance of peace Psal. 37.6.11 3. If thou wouldest have thy grace and peace increase thou must be constant much in the use of all the ordinances of God which are the meanes of grace and peace As thou measurest to God in the meanes so will God measure to thee in the successe thou must be much in hearing For grace is in the lips of Christ Psal. 45.3 and much peace shall be to them that love Gods lawes Psal. 119. and thou must goe often unto God by prayer who gives grace and glory and will withhold no good thing Psal. 84.12 2 Thess. 1.11 12. Runne by faith to Christ who is the Prince of peace Esay 9.6 and stirre up the grace of God that is in thee For thou hast not received the spirit of feare but of power 2 Tim. 1.7 4. Thou must not perplex thy heart with the cares of this life but in all things goe to God by prayer and cast all thy care upon him so shalt thou have peace that passeth all understanding to keep thy heart and minde Phil. 4. 6 7. Thou must make much of the beginnings of desires joy liking and care of the meanes of godlinesse and not let them goe out so as thou shouldest fails of the grace of God or receive those graces in vaine 6. Thou must be resolved upon it to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live righteously and religiously
them they shal never hunger Ioh. 6. yea he wil be life to them the life of their present lives and eternall life they shall live for ever Iohn 5.40 Thus of the first things required in Christians The second is They must be lively stones Verse 5. Ye also as lively stones bee made a spirituall house an holy Priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Iosus Christ. As lively stones IT is not unusuall in Scripture to compare men to stones and so both wicked men and godly men Wicked men are likened to stones first for their insensiblenesse and so the heart of Nabal was like a stone Secondly for their silent amazement when iniquity shall stop their mouth thus they were still as a stone Exod. 15.16 Thirdly for their sinking downe under Gods judgements so the Egyptians sunk into the Sea like a stone Ex. 15.6 And thus the wicked sinke into hell like a stone But chiefly in the first sense for hardnesse of heart their hearts by nature are like a stone And in the comparison of a building if they be in the Church they are like the stones of the house that had the leprosie or like Jerusalem when it was made a heap of stone Godly men are like stones too they are like the stones of Bethel that were anointed God is the God of Bethel and the godly are as those annointed pillars consecrated to God and qualified with the gifts of the holy Ghost They are like the Onyx stones given by the Princes and set on the brest of the High-Priest in the Ephod The High-Priest is Christ. The Onyx stones are Christians The Princes of the Congregation are the Ministers that consecrate the soules of men which they have converted to Christ who weares them on his brest and hath them alwaies in his heart and eye They are like to the rich stones of a Crowne lifted up Zach. 9.16 They are like the stone with the Booke bound to it Ier. 51.63 They are never without of the Word God But in this place they are likened to the stones of the T●mple which in the Letter are described 1 Kings 6.7 36. and 7.9 10. and in the Allegorie Esay 54.11 12 13. Sure it is that the stones of this spirituall Temple are the pla●e of Saphires as is said in Iob in another sense 28.6 Now the godly are likened to stones in divers respects First they are like stones to grave upon and so they are like those stones which must have the Law graved upon set up in mount Ebal Deut. 27.2 3 4. What is the mount but the world and what is E●●l but vanity or sorrow and what are those graved stones but the godly vvith the Lavv of God vvritten in their hearts the light vvhereof shineth on the hill of the vanity of this vvorld and 〈◊〉 in the midst of all the so●rovves of this vvorld Secondly● they are likestones for strength and unmovednesse in all the stormes of life The raine pierceth not the stones nor doe afflictions batter the hearts of Gods servants strength is attributed to stones in that speech of Iob. 6.12 Thirdly They are like stones for continuance and durablenesse they will last for ever so will their persons and so ought the affections of their hearts Lastly they are like stones for a building and that in two respects First if you consider the manner of their calling into the Church they are digged out of the quarry of mankinde as stones digged out of the earth being in themselves by nature but stones of darknesse such as might never have seene the light Secondly if you consider their union with Christ and Christians in one body they are like the stone of the house compact in themselves and upon the foundation Vse The use may bee briefly First for information Here is come to passe that saying that is written God is able of stones to raise up children unto Abraham Secondly let all the servants of God take pleasure in the stones of this spirituall Sion Psalm 102 15. and let us all learne to bee like stones in the former senses for the receiving the impression of the law and for constancy and durablenesse and for care to keepe our communion with Christ and Christians Lastly woe to the multitudes of wicked men whom God neglects with that heavy curse so as a stone is not taken of them to make a stone for the building Ierem. 50.26 Thus they are stones It is added they must bee lively stones to signifie wherein they must not be like unto stones they must not be dull and insensible they must be lively and cheerefull and that for divers reasons First Because the second Adam is a quickning spirit and they dishonor the workmanship of Christ if they be not lively 1 Cor. 15. Secondly Because one end of the offring up of Christ was that their consciences might be purged from dead workes Heb. 9.14 Thirdly they are therefore condemned according to men in the flesh that they might live according to God in the Spirit 1 Pet. 4.6 Fourthly Because we have beene alive to sinne and it is a shame to expresse lesse life in the service of God then wee have done in the service of sinne Fiftly Because we have lively meanes we are fed with living bread Ioh. 6. and we live by the power of God 2 Cor. 13.4 and we have the Spirit of Christ in us which is the fountaine of life and hath springs of joy in him Rom. 8.9 Ioh. 6. and the Word of God is lively and mighty in operation Heb. 4.12 and Christ himselfe lives in us Gal. 2.20 Sixtly because we professe our selves to be consecrate to God as living sacrifices Rom. 12.1 Seventhly because we have such excellent priviledges wee partake of the divine Nature and God is a living God and we have precious promises 2 Pet. 1.4 and we have plentifull adoption in Christ and we have a hope of a most glorious inheritance which should alway put life into us ● Pet. 1.3 4. and wee have a secure estate in the meane time For to live is Christ and to die is gaine and whether we live or die we are Christs Rom. 14.8 Phil. 1.21 Vse The use should be therefore for instruction We should stirre up our s●lves and strive after this livelinesse and that for the two reasons imported in this text to omit the rest For without a ready heart wee shall make no riddance in matter of sanctification and holy life and besides wee shall extract but a small deale of influence from Christ. For it is here required that we should be lively when we come unto him Now this livelinesse we should shew First by contentation in our estate Secondly by patience and cheerefulnesse in afflictions Rom. 5.2 3. Thirdly in the performance of holy duties with power and life Thus we should be lively in praier such as will bestirre themselves and take no deniall as Philip. 4.5 6. Quest. Now if
the flesh worke that which was extreemly ill for us Fourthly we hold our profession before many witnesses many eyes are upon us and the most men are crooked and perverse 1 Tim. 6.12 Phil. 2.15 and the best way to silence foolish men is by unrebukeablenesse of conversation 1 Pet. 2.15 Fifthly our heavenly Father is hereby glorified Mat. 5. 6. Sixthly it will be a great comfort to us in adversity 2 Cor. 1.12 Lastly great is our reward in heaven For hereby will be ministred abundantly an entrance into the glorious Kingdome of Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 1.11 But then we must looke to divers rules about our conversation that it may be right for First it must be a good conversation in Christ 1 Pet. 3.16 Secondly it must be a conversation discharged from those ●suall vices which are hatefull in such as professe the sincerity of the Gospell and yet common in the world such as are lying wrath bitternesse rotten communication or c●●sed speaking or the like Eph. 4.25 Col. 3.8 1 Pet. 1.14 Thirdly it must be all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1.15 wee must shew respect to all Gods Commandements at home and abr●●ad in religion mercy righteousnesse or honesty Fourthly we must shew all meeknesse of wisedome when we hea●e outward praise or do good or are to expresse our selves in discourse or otherwise Iam. 3.13 2 Cor. 1.12 And that we may attaine to this holinesse of conversation First we must walke according to the rule of Gods Word and let that be a light to our feet and a lanthorne unto our paths Gal. 6.16 Ioh. 3.21 Secondly wee must set before us the patterne of such Christians as have most excelled that way Phil. 3.17 and walke with the wise Thirdly especially as obedient children we should learne of our heavenly Father to fashion our selves according to his nature and in all conversation strive to be holy as he is holy and as it followes in this verse we should studie and strive to shew forth the vertues that were eminent in Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.15 16. and 12.10 Thirdly in so much as holinesse is the prerogative of a Christian it should teach all sorts of men to try themselves whether they have attained true holinesse or no so as they bee sure their holinesse exceed the holinesse of the Scribes and Pharisees for else they cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven For a Christian must have that holinesse of conversation which no wicked man can attaine unto Now that this triall may bee done effectually I will shew wherein the holinesse of a true Christian exceeds the holinesse First of a meere civill honest man Secondly of the most glorious Hypocrite First for the meere civill honest man The true Christian exceeds his righteousnesse both in the righteousnesse of faith and in the internall holinesse of the heart and the power of holy affections but because it is holinesse of conversation which is especially here meant I will touch the differences in conversation and so First they differ in one maine cause of orderly life For the holinesse of the godly Christian proceeds from a regenerate heart whereas the meere civill man is so naturally or onely by restraining grace he hath not beene in the surnace of mortification for sinne Secondly the meere civill honest man glories in this that he payes every man his owne and is no adulterer or drunkard or the like notorious offender But for the most part he is altogether defective in the religious duties of the first table especially in the duties of the Sabbath and the religious duties he should performe in his family Thirdly the meere civill honest man makes conscience of great offences but cares not to be stained with lesser sinnes whereas the true Christian lives circumspectly and makes conscience of the least Commandement Secondly now for the hypocrite Though the difference be hidden yet it may be assigned in divers things as First the holinesse of the godly Christian flowes from a pure conscience and faith unfained whereas there is no such repentance or faith in the hypocrite Secondly the true Christian hath his praise of God but the hypocrite of men Rom. 2.26 Thirdly the true Christian obeyes in all things the hypocrite but in some as here for the most part they may be found tainted with some evill vice Fourthly the true Christian is carefull of his conversation in all places and companies the hypocrite onely or chiefly when he is where he thinkes hee shall be observed and marked Fifthly the true Christian will not cease bearing fruit what weather soever come Ier. 17.7 8. But the hypocrite gives over when hard times come He is not like the good ground that brings forth fruit with patience The hypocrite will not hold out till the end though the times bee peaceable till his death For the most part he then beares the burthen of his hypocrisie he cannot die in peace Use. Lastly this is a terrible doctrine for open and notorious offenders For hereby it is apparent they are strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel and are not of this nation their language and their workes betray them Drunkards Adulterers Swearers Lyers Usurers and such like cannot inherit or have any lot in this heavenly Canaan For all this nation is holy and such are not they their owne consciences being Judges Nor is it a pleasing Doctrine to scandalous professors For such as give scandall are either hypocrites or godly If they bee hypocrites their scandalls betray them and testifie to their faces they have no lot among the Saints and if they be godly Christians that have fallen through weaknesse yet they have cause to be much humbled For by them the name of God is blasphemed and besides many other inconveniences that will pursue their fall this is not the least that hereby they have weakned their evidence and wonderfully darkned the markes of their happinesse For if the godly be a holy nation how discomfortably have they provided for themselves and their owne soules that have so stained their profession and holinesse An holy nation The sixth prerogative of Christians is imported in this word Nation which shewes the number For though all the wicked are more in number than the godly yet such is the glory and greatnesse of the number of all the godly of all ages that if we could behold them on earth as wee shall see them in heaven and at the last Judgement we would wonderfully admire the beauty and multitude of the Christian Armie All the godly together make a goodly Nation and though in largenesse of number they do not goe beyond the wicked yet in the priviledges of their number they goe farre beyond them They are all one and a whole Nation of them which imports divers priviledges First they are all originally of one blood borne of the blood of Jesus Christ. Secondly they are all governed by one Ruler their noble Ruler is of themselves there
by the bodily eyes The fourth thing to be proved is that the soule is immortall it cannot die when it is once kindled it will never goe out or be extinct as the Sadducees wickedly imagined and some Athiefts still thinke the contrary This is a point necessary to be knowne as for the truth it selfe so for the use of it in our lives For to doubt of immortality makes us miserable and to beleeve the soules are mortall makes men Epicures Let us eate and drinke for to morrow we shall die But to be fully assured of an estate after life makes a man carefull so avoid sinne lest his soule live for ever miserably and to serve God that hee may live for ever happily Now things may be said to be immorrall two waies either absolutely and in their owne nature and so God onely is immortall or else they are so by the will and pleasure of God and not by their owne nature and so the soules of men and so the Angels are immortall There have beene two sorts of men that have denyed the immortality of the soule the one were the Sadducees among the Jews who held that in death the soule of man is utterly extinct as the soule of a beast the other were certaine Arabians of whom Eusebius and Saint Augustine make mention who said that the soule died with the body and so remained dead till the day of Judgement and then they revived with the resurrection of the body Now against the first sort may be produced many reasons as also evident Scriptures The reasons are such as these 1 The providence and justice of God proveth the immortality of the soule For here in this life good men have not all their happinesse and evill men live in prosperity so there must be another life where justice must be done 2 Religion confirmes this for to what end were religion and serving of God if the soule died like the soule of a beast seeing in this life the most godly are outwardly in great misery many times For if S. Paul say If the dead rise not then of all men are we most miserable it will hold much more strange if the soule live not at all after death 3 The wisedome of God proves it for else man were not in better case than the beast yea in some cases worse For man from his infancie to his death is liable to many diseases subject to cares and griefes which the beast is free from yea this addes to mans misery that he knowes he must die which the beast doth not Now shall man that was counted like God be thought to have no better end than the beast that did exalt himselfe so much in the glory of his beginning 4 The conscience of malefactors proves this who feare a judgement after this life and an estate of misery 5 The nature of the soule proves it for it is simple and void of all contrariety and accidents and causes of corruption or putrefaction and is besides the Image of God Now no mortall thing can be the image of that which is immortall These reasons make it exceeding probable But I am of their mindes that thinke it may be beleeved by faith but not be proved by reason The Scripture therefore onely makes this point cleere such as these First our Saviour proves it out of the Word of God saying I am the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob c. Secondly it is most plaine Mat. 10.28 Thirdly eternall life is every where promised to them that beleeve Fourthly such places as treat of the Resurrection last Judgement and the Glory of heaven prove it Now for the other sort that confesse the life of the soule after the last Judgement but deny that the soule lives after death till then there are divers Scriptures against their opinion As First the former Scriptures The soule cannot be killed at all Matth. 10. And God was presently the God of Abraham as then living and for eternall life it is not said He shall have but He hath eternall life that beleeveth Secondly Christ said to the theese This day thou shalt be with mee in Paradise not at the last day Thirdly Ro. 8.38 Death cannot separate us from God in Christ as it would if the soule were dead or a-sleepe and did not enjoy God Fourthly the dead that die in the Lord are forthwith blessed Rev. 14.14 Fifthly the soules of Abraham and Lazarus were in joy and alive after death so was the soule of Dives in hell Sixthly Iohn saw under the Altar the soules of them that were slaine for the testimony of Jesus and they cryed with a lowd voice O Lord how long c. Revel 6. Seventhly the soules of the wicked die not but are kept in prison and are now in prison too 1 Pet. 3.19 Before I leave this point of the immortality of the soule it is profitable briefly to answer certaine objections which may be brought out of some words in the Scriptures as Ob. 1. The soule that sinneth shall die Ezek. 18. Therefore it seemes the soule is mortall or at lest for sinne it must die and the rather because it was threatned in Paradise That day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death Sol. The Scriptures evidently shew that since the fall and sinne yet the soule doth not die as the places before alledged prove But the answer is That this death threatned or inflicted is not the destruction of the beeing of the soule but the depriving of it of the grace and savour and presence of God Ob. 2. Eccles. 3. It is said that there is one end of the man and of the beast As dieth the one so dieth the other Sol. These are not the words of Salomon but of the Epicure who is here as in other places of that booke brought in declaring his mind of things For Salomon himselfe concludeth evidently that the soule returneth unto God that gave it as in the last Chapter The other objections are the objections of the dreamers that is of such as imagine that the soule lieth a-sleepe till the day of Judgement and perceives nothing and is without operation which is to say it is dead seeing life is nothing else but the continuall motion and action of the soule Object 1. It is said that man when hee dies sleepeth as Christ said of Lazarus He sleepeth Ioh. 11. and Stephen slept in the Lord Act. 17. Sol. Other Scriptures adde another word viz. in the grave or in the dust Iob 7.21 and Psal. 78. sleeping in their graves but it is evident that the soule cannot sleepe in the grave but the body only And Stephen delivered his Spirit to Christ. Object 2. Paul saith that if the body rise not we are of all men most miserable That it seemes cannot be true if the soule enjoy blessednesse without the body Sol. The immortality of the soule and the resurrection of the body are conjoyned For the Soule without the body can bee
without it it could never compasse things desired Hitherto of the working of the soule upon the body and those strange things it doth in the body by the faculties of vegetation and sense It is true that those things are done by the soules of brute creatures but as their soules differ exceedingly from the glory and excellency of the soules of men so are the effects upon their bodies but certaine glimpses of those things which are done exactly by the soules of men I meane in respect of the inward senses of phantasie and memory there is in beasts but onely a darke shadow of them in comparison of what is in men But for the third faculty of the soule which is reason therein men excell all creatures in this visible world and it is profitable for us to know what God hath done for us in our soules generally considered above all other creatures And so man excells in respect of his reasonable soule 1 In that he can conceive of things by the light of understanding as well as by sense This light is admirable whether we conceive of it as proceeding from God who shines upon the soule as the Sunne doth upon the body or whether wee beleeve it to be a light conferred upon the understanding by which from within it discernes things 2 In that it can conceive of things that never were in the senses as things absent that never were seene yea things altogether immateriall as Angels and vertues and vices 3 In that it can conceive of the nature of God and discerne God from his workes 4 In that it can conceive of things by a discerning reflexion as it can conceive of it selfe and understand that it doth understand 5 In that it can distinguish betweene good and evill truth and falshood I say of the morall goodnesse of things whereas the phantasie can judge onely of so much of the naturall goodnesse of things as they shew to the outward senses 6 In the largenes of the extent of our understanding For the understanding can in a small moment of time go almost over the whole world and view it all as it were at once whereas the senses are forced in within a narrow compasse 7 In that it can invent things that never were in beeing and thus wee see daily what strange things for number and skill are invented for the use of the life of man by art and skill of mans understanding in every calling of men 8 In that the reasonable soule governes and appoints and crosseth and fetters and alters and rectifies the other faculties of vegetation and sense and in respect thereof can turne and tame and rule and order all sorts of other creatures 9 In that by begetting with strange variety it can make knowne what images are within whether begotten by the senses or by the minde it selfe 10 In that it is the faculty by which onely true blessednesse is apprehended and attained 11 In that mans understanding is made after a sort all things For the understanding becomes the things understood in that it doth conceive a true and evident image of the thing to be understood so that as man is the Image of God so hath hee in him the images of all things printed as it were in his understanding This is a most dreadfull dignity in the soules of men yea herein he resembles God in the creation of the world for mans reasonable soule doth as it were forme worlds of things in it selfe If any object that the sensitive soule hath the images of things in it I answer two things First that the sense can receive only the images of a few things that is onely of such things as have colour found taste smell or touchable qualities but the minde can beget the images of all things Secondly that those images in the senses are dull and darke and confused in comparison of the likenesse of things in the minde 12 In that he hath a will in chosing or refusing things good or evill that cannot bee compelled The liberty of the will is inseparable to it in what it chooseth or refuseth for it implies a contradiction that the will should bee constrained 13 In that it hath in it that divine thing which we call conscience which is given to the soule as a guardian as it were to tend it from God the effects whereof are admirable in us for it testifies to our actions it accuseth or excuseth it comforts when we have well done above all outward comforts and it terrifieth and scourgeth the soule with unexpressible afflictions many times for sinne it is a Judge witnesse and executioner many times in us Now if the soule bee thus admirable in any estate for all these things are true of the reasonable soule even in the estate of corruption then how excellent was the estate of man in respect of his soule before the Fall and how doth it excell in the godly who have their soules enlightned with the light of faith and garnished with saving graces but especially how shall it exceed in glory when it shall be presented before God in the Kingdome of heaven So that as the whole man made in Gods image is as it were the visible God in this great world so the soule is as it were a little god in the l●sser world which is the body of man And thus much of the faculties of the soule Now the end of all this followes The Lord made the soule and endowed it with so excellent a being and so admirable faculties that so the Lord might in this visible world have a creature that would know him and serve him rightly The creatures without sense are Gods workmanship but discerne nothing of God or themselves or other things The creatures with sense discerne other things by sense but know nothing of God Now God made man as the abridgement of all he had made and gave him his soule of purpose that hee might discerne God aright and serve and worship and praise him Use 1. The consideration of the excellencie of the soule and of the end why it was created should stirre us up to make conscience of the service and knowledge of God it is as if we had never beene if wee answer not this end Wee should be fired to the observation and praise of God and of his love to man And withall it should make us wonderfull carefull of our soules since wee see they are such excellent creatures Our soule is more worth than all this visible world besides Especially it should fire us to a care of things that concerne the blessed immortality of our soules we should be forced to all possible care of all such things as might be provision for the eternall well-being of our soules And in particular the excellencie of the soule should disswade us from fleshly lusts and all inward impuritie by which the soule is defiled or wounded Hitherto of the description of the soule The warre against the soule is now
Scapul faith We reverence the Emperour as a man second to God and the onely one that is lesse than God and also Tertullian de Ido Capite 18. Nazianzen orat ad subdit Imperat. All men must bee subject to higher powers The expresse testimonies of Chrysostome and Bernard upon Rom. 1 3. have beene quoted before read Bernard de consid lib. 2. Capite 4. Hilar. ad Anx. Chrysost. homil 42. in Ioan. Ambrose in 2 Tim. 2.4 Secondly this should confirme every good subject to acknowledge and maintaine the Kings supremacie and willingly to binde himselfe thereunto by oath For the oath of supremacie is the bond of this subjection and this oath men must take without equivocation mentall evasion or secret reservation yea it should binde in them the same resolution was in Saint Bernard who faith thus If all the world would conspire against me to make me complot any thing against the Kings Majesty yet I would feare God and not dare to offend the King ordained of God Or unto governours By governours he either meanes all other sorts of Magistracie besides a Monarchie or else such Magistrates as in a Kingdome have commission from the King to heare and determine causes or any way to rule and exercise any Lawes of the King and it is the Apostles meaning that Christians should be subject to all sorts of Magistrates of what forme or dignity soever from the highest to the lowest so as it should be no more lawfull for them to disobey an inferiour Magistrate than to disobey the King so far forth as the inferiour Magistrate hath authority and doth proceed according to his commission in lawfull things This point needs not to be further handled having beene intreated of in the generall doctrine in submission to all Magistrates before And thus of the exposition the confirmation followes Verse 14. Or unto governours as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evill doers and for the praise of them that doe well THe Apostle in this verse and the next confirmeth the exhortation partly by reasons and partly by answearing an Objection the reasons are in this verse and the next and the prolepsis verse 16. The reasons may be referred to two heads the one taken from the calling of Magistrates verse 14. and the other from the will of God verse 15. The calling of Magistrates is considered two wayes First either in the author of it and so they are sent of God Secondly or in respect of the end of it which is partly the punishment of the wicked and partly the praise of them that doe well As they that are sent of him Of him either may be referred to the King or to the Lord If it be referred to the King then it shewes that all inferiour Magistrates receive all their authority from the King they have no more authority than other subjects but as it is bestowed upon them by the King and withall it shewes a secret in all well governed Monarchies which is that the King reserves the giving of honours and offices to himselfe which more obligeth the Under-officers and Magistrates to him and he is thereby the better acquainted with the State of the Kingdome But I am rather of the minde of those Interpreters that refer it to the Lord. And so the sense and doctrine is That both the Kings and the Governours are sent of God it is God that prefers them whatsoever the second causes be Though election or succession seem to make a King and Kings make Governours yet have wee beene taught that none of these come to their places without the providence of God Prov. 8.15 Now God keepes this businesse in his owne hands to see to the calling of Magistrates because of the service by them he can execute For a great part of his Kingdome is managed by their deputation By them God scourgeth the sins of the wicked yea of the whole world either by suffering them to bee publike miseries or by guiding them to punish offenders by the sword of justice and by them he many times brings many common blessings upon worlds of people as the next words shew Uses The uses are divers some particular some generall In particular it should teach us First by prayer to seeke Magistrates of God subjects might get great blessings of this kinde if they would pray hard for them For God it is that sends Magistrates Secondly with patience to beare the wrongs of evill Magistrates seeing there is a hand of God in it Thirdly with thankfulnesse to give the praise to God for good Magistrates seeing it was he that sent them as a common blessing Fourth●y in all suits about the lives or duties or successions of Magistrates to trust unto God For though we know not where to be provided in earth yet God can send one from heaven as it were The word sent imports that God can raise him up beyond expectation In generall it should stirre us up in all things done by outward meanes in this world to strive for the skill to finde out and acknowledge Gods hand and providence in it seeing in these things which are apparently done by meanes for the most part yet Gods providence is in it Thus of the Author of their calling the end followes For the punishment of evill doers Divers things may be noted from hence First that in all Common-wealths in the world there will bee evill doers though there bee a King and Governours and Gods Commandements lye hard upon mens consciences yet there will bee evill doers And the point shewes the horrible strength of the poison of naturall corruption which no Lawes of God nor man nor experience of evill nor example can restraine or dry up and withall it shewes their solly and weaknesse that will forsake Christian assemblies for the wickeds sakes whereas the Apostle improves that even in Christian Common-wealths there will bee this part of a Magistrates vertue to punish the evill doers such as are knowne to be so and therefore such curious persons must goe out of the world if they will goe from evill doers And withall it should breed in men a greater care to looke to themselves that they bee not infected by them since there is no society of men in which this plague-fore of sinne runneth not we must redeeme the time because the dayes are evill And further it should breed in us a loathing of this wicked world of this present evill world and a desire of heaven since we shall never live in a place where the people will be all righteous till we come to heaven And finally it confutes their folly that from the vitiousnesse of some men conclude the faultinesse either of the doctrine lawes or government Secondly that evill doers must be punished Rom. 15. and great reason for first evill doers in any society are infectious many may be defiled by them Secondly they work much disquietnesse and trouble humane societies Thirdly if they escape
Fourthly because it is never sought but by fooles for it is a wise mans honour and reputation to passe by an offence but every foole will be medling or quarrelling saith Solomon Fiftly because oftentimes it proves damnable to one of the parties who being slain in the act of malice must needs be damned for ever besides the curse of God brought upon the murderer making his life miserable and oftentimes his end fearfull Doct. 7. That it is conscience or meer necessity that makes any man suffer Men endure not wrong by nature but either by necessity because they cannot right it or else for conscience sake because God hath so required it Which should warne Supe●iours to take heed that they doe no wrong for the persons wronged if they want conscience may so remember the wrong as sometimes to finde a desperate way of revenge to the mischiefe of the wrong doer though the party wronged doe evill in so doing as followeth in the next doctrine Doct. 8. Inferiours being wronged even in blowes by the Superiour ought not to resist but endure it servants may not resist the correction of their masters nor strike againe that is horrible and egregiou●ly sinfull Which shewes the grievous pride and naughtinesse of divers servants that boast or threaten that they will take no blowes their resolution shewes they are voide of knowledge in the feare or conscience of Gods will And so it is alike sinfull in children wives or subjects to resist or returne blow●s for blowes or evill for evill neither doth this embolden masters or other superiours to do wrong because as was heard before they shall receive of God according to all the wrongs they have done Doct. 9. To suffer griefe and wrong is profi●able for besides that it is all ●●●ite to them when it makes them more humble and takes away their sin it makes them judge themselves before God for the sinnes they are guilty of and weanes them from the world and breeds a greater desire of heaven and the like fruits Besides all these this Text tels us of one commodity more that is praise or thanks it is an honourable thing to suffer wrongfully it winnes them a great deale not only of compassion but also of reputation among men As it makes the evill more hatefull so doth it procure love to him that suffers wrongfully It is a vertue worthy thanks yea the coherence with the next verse seemeth to import that God will give him thanks that suffers wrong if he endure it patiently not that God is bound to doe so or that such suffering merits any such thanks of God but God is so good and compassionate and he likes this vertue so well that he is pleased to crowne this patience with that high degree of liking it It is thank-worthy not because it deserves thanks but because it declares the party to bee such and so worthy in Gods gracious acceptation that he will of his owne grace yeeld him that encouragement Thus of the Doctrines that may be particularly gathered out of the words of this verse Before I leave the verse there are divers things to be considered of about Conscience For where this verse mentions conscience towards God it giveth us occasion to thinke what that conscience should bee and to informe our selves in divers things about it There are many reasons may be assigned why men should be carefully instructed about Conscience it is a necessary doctrine for first we see by experience that of most things that concerne us men know least about Conscience many men knowing little more of it than the bare use of the word Conscience Secondly men through this ignorance doe many notorious injuries and abuses to their conscience by resisting the motions of conscience not knowing what to make of them and by smothering the scruples of conscience and by deading the conscience or else by vexing them and many other wayes Thirdly God hath given men a great charge about the keeping of their consciences which he placed in their soules as a great treasure and God would have it respected and looked to with as much care as any thing he hath given us 1 Tim. 1.19 Fourthly God doth require that men should get grace and goodnesse into their consciences as well as into their hearts or words or lives which they can never doe if they bee not taught Fiftly Gods Word in all the directions and precepts of it doth binde and oblige mens consciences to see to the obedience of them now what can conscience doe if men know not what belongs to their consciences and the natures and works of conscience But above all things it should awaken men to study the knowledge of conscience yea of their own consciences if they consider that the conscience of every man is one of the principall bookes shall bee opened at the last day for evidence before the Tribunall Seat of Christ and therefore men were best to looke about them in this world to see to it what is written in this booke for it is indeleble and will stand upon record either for them or against them at that day Now concerning conscience divers things are to be considered First what conscience is Secondly what the worke of conscience is Thirdly what the prerogatives of conscience are Fourthly the kindes or sorts of consciences Last of all what it is that bindes the conscience which is to be inquired into because men are injoyned to suffer wrongs patiently for conscience sake even servants from their Masters For the first To know what conscience is we must looke both to the Etymology of the word and to the definition of the thing The word Conscience imports a knowledge with another Conscie●●●●● quasi cum alia scientia Conscience that is science conjoyned and the reason is because conscience is a thing in us that knowes what wee have done and therein joynes with some other thing that knowes it too Some of our actions conscience sees within and the Angels and men see them without but for our secret thoughts conscience is onely joyned with God or with our owne mindes as they are joyned with God Conscience is a thing within us which God hath plac't there of purpose to be his witnesse or 〈◊〉 to discover all we think or doe and as it is joyned with the minde of man it is the knowledge of what we know or the thinking of what we think To thinke of other things is the understanding or mind but to thinke what we think is the conscience of a man Or else conscience may be called so because it is a concluding science Consci●ntia quasi c●●●ludens scientia and the reason of the terme in that sense may be thus because looke what discourse conscience hath with God or the mind of man it u●tereth it by way of a Syllogism which they call a practicall Syllogisme As for instance if the conscience speake within to a murtherer it speaketh by Syllogisme thus Every
murderer is in a fearefull case but thou art a murderer therefore thou art in a fearefull case Now that that reason which concludes thus in him is his conscience is most apparent For the minde gives only the first part of the Syllogisme which is that a murderer is in a fearfull case or that the minde sees either by the naturall principles planted in it or by the Scriptures The other branch the conscience takes out of the memory that is that thou hast committed murder Now the concluding of both and applying them to the murderer is the proper work of conscience conscience is that within us that so concluds upon our actions Now for the definition of conscience omitting the diversity of frames given by divers men I expresse that which I take to be the cleerer and fullest to shew us what it is Conscience is a divine faculty in the soule of all reasonable creatures applying the principles or propositions of their minde in their particular actions either with them or against them I say it is a faculty to note that it is more then the act or the habite of the minde judging or determining For acts and habits may be lost but conscience cannot Besides the Scriptures shew that conscience doth act as it excuseth or accuseth and therefore must be a faculty it selfe and not the act of a faculty I say a faculty in the soule because I dare not assigne it or confine it to any part of the soule as they doe that make it a part of the understanding for the understanding hath no parts properly and to make it a part Analogically is not to be borne in a definition as Logicians know I say moreover it is in all reasonable creatures to note that beasts that have only a sensitive soule have no conscience And whereas God also is no creature therefore he hath no conscience For God being holinesse it selfe needs no faculties to governe himselfe by nor any conscience to witnesse or prompt him And I say it is in all that none might imagine that some men have a conscience and some have none For every man hath a conscience either good or bad Secondly the proper worke of conscience is imported in the other words of the definition viz. applying the principles of the minde For the understanding whereof we must know that there are certain notions or frames of truth planted in the minds of all men being infused by God as a naturall law in their minds shewing what is good or evill and those principles are increased in the mindes of such as have the benefit of the Scripture more or lesse according to the degree of their knowledge Now that which conscience doth is this it repaires to these formes of truth or light in the minde and takes such of them as concerne the businesse in hand and with the force of them either comforts or affrights men according as the occasion is Note that I say it is a divine faculty I wanted a fit terme to expresse my meaning for that I would ●●ter I say that it is a wonderfull speciall faculty in us it is a most celestiall gift Conscience is so of God and in man that it is a kinde of middle thing betweene God and man lesse then God and yet above man So then Conscience concludes about a mans owne actions for if conscience trouble it selfe about other mens actions it is either the weaknesse or the errour of conscience and I adde particular actions because conscience never imployes it selfe properly about generals and lastly I adde for the successe or end it is either with a man or against him to note that conscience is such an Arbiter between God and us that sometimes it speakes for God against us and sometimes for us to God But that we may be more distinctly informed about conscience I therfore come to the second point which is to consider what conscience can doe or how it is imployed in us and conscience is imployed both for God and for man which worke I will consider first apart and then joyntly For God then Conscience works diversly and hath many offices under God and for God for it is Gods speciall spy set in the heart of man to watch him and his intelligencer and notary to set downe what man hath done it is Gods hand-writing the Law of God written in our hearts or rather worketh by the helpe of that body of the Law written by the finger of God upon the tables of mens hearts it is a co-witnesse with God Rom. 9.1 It is also Gods Lievtenant and a great commander placed within us that severely requires homage and service to bee done to God and especially diverts man from ill directing him in the carefull manner of serving of God for God will not accept any service that conscience doth not order 2 Tim. 1.3 It is a taster for God in point of doctrine of Religion for all doctrines must bee brought to the conscience to bee tried whether they bee of God or no 2 Cor. 4.2 And finally it makes a man endure grief and suffer wrong for God and his glory as this Text imports For man conscience is many waies imployed as first it is imployed in viewing and surveying the things of man especially the hidden things of man and here the power of conscience is wonderfull For other creatures may see the things without them but have no power to see the things within them only man he hath a knowledge reflexed The eye of a man too can see other things but without a glasse it cannot see it selfe But now conscience can discerne it selfe and the whole actions of man and so it differs from science or the knowledge of the minde for to know other things is science but to know our selves is conscience The soule then by conscience knowes it self it views the thoughts memory affections of the soule and can tell what wee thinke desire love feare hate c. Secondly in matters of Religion conscience is specially imployed for instance both in the Word and the Sacraments For the Wo●d the mystery of faith even all the grounds of Religion they are laid up and are in the keeping of conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 And in Baptisme where as God makes a covenant with us and likewise requires a restipulation or promise on our part conscience is herein imployed and without conscience God will do nothing in the businesse It was the forme in the Primitive times that the party which was to be baptised was to be examined before God whether he did beleeve t●e question was Credis Doest thou beleeve And he was to answere Credo I doe beleeve Now this answer God would not take unlesse the conscience would say that hee did beleeve as hee said this is the answer A good conscience is mentioned 1 Pet. 3.21 Againe a good conscience serves in all the offices of our life or affairs even in all things to be a
if he obey not or to excuse if he obey As for the authority of masters or other superiours it cannot reach to the conscience properly for they have no power to command or punish conscience but that which ties conscience to submit unto them is the commandement of God in his Word in this and such like places And therefore hence wee may learne the difference between the power of mens lawes and the power of Gods Word which difference will further appeare distinctly in many things First men may make many lawes either ecclesiasticall or civill which bind not at all yea which we are bound not to keep as if they command a thing contrary to the Word of God and in that case it is better to obey God than men and conscience is first bound to God Acts 5. Dan. 3. Now all Gods laws binde Secondly if such as are next above us in authority command us any things contrary to the lawes of the supreme Magistrate to whom they and we are bound we are not tied to obey Thirdly mens lawes can only binde us to outward working or suffering they cannot make lawes or inflict punishment upon the hearts or mindes of men whereas Gods lawes enjoyne obedience upon the inward man as well as the outward and eternall punishment as well as temporary Fourthly the best lawes of men where they binde most binde not by any immediate power of their owne but by feare of Gods Word that enjoynes us to obey their lawfull authority Fiftly mens lawes ever binde with limitation that is with respect of the end of the law and the person of the law-maker and the offence of others and hereupon Divines say if mens laws be omitted so as the end of the laws bee not hindred that is that the Common-wealth be not damnified or other particular ends crossed or offence be not given as much as in us lieth or the law-giver be not despised or contemned the conscience may not accuse a man of sinne Sixtly some lawes of men are meerly penall note that I say meerly penall that is they are made about matters of lesse importance and not uttered precisely in commanding tearmes or so uttered that the Common-wealth is accounted by the law-giver to be sufficiently provided for if the penalty be inflicted Now he that is ready to pay the fine or the penalty and doth not transgresse but in some case of necessary respect he is not to be charged with sinne before God And thus of conscience and of the laying downe of the first reason The avouching of it followes in verse 20. Verse 20. For what glory is it if when you be buffeted for your faults you shall take it patiently But if when you doe well and suffer for it you take it patiently this is acceptable with God WHere the Apostle makes it good that the best praise is to suffer wrongfully First by affirming that it is no true glory for a man to suffer for his faults and endure it Secondly by shewing that to suffer patiently for well doing is a thing very acceptable to God That it is no true glory for a man to suffer for his faults that he endure it patiently he expresseth in these words What glory is it if when yee be buffeted for your faults you take it patiently Out of which words divers doctrines may be briefly noted Doct. 1. First that men of all sorts doe naturally affect glory 〈…〉 or reputation and are guided by it in their actions or sufferings even the meanest sort of men set before themselves something which they glory in and according to which they order themselves as here servants even of the worst sort too yea such as are faulty and so disliked and corrected yet will not be without something to glory in and that is as is here supposed to bee their patience in abiding blowes And this ariseth in man partly out of corruption of nature and pride that seekes to cover their faults with some thing they account to bee of praise and partly out of the force of some remainder of goodnesse in their natures that are not destitute of all desire of vertuous actions Which may serve for Use to all men in their carriage one towards another to avoide as much as may be the dishonouring and disgracing one of another for no person is so meane but he finds himselfe stung by disgrace And it may teach superiours to use praise and glory as a meanes to provoke and excite inferiours to obedience and care as being a motive that will work universally upon all natures Doct. 2. Usually men account that to be glory which is not vain-glory is taken for true glory by most men thus men mistake that place Their glory In Idols and Pictures Hos. 10.5 In Epicurisme and shamefull lusts Phil. 3.19 In the increase of meanes and power to sinne Hos. 4.6 7. In the gifts and power of other men 1 Cor. 3.21 In Russian-like pride or vain and strange apparell 1 Cor. 11.14.1 Pet. 3.5 1 Tim. 2.9 10. In mischief and malicious practices against the godly Psal. 52.1 94.4 In fraudulent bargaines Pro. 20.23 In a mans owne gifts of nature as wit strength memory c. Ier. 9.23 In the common graces of Religion as knowledge zeale c. Rom. 2.27 1 Cor. 4.7 In the praise sought and given by himself Ioh. 7.10 and 8.54 2 Cor. 10.18 In the merit of his owne workes Rom. 4.2 In the praise of men more then of God In strife contention and provocation of others Iames 3.14 Gal. 5.26 Phil. 2.3 In the falls of other men that are divided from them in judgement 1 Cor. 5.6 In earthly things as houses riches beauty honour pleasures c. 1 Pet. 1. 24. Isa. 48.16 So here some men account it their glory to suffer patiently though they be guilty and have deserved all they suffer And therefore we should be warned and directed in studying that which is true glory And if any aske what were indeed glorious I answer that spirituall riches are the best glory and therefore our soules are called our glory by an excellency Psal. 3.4 The best glory is within Psal. 45.14 And in particular it is true glory To be righteous and mercifull Prov. 21.21 To be humble and feare God Prov. 22.4 To know God Ier. 9.23 To live so sincerely as we may have the testimony of a good conscience 2 Cor. 1.12 To be exalted of God to the priviledges hope of his children Iam. 1.9 To have interest in the crosse of Christ Gal. 6.14 To be abased and truly humbled for our sins Iames 1.9 To abound in labours and sufferings for the Gospel 2 Cor. 11. and 22.12 To defer anger and passe by a trespasse Prov. 19.11 To suffer without fainting for Religion Ephes. 3.13 So here to doe well and suffer for it and endure it patiently this is a glory with God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sinning Doct. 3. The words may be rendred thus What
our faces toward Zion Ier. 51.4 5. Hosh. 14.2 3. 2 Chron. 6.24 37. Ierem. 3.13 Ioel 2.12 Thirdly we must order our wayes to a generall reformation The Prophet complaines that they would not frame their doings to turne to the Lord importing there can be no returning to God unlesse men cast their courses into a frame of reformation Hos. 5.4 Men must amend their doings and their workes Ier. 35.15 Fourthly we must returne in sincerity and that hath divers things considerable for 1. We must returne with our whole hearts nor fainedly Ier. 3.7 2 Chron. 6.38 our very faces must be turned from so much as looking after our abominations Ezek. 14.6 2. We must returne from our owne evill wayes every man from his way note it from his way that is from those courses in which he hath specially offended Iames 3.8 Esay 55.7 the wicked must forsake his way 3. WE must forsake not only outward sins but inward sins also we must reforme the wandring of our hearts as well as our lives the unrighteous must forsake his very thoughts Esay 55.7 and put downe the very Idols of his heart Ezek. 14.7 4. We must turne from all our transgressions It is not enough to forsake sin as some outward or inward sins but we must forsake all sorts of sins Ezek. 18.30 5. We must returne with resolution never to start backe we must not be like a deceitfull bow Hos. 7.16 Fiftly we must so returne as we must consecrate our selves to God to wait upon him continually Hos. 12.6 and to ●erve the true and living God 1 Thes. 1.9 and to doe workes meet for repentance Acts 26.20 The ninth point is the signes of returning or how we may trie whether we be effectually returned and that may be partly gathered by some of the points before and partly by some other things may be added He that is truely turned may know it First by the cause of his returning It was somewhat above his own power or disposition It was God that turned him by his Word neither did hee turne out of despaire as Iudas did but faith in God and perswation of Gods goodnesse in Christ made him returne He feares God and his goodnesse Secondly by the manner of his returning For if he returne in the manner before mentioned he needs not doubt the truth of his repentance especially if he be sure to have no hypocriticall or carnall ends of his reformation and that he doe desire to returne from all his transgressions making conscience of the least Commandement of God as well as the greatest and of secret sins as well as open and of the evill that leaves to his best workes Esay 1.16 Thirdly by the fruits of repentance of returning and so he may comfort himselfe 1. If he esteeme Christs pasture above all worldly things finding the sweetest savour in the Word of all things in this life Psalm 19. and 119. 2 Cor. 2. 2. If he have a mind to know God that he find that out of habituall disposition he have an earnest desire to know God and to be knowne of him Ier. 24.7 he will follow on to know the Lord Hos. 6.3 3. If he doe distinguish betweene the precious and the vile Ier. 15.19 and discerne betweene the righteous and the wicked betweene him that serveth God and him that serveth him not Mal. 3.18 esteeming godly men to be the onely wise men Luke 1.17 4. If he be carefull to put iniquity far from his Tabernacle if he be carefull to reforme his house and cannot abide to dwell where sin dwels unreformed Iob 22.23 5. If he become as a little childe for humility and trust upon God for all things necessary as the little child trusts upon his father for diet clothes inheritance preferment c. without any doubting or carking care 6. If he be earnest with God to heale his nature and to perfect his worke Esay 19.22 Ier. 31.18 19. He prayes and that earnestly for the mending of his disposition to wander 7. If he be profitable according to his bignesse and pasture if he be full of mercy and good fruit if he be zealous of good workes These be things meet for repentance that is things that be of equall weight with it in the scales they each of them weigh just as much as repentance The last point is what should be the reason that men have so little minde to returne they will not be driven home againe though they know that they live sinfully and heare of Gods wrath and discerne vanity in all their pleasures and that sin hath usually proved it selfe to be a lie and that they are in danger of strange punishments and of eternall torment What I say should be the lets of returning or rather the causes that they minde not to returne Answ. The causes are First the Divell is the cause he hath blinded their eyes and workes effec●ually in them and leads them wandring and captive at his will 2 Cor. 4.3 Ephes. 2.2 2 Tim. 2.26 Secondly impotency of consideration is the cause they neither can nor doe thinke of the arguments should make them to returne or move them they cannot spend an houre in the consultations upon it whether they doe well not to returne Thirdly ignorance of the glory of Religion and the Kingdome of Jesus Christ Col. 1.26 there is a vaile upon their hearts 2 Cor. 3. Fourthly opinion that it is dishonour and shame to return this makes divers continue in erroneous and humorous conceits or in fantasticall conformity to the wicked yea the very excuses of sinning because they feare they shall be vilified laughed at and censured for it Fiftly expectation to have their particular courses to be proved to be sins Thus doe almost all men in their times persist in their sins under the coverture of this question Who can prove them to be sinners Thus scapes usury excesse and vanity of apparell excesse likewise in drinking of healths till the wine inflame them swearing prophanation of the Sabbath c. being willingly ignorant of this that God hath condemned sin in the generall in Scripture and layes it to men to looke unto it that they fall not into his hands for transgressing and if they doubt they must be ruled by their teachers Sixtly forgetfulnesse of their latter end Therefore is their iniquity in their skirts still because they remember not their last end for both the terrour of that day and the shortnesse of their life and the judements they would meet with of those things if they were to die would fright them out of those courses But they will not apply their hearts to wisedome because they cannot remember their dayes Lam. 1.9 Psal. 90.12 Seventhly evill teachers are a great hinderance for they strengthen the hands of the wicked and by preaching peace perswade them they are in no danger Ier. 23.14 Ezek. 13.22 Eighthly in some there is a very spirit of fornication in the midst of them they