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

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the Rev. 11. 14. second woe is past to make way for the third the greatest woe that cometh quickly i. e. immediately upon it Many wicked escape the first woe in life but as it befel them that scaped the sword of 1 King 19. 17. Hazael there were two other worse swords of Jehu and Elisha that should dispatch them after The sword of Hazael may spare the wicked in this life but then the sword of Jehu meets with them at death and again the sword of Elisha at the day of judgement He may flee from the iron sword but then Job 20. 22. the how of steel shal strike him thorough Or as Amos hath it He may fly from a Lion in life Am. 5. 19. and a Bear meet him at death and the Serpent bite him at the day of judgement This yet hath an end though it be long first at the day of judgement the second woe ends but a greater succeeds If a man live Eccl. 11. 8. many years saith Solomon and rejoice in them all yet let him remember the dayes of darknesse that they are many The dayes of darknesse that is in hell are many and long dayes they be from thy death to the end of the world is but one day and there are many more after which are longer a thousand years is but as one day and every one of those dayes are as a thousand years yet are there many of them more than ten thousands of such dayes there are for they are without number But the third woe payes for all which is at 3 Woe at the day of Judgment the day of judgement then shall all the Cataracts of wrath be set open and all the vials of wrath filled and emptied out upon the heads of the wicked Then shall the Lord rain fire and brimstone from the Lord out of Heaven Then shall the sealed book of Conscience be unclasped and out of thy own mouth and heart and book shalt thou be judged Then shall both Earth and Sea and Hell and Death deliver up all their dead but not to be annibilated that they would account an unspeakable mercy but only to be Arraigned tryed sentenced Then shall Death and Hell be cast again into the lake of fire which is the second and eternall death Then shall a Hell in Conscience be cast into a Hell of despair and an Hell of guilt into an Hell of pain But of this third woe it is no where said the third woe is past Life ends and with it the first woe The world ends and with it the second woe But Etermity ends not therefore the third woe never ends Hence the judgement of that day is called Eternal Judgement Heb. 6. 2. and the destruction of the wicked an everlasting Destruction 2. Thess 1. 9. The first woc may be a sad one yet it cannot be long because life is short The second woe is more sad because more long but though long it is it is not for ever The third is the sad and killing woe because it is both long and endlesse There is the great Gulfe fixed that there is no comming over As the first woe leaves a man the second woe finde him as the second leaves him the third finds him but the third never leaves Look how Life leaves Death finds as Death leaves Judgement finds as Judgement leaves Eternity finds But this Eternity leaves not his place to any other Eternity is a pit which hath no bottome it is a large bottome that can never be unravelled it is a Center which hath no circumference no measure of times or number of Ages can fathom or reckon the length of it It hath ever a beginning of his dayes hath never an end of his years when Time shall be no more Eternity is but beginning It is a long and perpetuall night which shall never have a morning to succeed it Now to all Eternity thy evill Conscience shall accompany thee and fill thy heart with new tortures of Grief and fear and wrath and bitternesse and despair But this third woe must never have an end Means The means to be used to the getting and keeping of good Conscience are Principal and they two Subservient and they many The Principal means and without which 1. The Blood of Christ all the rest are insufficient are two First to get the bloud of Christ sprinkled on the Conscience by the hand of faith As David said of Goliah's sword There is none to that give it 1 Sam. 21. 9. me So may we say of this bloud This purgeth the Conscience from all dead works that it may serve the living God Heb. 9. 14. All duties gifts observances Performances nothing to this Other things may make the out-side clean before men the bloud of Christ is that alone which maketh the Conscience clean before God that there is now no more Conscience of sin as to the guilt and spot of it So Heb. 10. 29. The bloud of the Covenant is that whereby the beleever is sanctified Whatsoever other means are used courses are taken as by confession contrition satisfaction reading praying fasting building Alms-houses or the like they are no more without this to the commending of the Conscience unto God or taking away sin from the Conscience than Adams Fig-leaves to take away the shame of his nakednesse or the washing of Pilates hands in fair water to cleanse his soul from the foul sin of Bioud-guiltinesse He should have washed his heart in the bloud of Christ than had he been free from all his sins and not his hands in water that he might be free from the bloud of Christ His bloud is that Zach. 13. 1. Fountain opened to the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleannesse This bloud of Christ we should pray pathetically and fervently as the Jewes did passionately and furiously that it may be upon us and on our Children not on our heads but on our hearts not to be charged upon us but sprinkled on us not by Vulnera Christi eivitates refugii Sanguis Christi sons Bethlehemi Joh. 6. 53. 54. way of imputation but of expiation The wounds of Christ are our City of Refuge said one And the bloud of Christ is the well of Bethlehem which we should long for and break through an host of difficulties to come unto Except we drink this bloud we have no life in us But who so eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud hath eternal life and Christ promiseth to raise him up at the last day Fly then to this City of refuge and escape the Avenger Sprinkle this blood on thy Door-posts and escape the Destroyer Look up to this Brazen Serpent and be cured of all stings of Conscience from the fiery Serpent Cast in this Jonah and the raging Sea is calmed both of Gods displeasure and Consciences disturbance Go to this Samaritan for his Wine and Oyle to thy wounded Conscience
Leah instead of an imagined Rachel It climbes the Tree of Knowledge and cuts down the Tree of Life It taketh and chuseth a Barabbas but renounceth and condemneth Christ Jesus It Mar. 7. 8. 11. 12. will make a Pharisee set more by an old Tradi●ion then a divine Precept and a Pharisees di●ciple Acts 16. 9. Gal. 1. 13. 14. Psal 3. 6. Mat. 23. 15 look more after the Corban then his du●y to his aged and indigent Parents This set Paul blindfold to persecute and blaspheme Christ onely that he might shew his zeal to God This makes others compasse both sea ●nd land to make one their Proselyte who when all is done is but a double childe of hell Oh the wofull work erroneous Conscience hath made in all Times in the past Ages of the Church And this my story of iniquity worketh hitherto and is still working more mischief amidst our sad and dismall distractions This is one part of the spirituall wickednesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in heavenly things or places Ephes 6. 12 13. Against which must be taken the whole armour of God This like Saul hath slain his thousands not of Philistines but Israelites This like that wood which in a bloody day devoured more by erring disordering and intangling them then the sword devoured 2 Sam. 18. 8 This destroys more then ignorance or superstition or prophanesse This lets go Scripture duties upon more credit given to Revelations Upon this mistake a true Prophet once contrary to expresse commands of God gave up his faith obedience and withall his conscience upon a report of a later revelation and an Angelicall apparition to the old Prophets bare but false asseveration of a newer and cleerer light 1. King 13. 18. I am also a prophet as thou art and an angel spake unto me by the word of the Lord saying Bring him back with thee to eat bread and drink water but he lied unto him This above all other is the evil conscience intended in this place It was nothing but erring conscience at first that caused Hymenaeus and Alexander to relinquish their former Profession and having put pure conscience out of doors they come to make a fearfull shipwrack of their faith totally and o● their souls finally Enlightened conscience feareth and departeth from evil this fool rageth and is confident Prov. 14. 16. Englightened conscience hath his eyes open and seeth the angel in the way erroneous conscience like the seduced false Prophet rusheth forward into the midst of danger Erroneous conscience is he whose deceived heart turns him aside who feedeth on ashes as the Prophet saith Esay 44. 20. hath a lie in his right hand so that he cannot deliver his soul This is he whose plague is in his head Levit. 13. 44. This is the man whom ye may bray in a mortar with a pestell among wheat yet will not his folly depart from him Prov. 27. 22. There is more hope of a fool then of this man because he is wiser commonly in his own conceit then seven men that can render a reason Prov. 26. 12 16. Erroneous conscience is the eye that puts darknesse for light and light for darknesse It is the mouth that puts bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter It is the traveller that leaveth the ancient paths and the good way to walk in new wayes wayes not of Gods casting up and Scriptures chalking out Jer. 18. 15 A good Conscience must therefore be purified from Errour Thirdly It must be purified from naturall From deadnesse or hardnes deadnesse or hardnesse which is as bad a disease as either ignorance or errour So that although thou mayest escape the fear of ignorance by the instructions of Wisdom and-the snare of errour by the light of the Gospel yet if thou be taken in the Pit of deadnesse and naturall hardnesse thou art never the neerer thou hast not yet a good conscience Heb. 9. 14. The conscience must be purged from dead works that it may serve the living God A dead conscience is not for a living God One may be a knowing hypocrite or an orthodox nonconvert but what is he neerer to salvation while in this deadnesse There is a generation pure in their own eyes yet not cleansed Pro. 30. 12 as to conscience from their own deadnesse God I thank thee I am no Papist say they no Anabaptist Antinomian Sectary I am a catholike Christian I am an old Protestant but an unsanctified Christian and the common carnall Protestant is no better then they He is blinde and cannot see afar off and forgets that he is not yet cleansed from his old sins 2. Pet. 1. 9. Except you be regenerate and raised from naturall deadnesse you cannot see the kingdom of God Al that are not seducers as Jesuits false Teachers or seduced as common Papists Antinomians Libertines Anti-scripturists prophane Atheists and Socinians are not therefore necessarily saved There is a plague in the heart that every one must see and bewail and get cured of or else it is as pernicious to the 1 Kin. 8. 38 soul and sends more certainly to hell then any plague or leprosie in the head Levit. 13. 44. We call not that Arm or Leg good which is onely not bruised wounded out of joynt when it is benummed or paralytick It hath no pain indeed but what use is there of it So what though conscience be not bruised raging and tormenting and out of joynt by errour if it be benummed stupified or dead There is no use of such a conscience Conscience must therefore be purged from deadnesse Secondly There be three things which Conscience must be Purified by which are 1 The Three things conscience is purified by 1. The word of Christ word 2. Blood 3. Spirit of Christ First The word of Christ is the Great heart Searcher and Conscience Purifier Heb. 4. 12. The word of God is quick and Powerfull and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart c This is the Fanne with which Christ doth purge his Floore Canscience John 15. 3. Now are you clean through the word which I have spoken to you saith Christ to his Disciples and for them he prayes Joh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is that sanctifying truth This removes those before named discases of conscience 1. This is that which removes ignorance Psal 119. 105. Thy word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my paths What can the best eye see without a light of Sun or candle What can we know concerning God and his will without his word This written word is a more sure discovery of the minde of God then all apparitions or the most famous particular revelations 2 Pet. 1. 19. To which we must take heed and have recourse as to a light shining in a dark place This giveth knowledge to the simple Psal 119. 130. This is sufficient to remove all ignorance and uncertainty in divine things 2.
This rectifies errour being as a voyce behinde us Esay 30. 21. Thine ear shall hear a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it when ye turn to the right hand and when ye turn to the left This ends all controversies Esay 8. 26. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them This resolves all doubts How is it written in the law how readest thou Luke 10. 26. 3. This removes deadnesse of conscience and hardnesse Is not this word an hammer to soften the heart and is not this the immortall seed by which we Jer. 23. 29. 1 Pet. 1. 23 Psal 119. 25. are begotten again Therefore David finding his conscience in a dead frame prayed My soul cleaveth to the dust quicken me according to thy word Again verse 50. It is my comfort in my affliction for thy word hath quickened me So verse 93. I will never forget thy precepts for with them thou hast quickened me The word is the first thing by which conscience is purified and set right This makes the man of God perfect and thorowly furnished to every good work 2 Tim. 3. 17. Secondly By the blood of Christ is the conscience 2. By the blood of Christ further purified we must not rest in the word alone without this blood which cleanseth both the book of Conscience and is sprinkled on the book of Scripture to give vertue to it Heb. 9. 14. Shall not the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God This is it that purgeth the defiled and guilty conscience from all his diseases and filthinesse Christs spittle opened the eyes of two blinde men once His blood openeth the eye of Mark 8. 23 Joh. 9. 6. blinde conscience ever This is the blood of sprinckling which alone purifies the heart from an evil conscience Heb. 10. 22. So that the soul may now draw nigh to God with boldnesse and much assurance Other blood and observances Read the 9. and 10. chap. to the Hebr. might serve to make an Israelite under the Law legally pure as to the flesh Onely this blood of Christ typified by the purification water the hyssop scarlet blood of bulls and goats can make a Christian Evangelically pure before God and Internally in the court of Conscience The book and people and all things pertaining to the Tabernacle were consecrated with blood Heb. 9. 22. And almost all things by the Law were purged with blood And without shedding of blood there is no remission To teach us what is more plainly expressed 1 Joh. 1. 7. The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin Wash me O Lord with this hyss●p and I shall Psal 51. 7. be clean Purge me with this blood and I shall be whiter then the snow Thirdly Conscience is purged by the Sperit 3 By the spirit of Christ of Christ together with the word and blood without there be a concurrence of all three the work is not done not the word alone without the blood and spirit can effect it no● the blood without the word and spirit nor yet the spirit without both the former The word is sprinkled on the Conscience to inform satisfie and purifie it The blood of Christ is sprinkled on the word as Exod 24. 8. compared with Heb. 9. 20. which it was not sufficient to have read but sprinkled with the blood of the Covenant to give vertue to it And the blood it self must be applyed by the spirit that the vertue of it may be brought home to the conscience The blood of Christ without the spirit is no better then his flesh without the spirit The flesh profits nothing It is the Spirit that quickeneth The principall Jo. 6. 63. part of the work of purifying Conscience belongs to the Spirit It was that eternal Spirit whereby Christ offered his Blood Heb. 9. 14. which did commend our conscience to God And this Spirit applying the blood offered doth commend and seal Gods Covenant to our Consciences Thus the spirit heals those three diseases It properly removes Ignorance being the Spirit of Illumination Eph. 1. 17 This rectifyes Errour being the spirit of Truth Joh 14. 17. This removes Deadness being the spirit of life Rom. 8. 2. This is the great Purifyer this the Refiners fire this the Fullers soape Malach 3. 2. whereby Christ doth refine and purifie the sons of Jacob. This the Spirit of Judgement and Spirit of burning wherewith God hath promised to wash away the filth of the daughter of Zion Esay 4. 4. CHAP. III. Of the Conscience rightly pacifyed Conscience rightly pacified II. A Right pacifyed Conscience This is the second property and part of the good Conscience laid down in the Definition Purity indeed is the more excellent kinde of goodnesse it being essentiall to the very being of good Conscience Peace is but an additional and a secondary part of that goodness and conduceth more to the bene esse then to the bare esse of good conscience It is a spirituall good but of a temporary nature not standing and immovable Peace is so far good as that the Conscience is not perfectly well without it but right Peace it must be or it is not good at all which that it may enjoy There are three things which Conscience must be 1. Pacifyed from 2. Pacifyed by Three things it must be pacified from 1. The three things Conscience must be pacifyed from are 1. The Reign of Sin 2. The rage of Satan 3. The displeasure of God 1 It must be at peace from the dominion of sin So long as Adonijah Reigneth Solomon is in danger while Sin is in his Power and Throne 1 From the raigne of sinne Conscience cannot be in safety Our Peace therefore which we should seek is not such a Peace as we are born unto or are possessed of while the strong man is Armed but is a recovered Peace regained by deposing the Usurper Like Israels Peace after the seditious commotion 2 Sam. 20. 22. was quietly setled when Shebahs head was off No peace to conscience while a Sheba up in Armes There is a Peace indeed when Sin and Satan are strongly armed and keep the house Luk. 11. 21. This is no good Peace this is the peace of a sleepy not an awakened conscience No war so miserable as Pax est sed Bello pax ea deterior such a peace when the soul is at ease in it self at peace with Sin at peace with Satan at agreement with Hell but at war and enmity with God Conscientia pacatè optima may be vitiosè pessima In tali pace amaritudo mea amarissima as Bernard or Ad pacem advenit Amara mihi Amaritudo as Junius reads that of Hezekiah in Is 38. 17. Wo to these that ●laugh now they
joynes faith and the good conscience together viz. cap. 1. v. 5. v. 19. cap. 3. 9. Indeed they cannot be parted The life of faith is ever bound up in the life and bundle of good conscience There is no good faith where not good conscience nor yet good conscience where true faith wanting where you see the one looke and you shall finde the other These two are like the Churches two breastes Cant. 7. 3. compared to two young Roes that are twins that are bred and fed and grow and thrive and decay and live and dye together The best Gold and this Bdellyum of a good conscience is no where to be found but in the Havilah of Faith Faith it is which purifyes the Gen. 2. 12. heart Act. 15. 9. and mends the conscience The Tree of Life only grows in Paradise good conscience onely in Faiths Garden Faith is the grace and sheafe To which all other graces and sheafs must bow and do their obeysance This casts her crown at the feet of Christ therefore they all set their crowns on the head of this Faith mends and commends every thing Faith gives being denomination and acceptation to every Gospel Graee and comfort and duty No love without Faith Gal. 5. 6. Phil. v. 5. No obedience but obedience of Faith Rom. 1. 5. 16. 26. No Repentance without Faith Mar. 1. 15. so faith and patience Heb. 6. 12. Faith and hope 1 Pe. 1. 21. No joy but joy of Faith Phil. 1. 25. No works but works of Faith 1 Thes 1. 3. No duties without faith The prayer of Faith Iam. 5. 15. Hearing of Faith Gal. 3. 2. No life but the life of Faith Gal. 2 20. This is the salt that seasons every sacrifice So look first for Faith when thou imaginest thou hast a good conscience Let us draw neer saith the Apostle Heb. 10. 22. with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an ill conscience c. No true heart no assurance nay no Faith where no good conscience yet Nor good conscience to be looked for where Faith is not first to be found Among the Heathen Sages and Philosophers you may read good Sentences hear good expressions finde some good Actions but no good consciences because without Christ and without Faith Among a thousand Civilized morall persons not one good conscience because no Faith For it is the Apostles Rule Tit. 1. 15. To the unbeleeving and impure is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled None were found among the ordinary sons of men men of better tempers sweeter natures lovely and praise-worthy Deportments for Personall and Heroick vertues for sundry memorable sayings and generous actions then were Titus Trajan Hadrian Antoninus Pius Antoninus Verus his Brother yea Valerian and that so much detested Julian yet nothing of good conscience in any of them all strangers to the knowledge and Theory of it All Enemies to the Practise and Power of it All Persecutors of the truth in their severall times and reignes Titus is called Amor deliciae generis humani Trajanus alioqui civiliter bonus laudatus princeps ob justitiam humanitatem adeo clarus ut postea laetae acclamationis quoties Crearetur Caesar praebuerit formulam sis faelicior Augusto Melior Trajano dixisse fertur praefecto praetorij gladium ei tradens Hoc Ense contra hostes utere si justa mandavero contra me si me videris injuste agere c. Hadrianus ingenio excelluit omnium doctrimarum capacissimus Dixisse fertur Imperatorem erga unumquemque debere esse talem qualem si privatus esset sibi vellet esse imperatorem at in Regu● Christi nullas portas regi gloriae aperuit sed inter milites est qui Christum crucifigunt Cent. Magd. Cent. 2. cap. 3. De persecut sub Traiano Hadriano Antoninus Pius solitus est dicere se malle unum civem servare quam mille hostes Occidere M. Antoninus Verus ingenio eruditione valuit Philosophi nomen adeptus est A Philosophiae studijs nec imperij negocijs nec Bellicis occupationibus unquam se avocari aut distr●hi passus est ex illis optimus imperator formatus multa in Remp. Rom. contulit praeclarissima merita Talem se omnibus praestitit ut ab omnibus amatetur At quo in suos commodior eo in Christianos gravior hic Antoninus Cent. Magd. cent 2. cap. 3. Valerian a most bloudy and Raging perecutor was princeps laudatus de quo scribit Trebellius cum senatus authoritate Censor crearetur in senatusconsulto has fuisse voces Valeriant vita censura est ille de omnibus judicet qui est omnibus melior Ille de senatu judicet qui nullum habet erimen ille cui nihil potest obijci de vita nostra sententiam ferat hunc censorem omnes accipimus hunc omnes imitari volumus cent 3. cap. 3. Julian equall to any of them scientia Philosophia Graecarum litterarum in eo magna fuit I● studijs tanta assiduitate usus est ut semnum defraudans suum totas noctes interdum illis daret similis Tito existimatus bellorum successibus Trajano comparatus clementia Antonino Pio moderatione M. Aurelio Antonino litteratum scientia magnis Philosophis Magd. Cent. 4 Cap. 3. Hold faith and a good conscience saith the Text Hold the mystery of faIth in a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3. 9. Good conscience is the Ring faith the Gemme and Jewell enriching and adorning this Ring Good conscience is the Cabinet faith the Pearle lockt up in it Good conscience the Ship faith the Merchandize that the Field this the Treasure hid in it faith the Apples of Gold this the Pictures or Tables of Silver in which it is set Faith is the Christians eye good conscience is the Christians eye-lid with the eye-lid men cannot see at all no sight at all in conscience where faith is not nor can the best eye see long without the eye-lid to cover and defend and guard it from dust and other injuries faith without conscience keeping it will soone decay Faith is the wise virgins Lamp good conscience is the Oyle that feeds it or make faith the Oyle good conscience is the Vessell that containes it what can the Lampe do without Oyle or Oyle without a Vessell So what 's Faith without good conscience or this without that But to conclude this correlation and agreement between faith and conscience or the relation and preheminence of faith to conscience with that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 11. 8 9. 11 12. speaking of the relation between man and wife made to be meet helpers each for other So is faith to conscience so is Gen. 2. 18. conscience to be to faith it is not good nor safe for either to be alone The man is the glory of God the woman is the glory of the man saith he ver 7. So say I faith setteth the Crowne on
Conscience doth not onely bear up the Spirit with invincible Patience under all Pressures but it anoints the head with oile and causeth the cup to run over with Joy and Consolation His excellencie herein is beyond all expression Good Consciences Peace is the Peace that passeth understanding It makes a Heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tam sunt Dies ejus jucundi quam si quotidiè lautissimè aleretur Junius in Ioc. on earth a continual feast Prov. 15. 15. The merry heart our late Translation readeth it hath a continual feast Bonus corde Ar. Montanus Laeti corde Junius He hath Benjamin's Mess before him his fare is far above the ordinarie The bread he hath to eat others know not of nor doth the stranger intermeddle in his joy He hath Jehojakim's Provision Every day a rate from the Kings Pro. 14. 10. Table all the dayes of his life even to the day of his death Jer. 52. 34. His feast is beyond Ahasuerus Royall feast which lasted the longest of any feast we read of an hundred and fourscore dayes Esth 1. 4. but then ended This maintains the heart as Salomon did his subjects with continuall undisturbed peace all the dayes of his life not by force and sword but by Prudence and Counsell This makes thee live Halcyon-dayes in life and sing the Swan-like note at death and leades thee into a new year of Jubile after the expiring of the former year of Sabbath The Good Conscience is it self the Conscientia bona titulus est Religionis Templum Solomonis Ager Benedictionis Hortus Deliciarum Aureum Reclinatorium Gaudium Angelorum Arca Foederis Thesaurus Regis Aula Dei Habitaculum Spiritus Sancti Liber signatus clausus in die Judicii aperiendus Nihil jucundius tutius ditius bona Conscientia Bern. de in t domo greatest Good a man can have and is the Procurer and Entertainer of all that Highest good that man is here possibly capable of It is the onely Paradise which God loves to walk in the onely Throne which Christ sits in the onely Temple which the holy Ghost dwels in it is the golden Pot which the bidden Manna is kept in the white Stone which the new Name is written in the Ark which the Tables of the Covenant are laid up in the earthen Pot where all our writings and Evidences are preserved in it 's Gideon's fleece which all the dew of Heaven falls on it is the soft bed which the wearie soul sleeps in it is the Top of Jacob's Ladder reaching unto Heaven Stevens Perspective looking into Hic est Lectus Animae in hoc requiem capit Bern. Par. Sermon Heaven Moses Nebo where first a view is taken of all the promised Inheritance and thence a few steps higher and he was in heaven it is indeed our Penuel God face to face 5. The Good Conscience is so extensive and communicative a good that it is not onely a real Good it self but makes all other things better where it hath to do whence it deserveth that denomination of good Conscience which it commonly is honored with Other things are called Good as Riches Honors Learning Eloquence c. which are not so really but onely in opinion nor do they make any man the better This makes all Good and Good better where it comes Your Riches Honours Great Parts you call them good but who is made good by them if Good Conscience be not there to do it Bad men may have them and bad they finde them and as bad or worse they leave them But this is that which is inconsistent with any badness no bad man can have a Good Conscience This makes all good it meets with and leaves them good whom it found evil It findes some sinful but leaves them holy findes some proud leaves them humble unmerciful it findes some leaves them charitable covetous it findes some leaves them content unjust and dishonest it findes men but makes them just and honest ere it hath done with them it findeth men unprofitable and good for nothing it leaves them profitable it findes some sad leaves them merry poor and leaveth rich dead and leaveth alive What a change doth this one thing make in the world It mends a Magistrate it mends a Minister it mends rich it mends poor for it mends all This alone would mend ill times mend ill Officers mend ill Lawes mend ill execution of good Lawes mend Church mend State and mend all What Plato said long ago of Common-wealths Tum demum fore beatas res publicas cum aut reges philosopharentur aut philosophi regnarent It would never be well in the world till either Philosophers were Kings or Kings Philosophers we may certainly say It will then be well with Common-wealths and not till then when they that are most conscientious are put in publike place and made Magistrates Rulers Commanders Officers Ministers c. or when they that are in such place be most conscientious Good Conscience is the Treasurie of good which therefore brings forth nothing but what is so Good Communication to edifie the hearer Good Conversation to edifie the Beholder yea Conscientiae ea est vis c. saith Dr Ames that it alters the nature of things it makes Actions in their own nature indifferent become good and Actions good become better as Conscience when not good makes lawfull and indifferent actions sinful and displeasing yea the most holy Action is turned into sin the sacrifice is abomination offered with a wicked heart Prov. 21. 27. How mightily doth it concern us to get this Good Conscience which hath so much of Good Epitomized in it which maketh Learning Parts Riches Honour Good yea makes Faith Repentance Praier Alms Holiness Obedience all Good when Good Conscience there which all cease to bee good if it were not for good Conscience commending them Therefore did Irenaeus well to resemble the Good Conscience to the Altar which sanctifieth the gift that is upon it Non sacrificia sunt quae sanctificant hominem sed conscientia ejus qui offert sanctifi●at sacrificium pura existens It is not sacrifice which can sanctifie a man and commend him to God but it is Good Conscience which sanctifieth and commendeth the sacrifice it self CHAP. XVI Of the danger and mischief of an evil Conscience THe Excellencie and Benefit of the Good The danger and mischief of an evil conscience Conscience is not so great but the evil and mischief of the evil Conscience is as great which is our second consideration and this will appear in three particulars 1. Here commonly is the first decay as in the Text you see Hymeneus and Alexander no sooner had put away their Conscience but they sink their faith when once Conscience is tainted and become corrupt then presently the Judgement then the Affections then the Life and what not Corruption in the Conscience is as poison in the spring head this fountain corrupted all the streams run muddie
of later times have had the boldness to call it that Idoll of Sanctification That no regard was to be had to any scandall taken by others That all things Studiosè sibi iurpem vitam elegerunt ut infamiam opprobrium Ecclesiae conciliarent Basilides vesci jussit Idolothytis seu victimis rebus illis quae simulachris immolatae essent indifferenter sine respectu Conscientiae etiam in casu scandali Fidem perjurio negare tempore persecutionis Carpocrates omnibus operationibus libidinibus indifferenter uti necessarium d●●it ut sine Turpitudine nemo perfectionem mystagogtae consequi posset Alli se Jesu similes alii se Petro Paulo praestantiores ob excellentiam cognitionis dixerunt Vide Plura Mag. Cent. 2. cap. 5. were lawfull That they might converse with any Idolaters and Idolothytes That the onely way to perfection in their mysterious Religion was to give themselves to any libidinous and obscene actions That some of theirs were equall to Christ Jesus himself and nothing inferiour to him And as for Peter Paul and the other Apostles they were far their superiours and their Doctrine more perfect then any of theirs That to denie and forswear their faith in case of danger was lawfull c. These are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Text speaks of who deal with Conscience as Amnon did with Thamar first ravish and abuse 2 Sam. 13. 17. it then put it out of doors And like those Sons of Sodom who will no longer endure any more reproofs but assault the reproover in his own house This is he who came to Gen. 19. 9. sojourn and he will now be a judge therefore will we deal worse with thee c. These give the Harlot erronious or seared Conscience the living childe from the right mother pure and tender Conscience laying the dead child at her doors But while these give Conscience a Bill of divorce God gives them a Bill of divorce And while they would make Conscience a reprobate themselves become reprobates A shame it is these things should be said or suffered among Christians What would those ignorant Heathens now say if they should see these things who when once they saw the Spirit carriage and Acts of the Apostles cried out The Gods are come down to Act. 14. 11. us in the likeness of men But changing their voice say that rather Devils are come up to us in the likeness and under the name of Saints But to conclude This particular conscience is that which doth constitute and commend the Christian and all that belongs to the Christian The Christian is no more a Christian if he have not and keep not a good Conscience Our Baptism is no Gospel Baptism but without efficacie if there want a good Conscience 1 Pet. 3. 21. Knowledg not right Gospel Knowledg if not according to godliness Tit. 1. 1. Faith no more Gospel Faith if not joined with Conscience 1 Tim. 3. 9. Love no more Love if separated from good Conscience 1 Tim. 1. 5. nor assurance good assurance if not joined with good Conscience Heb. 10. 22. nor Obedience acceptable except for Conscience Rom. 13. 5. nor Sufferings thank-worthy if not for Conscience 1 Pet. 2. 19. You may do much in vain and suffer and expend much in vain and all be in vain if not for Conscience sake Yea the blood of Christ it self profits not if not sprinkled upon pure Conscience Heb. 9. 14. 2. The second mistake is a practicall mistake of those who reckon not Conscience a Fort or Tower but a Snare and a Prison rather and think in evil times to abandon and desert it is the onely safetie He that looks overmuch to Conscience must die a begger is a chief Article of the worlds Creed Better protection is to be had in policie and a safer refuge in lies and falshood and to make an agreement with hell and covenant with death or to break the Covenant with God and agreement with Heaven is the onely way to securitie But shall not an overflowing Isai 28. 17 18. scourge come and sweep away the refuge of lies as the Prophet saith And shall not men at last be forced to say That the effect of righteousness is onely quietness and assurance for ever Isai 32. 17. When the sinners in Sion shall be afraid and the hypocrites surprized with fear crying out Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings Isa 33. 14 15. Then shall he that walketh uprightly be set up on high and have his defence in the munition of rocks c. 3. There be others who will easily yeeld that good Conscience is worth making of but are mightily mistaken in judging what good Conscience is And there be many mistakes in this respect First some and those very many do conceive if they live according to their Conscience they doe well although their Conscience bee but a naturall Conscience Now the nature of Conscience is very good but the Conscience of Nature is very bad Some good naturall Conscience may have in it but good it cannot be called 1. It may make a man cum seipso scire Rom. 2. 15. And so become a law unto himself 2. Such an one may cum aliis scire and so far is good as Adrian said to do that to others which he would exspect from others 3. Such an one may be exact in matters of the second Table he may answer all the duties of naturall and civill Relations observe the Lawes of humanitie and friendship religiously be true to his trust interest countrey friend promise engagement to his Oath taken as Regulus To the salt of the Palace Ezra 4. 14. as those Idolaters were 4. He may make scruple of many sins such as the light of nature condemnes gross sins commonly Abimelech abhors adulterie Gen. 205. Pilate's Conscience grudges and relucts Joh. 18. 31 38. 19. 4 8. Act. 25. 27 to condemn an innocent man to death Festus holds it unreasonable to send a Prisoner bound without matter of weight charged upon him to be inserted in the Mittimus 5. He may have some sense of the Deitie of God and of the force of Religion Rom. 1. 20. and 2. 14 15. 6. May in that respect tremble sometimes and be terrified in Conscience for sin and hell as Felix Act. 24. 25. 7. He may sometimes and ever and anon when he seriously reflects on himself have a dislike of his own state and wayes and know and confess his sinfull doings yea he may have store and plentie of teares and make shew of much passion and compunction for sin so did Saul 1 Sam. 24. 16. and 26. 21. Hee was under great and frequent fits of horror of this naturall Conscience 8. Or he may on the other side have much inward and pleasing naturall Peace while he observes the rules and dictates of his naturall Conscience Rom. 2. 15. They have their
the great State The godly man saith there is no such necessity for me to have two eyes or two hands there is no necessity of preserving my credit of securing my state of providing for my family no such necessity of gathering riches to live honoured and so dye wealthy but there is an absolute necessity lyes upon me to fly hell save my soul lay hold on eternall life and to this end to get a good conscience If I have but a good conscience left me faith the Christian I have enough while I have that I can want nothing I may be counted poor yet am truly rich I may be looked upon as outwardly sorrowing but behold I am alway rejoycing as dying but I live 2 Cor. 6. Austin said of some Christians Amiserunt omnia quae habebant nunquid fidem nunquid pietatem nunquid interioris hominis bona qui est ante Deum dives de civ Dei l. 1. c. 10. as unknown yet well known as a deceiver yet true as having nothing yet possessing all things I may have dirt cast upon my face good conscience will wipe all off 1 Pet. 3. 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil they may be ashamed who falsly accuse your good conversation in Christ I may lye under great pressures even to despair of help or life good conscience supports me and makes all light 2 Cor. 1. 12. I may have my credit blasted yet repaired againe as Joseph had State ruined yet restored againe as Job had life lost yet found againe as Christ Jesus promised but if conscience be lost I am a lost man The world may with their lightning as the Philosopher saith Consume the scabbard but not at all peirce the sword destroy and split the caske but not spill the liquor or wine in it yet how sad it is that the getting and using conscience is so much among the most of men neglected Every one observeth his rule and way Si curtatus in aequali Ton sore capillos Vel si Toga dissidet impar Horat. Vide Domine quomodo diligenter observent filii bominum pacta literarum syllabarum accepta à prioribus locutoribus à te acceptvae terna pacta perpetuae salutis negligant Conf. l. 1. c. 18. of living but the Christian Every Artificer studieth to be exact in his kind the Taylor hath his measure or his patternes the Carpenter heweth and Squareth his timber the Mason his stone by rule he maketh his wall by Line and Plummet must not the Christian observe his measure his patterne his rule and line The welbred Gentleman is ashamed to be seene abroad in an undecent habit if he be not drest from Top to Toe in the best fashion he thinkes he is not like himselfe And is not the Christian to observe his fashion and demenour Austin did observe and bewaile this exceeding Pathetically the Grammarian observeth his Rules of speaking given him by his master and shall not we observe our Rules of doing given us by God himself the Grammarian or Orator observes his Construction his Pronounciation will not say Inter hominibus for inter homines will not lose you a Letter nor an accent nor an aspiration saith he which is no Letter he will not commit such a Verball fault as to say Ominem for Hominem yet saith he he that will not against the Rules of Grammer the Precepts of his Schoolemaster pronounce Ominem for hominem dare against the Rules of Divinity and precept of God Hate a man odisse Hominem Yea saith he you may observe the Eloquent Orator or Lawyer is more carefull of his words when pleading against his Adversary and is more afraid to speake one word improperly then to aggravate his charge without all charity and Conscience Vigilantissimè Cavet ne Per linguae Errorem dicat inter hominibus et ne per mentis furorem hominem auferat ex hominibus non eavet yea he confesseth and bewaileth it as one of his owne sins when he was a young Scholler that he did abhor Barbarous Solaecisines and Incongruities of speech more then absurdities and incongruities in his actions But let all men know wheresoever Conscience is wanting or not attended there is yet no Grace nor shall there ever be glory First there is yet no Grace at all in that heart the first lesson and the A. B. C. of a Christian is Make Conscience The first thing that God doth worke in that mighty change from nature to Grace and Translation from death to life is the new heart He begins ever with Conscience He a wakens it he softens it enlightneth it enliveneth it He cleanseth it he Sanctifieth it Ezek. 36. 25 26. He dwelleth in it The first worke of Grace is the Donation of a new heart and the change of a stone into flesh The sense of Externall feeling is the first Indication of the life of nature this sense of Internall feeling is the first and best discoverie of the life of Grace He that hath not his Conscience sprinkled purged quickned renewed and of a new impression is not at all of God yet nor belongeth to him Because he neither hath his Image nor his Superscription Therefore neither shall he ever have Glory which is the second thing Secondly where is yet no Good Conscience There shall be no Glory As in the New Creature where God worketh Grace he begins with Conscience as was said before So in the new Covenant where God promiseth Glory he begins with Conscience also This is the Covenant of grace when God promiseth to blot sinnes out of his booke of Remembrance He giveth unto man a New Conscience for a Book of Remembrance unto duty and obedience Heb. 8. 10. 11. 12. This is the Covenant I will make with the house of Israel I will put my lawes into their mind and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a People And they shall not teach every man his Neighbor and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least to the greatest for I will be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and their sinnes and iniquities will I remember no more In which words the Lord alludeth to what he did to his people Israel when he made the old Ceremoniall Covenant with them He spake to them gave them his mind in writing delivered them the two Tables containing the Tenor and duties of the Covenants these Tables were to be layd up in the Arke God will do much more now he will speake to the heart write the law in new Tables fleshly Tables of the heart and keepe them there as in the Arke And there they shall be for a continuall monitor remembrance that they shall need the lesse of outward teaching and humane Laws they having an inward Directer and Admonisher and a Divine Law within God will pardon no mans sinnes which is
on part of the Covenant where this written Law is not in the heart which is another and former part of the Covenant The High Priest might not go into the Sanctum Sanctorum unlesse Sanctified and sprinkled outwardly with the bloud of the appointed expiation nor shall any enter into Heaven whose Conscience is not first sprinkled and purified with the bloud and Spirit of Christ The Persian King had none came in unto him but they were first purified prepared a whole twelve moneth before There shall Esther 2. 12. certainly be admitted into Gods presence and Kingdome nothing that is defiled and uncleane But all must be in some good measure Reu. 21. 27 purified that they may be made meet to be partakers of that inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. In the second place it doth much more reprove those that sometimes had some kind of Conscience and have now lost it This is the losse of losses If a man have losses at Sea he takes on if lost a child he mournes if lost an eye or an Arme he grieves if by a Dead Palsie he hath lost the use of a side he sees Death on himself and reckons himselfe halfe dead what is it thinkest thou to have lost thy Conscience If Quae laedunt oculos festinas tollere si quid est animumi differs curandi tempus in Annum any Moat or Dust be in the eye he Rubbes and wipes his eye and cannot be quiet till he get it out If but a thief in the candle he takes it out but who is sensible of the losse and spoyle of Conscience which is the greatest losse Now a man may recover most losses or beare any losse but this and not be miserable This he cannot sight may be lost and recovered a child may be lost and thou mayst have another credit may be broken and regained as Iosephs state broken and repayred as Iobs liberty lost and regained as Iehoiakins life lost and be redeemed and a better given for it but this is the undoing loss this breaks a man for ever and makes a Bankrupt of him he never recovers This was Iudaas's Rupture This man falles downe Headlong Breakes in pieces in the midst all his bowels fall out with this fall and to his place he hastens The man that hath lost his Conscience may justly cry out with Micha's complaint what have I moreto lose I have lost my God Jud. 18. 24 I have lost my Priest I have lost my Conscience which was to me as both and what have Vt in portum perueni amus regendus est bona Conscientia navigationis nostrae cursus I more I have lost my Jewels and all my goods shall any stop my mouth and say what aylest thou losse of Conscience is like the losse of a Pylot to the Ship or the losse of Card Compasse Sayles Anchors to the Pylot they are at mercy of the Sea and in the next storme in danger of being cast away It s a sad and fearefull sight to see a man in a Phrensie that hath run out of his wits and hath lost his understanding he is now besides himselfe he knowes not friend from foe nor mindeth what he does nor what comes of him what a Phrensie is the man in that is run out of his Conscience He hath lost his Right minde indeed and is quite Distracted and beside himselfe A man cannot be called Compos mentis as a Christian if he be not Compos Gonscientiae It is the Countrimans observation as a Prognostick of an Ill and stormy day to follow If the Sun Rise and appeare betimes and go to bed againe as they call it then they looke for ill weather ere night you may observe it while you will it never fayles If Conscience in a young Professor be up betimes and then go to bed againe such a man hath sorrowes and miseries following upon his spirit and many an ill storme he must expectere he die The losse of Conscience to a man is like the losse of the sting to the Bee shee gathers no more Honey but becomes a Drone and is expelled out of the Hive Losse of Conscience makes a man to be as Nabuchadnezar when he had lost his Reason It was the losse of his Kingdome He was Deposed from the Throne driven away by Dan. 4 33 34 36. his people acknowledged no more for a King nor looked upon as a man but a fit companion for Beasts till he looked up to God and received his reason againe A man rejecting Conscience is like Saul rejecting the word of God rejected and cast off by God for it 1 Sam. 15. 26. Thou hast rejected the word of the Lord and the Lord hath rejected thee Because thou hast despised knowledge God hath despised thee Hos 4. 6. The losse of Conscience to a man some time acquainted with it and guided by it is like the losse of the Star to the Wise men Mat. 2. it is as much as the losse of all thy Grace and of all thy Peace all thy comfort is worth It is the losse of Christ They had not their joy againe till they saw the Star again nor could they go to Christ without it CHAP. XXII The use of Terror to four sorts of men THe next Use speaketh Terror and that in particular to four sorts of men 1. To such as have no care to get or keep a good Conscience nor to avoid an evill All the diseases of the soul are bred first in an evill and vicious Conscience all the torments miseries of Hel are epitomized in an unquiet and self-tormenting Conscience Suam secum Gehennam Portat Ipsa testis Ipsa judex Ipsa Torter ipsa carcer This man carries his Hell along with him where ever he comes or goes he carries his offence his accuser his witnesse his Judge his Jaylor his tormentor with him This is the sad melancholly Ague which will set thee a shaking that no fire can warme Sua quemque fraus suum facinus suum scelus sua audacia de sanitate ac mente Deturbat Hae sunt improrum furiae hae flammae hae faces Cicero Cur tamen hos tu evasisse putes quos diri conscia facti mens habet attonitos surdo verbere caedit occulto quatīente animo tortore flagellum Juvenal Sat. 13. thee nor canst thou get any heat within thee and though it may intermit and leave thee for a day or two it is but gathering strength to assault thee more fiercely when the next fit comes None can altogether excuss and extinguish Conscience let him do what he can snub'd it may be betrayed it may be as Sampson was Imprisoned it may be you may cut his locks put out his eyes make him grinde and be thy slave and drudge thou maiest be so secure as to make sport with him yet will his locks grow againe his strength will returne and he will be revenged
whose cause if thou wilt plead thou shalt have double fees but if thou be of Counsel against he● or by thy opposition silence craft or negligence she be cast and overthrowne thou shalt never be able to stand in the Judgement but be disabled pleading before the Lord Chief Justice at that Upper Bench. Art thou a Physitian Conscience must be thy Patient whom thou must attend most be sure to keepe her out of a Lethargy and a Consumption to which diseases she is naturally most inclined if this Die under thy hand and miscarry thou art an undone man and all thy skill and practise nothing worth If thou be a Rich man Conscience will furnish thee with Baggs which wax not old of Treasure that will not waste If Poor it will furnish thee with a Cruse and Barrel that will not fail If thou hast a good Conscience it will be a staff to support thee If an evil it will turn in to a Serpent to sting thee If thou art an Israelite it is the Red Sea fear not to go into it it will secure thee if an Egyptian thou art drowned if thou go into it If thou be a woman Conscience is thy Glasse into which thou must looke and by which thou must dresse thy self saith Bernard that thou mayest please Christ thy Spouse If a Maid this thy attire If a Bride this thy Ornament If a Mother this thy Child which thou must nurse thy self not put out of doors as Moses Mother did him for any danger or benefit Take heed of starving and overlaying thy Conscience Thou must be as tender of this as of thy only Child for it more concerns thee Whosoever thou art I have two things more to beg the one for thee that what is here all along spoken of Conscience may be also spoken effectually to thy Conscience and tend to the clarifying and fortifying to the purifying pacifying and preserving of thy Conscience and the other from thee that thou wilt joyne in thy prayers endeavours that the Lords banished may be brought home that banisht Conscience may be restored to his liberty and that deposed Conscience may be Re-in-throned in his full power and soveraigne authority commanding in the heart and lives of all professors and Christians that while Conscience reignes the peace of God which passeth all onderstanding may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beare rule in our hearts and minds So I remit thee to the Conscience of God and commit thee to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pe. 2. 19 God of Conscience that thou maist live full of Conscience so dye full of comfort and rise full of glory So prayes he who is The meanest servant of thy Faith and Conscience J. S. THE CONTENTS THe sum and scope of the Epistle to Timothy is the Ministers duty page 1. The sum of the Text the Ministers greatest charge p. 2. 11. The words opened observations raised p. 3 4 c. The maine point of Doctrine Propounded p. 11. Expounded p. 12. Confirmed p. 13 14 CHAP. I. What Conscience is shewed two wayes p. 15. 1. By opening the word Conscience p. 15. Conscience is more then a bare and single knowledge ibid. Conscience implyes a four-fold knowledge with God p. 16. with self p. 17. with others p. 18. with things themselves p. 20. Four Corollaries and Deductions p. 22. 2. What the thing Conscience is described p. 24. CHAP. II. Two kinds of Conscience Evill Good A two fold evill Conscience Quiet Troubled A double goodness in Conscience of Sincerity Security p. 26. The full definition of a good Conscience viz. when 1. It is rightly Purified 2. Rightly Pacified 3. And doth ●egularly performe all his offices ibid When Conscience is rightly purified p. 27. Three things Conscience must be purified from Ignorance p. 27. Error p. 28. Hardnesse p. 31 Three things Conscience is purified by The Word of Christ The Blood of Christ The Spirit of Christ p. 33. CHAP. III. Of the Conscience rightly pacified p. 37. Three things Conscience must be pacified from The raigne of sin p. 37. The rage of Satan p. 39. The wrath of God p. 41. Three things Conscience is pacified by The Word p. 42. The Blood p. 43. The spirit of Christ p. 44. CHAP. IV. The Offices of Conscience p. 45. Conscience hath a four-fold Office Ministeriall or Propheticall Regall or Magistratuall Testimoniall or of a witness Judiciall or of a Judge p. 46. To which is added a fifth Office viz. Registeriall Wherein Conscience is a Minister p. 46. Wherein Conscience is a King p. 48. Wherein Conscience is a witnesse p. 49. Wherein Conscience is a Judge p. 51. Wherein Conscience is a Register p. 52. Five Corollaryes p. 54. CHAP. V. Ten particular sorts of good Conscience propounded First of the Conscience of Faith ibid p. 60. CHAP. VI. Of the Conscience of Purity p. 66 CHAP. VII Of the Conscience of Sincerity p. 72. Ten notes of Sincerity p. 75. CHAP. VIII Of the Inoffensive Conscience p. 93 Inoffensivenesse twofold Not taking Not giving Offence p. 93. 1. Inoffensiveness in not giving offence respects either God or Man ibid. What is it to be inoffensive before God p. 94. How any can be said so to be inoffensive ibid. Foure markes of this inoffensivenesse p. 95. Offence not to be given to men Others Godly p. 97. or Those without p. 105. Our selves p. 107. Six cautions given to prevent offence giving p. 98. Six rules prescribed to avoid offence giving p. 102. 2. Inoffensivenesse in not taking offence from God p. 109. The Godly p. 110. The wicked p. 111. CHAP. IX Of the well sighted Conscience p. 112. CHAP. X. Of the well spoken Conscience p. 115. 1 Pet. 3. 21. Opened The answer or interrogation of a good Conscience p. 115. 116. CHAP. XI Of the honest dealing Conscience p. 120. Seven notes of an honest Conscience p. 124. CHAP. XII Of the tender Conscience p. 129. A double tenderness of Conscience Sinfull and diseased Lawfull and Sound p. 132. Five kinds of diseased and faulty tenderness p. 132. 133 Right tendernesse respects 1. God 2. Others 3. Our selves p. 140. 1. Tendernesse in respect of God seen in six things p. 141. 2. In respect of Men. 1. To all Godly in generall 2 Weaker ones among them especially 3 To all men whatsoever 4. To those who are related to us principally p. 151. Sequ. 3. In respect of our selves this tendernesse seen in 14. Notes p. 157. Sequ. CHAP. XIII Of the passive or suffering Conscience p. 181. Foure sorts of sinfull uncomfortable sufferings p. 187. Six markes of honourable and conscientious suffering p. 189. CHAP. XIV Of the Conscience of Charity p. 194. Charity two-fold Externall or civill Ecclesiasticall or christian p. 195. 1. Externall charity respecteth The Poore The Neighbour Our Enemy To the poor is to be shewed charity of beneficence p. 196 To the Neighbour a charity of benevolence p. 199. To an Enemy the charity of forgiveness p.
200. 2. Ecclesiasticall or Christian charity the more excellent p. 201. In what it is to be shewed p. 202. The great and dolefull want of it in these times p. 206. CHAP. XV. The reasons of the point p. 212. Three generall heads of reasons whereof the first is taken from the excellency of good Conscience and shewed in five particulars p. 213. CHAP. XVI The second reason from the danger and mischief of an evill Conscience p. 225. This set out in foure Particulars p. 225. 226. CHAP. XVII The third reason from the difficulty of getting and keeping a good Conscience and escaping an evill p. 232. This made plaine in three particulars p. 233 CHAP. XVIII The application of the Doctrine p. 237 A seven-fold application propounded ibid. First by way of information ibid. This information looketh two waies 1. To discover errors 2. To assert Duties and Truths 1. Error discovered that to preach Conscience and presse duty is legall preaching p. 238. 239. 240. 2. That Conscience is a snare not security p. 243. Third mistake of such who judge thier conscience good when it is yet but a naturall conscience p. 244. Naturall conscience may have some good in it yet cannot be call'd a good conscience p. 244. What good may be in naturall conscience shewed in 8. particulars p. 244. 245. What is wanting in naturall conscience to make it truly good shewed in four particulars p. 246. 247. Fourth mistake To judge conscience therefore good because quiet p. 247. Foure quiet consciences never an one of them good p. 248. 1. The ignorant mans conscience p. 248. 2. The unawakened conscience p. 249. 250. 251. 3. The deluded conscience p. 252. 253. 254. 4. The hardened conscience p. 255. A six-fold hardnesse of heart or conscience p. 255. 1. Naturall hardnesse p. 255. 256. 2. Voluntary and attracted p. 256. Eleven steps to hell discovered p. 256 257. 3. Judiciall hardening by Impostors and Seducers p. 259 4. Ministeriall hardening by Ministers and Ordinances p. 259. 260. 5. Divine hardening by God himselfe ibid. 6. Satanicall by the prevailing efficacy of Satan p. 261. 5th Mistake of such who judge conscience therefore good because troubled p. 263. Three notes of an ill troubled conscience p. 264. Six notes of a good troubled conscience p. 271 A sixth Mistake to judge erroneous conscience a good conscience p. 273. Seven common and ordinary notes of an erroneous conscience p. 274. A seventh mistake to judge scrupulous Conscience a good Conscience p. 278. The eighth mistake to judge the conscience of and for liberty a good conscience p. 280. Sinfull liberty of conscience branded and decyphered p. 281. Right liberty of conscience asserted p. 282. Set out in five particulars p. 283. CHAP. XIX The other part of the use of information to assert Truths p. 285. 1. That good conscience is the Christians greatest charge ibid. 2. To looke after conscience in selfe and others the ministers greatest charge p. 286. 3. Conscience decaying is the decay of State p. 290. 4. Conscience decaying grace decayes p. 292. 5. Tolleration not to be granted to all sorts of consciences p. 293. 6. Whence the world is so poysoned with corrupt Doctrines and blasphemous errors p. 249. 7. Whence many have lost former peace and comfort ibid. 8. Whence many come to dye Tragically and dispairingly p. 296. 9. Whence men come to commit the sin against the Holy Ghost p 298. CHAP. XX. The use of Lamentation p. 299. The generall want of conscience lamented ibid. The generall losse of conscience more lamented p. 303. CHAP. XXI The use of reproofe p. 309. Want of conscience reproved ibid. Want of conscience the greatest want p. 313. Losse of conscience reproved p. 314. Losse of conscience the greatest loss p. 315. CHAP. XXII The use of terror to foure sorts of men p. 317. 1. Such as are regardlesse of conscience ibid 2. Such as have an accusing gnawing conscience 318. 3. Such as have a stupified and feared conscience p. 320 4. Such as are falling into the consumption of conscience p. 321. CHAP. XXIII The comfort and happiness of such whose care is to get and keepe a good conscience p. 323. CHAP. XXIV The use of examination p. 327. CHAP. XXV The use of exhortation p. 333. 1. By way of Dehortation ibid. 1. By way of Adhortation to All Christians Ministers chiefly p. 334. This exhortation backed with Motives perswading p. 335. Meanes directing p. 349. Motives to perswade foure p. 345. c. Meanes directing two-fold principall Subservient p. 349. Principall meanes two The blood The spirit p. 350. Subservient meanes 13. whereof 6. prescribe what is to be had and done 7. what is to be avoided p. 352. 1. Meanes to get and keepe good conscience faith 353. Three-fold faith necessary for a good conscience Justifying for the heart p. 354. Orthodox for the judgement 355 particular warranting faith for our particular actions p. 356. 2d. Meanes To exercise and renew repentance p. 357. Repentance a Gospell duty ibid 3d. meanes To attend the Hints and Items given by Christ and his Spirit p. 360. 4. To attend and observe the hints and motions of our own Spirit p. 361. 5. To confer our conscience with Scripture p. 365. 6. The last meanes to be used Prayer p. 366. 2. The evills to be avoided are seven p. 370. 1. Beware of the smallest sinne allowed ibid. 2. Of one sinful Act deliberately committed p. 373 3. Beware of living under a loose cold freezing ministery or an unsound ministery p. 375. 4. Take heed of an ill companion p. 381. 5. In things doubtfull forbeare to Act or chuse the safer part p. 382. 6. Shun worldly mindedness p. 383. 7. Beware of erroneousness of conscience p. 385 2. The other part of the exhortation concerneth ministers especially p. 387. Ministers have a double charge given them concerning conscience 1. Personall 2. Doctrinall His personall charge is that he be a man Exemplary a man of conscience ibid Here 1. A particular encouragement to younger Timothyes p. 389. 2. An Item to Hymenaeus p. 390. His Doctrinall charge is that he bee aman for Conscience in all his ministery applying himselfe to the conscience of his hearers p. 396. A Good Conscience THE Strongest Hold. 1 Tim. 1. 19. Holding faith and a good Conscience which some having put away concerning Faith have made Ship-wrack THese two Epistles to Timothy and that to Titus may well be called the Ministers Directory made up of Canons clearly and undubitately Apostolicall Directing the Minister how to Govern himselfe and how to Guide his People The Ministers charge is looked upon by all as the greatest and the Apostle who best knew what it was doth not spare to lay it home to him and to give it him to the full Each Minister hath a double charge The one ad extra concerning others The other ad intra which concernes himselfe Both are 1 Tim. 4. 16. summed up in those few words 1 Tim. 4.
to get keepe use two weapons especially Faith and a good Conscience get both or neither faith in the one hand good Conscience in the other thou hast many enemies to resist and fight with thou must use both hands not faith alone without good Conscience nor good conscience alone without Faith Both make thee compleately armed and will make thee more then a Conqueror But hold them fast throw down neither but should thy weapons be beaten through violence of persecution to thy head never suffer them through cowardize to be beaten out of thy hands The latter especially he giveth charge abovt viz. a good conscience without this if thou shouldest be all faith all faith cannot save thee nor save it selfe without this second good conscience But faith either stands or swims with a good Conscience or falls and sinkes with a bad Conscience Hence the point intended is In the most Perillous tempests of corrupt and dangerous Obs times wherein we often see others losing their Lives their Graces their Comforts their former Peace their future hopes that our selves may not eternally miscarry and loose all we have on earth for Grace and comfort and all we look for in heaven for glory and happiness Our continuall care must be to get and keepe to have and hold faith and a good conscience If thou lose not these two thou shalt never have cause to complaine of losing times keepe these they will keepe thee In times of common Naufrage and Shipwracke when we see abroad Church-wracks State-wracks Faith-wracks Truth-wracks take heed then of the worst Ship-wrack of all at home Conscience-wrack Our life here is set out by a double Metaphor 1. Of a warfaring condition v. 18. 2. Of a Seafaring condition v. 19. Is our life a warfare These are our principal weapons Faith and good Conscience if faith be the Shield good Conscience is the Brestplate of Righteousnesse Ephe. 6. 14. or the golden Eph. 6. 14. 16. Girdle of truth and sincerity v. 16. Is our condition a Land fight and not of a single combate but of common interest These two Faith and a good Conscience are the two strong holds we must secure our selves in and hold out to the last drop of blood and gaspe of life These two like Jonathan 1 Sam. 14. 13. and his armour bearer will disco mfit an hoast of Enemies and carry all before them and break through the most insuperable difficulties 1 Pet. 3. 16. Having a good conscience 1 Pet. 3. 16 saith the Apostle that whereas they speake evill of you as of evill doers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ q. d. Though they encampe against you beset your houses shoot their arrowes and bullets bitter words and as bad deeds yea should they discharge their murdering Peeces upon you and thinke by firing and storming to carry all before them stand you your ground quit your selves like men retire you like the Cony to this Rock like the Bird to this Hill your Brazen walls of Faith which indeed without any Hyperbole as Jerichoes walls reach up to heaven and that Adamantine Inworke of a good Conscience founded on a Rock no Gates or engines of Hell shall prevaile against But they shall be ashamed when they behold your good and unblameable conversation They shall draw off with dishonour and infamy as Abimeleck when he attempted to fire the Tower of Thebez to which they fled for safety a woman threw a Jud. 9. 51. 52. piece of a Milstone upon his head and sent him packing These indeed shall never be ashamed Ps 127. 5. when they speake with any Enemies in the Gate Is our life a Seafaring condition A good Conscience is the Arke not like that wherein Moses was exposed to drowning and danger Ex. 2. 3. an Arke of Bulrushes daubed with slime and pitch But like that of Noah Pitched Gen. 6. 14. Et Seq within and without with pitch made by Gods own direction wherein thou mayst adventure as he did the whole world both Church and State thereinto God bad him enter therein God shut him and kept him safe it preserved that second Adam and all the reserve of the Creation from that universall Deluge A window it had in the top to let in the light of Heaven not the lest Crevise below to let in a drop of water to endanger it It did shoot off all the Showers that fel downwards and all the Floods that raged upwards The like figure whereunto even Baptisme doth now save us not the putting away the filth of the flesh 1 Pet. 3. 20 21. but the answer of a good Conscience towards God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ 1 Peter 3. 20. 21. Is our Life a Sea-fight These two Faith and good Conscience are our men of warre which we must never yeeld up to any Enemy but chuse rather to perish and sinke in defending them and maintaining our Trust See what Trophees a Christian brings home by making good these two above all Trophees of honour a Conqueror can get from a spoiled Enemy 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this 2 Cor. 1. 12 the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisedome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world but more abundantly to you-wards It had been now an ill time with the Apostle his sufferings did abound v. 5. He was pressed above measure and above humane strength Even to dispaire of life yet even under the sentence and stroke of death He had consolations abounding as much as his afflictions and joyes running over above measure if afflictions above measure And all from this Magazine and Treasury of a good Conscience In pursuite of this point I shall first shew The five particulars to be handled what Conscience is 2 What this good Conscience is 3. Give the particular kinds and sorts of good Consciences 4. Give the reasons of the point and duty 5. Deduce the inferences arising hence by way of Application CHAP. I. Chap. 1. What Conscience is What conscience is TO the first What conscience is This I shall shew in two particulars 1. Explaining what the word Conscience signifies 2. What the thing Conscience is 1. What the word conscience signifies Notatio nominis praemittenda notationi Rei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word in Greeke and Conscientia in Latine and Conscience in English are all compound words and signifie a knowing together and imply two things 1. Some competent measure of knowledge or there can be no conscience Hence the word so translated 1 Cor. 4. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I know Nullius rei mihi conscius sum Beza So. Nil conscire sibi Horat. nothing by my selfe Prov. 8. 12. Wisdome saith Ego sapientia cum Prudentia cohabito I Wisdome dwell with Prudence So Ego Conscientia cum scientia I Conscience dwell with
Dyke I shall not trouble my selfe to debate whether Scot. Bon. Dur. Conscience be an Habit as many of the Schoole-men affirme Or whether a faculty or power as reverend Mr. Perkins judicious Rutherford disp against pretended liberty of cons cap. 1 Ames de consc lib. 1. cap. 1 Rutherfurd and divers of the Schoolmen determine Or whether an act onely as acute Dr. Ames contendeth Nor shall I with any curiosity at all discourse of it Origen had an odde fancy as he had many an other that it was another spirit in the soule But somewhat is in it for as I said before it is as a wheele in a wheele a wheele full of eyes a wheel ful of motion a wheel ful of spirit of life And as all the sight is contracted in the apple of the eye so I may say is conscience as much as con-knowledge or knowledge contracted and epitomized and conscience as it were the apple of the soules eye I shall describe it thus Conscience is the soules acting and reflecting on it selfe and on all a mans own actions This is consciences worke these are his Bounds what hast thou to doe with another mans Conscience in this sence or what 1 Cor. 10. 29 hath hee to doe with thine A man standeth or falleth to his owne conscience That standeth or falleth to his owne Master and onely to him Ro. 14. 4. Humility Patience Meekenesse Compassion Justice Righteousnesse Chastity c. extend to others my charity may and must relieve others knowledge may and must informe and benefit others But consciences worke is to make every man his owne keeper CHAP. II. What a good Conscience is NOw I am next to shew what a good Conscience is For there are two kinds of consciences 1 Evill conscience Heb. 10 22. 2 Good 1 Tim. 1. 19. This of which I speake The evill conscience is mainly two-fold mala turbata an ill Troubled mala Pacata or Quiet Or as Dr. Ames more clearely viti sé mala molesté mala So is there a double good conscience bona turbata Felix conscientia in qua obviarunt sibi verritas misercordia in qua osculatae sunt pax justi cia Bern. de in t do good troubled Bona pacata or good quiet And to a right good conscience there must a double goodness concur to the constituting of it 1. A goodnesse or sincerity 2. A goodnesse of security It must be hon sté bona Pacaté bona Ames Or more plainely it must be Purificatè bona Pacatè bona And here I shall give you a full def●nition of a perfect good conscience when it hath both these goodnesses in it The good conscience what it is That is the good conscience which is rightly purified and rightly pacified by the word and blood and spirit of Christ regularly performing all his Offices to which it is designed First I call it the Conscience purified Here is the first and principall part of Consciences goodnesse though yet for the present it have not peace Peace alone without purity makes not the Conscience good at all as purity alone without peace makes not a perfect well Conscience Conscientia aedifieanda sed prius mundanda said Bernard well Conscience is to be edified but first to be purified As the wisdom that comes Security without sincerity is not security but stupidity Jam. 3. 17. from above is first pure then peaceable So Consciences first goodnesse stands in purity then in peace The first goodnesse of the eye is the clearnesse of sight It is but an inferiour goodnesse to say it is not inflamed or blood-shotten nor do we call it good at all if it want its sight So neither is Conscience good at all though it rage not be not inflamed or bloodshotten if it want his purity All negative goodnesse is but a poor and heggerly goodnesse Now that conscience may be rightly purified there are three things which it must be purified from and three things which it must be purified by These things conscience must be purified from The things it must be purified from are ignorance errour hardnesse or naturall deadnesse First it must be purified from ignorance The conscience void of knowledge is a conscience void of goodnesse Rutherfurd The blind From ignorance Mat. 6. 23. Mat. 5. 13 mans conscience is ever an ill conscience his light is darknesse how great then is that darknesse His salt unsavoury what then shall season him Conscience in the best unregenerate Luk. 8. 16 person is as a light whelmed under a bushell or thrust under a bed gives but a dim light and reacheth not far In things between man and man it can discern more clearly and like those nightbirds which can with their weak Ex. 18. 19. eyes see where better eyes sometimes see not a Jethro herein may be able to advise a Moses But in the Things of God he is little skilled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blinde and cannot see afar off What a night-bird was Doctour Nicodemus in conceiving of the necessity nature and manner 2 Pet. 1. 9. of regeneration Hence it is that the Scripture calls the naturall mans wisdom foolishnesse with God as Gods wisdom is accounted foolishnesse with him It is enmity to God it is not subject to the law of God nor indeed can be 1 Cor. 2. 14 Rom. 8. 7 The ignorant mans judgement therefore is no judgement his peace no sound peace his hopes no safe hopes for his thoughts are not Gods thoughts nor his wayes Gods wayes Tit. 1. 15 To the unbeleeving and unpure is nothing pure because their very minde and conscience is defiled Good Conscience must therefore first be purified from ignorance Secondly it must be purified from errour The From error erroneous conscience is ever a desperate and dangerous conscience It is the pestilence that walketh in darknesse Erroneous conscience Ps 91. 6. maketh strange work in the world but worse in the Church Look what swine are to garden-beds or a wilde Boar to a Vineyard or wilde beasts to Vines or young Foxes to grapes that is erroneous conscience to Churches to Doctrines to Truths to Graces and to Duties It overturns all Erroneous Conscience engaged Herod under opinion of piety to destroy a holy man to save a wicked oath and gratifie a clamourous woman Matth. 14. 9. for his oaths sake the king commanded John Baptists head to be given her Others Jerem. 44. 16. make no scruple to make voyd Gods Commands because they must make good their own vows This is the Horse that rusheth headlong into the battle impatient of all restraints Puts men often upon dangerous wayes and designes yet they say not once what have I done Jer. 8. 6. but suppose their ways are right wayes and often they think they do God the greatest service when they do the Church the greatest disservice Oh the grosse mistakes of erring conscience It embraceth a blear-eyed
faithful Ministers for delivering Gods minde and rebuking the sins of their wicked hearers sometimes Take heed thou tread not in their steps to interdict and silence thy own conscience this is more to be hearkened to in many cases then any Divine or Minister whatsoever this is the mouth of the Lord the Candle of the Lord searching and discovering Pro. 20. 27. the secrets and inward things of the belly We say conscience in some cases is above all witnesses a thousand witnesses it is a thousand Preachers too God saith to conscience as he Conscientia mille Ministri did to Moses once Exod. 7. 1. See I have made thee a God to Pharaoh and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet Conscience shall be to me in stead of a mouth saith God and to thee in stead of God as Moses was to Aaron Exo. 4. 16. Consciences second office is Regall or Magistratuall 2. Consciences Regall office a higher office then the former Conscience hath a commanding and legislative power to binde even kings in chains and nobles with fetters of iron He is thy Perpetuus Dictator whose dictares are Laws They were a law to themselves Rom. 2. 14. This king may neither be deposed nor resisted but ever informed counselled and treated with and then ever obeyed as Gods vicegerent Whosoever cast off the imperiall commands of conscience God saith to them as he did to Samuel concerning Israel 1 Sam. 8. 7. They have not rejected thee but they have rejected me that I should not reigne over them God giveth to conscience a large Commission and saith to it as to Eliakim in the day of his investiture in his office I will clothe thee with a new robe and commit the government into thy hand The key of the house of David will I lay on thy shoulders Thou shalt shut and none shall open thou shalt open and none shall shut Isay 22. 21 22. What conscience peremptorily commands or forbids is more to a godly man then what Kings or States command And the religious man resolveth Conscientia mille Reges mille Leges rather to disobey any unjust commands of Kings or States and fall under any displeasure of men then to go against the dictates of his own rightly informed conscience We are not carefull O King to answer thee in this Dan. 3. 16. matter said they to Nebuchadnezzar although they heard his expresse commands and saw the fiery furnace before them Julian the Apostate forbad the Christians to sing Psalms Risui ei catui furias suas esse intellexit Magd. cent 4. cap. 3. the very women and virgins did purposely sing the louder when the Emperour was to go by their doors that he saw his wrath was by them derided And those Psalms they picked out that condemned his Idols as that Psalm 135 ver 15. 16 18. Conscience rides in the second Charet and is Gen. 41. 40 43. 44. solo Deo minor soli Deo secunda Without thee saith God to conscience as Pharaoh once to Joseph shall no man lift up his hand or foot Onely in the Throne will I be greater then thou Conscience hath a kingly or magistratuall power but must not exercise an Arbitrary power It must be it self at his beck who is in the Throne Of whose subordination to God and his written Word and Law we shall speak afterwards in his proper place His third office is Testimoniall or to bear Consciences Testimoniall Office witnesse Rom. 2. 14 15. The Gentiles who had not the Law in Tables of stone as had the Jews had the Law written in their hearts which did shew it self in this work of Conscience Their consciences also bearing witnesse Rom. 2. 14. 15. c. This is the witnesse in a mans self a greater testimony then that of John This is the Epistle of Christ written in the heart Our rejoycing is this The testimony of our conscience 2 Cor. 1. 12. A testimony and certificate which Gods Spirit doth attest to and consent with Rom. 9. 1. My conscience bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost In the mouth of these two great witnesses the state of a Christian is established For the Spirit it self witnesseth with our spirit that we are the Rom. 8. 16 sons of God Rom. 8. 16. This testimony of conscience is above a thousand witnesses be it Conscientia mille testes for thee or against thee 1 Job 3. 19 20 21. Turpe quid acturus te sine teste time Take heed wheresoever thou art what thou dost Conscience will out with all the secret passages it hath observed It is like Joseph among his brethren who carried home their ill report to their father and made them much anger Thou never sinnest without a spie or Gen. 37. 2. an observer and informer Do therefore as was said of Mr. Latimer who being examined in private spake more freely till he over-heard one behinde the Hangings whom he saw not present to take in writing what he said then he spake more warily Take heed what thou dost remotis arbitris Curse not the King no not in thy thought conscience the margin reads it scientia Arias Mont. conscientia Junius Nor the rich in thy bed-chamber for a bird of the air shall carry the voyce and tha● which hath wings shall tell the matter Eccles 10 20. Thine own conscience may be that bird Elisha did relate what was in agitation at the 2 Kin. 6. 12 King of Syrias Councell-table yea what passed in his Bed-chamber Such an observing witnesse hath every one continually with him do he good or evil Conscience is a witness and is like one of those two famous witnesses spoken of Revel 11. 3. who prophesied in sackcloth despised and opposed by the men of the world as the great Rev. 11 3. 5. 6 c. heart troubler and worlds tormenter they rejoyced made merry and sent gifts when they were slain these brought all plagues from heaven among men and could shut up Heaven it self fire came out of their mouth yet kill this if thou darest and keep it down if thou canst it will rise again after a few days stand upon his feet the sight thereof will terrifie and dismay thee but thou shalt know it will go up to Heaven there to accuse and condemn thee 4. The fourth Office of conscience is Judiciall Conscienecs judicial Office and Judge-like It doth passe sentence on thee and read thy doom Hence men are said to be convicted of their own Consciences Joh. 8. 9. Some are said to be self condemned Tit. 3. 11. Happy is he that condemneth not himself Rom. 14. 22. If our heart that is our conscience condemn us God is greater then our hearts to condemn us further But if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. Consciences sentence is the fore-runner of the last judgement Praejudicium Divini judicii as Joseph interpreted
sapienter descendere in infernum Ber. de vit Sol. discretion and go a wise and learned way thither These keep the key of Knowledge but mean not to go into the Kingdom of Heaven themselves but the key of Conscience the poor and simple and unlearned ones in the world get and presse after the Kingdom of God and enter in Surgunt indocti et rapiunt Regnum Coelorum nos cum doctrinis nostris sine corde ecce ubi volutamur in carne sanguine Aug. Conf. l. 8. c. 8. The Publicane and Harlot conscienciously humbled enter into the Kingdom of Heaven before the Pharisee elated with his greater knowledge And the illiterate Christian is able to read his name in the book of Life and his Duty in the Book of Conscience when the most literate Scribe and Learned Scholler can do neither CHAP. X. Of the well spoken Conscience Of the wel spoken conscience THe well-spoken Conscience is that which can make the Soule a good Answer or upon just Occasion can make fit Demands and put forth his Queres This is that good Conscience or rather Property of it which Peter commendeth so much resembling it to Noahs Arke and saith of it that it saves us 1 Pet. 3. 21. The like figure whereunto even Baptisme doth also now save us not the putting away of the filth of the flesh but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The answer of a good Conscience towards God Which word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies as well or rather an Interrogation then an Answer Stipulstio Some thinke the Apostle doth allude to that Practise of Demands made in Baptisme Credis Credo which Practise though very Ancient yet may be questioned whether so Ancient Our Translators have chosen rather to render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Answer And in this sense it tells us what conscience hath to do First It makes a good and ready Answer to God It is ever as quick of Speech as it is of Sight or of Hearing when God saith Seeke ye my face my heart saith David talkd of it and went up and downe with it Thy face Lord I will seeke Psal 27. 8. It is written of me that I should doe thy will Psal 40. 8. Conscience replyes thy will O my God is my will Thy law is in my heart I am content to do it Conscience goes often into Habukuks watch Hab. 2. 1. Towre and watcheth listening what the Lord hath to say and studieth what to answer when he is spoken unto Speak Lord saith Conscience for thy servant heareth yea Conscience is 1 Sam. 3. 10. ready to aske and listen Lord what wilt tb●u have me to doe As Augustine often da quod Act. 9. 6. jubes et jube quod vis Lord give what thou commandest and give what Command thou wilt Loquere Magister bone libenter te audio et cum adversaris mihi et cum irasceris audio te Cyprian Secondly It makes a good answer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for God according to that Precept 2 or 3 verses before 1 Pet 3. 15 16. Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and be ready alway to give an answer to every man that asketh you a Reason of the hope that is in you with meekenesse and reverence having a good Conscience that whereas they speak evill of you as of evill dooers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ So that with S. Peter it is a matter of Conscience and a marke of a good Conscience to be ready to yeeld an account of our Spirituall state when it is required of us Nicodemus thought he was bound in Conscience to stand up and make an Answer for Christ when he was unjustly condemned in the Consistory being never heard and never summoned Doth our Law condemnn any man saith he before it heare him and know what he doth Good Conscience cannot be silent Jo. 7. 51 and fit still without an answer when any cause of God is in hand A good Conscience thinks it is the heaviest crime that can be laid Blasphemiam ingerit religioni quam colit qui●quod confitetur ante omnes non impleverit Cyprian to any mans charge to be silent for God Let them call me Adulterer Theife c. or what they please said Luther so that I may not be charged with wicked silence in the cause of God Thirdly Good Conscience makes many a good answer fot ones selfe when under the greatest cloud of Censures and Suspitions or under the Aspersions of all Obloquies Ro. 9. 1. I speake the truth saith the Apostle and lie not my Conscience also is my witnesse This the same Apostle glories in in another place we are as deceivers say you but yet True men saith 2 Cor. 6. 8. 9. Conscience As unknown say you well enough known saith Conscience Conscience makes the best Certificate and gives the best Testimony to any man that hee can have with which Certificate he may confidently travell and passe the whole world over yea at last with this he shall not feare to enter Heaven conducted thither by a guard of Angels Fourthly When any businesse of greatest consequence is under consideration Conscience puts the best answer into thy mouth and will readily resolve what is to be done Enquire-still at Consciences mouth and say as Paul to Philemon without thy advice wil I do nothing consult not in such cases with flesh and blood with safety and policy but with conscience and duty and the answer is ready Phil. v. 19 Habes spacium trium dierum in quo deliberes velisne Romam reverti aut aliquem locum quo traducaris eligere cui ille trium dierum vel etiam mensium spacium rationem non immutat quare mittas me licet quo velis Magd. Cent. 4. c. 3. we need not crave time As Liberius a Godly and Orthodox Bishop of Rome when convented before Constantius an Arrian Emperour and charged there with stubbornes for partaking with Athanasius answered most freely before the Emperour at last when after all faire perswasions and sharp threats he found him persisting in his former resolutions he gave him then three dayes time to consider of it whither then to returne to his Bishoprick at home or to be banisht or to set downe what he would make choice of He answers O Emperour send me whither thou wilt three dayes or three moneths are all one to me Truth and reason do not change with time So into banishment he was sent If men would in their straites when they know not what to resolve upon cast their lot into the lap of Conscience they should have a more certain easie and compendious resolution then by consulting with flesh and blood and reading sometimes many discourses Cathedram habet in conscientia qui corda docet Conscience should bee made Doctor of the Chayre It is the most sound Divinity Reader and oftentimes the most satisfying Casuist in the world
and the best resolver of all our doubts Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies rather an Interrogation or demand as Beza saith well upon the place though our translation render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro respondere testificari vix putem satis aptè usurpari posse Beza 1 Pet. 3. 21 Jud. 13. 12. an answer Conscience hath many questions to put and it is still the nature of conscientious men to be enquiring as Manoahs wife when she had the Angell to resolve her now tell us how shall we order the Childe What shall we doe unto him All that came unto Iohn wrought upon by his ministery came with this question Luk. 3. 10 12 14. The most proper and pertinent question And what shall we do What shall we doe said the Publicans and People and Souldiers So is conscience still inquisitive desiring to goe upon safe grounds It inquires at the mouth of God 1. By Prayer as David Lord shall I goe 1 Sam. 30. 8 Joh. 34. 32. Luk. 10. 26 Isa 8. 20. as Job That which I see not teach thou me 2. By the word How is it written How readest thou is consciences question And to the Law and Testimony is consciences resolution 3. Conscience enquires at the Priests lips and seekes the law at his mouth Mal. 2. 7. Comes unto him for private Conference and satisfaction 4. Conscience puts cases in writing and propounds his doubts and scruples and desires resolution As the Corinthians had written to Paul in a certain case which did much perplex them desiring his resolution 1 Cor. 7. 1. Lastly Conscience hath many questions to put home to a mans selfe He must commune with his own heart and cause his spirit to make a diligent search in himselfe as the Psalmist saith he sometimes did Psal 77. 6. From whence it is that you see still young Converts they have many questions to make and cases to put they dare not walke at a venture as the word is Levit. 26. 21 23 27. for that is indeed to walke contrary to God as it there rendred CHAP. XI Of the honest dealing Conscience GOod Conscience must not onely be Good Of the honest dealing conscience at seeing and good at saying but as good at doing therefore I adde after the well-sighted and well spoken Conscience The well-dealing This which we call the honest Conscience a conscience of absolute necessity in a Christian so much of honesty before men so much of good Conscience before God want common honesty and all that is left is but hypocrisie Say not this is morallity and it is to be found among Heathens It is Divinity also and must be found among Christians religion teacheth to honour it though not to rest in it And the Christians care must be not to despise it but exceed it Of this good conscience Paul glorieth while he saith Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good Conscience in al things willing to live honestly To live honestly in all things is an honor to an Apostle and an undeniable argument of a good Conscience Visibility and Vniversality are Popish markes of a right Church but they are Protestant marks of a good Conscience and a right Christian We have a good Conscience The word translated Good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies also honest of this the adverb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived translated honestly It might as well have been read Wee have an honest Conscience and in all things desirous to live honestly where all good Conscience is to bee seen Act. 23. 1. there all Honestie is to bee seen So 1 Pet. 3. 16. Peter exhorts to this Good Conscience Having a good Conscience that whereas they speak evil of you as of evil doers they may bee ashamed when they falsly accuse your good Conversation A good Conversation without will proclaim to all the world a good Conscience within And a good Conscience ever bindes us to our good behaviour towards men The Apostles Rule is Phil. 4. 8. Whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whatsoever are lovely and whatsoever of good report those seek and do as well as whatsoever things are true are pure are holy And 2 Cor. 8. 21. Providing things honest not onely in the sight of God but in the sight of all men Good Conscience must have Jacobs hands as well as Jacobs voice must as well deal fairly as speak fairly Good Conscience must look to a Thread and to a Shoo-latchet as Abraham did And must bee able Gen. 14. 23. to say in the sight of all the world as Moses Num. 16. 15 and Samuel Testifie against mee whose ox or whose ass have I taken whose gold or silver or apparel have I purloined or coveted 1 Sam. 12. 3 Act. 20. 23 2 Cor. 7. 2. whom have I defrauded or whom have I circumvented in bargaining The good ground in the Parable which maketh best use of the Word is expounded by our Saviour to bee the good and honest heart Luke 8. 15. And the man who is to bee admitted into Gods holy place must bee such an one as hath clean hands and a pure heart Psal 24. 4. Godliness and honestie are joyned together 1 Tim. 2. 2. as being inseparable The life of Godliness is bound up in the bundle of Honestie They are mother and daughter as Naomi and Ruth and cannot part companie Where Ruth 1. 16 17. thou goest I will go saith Ruth where thou dwellest I will dwell where thou diest I will die and bee buried with thee Thy God is my God so these go together stay together live together die together for they both serve one and the same God Pietie without Honestie is but seeming Pietie and really Pharisaical Hypocrisie and all Honestie without true Pietie is but Semi-honestie and at best but Philosophical Paganish moralitie Each of them parted make but halfe of a man Both together make a compleat Christian The Good Conscience must ever consider what may stand with Honestie When carnall Reason and worldly Policie bid thee run with Gehazi and say This thou maist do and that thou maist get here is an Opportunitie neglect it not Good Conscience saith to them as Abner to Asahel Turn aside from following mee for how shall I then hold up 2 Sam. 2. 22. my head before Joab How shall I answer this another day Therefore no more Gain then what will stand with Godliness What I may take with Honestie that I will take what I can keep with Honestie that I will keep what is offered upon Terms of dishonestie I may not I will not receive what is received in way of dishonestie I must and I will restore as did Zacheus Better Salvation should Luke 19. 8. come to my house when I am restoring then damnation to my soul and a curse into my house and upon my Posteritie when I am receiving God shake every man out of his house and
for be weakeneth the hands of the people and he seeketh not the welfare of this people but the hurt Hee is no waies well affected to the State but a malignant So they Act. 5. 33. 7. 54. were cut to the heart and gnashed at Steven with their teeth as if they could have eaten him up Thus tender was the High Priest who rent his clothes at Mat. 26. 65 Christs supposed blasphemy when he should have rent his heart for his owne treason cruelty and hypocrisy All this is not tenderness but effeminate softness outwardly and inwardly the greatest hardness There may be mollities animi where is maxima durities cordis as in the godly there may be summa durities or is vultus when maxima mollitudo cordis Ezek. 3. 9. Christs face was harder then flint Isa 50. 7. Ezekiels then Adamant when the heart was most tender So è contra wicked men have tender skin and flesh hard heart and spirit Their Passions are soft and touchy Their dispositions hard and unruly Their love to their sinne is tender to their soules as cruell as the Ostriches of the wilderness Lam. 4. 3. This is a corrupt softness like that in a rotten Plum which if you touch you breake But it hath a hard stone in the midst that will not breake So have these a hard stone in the heart when so much outward tendernesse But the right tenderness is that which was Act. 2. 37. Their hearts were peirced and being pricked in heart they cryed out Men and brethren what shall we doe They fall not out with Peter but with themselves As Austin looked upon it as a marke of grace in Alipius when he had reproved his sinne viz. Stage playes Quod ilius acciperet ad succensendum mihi accepit honestus Adolescens ad succensendum sibi ad me ardentius diligendum When another would have been angrie with me the honest youth saith he was onely angrie with himself and loved me the better Right tenderness is to be very sensible of the evil of sin and the danger thereof thereupon impatient of the sin but easily patient of any Reproof Let the righteous smite me Psal 141. 5. that my heart may not stab me another day and let him reprove that my own heart may not reproach me you see the sound hand will endure touching and shaking when the sore hand must not bee so much as touched 2. Scrupulousness As when one hath got some stone or gravell in his shooe he cannot set his foot on the ground without complaint he cries out Tender when his foot is plainly Galled This is no good tenderness neither Take out this Gravel and hee may walk without any more ado The Apostles rule will help him Rom. 14. 5. Let every man bee fully persuaded in his own minde His meaning is not that he would have us at adventures lay aside all Enquiries but onely rid our selves of unnecessarie and unprofitable scruples Unnecessarie scrupulousness is when a man makes a stir about that in which God's Word is silent and makes a sin where the Scripture makes none The priests made one while a great scruple of going into the Praetorium the house of a heathen Joh. 18. 28. man least they should bee ceremonially defiled and so held from the Passeover but made no matter of defiling themselves morally with the guilt of Innocent bloud Another while they made a great scruple of putting the money into their holy Corban because the price of blood but questioned not the giving the money unto the same end and taking the blood it self upon themselves and their children Matt. 27. 25. These tithe mint Mat. 23. 23 and Cummin and yet neglect the grand and weightie matters of the Law which God gives especially in charge Mercy truth and Judgement keep a stir about washing of pots Mar. 7. 11. and hands make nothing of filiall disobedience to parents strain at a Gnat swallow a Camell cannot walk upon even ground yet can dance bare-foot among thorns and kick against the Pricks Herod had a great deal of this Conscience he had passed his word and given his Oath to go back were perjurie but to go forward by virtue of his rash oath to commit murder is Pietie when the rule is injusta vincula rumpit Justitia Unnecessarie and vain scruples the Apostle would have us lay aside 1 Cor. 10. 25. asking no question in such cases for Conscience sake 3. A third faultie tenderness is that too much facilness and flexibleness of spirit to every Counsellor and Enticer whereby the blinde often followes the blinde or at least the blinde followes the lame for which Ephraim was broken in Judgement because he was so readie and obsequious at every commandement Hos 5. 11. of this man you may say he is Gereus in vitium flecti monitoribus asper As wax for softness prone to every vice As thorns for sharpness stern to best advice Young and tender-hearted Mollis animo Jun. Thus tender-hearted was Rehoboam 2 Chro. 13. 7. Tener corde But to whom was he so tender-hearted It was onely to the young mens Counsel The wiser Old men found him not so tender to better counsell but pertinaciously stiffe to them and immoveably resolved not to yeeld in the least to any submissive Petitions for the ease of his aggrieved Subjects Zedekiah who rebelled most against the word of the Lord of any other was as easie and flexible to the Princes as could be imagined Jer. 38. 5. The king is not he who can do any thing against you saith he to the Princes but as inexorable and refractorie to Jeremy as was possible These the world calls your Good Natures you may work them as you will and lead them whither you will but who is it that may lead them Not God not the godly Minister not his religious Parents but his vain Companions But he onely can be said truly to be of a Good nature who is partaker of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. I am sure Christ sets us another Example He was as immoveable as a Rock as hard as Adamant he set his face as flint Isai 50. 7. When he heard any evil motioned Get thee behinde me Satan Matt. 16. 23. said he to Peter So to Satan tempting Matth. 4. 10. Get thee hence Satan But to God It is my desire to do Psal 40. 8. Joh. 6. 38. thy will O my God I came not to do my own will but his that sent mee And to John It becomes Mat. 3. 15. Eze. 3. 8. 9. us to fulfill all righteousness This is the right good Nature to have a face of flint a fore-head of Adamant harder then flint as Ezekiels was to any evil motion but as soft as wax to any good Bray him in a mortar among wheat yet is he stedfast and unmoveable This hardness is better then all that former tenderness 4. The fourth ill tenderness is of that Conscience which is weak
was among his Disciples as one that served Luke 22. 27. He could wash their feet and stoope to any the meanest office to leave with them a never dying example of matchlesse humility in remembrance It is no argument of weaknesse said a learned man but of much strength Dr. Staughton to be able to bend the body backward and to recover ones self again so to stoop backward as it were to our brothers weaknesse implies much prudence and strength of grace in us 3. Nor are we to be so tender of the godly 3 Towards all men Phil. 4. 5. onely strong or weake but our moderation must be known to all The wicked himself must see we are tender of his good more then he is of his own good With meeknesse we are to 2 Tim. 2. 26. 1 Pet. 2. 15 instruct such as yet oppose themselves with well-doing not with ill speaking and contumelious reviling to put to silence the ignorance of foolish men and we are to labour to take away all occasion from such as seeke occasion to speak reproachfully of us 1 Tim. 5. 14. 4. But of all others we must shew our 4 Of those nearest to us Josh 24. 15 selves tender most of the good of those who are nearest to us that we and our houses may serve the Lord that all ours may be Gods Job disliked sin in others but was most fearfull Job 1. 5. of it in his children least they should in his absence curse God in their hearts Paul was especially jealous of his Corinthian Believers with a godly jealousie whom he had espoused 2 Cor. 11. 2 6. 11. to Christ because his heart was enlarged to them Austin saith of his mother Monica That it was as much to her as the new bearing of a childe whensoever any childe of hers did amisse Toties filios parturiebat quoties à Deo eos deviare cernebat This is right Religious tendernesse when we put no difference between sin in a friend and in an enemy or stranger unlesse this difference to be more plain in rebuking thy friend and dealing effectually with him to reclaime him If thy signet on thy right hand or thy friend Jer. 22. 24. in thy bosome that is as thy right eye cause thee to offend shew most love to him by the most dislike of his evill way Be not like Pharaoh who would have an Israelite beaten whether there was a fault or no but his own servants in whom the fault was must not be beaten but borne out in all they did Exod 5. 16. Thirdly In respect of selfe tender conscience 3 In respect of self hath much to do and will shew it self in these particulars First in respect of finne already committed his heart now smites him as oft as he sinnes 1 Sam. 24. 5. and 2 Sam. 24. 10. his heart gives him no rest till he hath made his peace with God by renewed repentance and with man by restitution or other satisfaction as Zacheus did This is a certain evidence of the life of grace within when so sensible of sin committed Thus was David after his foule sinnes his iniquities were ever in his eye Psal 51. 3. 38. 8. they cost him many a teare groane yea they made him houle out ere he had done he made his bed swim with teares his eye dimme with Psal 6. weeping and his flesh abate with fasting The like was to be seen in Peter after his shamefull denying of his Master Austin tels us what a change he saw in Confess l. 2. c. 1. Da castitatem da continentiam sed noli modo malebam morbum concupiscentiae expleri quam extingui Conf. l. 8. c. 7. himself after his conversion in respect of sin Exarsi aliquando saliari in inferis He said he could never have enough of it he could have gone to hel to fill his body with it no bread to him like those husks And though he was wont sometimes to think of his sinnes yet all his prayer was rather to have sin pardoned then purged and mortified and his hearts secret wish was that his lusts might be satisfied rather then extinguished He did pray indeed sometimes for continency and victory over his lusts but he was afraid he should be heard too soone But after he had put his hand upon the hole of the Aspe and had done playing before the Cockatrices Denne he tels us what his sins cost him Then he had enough of hell Rodebar intus confundebar vehementer pudore horribili quibus sententiarum verberibus flagellavi animam meam He then felt as he said an inward gnawing worme within him and a fearfull horrour of shame fell upon him that he fell out with himself that he did chide and rattle himself to the purpose in his privacy for his former folly and foule miscarriages 2. In respect of sin not yet committed He feares and departs from evill and shuns all occasions and provocations leading to it How can I yeeld to any such wicked act and sin against God saith Joseph to his immodest Mistresse Gen. 39. 9. whom he did flye from as from a Serpent he would not hearken to her though day after day sollicited by her either to lye with her or be in her company Austin also tels us what care he had after that happy change in him to keep himself from his wonted sins In illa grandi Rixa interioris domus quam fortiter Conf. l. 8. c. 8. excitaveram cum anima mea in cubiculo nostro corde meo c. That there was so much unquiet and chiding in his little house his heart between his lusts and his conscience they fell out so sharply that they must needs part and he would never harbour his wonted lusts any more A happy falling out and a happy parting 3. Tender conscience flies those which the world cals small sins as well as grosse sins He will not be found in a lye no not in an officious or excusatory lye such as Gehazi's was 2 Ki. 5. 25. Eccles 9. 2. Mat. 12. 36 He sticks at a thread and a shooelatchet he feareth an oath even a lawfull oath if not necessary He flyes your lesser Oaths as they are counted of faith and troth he takes heed of idle words wanton looks vaine thoughts wishes and motions he allowes not a light behaviour an unseemly habit he is watchfull against inordinate anger immoderate cares or labour even in his honest calling he knowes in much laughter and unseasonable mirth there is danger in loquacity and multitude of words there is no want of sinne He findes foolish talking and vaine jesting reckoned among sins and forbidden that jesting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which among the Morall Philosophers went for virtue and which common Christians account Eph. 5. 3. all their grace He is better taught then to call any sin little for there is no Poison little death little or Hell little He knowes
second Temple of our latter Reformation And that we should finde that observation of Austin made good who moving the question Whether Peace or War devoured more Christians resolved Peace Pax cum bell● de crudelitate certavit vicit Peace and War once strove saith he who should do most mischief in the Church and Peace carried it Thus have I given the Description of these ten Good Consciences and shall name no more There are more I confess then these ten to bee found in the Word But this I am bold to say If these ten were to be found in the world in this age in this Nation God would deal with us yet as he had done with Sodom had hee found ten Gen. 18. 32 Righteous men there wee should not bee destroied but this whole Nation spared for these Tens sakes yea doubtless had not the Lord reserved a very small Remnant in whom these ten properties of Good Conscience have been found wee had alreadie been made as Sodom and should have Isai 1. 9. been as Gomorrah before this time CHAP. XV. Of the Excellencie of a good Conscience and the benefits thereof HAving hitherto spoken of the nature of good Conscience in generall and of these severall kinds of good Conscience in particular I shall now proceed to give such reasons and use those arguments which may provoke us to get and keep such a good conscience Which reasons are drawn from three generall heads 1. From the excellency in and bene●●t gotten by a good Conscience 2. From the danger and mischief of an evil Conscience 3. From the difficultie of getting and keeping a good and escaping a bad Conscience This Chapter shall speak of those excellencies which are in and the benefits gotten by a good Conscience Which appears in five particulars 1. The excellency of good Conscience appears The excellencie of good Conscience both in the Honourable Title given it above all other graces and the reall Preheminence it hath if compared with all other things 1. It hath this proper Epithite and denomination given it ordinarily of good Conscience Act. 23. 1. 1 Tim. 1. 5. 19. 1 Pet. 3. 16. 21. whereas other graces excellent in their place and kinde seldom called thus When do you reade of good faith good repentance or love or holiness or obedience but still conscience is called good Conscience There is surely some eminent and superlative goodness yea much communicative goodness in it It is good it self and makes the good faith and good love and repentance and obedience c. which all cease to be good when separated from good Conscience Then compare it with all other good things and it hath the better of them What Quid prodest plena bonis Arca si inanis sit Conscien tia good is there in a chest full of goods when the Conscience is empty of goodness said Austin What is a man better if he have all goods and want this one good what if he have good ware in the Shop good stock in the ground houshold in the house clothes on his back and good credit abroad and have not a good Conscience in his heart all this were like a rich suit on an ulcerous body This man is like Naaman a rich man 2 Kin. 5. 1. but a Leper a great and honourable man but a foule man What are all great Parts and excellent Gifts and Abilities of minde without good Conscience but as so many sweet flowers upon a dead man wrapt up in fair linen He is a drest man but a dead man outwardly sweet inwardly smelling or like a sounding brasse and tinkling Cymball This is above knowledge alone Adde Con to Science and you have the compleat Christian Omnibus numeris perfectum Take away Con and leave all Science you leave nothing but Cyphers Though saith Bernard many seek Knowledge and desire Science few care for Multi scientiam quaerunt pauci Conscientiam Conscientia autem quam scientia citius apprehenditur utilius retinetur Bern. Conscience yet is Conscience gotten with more case and kept with more advantage then all your Knowledge This is above All Faith alone therefore they oft go together in Scripture 1 Tim. 1. 5. and 19. and 3. 9. when Conscience is put away the text saith Faith is cast away and shipwrackt Nothing profits alone without this not Baptisme 1 Pet. 3. 21. not coming to the Lords Supper Heb. 10. 22. not Charitie 1 Tim. 1. 5. not any serving of God 2 Tim. 1. 3. not our subjection and obedience to men or Magistracie Rom. 13. 5. not all our sufferings 1 Pet. 2. 19 20. Take any man with all endowments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dirt kneaded with bloud as they call'd Tiberius Nero. without Conscience you have but the carcaese of a man without the soul What is the learned Philosopher and eloquent Orator without Conscience but a rational brute or a speaking beast who may like Balaams Ass open his mouth to rebuke another more mad yet is beaten himself What is a Magistrate without Conscience but as the Gyant without his eye or the eye without his sight Let all Duties be performed and Conscience not regarded you have but an Hypocrite let all gifts remain and Profession stay if Conscience go you have but an Apostate Bernhard saith excellently to this purpose It is better running to Conscience then to all your wisdom unless you mean by your Vtilius est currere ad conscientiam quam ad sapientiam nisi cadem sit sapientia quae conscientia wisdom nothing but Conscience The unlearned man with his good Conscience saith Austin will get the start of thee and be in Heaven before thee when thou with all thy learning and abilities wilt be cast into hell Surgunt indocti rapiunt regnum Coelorum c. 2. Consider the absolute Necessitie of a Good Conscience to the very esse and being of a Christian when many other things serve onely to the melius esse better being And this will shew you a higher Excellencie in Good Conscience which should set us upon getting it This constitutes the Christian and is that sine quâ non To suppose a Christian without Conscience were to suppose the Sun without Light or fire without heat this is of the very same consequence to spiritual life as the sense of feeling is to natural life which compared with the rest of the senses hath the preheminence in sundrie particulars as the Philosopher laies down in his Axiomes all applicable to Conscience 1. Tactus Origine primus they say Feeling Conscience to the soul is as sense of feeling to the bodie in four respects is the first sense in being So is Conscience the primum vivens and ultimum moriens in the new Creature Life discovers it self in the soul first in his sensibleness and tenderness as in the childes feeling appears the first of natural life the childe beginneth to feel when it
be not regarded in his two first Offices he will be known in his two last if his Ministeriall reproofs and Magistraticall rods be slighted he will as a witness against thee and a Judge over thee chasten thee with Scorpions Did not I speak to you will Conscience say as Reuben to his brethren Gen 42. 22 and you would not hear then see now what is come on it Now his bloud is required 4. I might adde in the fourth place that which followes in the Text that when once any have betraied their trust and delivered up this Fort to Satan they are ever after cashiered God's service and are by him delivered up to Satans custodie and an evil Consciences mercie either to be misled by an erroneous Conscience or terrified with an accusing Conscience He that is filthy let him Rev. 22. 11 Zech. 11. 9. be filthie and that which perisheth let it perish saith the Lord in his fiercest anger as they had no love to the truth so they shall have no Judgement to discern lies but be given over to strong delusions to beleeve any lying doctrines That all they may be damned who received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 2 Thes 2. 10 11 12. Thus it befell these Hymeneus and Alexander who having once renounced Conscience and forfeited their faith they were discharged any more emploiment They have no more part in Christ nor lot in the Church but are delivered up to Satan among blasphemers CHAP. XVII Of the difficultie in getting and keeping a good Conscience and escaping a bad WE have alreadie spoken of the excellency The third Reason from the difficultie of getting the good Conscience and escaping the bad and benefit of the good Conscience and the danger and mischief of the bad But here we shall see the difficultie of getting and keeping the good Conscience is as great as the excellencie or benefit when had and the difficultie of escaping an ill Conscience is almost as great as the danger of it What can be so hardly got or kept as the one what so hard to scape and misse as the other Consider it in these three respects 1. First in respect of Satan it is hard to get and keep the one and escape the other Satan all his spite is at good Conscience all his aim is to make a bad He envies a man nothing but his good Conscience not riches not honours no learning parts duties not mirth pleasure not his peace but onely a good Conscience He envied not the Serpent his subtilty he could make use of it not Pharaoh his Kingdom not Ahithophel his Policy Gen. 3. nor Absalom his Beautie nor Haman his Court-honours or State-offices nor Dives his wealth and good cheer He could tell how to make use of all Yea he will offer his help to men to get them riches honours offices learning so they will quit good Conscience He will grant any Articles you can propound so he may gain this Fort. He can make use of all other things parts power policie but a good Conscience is never for his turn in a Magistrate or Minister or in a private person but it is constantly against him and he against it and therefore he despairs of doing any good on it as they said of Luther when some perswaded the Pope to attempt to take him off by offering him some great preferment and Church promotions it was answered it was in vain to trie Germana illa bestia aurum non curat That German beast Mel. Adain vita Luther said they cared not at all for all their gold Yea if a man be plundered of all his estate and stormed out of all his out-works his riches friends children power places yea stormed out of his nearer comforts out of his faith and hopes out of his prayers and promises all on the sudden surprized if he retreat to a good Conscience and make good this last hold by a still retaining of his integritie Satan will be repelled with shame and losse and draw off with dishonour wearie of laying his siege against so impregnable a Fort. Job had lost all but keeping good Conscience alone and manfullie defending this piece he recovered all again he had lost and his Job 42. 12 13. last state was double to his first 2. In respect of thy self or of the work it self thou wilt finde a hard task of it to get or keep a good Conscience in an evil age it will require thy greatest skill and utmost diligence So the Apostle found it Act. 24. 16. therefore he saith Herein do I exercise my self Mr. Harris Mr. Ward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 meditari exercere se in re aliqua Gagnei In genere notat severius exercitium Religionis Christianae sive praeparare se ad certamen Vid. Leigh Crit. Sacr. to keep alwaie a Conscience void of offence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word signifies saith one I use all my skill diligence and constancie together I lay my policie or bend my wit saith another godly Divine All which tell us it is the Christians master-piece to look well to a good Conscience A work of continuall exercise to an Apostle himself Look but well into it and thou wilt f●nde there is work enough in it as much as thou canst turn thee too To keep a Merchants book is a piece of art requiring skill and care To keep this book well is the art of arts To keep thy Masters accounts if thou be a servant thy Lords if thou be a steward thy Shop-book if thou be a tradesman requires much care and diligence What is it to keep thy soul-book to keep Gods book to keep this Dooms-day-book for so Conscience is 3. Look yet further and in respect of others thou wilt see it more difficult still How many hast thou seen miscarry in it who is sufficient for this work How should we fear This is much insisted on in the Text and given in charge to Timothy Timothy see thou war a good warfare and look well to thy charge hold fast faith and a good Conscience for all have not done so Of many that have run in a race most have lost but one ohtained the prize of many that have fought most have been foiled or wounded or slain or fled but one crowned Run not uncertainly fight not saintly look well to thy Conscience And here are many Items couched together in this place 1. Some Not one single person in an age but it is the case of many not one mans onely many have miscarried and it is incident to all Look well to it Be not high-minded but fear Rom. 11. 20. 2. Some have put away Conscience A monstrous vile act for men sometimes of better principles to send Conscience packing like a vagabond or to thrust it out of doors as if it were the Son of the Bondwoman It is the most unkinde and ungracious act that can be to disclaim Conscience
Consciences witnessing with them saith the Apostle of the naturall Heathens and their thoughts as well excusing as accusing them They may have tranquillam but not securam conscientiam as Bernard distinguisheth And thus it is said of Socrates who living according to the rules of his naturall enlightened understanding when he came to die and was put to death he took his death with much Resolution and Tranquillitie of minde He said of his enemies They could but kill him they could not hurt him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet for all this no naturall Conscience can be a good Conscience 1. Because though it may cum seipso cum aliis scire yet it doth not cum Deo scire At the best it is liable to that rebuke given unto Peter Matth. 16. 23. Get thee behinde me Satan thou art an offence unto me for thou savourest not the things that Mat. 16. 23 be of God but those which are of men onely 2. Because it is not purged by the bloud of sprinkling It is without Christ therefore without God and Covenant and Promise and Eph. 2. 12. Hope and Mercie 3. Because as it hath not the purifying bloud of the Lamb so nor the purifying water Ezek. 36. 25. of the spirit sprinkled on it whereby it should be cleansed now whatsoever is born of the flesh is still but flesh and onely that which is born of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3. 6. 4. Because it hath not Faith which is that whereby the heart is further purified Act. 15. 9. And the Apostle when he bids Timothy hold faith and a good Conscience tells us as much that first faith must be had and then good Conscience Good Conscience is never without Faith never before Faith This Conscience how ever many may lull themselves asleep on it yet is it a bed shorter then that a man should stretch himself on it and a Isai 28. 20. covering narrower then that a man should wrap himself in it No sure Refuge is it and a strong fort it is not to endure a storming It is not the Ark of Noah of Moses it may be not an Ark of Gopher wood but made of Paper Rushes not pitched with Pitch but daubed with slime not furnisht with all manner of Provision as Noahs was to hold out to the utmost for a whole year and longer Gen. 7. 11. with Gen. 8. 14. but utterly unfurnisht for a day that unless he be taken out of it as Moses was he may there lie and crie and famish and perish This fort is no better then that hold of the idol Berith to which when the men of Shechem fled for Refuge it was fired over their Judg. 9. 46. 49. heads and they perished miserably in it A poor man and this naturall Conscience may perish and burn together Oportet Conscientiam non solum bonam esse tranquillam sed securam Bern. Par. Ser. 4. The fourth use discovers another mistake of theirs who judge their Conscience good when it is nothing so With many that is held for the best Conscience that is most still quiet and sleepie as ignorant people think of a Minister he is the best Minister who is the good neighbour the quiet man who troubles none even he in whose mouth is no reproofs Whereas the Prophet saith They who bless the people cause them to erre and they who are called blessed of them are destroyed Isai 9. 16. and 3. 12. The blinde lead the blinde into the ditch But a man may have so much of this Peace till he be the worse again He may have this Peace too soon he may have it too long There is a Peace of Satans giving Luk. 11. 21. As there is a sword and variance of Christs sending Luk. 12. 51. The kingdom of God is righteousness Peace and Joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. The kingdom of Satan is ignorance and peace and joy in unholy courses yet this is the Conscience which most men call good if it be Pacatè bona they care not though it be malè Pacata Cain desires his Conscience would be quiet therefore he sets upon business of building and travells to go from his discontents Saul makes use 1 Sam. 16. 16 17 23. Act. 24. 25. of musick Felix would stop his present trembling by an abrupt diversion I will take another more convenient season purposely for this Meditation Judas would fill up the mouth of hell and clamours of Matt. 27. 3 4 5. Conscience with loud and bitter Confessions fearfull Exclamations and plenarie Restitution Some call for wine and Mirth to cheer themselves against a day of slaughter All James 5. 5. which is like the drinking cold water to one who is in a feaver who for the present findes relief but his feaver is increased thereby There are four Quiet Consciences and never Four ill quiet Consciences 1. The ignorant mans conscience Luk. 11. 44. an one of them good 1. The ignorant mans Conscience is quiet and still and as the blinde man eates many a hair and drinks many a flie so these know not that they do evil no more then the graves are aware who goeth over them Blindeness of minde makes men past feeling when they commit all uncleanness with greediness Ephes 4. 18 19. Abimelech talks much of his Integritie and Gen. 20. 4 5. Vprightness and stands much upon his Conscience when all was but moralitie or ignorance Without knowledge the Conscience cannot as without Conscience knowledge is not good The Scripture somewhere cals Knowledge the Key but if Knowledge be the Luk. 11. 52. Key Conscience must be the Lock The one must be made fit to the other therefore Paul cals Good Knowledge the Knowledge according to Godliness Now what is a Lock Titus 1. 1. good for without a Key what Conscience good for without Knowledge to open and shut to lock and unlock it and what is the Key good for without the Lock Get both Science and Conscience Glorie not that thou hast got a quiet that is a blinde deaf silent and speechless Conscience The dumb and deaf spirit was the worst spirit to cast out of all the evil spirits wee read of in the Gospel Mar. 9. 25 26 29. The other roaring devils were more easily ejected Better a roaring raging and racking Conscience then a dumb Conscience Mar. 1. 23 26. The second Conscience that is quiet yet 2. The unawakened conscience not good is that Conscience that was yet never well awakened But sin lies at the door like a Mastiff asleep and makes no noise Here is quiet indeed but a dangerous quiet This Conscience either is given over to sleep a perpetuall sleep as God threatens Jer. 51. 39 40. In their heat I will make their feasts and I will make them drunken that they may rejoyce and sleep a perpetuall sleep and not awake saith the Lord. Then will I bring them like lambs to the
a good When quiet Conscience good Haec est bona tranquilla Conscientia eorum qui carnem spi●●●ui subdiderunt qui cum his qui oderunt pacem sunt Pacifici Bern. Par. Serm. Conscience when it is purified as well as pacified as was said before when it hath done all his four Offices and speaketh peace that is a happy peace and when it hath those ten properties of good Conscience before spoke of viz of faith of puritie of sinceritie of inoffensiveness and of charitie and when it is a well sighted well spoken and an honest dealing Conscience when it is rightly tender and rightly hardy and after all these speaketh peace This is the onely right peace of Conscience the peace that passeth understanding 5 Vse The fift use is to discover another ordinarie mistake in men who are apt to judge a troubled Conscience a good Conscience and for no other reason but because troubled These are the third sort of men who are mistaken in judging of Conscience these are as much out as the former they judged Conscience good because quiet these on the other side say I have a good Conscience because I have had troubles in Conscience therefore I hope the worst is past bitterness of death and hell is over But so had Cain and Ahab and Judas and Simon Magus There is Conscientia mala turbata as well as mala pacata Thou maist have had great horrour and a dreadful sound in thy ears yet onely felt Job 15. 21. the beginning of sorrows Eccles 9. 3. The wise man saith that there are they whose heart is full of rage and madness while they live yet after that they go to the dead and damned out of one hell they go into another and out of one Ex inferno ad inferuum Eze. 15. 7. fire into another Then is Death and Hell cast into the Lake of fire Now there is a troubled Conscience which is not the better for it And there is a Conscience troubled again then which there is no better The ill troubled Conscience is known by 3 Marks of an ill troubled conscience these three marks When those troubles have an ill originall or rise whence they take their beginning 2. When there is an ill carriage and frame of spirit under them 3. When an ill course is taken to remove them Then from first to last these troubles are evil troubles 1. Troubles are then evil when the root is 1. When proceed from an evil root and cause evil whence they spring Ahab is much troubled till he is sick again not because his covetous lust is unmortified but becaus unsatisfied Amnon is sick because his brutish lust is nor satisfied Herod was troubled in his minde Mat. 2. 3. when he heard Christ was born But no good trouble this it had no good spring but came from hence that he feared he should be disturbed in his Dominion and his usurped power should be abolished So Prov. 4. 16. There be they that cannot sleep if they have done no mischief all day These troubles are not from sin but for it that they may effect it Hell is full of such troubled spirits This is indeed the Devils trouble The unclean spirit going thorow places where there is no good to be done for his purpose seeketh rest but findeth none This is cum diabolo conscire or consentire and may be called the Devils Conscience 2. When if it be at all for sin it is not so much for the intrinsecal evil and sinfulness that is in sin as in regard of the eventuall and consequential evils that attend sin and the punishment that follows Thus Ahab after his sin is troubled walks heavily puts on sackcloth and is humbled and fasts and lies in sackcloth 1 King 21. 27. But all this ado is not for grief of the sin committed but for fear of the punishment threatened So did Cain crie out because of his punishment Judas because he must be damned Magus desires praiers that none of those evils told him of by Peter should come upon him and Act. 8. 24. there was all his trouble This is to be troubled for Hell not for sin Hell it self is full of such troubled Consciences where there is continuall weeping wailing and gnashing of teetb for their pains but not the least Repentance for their sins 2. When the Carriage under the troubles 2. When attended with an ill carriage under it is evil then it is an evil trouble as 1. when the man doth rage and swell and storm under the stroke of God but his uncircumcised heart is never a whit broken to accept of the punishment of his iniquitie Cain was troubled enough at his sentence pronounced by God he was not troubled aright it was not at all for his sin nor did he at all humble himself under the just sentence of God but rageth and stormeth at his punishment My punishment is greater then I can bear So those Isai 8. 21 22. who fret themselves curse God and King and all that comes in their way And they look upward and downwand upon the earth and behold trouble and darkness and they are driven to darkness 2. When you see a man go on in sin under his Troubles these are ill troubles Eelix sometime trembled while Paul was at work upon his Conscience but all this trembling did no good upon his Conscience Paul left Felix as he found him an incorrigible sinner sinning against checks of his own Conscience And Felix left Paul as he found him He could not be moved ere the more to do Act. 24. 27. 1 King 12. 33. 2 Chron. 28. 22. him Justice Felix left Paul bound Jeroboam was as ill and that wicked Ahaz much worse after judgements upon them Simon Magis waxed worse and worse after that warning given him by Peter Hell is likewise full of such troubled Consciences there is continuall sorrowing but yet continuall sinning Rev. 16. 11. 9. 20 21. They gnaw their tongues because of their pains yet blaspheme God with their tongues and repent not to give him glorie as they Revel 16. 11. It is not the thorn in the hand throbbing and burning which makes the hand well but the pulling of it out 3. Those are ill troubles whose cure is 3. When an ill cure sought evil or when an evil course is taken for their removal as 1. When men go to outward means to remove an inward grief and go not to God Cain goes and travels first leaves his Countrey to see if he can leave his sting of Conscience he afterwards settles himself to emploiment in building but Cain carries his hell with him Saul while his ill fit is on him sends for David and seekes to still his distempered spirit by his musick An ill Diversion doth but Prorogue not end the disease It is like the casting of water upon the outside of the house when it is all of a flame within or
bewail and lament his sin Psal 51. 3. My sin is ever before me I will acknowledge my sin c. What shal I say Oh thou Job 40. 3 4. preserver of men for I have finned Job 7. 20. 3. When upon such confession and bewailing of sin he forsakes it Prov. 28. 13. The Promise of Mercie is to such Such a troubled soul saith Behold I am vile what shall I answer thee I will lay my hand upon my mouth Once have I spoken but I will not answer yea twice but I will proceed no further 4. When not onely sin is forsaken in respect of the outward act but the heart is changed and mortified to the love of sin when God hath hidden all pride from man Job 33. 17. by means of all his trouble this is a good trouble when the sin-troubled soul saith I finde now more bitter then death the woman whose heart is snares and nets and her hands as bands whoso pleaseth God shal be delivered from ber Eccles 7. 26. 5. When the heart is not onely changed from the love of sin but is carried out to seek after Christ for rest and Righteousness when Mat. 11. 29. Zech. 13. 1. Joh. 3. 14 15. we go to this Physitian to get rest to the soul and go to this Fountain to wash away sin and uncleanness Those are happie stings of the serpent that cause us to look up to the brazen serpent And that Pursuer doth us no hurt which doth drive us the faster to the Citie of Refuge 6. Lastly when after all this the Conscience is made more careful and more tender ever after Job 34. 31 32. Now I have smarted for it I will no more offend saith 2 Cor. 7. 11. Optimum est tunc sentiri vermem cum possit etiam suffocari hic mordeat ut moriatur paulatim desmat mordere Bern. Par. Serm. the right troubled spirit That which I see not teach thou me if I have done iniquitie I will do no more It is an excellent hopefull signe saith Bernard to feel this Worm of Conscience gnawing and biting while it is here biting it may be kill'd and when it is biting it is dying Mordear ne moriar Let me rather be bitten that this worm may after die then be unbitten that I should ever die What was Julius Cesars Motto is every Christians in this case Semel quam semper To die at once rather then to languish ever The next mistake is of them who think 6. Mistake they have a good Conscience but it is an Erroneous Conscience They pretend to Conscience in some thing yea more then others but it is a mis-informed Conscience The Pharisees made a matter of Conscience of it to take off hearers and followers from Matt. 23. Christ to make Proselytes to themselves Paul once thought he could not do God better service then in persecuting the Apostles Act. 26. 9. and Preachers of those times and to disperse the flocks How far was Saul gone with this disease when he would make the old Covenant an old Almanack which was made with the Gibeonites He would needs be wiser then all his Predecessours and more Conscientious and an impulsion of spirit with a pang of Conscience such it was set him on He did it in his zeal it is said to the house of 2 Sam. 21. 2 Israel But was it therefore good because he had such a persuasion did not his Realm first and his house at last smart for such an errour in breaking that Covenant which was at first subdolously obtained and inconsiderately made yet fieri non debuit factum valuit Much was spoken at first of the evil haunts Chap. 2. of this Conscience we may therefore say the less here we shall onely adde some of his common Marks whereby it may be discovered it is impossible to enumerate all his Wiles and Exorbitancies Some and his chief among them wee shall name 1. His grand and greatest mistake is to leave the Word which is the standing Rule to a rectified and judicious Conscience and to prefer a Tradition or some humane invention before an express Precept Thus did the Pharisees Matt. 15. 13. 2. Erroneous Conscience leaveth the waters of Siloah the holy Scriptures that ran softly and uniformly and constantly and takes extraordinarie Providence for a Rule in stead of Precepts whereas Gods Providences Deut. 13. 3. Dan. 11. 35 both prospering and adverse are oft more Probatorie then Directorie To tempt and trie rather then to warrant or discourage proceedings But erroneous Conscience imputes his success to his cause and his cause prospering he entitles God's cause This was Rabshakehs Divinitie Am I come hither Isai 36. 10. without God God hath said Go up against Jerusalem This was the Divinitie of the Caldeans Hab. 1. 11. Then shall his minde change with his success and he shall pass over and offend imputing this his power to his God These are apt to say Jer. 50. 7. We offend not because they have sinned and we have prevailed But if Gods Permissive Providence and our prevailing success make any thing lawfull what is then sinfull that is in our power Then were not God's written will but our will and power Providence concurring the Rule and Measure of lawfull and unlawfull But Providences are various and uncertain Our Rule must be constant and certain Providence can never be made a Rule for first no Conclusion thence can be certain and infallible saith the wise man Eccles 9. 1 2. All things come alike to all c. so that none can know love or hatred by all that is before him Secondly The success which God doth often in his Providence lay out for men is short of mans Expectation and the most industrious endeavours Eccles 9. 11. The race is not to the swift c. Thirdly Gods wise and secret Providence doth oft disappoint and frustrate the expectation of the wisest and the best of men Eccles 7. 15. There is a just man that perisheth in his righteousness and a wicked man who prolongeth his life in his wickedness The like he saith again Eccles 8. 14. Fourthly Providences are various and full of alternations that it were a brutish kinde of Logick to conclude any thing positively thence concerning the minde of God or the state of man Then when Paul and all his companie escape their shipwrack they must be all Saints when the Viper is on his hand he must be a murderer now and when the Viper is in the fire he must be a God again All the consequences alike valid Fit Divinitie this for Barbarians not for Christians But Solomon would have us cease from such kind of daring reasonings when he concludes Eccles 8. ult I beheld all the work of God that a man cannot finde out the work that is done under the sun because though a man labour to seek it out yea further though a wise man think to know it yet shall
he not be able to finde it out 3. It prefers a supposed fictitious Revelation before written and clear Revelations as did the deceived prophet 1 King 13. Now all Divine Revelations coming from the Spirit of Truth ever are consonant to the word of truth which is the Rule to trie all Revelations by 2 Pet. 1. 19. 4. It prefers a strong impulsion from his own thoughts before Gods own thoughts Jer. 7. 31. God said what they did never came into his minde to approve it yet would they do it because it was their Conscience and it came into their minde But the strongest impulsion of our spirits though gracious Spirits can be no Rule David had a very strong impression once to build God a house he consults with Nathan a Prophet he hath the 2 Sam. 7. 2 3. same apprehension of the work Go on for God is with thee yet was it not therefore good in Gods eyes because good in both theirs David had another vehement and impetuous Motion to be avenged on Nabal for his inhumanitie 1 Sam. 25. 22. and uncivilities towards his servants sent in his name he backs that motion with an Oath yet upon Abigails submission he changeth his minde blessing both ver 33. God and her and the counsell given to stay him from proceeding so fiercely according to the wilde light of an erring Conscience God did appoint his people under the Law Numb 15. 39. to wear fringes on their garments that they might remember Gods written Commandments and not seek after their own heart after which they were apt to go a whoring He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool the wise man Pro. 28. 26 saith And Job gives a serious Item in this case Let not him that is deceived trust in vanitie for vanitie shall be his recompense Job 15. 31. 5. Erroneous Conscience interprets difficulties and discouragements as a discharge from dutie The time is not come say they to build the House of God nor is it any more our dutie because the Kings of Persia forbad and the adversaries hindered it Hag. 1. 2. But this is the sluggards Conscience when he seeth a lion in the way Prov. 26. 13. 6. It conceives a fair intention or a good end may legitimate an unwarrantable action Now though true it is That the goodness of the end propounded hath a great influence upon an action to make it theologically good yet can no good end alter the nature of an action that is materially bad to mend it To do the greatest good to an evil end as to pray to be seen of men and to do the least evil to attain the best end as to lie for God are Job 13. 7. alike abomination Our Rule from the Scripture is not to do the least evil to gain the greatest beneficiall good or to avoid the greatest penall evil Rom. 3. 8. 7. Lastly this fool so rageth and is so confident that he dare appeal to God to patronize his exorbitancies Jo. 16. 3. They think they did God greatest service when they did the Church the greatest dis-service in killing the Apostles So did Pauls erring Conscience once stimulate him Out of zeal persecuting the Church Phil. 3. 6. Jehu could not look upon it as any other then true zeal to God when he saw himself so violent in rooting out Ahabs house and Baals priests Come see my zeal for the Lord saith he And were there not fourty zealously enraged against Paul who had made a religious vow not to eat again unless they had killed Paul Act. 23. 12. Quantum Religio poterit suadere malorum what so evil that erroneous Conscience will not call good It puts bitter for sweet and darkness for light familiarly 7. The next mistake is of them who mistake a scrupulous Conscience for a good Conscience whenas all their scruples are about minute and triviall matters about indifferent or impertinent things overlooking things of greater consequence they stand upon Tythe Mint Annise and Cummin and neglect the weightie matters of the Law Mercie Justice Faith Strain at a gnat swallow a camel stick at joyning with a Christian Congregation in the commanded duties of publike worship and Communion but never stick at joining with scorners in sinful communion or in conforming to the fashions of the world Surely we may say as Paul to his Ephesians But ye have not so learned Christ Ephes 4. 20 21. if ye have heard him and have been taught by him c. These make ado about washing pots and cups and outsides when the heart is brim full of pride hypocrisie malice censoriousness rapine and all iniquitie scruple rubbing ears of corn when hungrie but not swallowing a poor widows house The high Priests were troubled in Conscience and rent their clothes when Christ said he was the Son of God but when themselves blasphemed Christ and resisted the holy Ghost there was then no rending hearts nor renting garments When Judas brought back the money and threw it down they would not once touch it and into their Corban it must not come it was the Price of blood now but when they drove the bargain with Judas and told him out that very money then it was not the price of blood out of Corban it might lawfully come but into Corban again it must not go Oh painted sepulchres and whited walls 8. Such again on the other side who think that scruples and strictness and tenderness are the onely arguments of an ill Conscience and that Libertie and bold adventurousness are the best arguments of a good Conscience And so all the world is of a sudden become very Conscientious and our Reformation brought unto perfection All men crying Conscience Conscience Libertie Libertie But shall we go down and see whether they have done altogether according to this crie Gen. 18. 21. Is this the onely good Conscience that the world hath left Must wee needs leave Jordan and go wash in Abano and Pharpar that we may be clean Must we beat down one altar and set up many altars going the clean contrarie way to Hezekiahs Reformation to make sure that our Reformation shall not be Legall must we say that uniformitie is the onely slaverie That one heart one waie one faith one Baptisme and one Table of the Lord is too little under the Gospel That Jerusalem is not the place it is too much to meet all in one place Dan and Bethel may do as well private places are as good as publike The meanest of the people as fit as the most learned Well we see the one part the worse part of that prophecie fulfilled Micah 4. 5. for all people will walk every one in the Name of his God when shall we see the other and better part fulfilled which followes And we will walk in the Name of the Lord our God for ever Shall this serpent Libertie eat up all our other Rods Must all the legitimate sons of Gideon be slain
on thee ere he hath done for his eyes put out and will destroy thee though he perish with thee Peccatum susurrans will prove Peccatum exclamans the witnesses might be slaine but did soon rise againe and up to heaven they went to accuse the world of Irreligion and Impiety Rev. 11. 2. To such as are haunted and f●●●owed with that griesly and ghastly fury of an evill accusing gnawing and corroding Conscience no wolfe on the breast like this no worm in the inwards like this torment it never lies quiet it s ever gnawing and corroding as no phrenfie so outragious as the roaring and raging Conscience It is like the raging Sea which cannot rest Esay 57. 21. No winds abroad cause an Earthquake but what wind is inclosed in the bowels of the earth no outward pressures can so torment as this inward horror the wind within causeth the Gollick paines not all the winds blustering about our ears but that little wind though it make no noise that is shut up in the bowels and pent up that wrings and tortures the body what are all the paines of body to the gripes and gnawing and wringings of an accusing disquieted Conscience This is the heart that continually meditates Terror to it self there is no darkenesse Paena autem vehemens multo saevior illis quas Caeditius gravis invenit Rhadamantus nocte dieque suum gestare in pectore Testem Ju. 1 Tim. 5. 24. 2 Sam. 13. 13. 1 King 2. 44. Gen. 42. 22 or shadow of death like his blacknesse of darkenesse He flies from the Iron weapon and the bow of steele shall strike him thorow The glistering sword cometh out of his gall all darkenesse is hid in hir secret place a fire not blowne shall consume him Job 20. 24 25 26. His sins have now found him out and are going before him to judgement whither he himself shall shortly follow I whither shall I go saith he to his offended Conscience where shall I leave my sin and shame and Conscience againe replies thou knowest all the evill that thy heart is privy too as Solomon said to Shemei nay saith Conscience you would not hear me as Reuben said to his brethren did I not speak to you and tell you then you must take what follows you have troubled Conscience and Conscience will trouble thee Men make light of the checks and admonitions of Conscience while they are in pursuit of sin and amidst their prosperity but when distress and anguish comes to take hold of them how do they cry out Oh Conscience Conscience Oh that I had hearkened to Conscience as it said of Rich Craesus who glorying in his wealth Solon told him that no man could reckon himself happy till he saw his end Craesus regarded not till being overcome by Cyrus and condemned to be burnt to death then he remembred what Solon had said to him and in the fire he cryed out Oh Solon Solon being asked what he meant he told them now he thought of Solons words and found them true and repented that he had made no more use of them when time was 3. It speaks terror to such as have an unwakened unsensible and sleepy Conscience no Lethargie so dangerous and near to death Gelidae est quasi mortis imago The Lethargick sleepy stupid Conscience is the most hopelesse Conscience that can be The dumb deaf silent speechlesse bedrid Conscience is the most desperate disease in the world The Physitian cures the Lethargy by a feaver if he can cast his patient into one and let me tell thee it is better God should cast thee into a hot burning feaver of Conscience by any affliction or horror whatsoever then that thou shouldest go sleeping and snoring to Hell It is not a more certaine token of death approaching to the body when you see speech gone eyes set in the head breath failing feeling lost pulse stopping excrements coming away unawares that such a one is drawing on to his Grave Then when you see the eyes of Conscience set feeling gone checks cease Heart-smiting done all Sins perpetrated yet the Soul lies wallowing in his noysome Excrements that such a Soul is drawing on to the Chambers of Hell The body of the former sleeps but his 2. Pet. 2. 3. Death slacks not the Soul of the latter sleeps too But his Judgement and Damnation slumbers not but is hastening upon him 4. It speaks Terror again to such as are already fallen or are entring into that disease called by Divines Vastatio Conscientiae the wasting or Consumption of Conscience the worst Consumption Such a Disease as the Phisitian meddles with none so bad This if not very timely prevented and stayed turns ever into one of those two desperat and incurable Diseases thou wilt either be stricken with a cold benumming Palsie or Lethargie and so be half dead while thou art alive or into a raging and desperate Phrensy it turns which will make thee be half in Hell while thou art alive The one was Nabals disease who was stricken with it that he became as cold hard and livelesse as a stone and was no better than a breathing Clot and so he died and is much like that Plague threatned Zach. 14. 12. where the flesh rots and consumes upon their feet while they stand their eyes consume away in their holes and their tongues in their mouthes so that they have neither sight nor tast nor speech nor motion yet living Death it self were to be chosen before such a Life The other was Joram's disease whom God smote in his Bowels with an incurable disease of which he lay in great extreamity for two years space and at last his very Bowels 2. Chron. 21. 19. fell out by reason of his sicknesse day by day and so he died in great horrour of whom may be said as was said to Maximinus that Tyrant and bloudy Persecutor when swarms of Lice did Gender in his diseased putrified body dayly did crawl about him that no Physitian could endure to come near him divers of them being slain because for the filthy stink they could not endure his presence others slain because they could find no means to cure him one of the Physitians then spake plainly to him and told him Nec est humanus iste Morbus nec medicis curatur It is not a naturall disease but a Divine stroke of Gods hand it is past the Physitians skill to deal with it CHAP. XXIII Of the Vse of Consolation ANd here we cannot but Proclaim the Happiness and commend the Wisdome of those blessed Souls that in this crooked and perverse Generation have made the better part their Choise and Care viz. to get and keep the good Conscience that Conscience void of offence before God and men that have preferred Purity of Conscience before Liberty and have studied Vprightnesse while others have studied Policy and fleshly wisdome These are like the few Names in Sardis who had not defiled their Garments
the other which make the able Divine or eminent Christian 1. The Book of Scripture 2. The Book of Providence or Experience 3. The Book of Conscience These three I say must be studied diligently and compared Read any of the three alone it profits not Read any two of them without the third thou wilt be imperfect 1. Scripture knowledge alone without Experience and Conscience makes not a Christian 2 ly Providence and Experience alone without Scripture and Conscience 3 ly Conscience alone without the other two No nor yet as I said any two of them without the third 1. Not Scripture and Experience without Conscience 2. Not Experience and Conscience without Scripture 3. Not Scripture and Conscience without Experience Conscience is one of the chiefest volumes thou must read then and self Examination is a Christians great Task Therefore saith Bernard Seek to be well acquainted with thy self Enter into thy self Run through thy self yet stay in thy self Begin with thy self end with thy self but Nulla scientia melior illa quâ homo novit seipsum relinque ergo caetera teipsum aiscute per te curre in te consiste A te incipiat cogitatio tua in te finiatur nec frustra in alia distendaris te neglecto postea Si nondum dignus es intrare Tabernaculum primum quâ fronte praesumis ingredi secundum id est Sanctum Sanctorum Ber. de Int. domo cap. 65. Enter into this first Tabernacle every day if thou wouldest enter the Sanctum Sanctorum once in the end of the year that is of thy life leave not thy self As therefore the Orator said of Tully I may say of Conscience Ille se plurimum profecisse sciat cui Conscientia valde placuerit That man may know he hath made a good proficiency who is more and more delighted in Conscience Let each Christian therefore try and consider what an one he is for Conscience I say not for knowledge and profession All have knowledge all make profession But how far doth a little Conscience go among a great many Professours The number of the Rom. 9. 27. Children of Israel is as the sand on the Sea shore yet how small a remnant saved There are threescore Queens fourscore Concubines Virgins without number yet my Dove my Vndefiled is but one the onely one of her Mother she is the choise one of her that bare her The Daughters saw and blessed her the Queens and Concubines and they praised her Cant. 6. 8 9. There were never more Saints and never fewer Saints said one truly Never more Nominal and fewer Real Never more Saints and lesse Sanctity And never more talk of Conscience heard and lesse of Conscience seen We can discourse and dispute better than our Fathers they could and did live better Liberty hath like Reuben climbed up into his Mother Conscience's bed and there hath defiled it therefore loseth the Preheminence and Birth-right and shall not excell And as for Purity Charity Tendernesse Inoffensivenesse Sincerity and the like we have sent them afar off as Abraham did the Children of the Concubines But if these things were in us and did abound we should not be so barren and frigid and unfruitfull in the knowledge of Christ as we are whereas for lack of these things men are blind and doting about questions to no profit but to the corrupting of the Speaker and subverting of the Hearers As we are wont to say of a Scholler going to the Vniversitie if he do not as well profit Qui proficit in Dectina deficit in moribus non profitit seâ deficit in his Ethicks in his Behaviour and Morals as he doth in his Logick or in Arts and Tongues he doth not profit but lose So may we well say of the Professor if he profit not as much in Conscience as in bare Science and Opinions his Proficiency is but a Deficiency Who doth not look upon the Toad as a hatefull creature although it have a Pearle in his head because it is full of Poyson within and all speckled without what is that man to be valued who hath a Pearle of knowledge in his brain if another had it but his inward parts are very wickednesse he swels with poysonous Pride within and his life spotted abroad But here is the difference you shall alway find between the knowledg of an Hyppocrite and the true Christian The Hypocrites knowledge is like the light of the increasing Moon which increaseth in Light and bignesse onely not at all in Heat But the light of the true Christian is like the rising Sun in the morning or the Vernal Sunne in the Spring where light and heat are conjoyned the darknesse and coldnesse of the night is lessened the heat of the day is increased The Moon grows lighter and lighter and bigger and bigger but not hotter and hotter Her Plenilunium or full is as cold as her Wane But the rising Sun we all see doth not onely go higher and higher but growes hotter and hotter The Hypocrite hath onely an increase in knowledge in his Plenilunium and full he hath no heat in Conscience and affections to be discerned the true Christian hath both light and heat increasing alike together There is a four-fold knowledge in the world a knowledge of Speculation which is the hypocrites knowledge a knowledge joined with dislike and disobedience which is the knowledge of the Devils a knowledg joyned with delectation and complacency which is the Angels knowledge And the knowledge joyned with Conscience and good affections which is the Christians The hypocrite with all his swelling knowledge is like those children which have the Rickets whose head indeed growes bigger than another childs but their strength lesse they fall into an Atrophy they thrive not but pine away and die So the hypocrites head is unproportionable to his other parts he is swollen big with notions and opinions but thrives not in substantial graces and grows not strong in Faith and Conscience Look therefore every one to his Conscience and hereby know thy state look well that if thou hast not yet got a good Conscience thou mayest seek to get one if thou hast then seek to hold and keep it if thou hast lost it seek to recover it if it be evil get it amended if ignorant get it informed if erring get it rectified if dead quickened if hard softened if asleep awakened if corrupt purified if unquiet pacified CHAP. XXV The Vse of Exhortation NOw are we come to the last use which is Hortatory which I might make twofold First for Dehortation Secondly of Exhortation But I would now hasten to an end First for Dehortation let me charge thee in the Name of God and upon thy Soul to take heed of an ill Conscience what ever other evils thou mayest lie under Pray with Austin Deliver me Lord from the evill man I mean my self and deliver me from an evill Conscience I mean my own With Agur pray Remove
far from me vanitie and lies With David Deliver my soul O Lord from lying lips Pro. 30. 8. Psal 120. 2. and from a deceitfull tongue Lord cast out this unclean Spirit and Create in me a clean heart and renew in me a right spirit No shipwrack so perilous no disease so dangerous no deceiver so deceitfull n abysse so deep no death so deadly no hell so dark no pit so steep to fall into and so narrow to get out of as the evill Conscincee But I come to the Exhortation which contains a double charge The text is no other then an Apostolicall Exhortation or divine charge therefore this Use must be made or the chiefe Use is not made yet First to each Christian secondly to the Minister especially First to each Christian who makes Conscience of any thing that he especially make it his care to get a good Conscience and to keep it As Solomon of Divine Wisdome so I of Conscience wherein is all practical Wisdome Above all thy getting get that saith he Pro. 4. 5. 7. So say I above all gettings whatsoever get a good Conscience and whatsoever thou gettest more get it still with a good Conscience and with all keeping keep thy conscience keep it pure keep it clean keep it in peace keep it thy friend keep it as thou wouldest keep the apple of thine eye Life and Death are in the power of Conscience it is the principal thing therefore above all getting and keeping look to this exercise thy self daily with the Act. 24. 16. Apostle herein to have thy Conscience alwayes on thy side and have it without offence both to God and man What the Orator answered to one demanding what was principally necessary to make a good Orator Pronounciation said he What second Pronounciation What third Pronounciation he answered still as if Pronounciation did chiefly and wholly make a compleat Orator So do you ask what is most necessary to make a good Christian I answer Conscience And what next if you ask I answer still Conscience And what again Conscience still say I. As of the Scholler comming from the University when he hath been a Student for many years the best Testimony which can be given him is that he hath profited Tam doctrinâ quam moribus In Learning and Religion So the best Testimony that can be given of a Christan going from the Church when he hath been a frequent hearer is That he hath profited tam scientiâ quam Conscientiâ both in science and in Conscience To back and strengthen this exhortation I shall first lay down some Motives to inforce then some Means to direct to the better attaining and retaining a good Conscience Let this move first that God doth weigh Motive 1 and try the Conscience of a man The Lord weigheth the Spirits saith Solomon Gold and Pro. 16. 2. Silver men do weigh Grace and Spirits men cannot God weigheth not Gold or Silver or Honours or Estates but he onely weigheth the Spirits and Consciences of men So much of Conscience as is in any person or duty or action or suffering so much of thank and worth with God This is thank-worthy with God if a man for Conscience suffer and take it patiently That ●ction is denominated good that proceeds from a principle of Conscience that suffering good which is for Conscience So much Conscience toward God so much Comfort is coming to thee from God So much Conscience before God so much confidence before God But on the other side if Conscience be Motive 2 wanting a man shall suffer losse of all he hath and lose the thing he hath done or suffered or expended When a man shall say with Jehu See my zeal for the Lord I have fasted I hove fought I have been active I have suffered God will say Have you fasted at all to me have you done all this out of Conscience When you fasted was it not to your selves and when you did eat was it not to your selves therefore walk in the sparks which you have kindled If you have done well and truly Conscientiously and Religiously as Jotham said once do you then rejoyce in Jud. 9. 19. Conscience and let Conscience rejoyce in you but if otherwise a fire will break out of that bramble the evil Conscience and consume you and all your works What a mighty stickler was Jehu a man of an active and impetuous spirit yet he lost his reward for all his pains and seeming zeal his Conscience was not right Ananias lost his cost charges after he had contributed so much Alexander lost his reward and comfort after he had suffered so much Judas lost al after he had followed Christ so long and preached Christ to others so often Mot. 3 This leads a man to perfect and compleat happinesse both here and hereafter Here in this world it brings two the greatest benefits being the onely way Ad bene beatèque vivendum Ad bene beatèque moriendum In Life Ad bene beateque vivendum A good Conscience is the onely way to the good and blessed life This makes the good dayes whether thou be in prosperity or in adversity First if in Prosperity this will be as a hedge about all thou hast As the Candle of God in thy Tabernacle as the widdowes Cruse and Barrel will never fail of somewhat to supply and support thee 2. If in Adversity this will be like the good Houswifes candle that goes not out by night Or like Israels pillar of fire that will not leave thee in a wildernesse This like Ruth to Naomi will stick to thee stay by thee goe with thee where thou liest it will lie and as thou farest it will take part with thee when all other comforts and dearest friends like Orpah lift up the voyce and weep and take their leave of thee This like Ittai the Gittite to David saith 2 Sam. 15. 21. as the Lord liveth in what place soever thou art be it in life or death there will I be This turns Reproach into Honour takes up a stigmatizing invective as if it were a Garland throwes the viper into the fire and feels no harm This fears neither fury of Tyrants nor fire of furnace It dreads neither Anakim nor Emim nor Zamzummim This makes a man more than a Conqueror Rom. 8. 37. which is a very high and bold expression of a poor Paul why Paul who art thou A Conquerour is the highest Title he gives Laws to Kingdomes his place is above that of a King it hath been held more glory to make a conquest than to wear a Crown Al Kings have been crowned all Kings have not been Conquerours yet are we Conquerours and more than Conquerours First The Conquerour may overcome to day yet be overcome to morrow of the same enemy Victorem a victo superari saepe videmus Secondly The Conquerour may find the same enemy increasing by new Associations and then shake of his Yoke Thirdly The Conquerour
his head this is the day it hath longed for and the place where it desires to be heard 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. Hereby we know saith the Apostle that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him for if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence or boldnesse before God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Libertatem aut audaciam quid vis dicendi This will make the Godly man in that great Audit to give up his account with joy and not with grief 4. To all Eternity Conscientia bona perfectè tranquilla et lae●a est formalis essentialis beatitudo sanctorum in vita futura Ames de Cons l. 1. c. 15. Lastly which is above all it leads him the way ad Gloriosè Regnandum aeternùmque Triumphandum It is the step to the highest glory and is the state of highest Beatitude To be feasted with the fruits of a good Conscience this is Angels food and one of the sweet-meats of Heaven As the evil accusing and tormenting Conscience is one of the greatest miseries in Hell causing the fire never to be quenched because their worm never dieth So the good Conscience is one principal Delicate in Heaven Therefore in that day Christ will not onely tell the Godly how much he hath done and suffered for them but he will tell his Father what they have done and suffered for him I was hungry these have fed me thirsty these gave me drink These have kept the word of my Patience These were not ashamed of my Name where Satan had his Throne These have kept their Garments unspotted therefore they shall walk with me in white Hence it is that the Crown of Glory is not onely called a Crown of Grace because the gift of God But the Crown of Righteousnesse because the Reward of this warfare for faith and good Conscience Then shall the Godly be satisfied from himself and the fruit of his hands shall be given him Then shall flow Pro. 12. 14 forth from the belly of each Beleever River● of living water rivers of Peace Joy Comfort to all Eternity where Repentance and Faith and Hope and Patience and Knowledge and Tongues and Prophecying shall cease there shall good Conscience continue and in it Life and Joy and Glory Consider on the other side the miseries of an ill Conscience in every condition both in Mot. 4 life death and after both First in life In midst of prosperity he can have no security Job 20. per totum read especially ver 16 17 22 23 24. He shall suck the poyson of Asps the Vipers tongue shall slay him He shall not see the Rivers the Flouds the Brooks of Honey and Butter In the fulnesse of his sufficiency he shall be in straights Every hand of the wicked shall come upon him when he is about to fill his belly God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him and shall rain it upon him while he is yet eating c. and so Job 15. 21. A dreadful sound is in his ears in prosperity the destroyer shall come upon him As Adonijah in the day of his Coronation riseth from the table he and all his Guests fly and shift for themselves a short Reign a mourning Feast Or as Belshazzar in his Banquet when he sees the Hand-writing dread and horrour seizeth on him And as the Syrians upon a secret noise God caused 2 Kin. 7. 6. them to hear fled disorderly from their Tents leaving all their wealth and good chear a booty to the hunger-famished Israelites What torment like that of an ill Conscience of which that forenamed Authour Dr. Stoughton ubi supra excellently speaks All outward blessings saith he cannot make that man happy that hath an ill Conscience no more than warm cloathes can produce heat in a dead carkasse if you would heap never so many upon it There is no peace to the wicked Aut si pax bello pax ea deterior For this man in his greatest fortunes is but like him who is worshipt in the street with cap and knee but as soon as he is stept within doors is cursed and rated by a scolding wife Like him that is lodged in a Bed of Ivory covered with cloth of Gold but all his bones within are broken Like a book of Tragedies bound up in Velvet all fair without but black within the leaves are Gold but the lines are bloud O the rack O the torment O the horrour of a guilty mind There is no hell so dark as an evill conscience Secondly but much more in adversity ill Conscience that hath long lien silent and quiet is apt to cry out and fly in the face as Josephs Brethren in their distresse were forced to cry out Gods hand was just upon them Their sin which was before Peccatum susurrans is now Peccatum clamans such cry out as Saul in his distresse I am sore distressed the Philistims make war upon 1 Sam. 28. 15. me and the Lord hath forsaken me and answers me no more then poor soul he goes to hell for comfort and accordingly he sped Such have neither Joy in Life nor Hope in death Vtrinque timidi as Eusebius Euseb l 6. cap. 42. speaks of some in the time of the Persecution under Decius Cowardly and unsound Christians who were timidi cum ad moriendum ●um ad sacrifi●andum A lamentable case neither would their Conscience serve to let them Sacrifice to the Heathen Idols nor would their heart serve them to die for refusing So were they in a miserable strait between two dangers of losing Life and wounding Conscience and could no way satisfy themselves whereas good Conscience had seen in such a case what was presently to be chosen Ill Conscience never made good Martyr yet But there are three times especially wherein ill Conscience proclaimeth Terror and Rev. 8. 13. as the Angell in the Revelation flies over the head of a sinner crying Woe Woe Woe First One Woe in life Secondly Two Woes at death Thirdly But Three Woes at the day of Judgement 1 Woe in this life The first woe is in this life But this how dreadfull soever is the least because the shortest and hath an end in a little space of a few dayes or years therefore it is said the first woe is passed but behold two worse woes come shortly upon it Rev. 9. 12. The Second woe is at death This is a great 2. Woe at death woe double to the former the furnace is heated seven times hotter than it could be in this Life And as the Apostle saith of the Godlies afflictions all the sufferings of this present time are not to be compared to that Glory that is to follow so may we say all the sufferings of this life to the wicked whether in Body or in Spirit are nothing to be compared to those that follow This is a long lasting woe But yet of the second woe it is also said
the Counsell of the ungodly least at last thou be set in the Chaire of the scorner Evill company corrupts the best dispositions we see godly Jehosaphat in company with a wicked Ahab complementing 1 Kin. 22. 4 too farre and complying too too much I am as thou art saith he c. 5 In things doubtfull be well advised or forbeare and take the surer and safer way This is a necessary rule to be observed I meane not the safer way in outward respect This often blinds the eyes of the wise and perverts the judgement of the judicious But of inward safety before God I speake As for instance Vsury some allow most condemne it now what is to bee done Faith and Troth some say is no swearing others say they have too much appearance of evill I am sure thy Conscience will say they are more then Yea Yea Nay Nay Some say to Drink and pledge healths to play at Cards and Dice to follow the fashions of the times The long haire of men the naked necks backs and breasts of women are all lawfull Others are of another minde Judge thou what is safest and let those be thy rules to judge by Eph. 5. 11. Have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darkness but rather reprove them Phi. 4. 8. Whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are just whatsoever are honest whatsoever are pure whatsoever are lovely and whatsoever are of good report thinke on these things and doe them c. Resolve thou what is safest with thy selfe when sometimes thou mayest plainly see danger of sin lying on the one hand and none at all on the othe The wary traveller when night comes on and he not perfect in his way will rather chuse to take up his lodging and lye short then adventure to goe on and wander in the darke or be in danger to bee set upon It is safe to lye short often goe not ever to the utmost of thy Liberty Quodcunque Licere potest Libere non debet 6 Take heed of worldly-mindednesse no enemy worse to Conscience These thornes choak the best seeds of Grace and this Canker eates out the very bowells of Conscience For a piece of Bread such a one will transgresse and for one small morsell sell a Birth-right Take heed of that maxime of the Mammonist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gaine is the Godlinesse This is the root of all evill when the man is resolved to bee rich and will dye worth thousands leave his Children such portions become a purchaser drive a great Trade though he dye Ditior quam Sanctior These resolutions send Conscience packing Then is the wilde Boar broke into the field of Conscience all is rooted up These will break their word betray their Trust deceive their Brother violate their Faith falsify their Wares Weights Measures lye at catch for advantage and for an accursed wedge of Gold bring the fire and curse of God into their Tents and Families What is become of that old honesty integrity and plain dealing that was wont to be in the world Where is that Breviary and Epitome of all justice as Jerom call'd it to be found Whatsoever yee would that men should doe to you doe ye the same to them Men many times in bargaining make more large and cheap Penni-worths of their Conscience Faith Hope Christianity yea salvation then of their wares you shall have too much of them to helpe off with these What more ordinary then to say as I am a Christian as I hope for mercy if there be any faith in me upon my Conscience upon my Salvation and upon my Soul such have Venalemque fidem Vendibilemque animam a low-priced faith and a vendible soul Seldom doe riches and a good Conscience dwell under the same Roofe Satan knowes where to have such at any turne Balaam in pursuit of the wages of iniquity will not be stopt by any Angell in the way or a bruised Legge Gehazi will steale out some private way when he thinks his Masters eye is not upon him Satan knew who carryed the Bagge among the Apostles and that thirty silver pieces would make him swallow the Soppe and any the most opprobrious open reproofe too yet goe on with his purpose to sell both his Saviours body and his owne soul Take heed your hearts be not surcharged with cares of the world and deceitfulnesse of Lu. 21. 34. Riches as well as with surfeiting and drunkennesse More go to hell that are the worlds good husbands buying selling building planting c. than of perjury blasphemie buggery incest Atheisme and malicious despighting the Spirit of Grace These are no light sins they were Sodomes sins This is no Gospell life it was the life of the old world whom God destroyed The worlds best husbands are commonly heavens worst husbands The penny and Earthly wise is the pound and the Pearle-foolish How seldome are those wise to Salvation who are so over-wise in their Generation Finally take heed and again I say take heed of an erroneus Conscience This is indeed as the wild-fire in the standing corn or as Sampsons Foxes with their fire-brands in their tails These are as the wild Boar or as the ravening Bear No stopping this Fool in his folly A wild Asse used to the wildernesse that snuffeth up the wind at her pleasure Jer. 2. 24. in her occasion who can turn her away Saul when an erroneous zealous Pharisee thought no better service could be done to God than to make havock of the Christians This Alexander and Hymenaeus what Heresies did they broach after they once fell away and because they found not Paul as vertiginous mutable as themselves they hate defame and persecute his person and blaspheme his Doctrine Oh how sad a sight it is to behold that many hopeful Professours formerly after they are once leavened with the bitter leaven of the Pharisees how do they in their hearts undervalue and contemn and it may be in their speech openly cry out of and seek to put all the disgrace and disesteem upon such faithfull Ministers whom themselves did most magnifie and prize judging them worthy of their very eyes in their heads Oh the unsavoury salt of Errour how doth it infatuate and distaste every thing till it be cast out to the dunghil It is a dolefull story that of Valens mentioned Postea nec Arrianus nec Christianus visus est licentiam omnibus dedit sua sacra celebrandi gentibus ac Judaeis nec non omnibus haere●icis Idolatricas vanitate à Joviniano destructas reflorescere permissit Jovis cultum Dionysii Cererisque sacra non in occulto celebrabant sed per medias plate●● Bacchantes ubique cur sitabant cum illis solum inimicum se praebebat qui Apostoliam doctrinam praedicare videbantur Theod. l. 4. c. 24. before who having been sound and zealous in the true profession in the time of Julian yet afterwards being Emperour having married an Arrian wife and being
is certaine whatsoever Trade the other was of how ominously fatall is it to the undertakers themselves when private Mechanickes do presumptuously invade the Ministery and become publique Preachers 3. There is no dividing between Faith and a good Conscience leave Orthodox Faith and farewell good Conscience or let go good Conscience and you have seene the last of Faith it sinkes it shipwracks 4. How true is that of 2 Tim. 3. 13. That evil men and Seducers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waxe worse and worse deceiving and being deceived seldome staying when they begin to shrinke from their former sincerity and strictnesse till they arrive at the highest of impiety going from sinne to sinne and from Error to Error till by the just judgement of God they are given over to become open Blasphemers and outragious Persecutors 5. Every vicious and infectious Teacher and every bold Broacher of Doctrines corrupting and staining the simplicity of the Faith and every Member of a corrupt and dissolute Conscience are not to be Tollerated and permitted in a new Testament Church but all such are deservedly excommunicated the Church who have once excommunicated Conscience and they justly suffer in being delivered up to Sathan who have wickedly sinned in delivering Doctrines of Sathan No liberty here you see for every kinde of Conscience 6. Yet are not visible and open censures but for visible and open sinnes not for Errors in judgement concealed but published not for want Publice declarantur pertinere ad regnum Satanae quippe qui non pertineant ad regnum Christi Piscator of faith but for opposing it 7 Excommunication Clave non errante is a solemne and dreadfully operative Ordinance a shutting out of Heaven a shutting up in Hell him who is justly cast out of the Churches fellow●hip by that censure He is delivered up to Satan 8 The end of Excommunication and all Church censures is not to serve to the destruction 2 Cor. 10. 8 13. 10. 1 Cor. 5. 5. of the Censured or Private revenge of the Censurers but to edification onely That the offender may be terrified and reclaimed The Traditi sunt ad emendandum non ad perdendum Sedul in locum flesh destroyed that the soule may be saved and that others may be warned and so the infection stayed That they may learne not to blaspheme Vt Castigatione hac adducti desinant falsum suum dogma spargere Piscator But none of these doe I intend to stand upon though I shall have occasion to meet with them in prosecuting the intended Doctrine To the words Holding Faith and a good Conscience c. Holding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Piscator It signifies properly Having and so translated 1 Pet. 1 Pet 3. 16. 3. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Having a good Conscience here Holding To have and to hold in our English speaking are usually put together It is not enough once to have or for some while to have Had unlesse we ever have and hold them Faith Either take it first for that which we call Grace-faith Fides quâ creditur That hee should Hold Act Maintaine Exercise the grace of saving and lively Faith Or Secondly for the Doctrine of Faith Fides quâ creditur In which sence it is used Chap. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. Jud. v. 3. And Expositors do generally understand it so here that Timothy should 1 Tim. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. ●ud v. 3. hold the whol●some forme of sound words and still retaine the old received Faith in Orthodox Doctrine for the grace of saving Faith will not be long kept in the heart unlesse we keepe the Doctrine of sound faith and principles in the head And a good Conscience Conscience you seldome 1 Tim. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19 see it without an Epethite and this usually is his Epethite Good Conscience so in many places Cap. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19. Faith had no Epethite of Good you doe not Ordinarily see other Graces called Good as good Love good Repentance Zeale Hope Patience or the like But ever good Conscience The other graces are commonly Nemo tam perditus est ut sit omni conscientia planè expers Ames good or few have them but those that are good But Conscience is a thing which all have though a good Conscience but few therefore get and hold a good Conscience or have none at all Which some having put away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua repulsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de trudo depello arceo ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trudo pello Act 7. 27. 39 Beza Expulsa Piscator quam Repellentes Vulgar Transl thrusling it away This word is used Acts 7. 27. He that did his Neighbour wrong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trust Moses away as a busie body and an intruding intermedler so did these thrust away Conscience as if it had been a troublesome usurper over them So after Act 7. 39. The rebelling Israelites thrust him from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They would cast off and eashiere Moses no more receive his Dictates nor obey his directions but would set up another Captaine whom they would follow or lead rather into Egypt Thus did these in the Text cashiere and throw off conscience from his be trusted employment and would follow their owne swinge This word is used also Rom. 11. 1. 2. Hath God cast away Ro. 11. 1. 2 his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and v. 2. He answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath not cast away or reprobated his people whom he foreknew But these did reprobate Conscience and would make it a cast away as not to be retained in times of Gospell Light and liberty So that in this place the Translation is with the softest and more gentle it is here then in any other place when it is rendered they put away good Conscience It might have been read they thrust off threw away cashiered disclaimed and even reprobated it Concerning faith made Shipwrack Fide Vacui facti sunt They were emptied and eased of their faith Syriack transl Their souls are Shipwrack'd their Faith Grace Ship-wrack'd aleak being sprung in Conscience the Vessel they lost all they had and saved not the use Comfort Confidence Joy or feeling of former Faith and beleeving Nor did they preserve their former simplicitie and integrity of judgement in matter of Doctrine and Truth But as Conscience was reprobated to their judgement their judgement is now wholly reprobate concerning the Faith Now the words being opened you see they are a Magazine or Panoply of Armor and Ammunition to furnish Timothy and each good Minister yea every Christian with the most necessary and usefull armes both to warre that good warfare v. 18. And to prevent this evill shipwracke v. 19. Timothy thy charge is that thou war a good warfare thy duty is
follow the example of all sufferings Jesus Christ who being 1 Pet. 2. 21 22 23. reviled reviled not again when he suffered be threatened not but committed his cause to him who judgeth righteously yet had he done no evil neither was any guile found in his mouth 6. Lastly be sure thou commit thy self to God when thou art suffering according to the will of God in well doing so is the Apostles rule 1 Pet. 4. 19. Suffering times had not need bee sinning times he will never make good Martyr that is not a good Saint first The Israelites were warned not to go Ex. 2. 22. out of their doors but to be within at their Sacrifice when the Destroyer was abroad Daniel was within at his Prayers when the Inquisitors came to apprehend him Many cautions are to be kept in suffering times and many ingredients must be in our sufferings that they may be comfortable sufferings 1. It is not poena but causa was said of old Cum boni malique pariter afflicti sunt non ideo ipsi distincti non sunt quia distinctum non est quod utrique perpessi sunt manet enim dissimilitudo passorum etiam in similitudine passionum licet sub eodem tormento non est idem virtus vitium Aug. de Civit. Dei l. 1. c. 8. that is true but not enough 2. I may say it is not poena and causa too that makes a Martyr but conscientia 3. Nor is it every conscientia but conscientia Dei 4. Nor is it poena causa conscientia but vita that makes the Martyr 5. But poena causa conscientia vita patientia aut modus patiendi makes the compleat Martyr A good cause a good conscience a good life a good death a good matter to suffer for a good manner to suffer in make the happie sufferer and the honourable Martyr Thus much of the Passive or suffering Conscience CHAP. XIIII Of the last Good Conscience the Conscience of Charitie THus are we come to speak of the last of Of the conscience of charity those ten particular good Consciences which we propounded at first that is the Conscience of Charity which I have reserved this last place for not because it is of the last or least worth but because the world hath put it in the last place if so be yet it hath left it any place at all This is that which the Apostle speaks of 1 Tim. 1. 5. As the end and perfection of the Law and Gospel too Charity out of a pure heart and of a good Conscience and faith unfaigned Whereever you see truth of Charity question not there the truth of Conscience The more of Charity the more of Conscience And the now totall want almost of this in the world argues the generall want of good Conscience in this Iron Age of the world These are the daies foretold by our Saviour wherein all iniquity doth abound Mat. 24. 12 and vice increase because Conscience doth decrease and Charity wax cold The world was never more full of knowledg nor emptie of Charitie 1 Cor. 8. 1. All have that knowledg which puffs up few that charity which should build up and while Conscience in most men calls for freedom Charity is by all left bound But it is by this badge of Charity that you may know a Disciple of Christ better then by the Joh. 13. 35 Language of a Galilean Now this Charity is twofold Charity of two kinds Externall or Civill Ecclesiasticall or Spirituall and Christian And this Externall Charity is threefold respecting three sorts of persons 1 Poore 2 Neighbours 3 Enemies 1. To the poore is to be shewed the love or Outward or civil and that first to the poor charity of beneficence To the neighbour and friend a love of benevolence and to the enemie a love of forgiveness Tranquilla Conscientia est omnibus dulcis nulli gravis utens amico ad gratiam inimico ad patientiam cunctis ad benevolentiam quibus potest ad beneficentiam Bernard de Consc 1. To the poore is to be shewed the charity of beneficence and well-doing This kinde of charity is the worlds grand Benefactor the poores great Almoner the widows Treasurer the Orphans Guardian the oppressed mans Patron This lendeth eyes to the blinde feet to the lame deals out bread to the hungry clothing to the naked maketh the widows heart sing for joy and brings upon the Donour the blessing of him who was ready to perish How did Zacheus shew the truth of the work of grace upon his Conscience but by those first-fruits of his charity Behold Lord the half of my goods I give to the poor Luk. 19. 8. How did Job vindicate his conscientiousness and sincerity against all his friends detracting calumnies Job 30. 12 13 14 15 16. but by such unquestionable demonstrations of his charity I delivered the poor that cried the fatherless and him that had no helper The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me and I made the widows heart to sing for joy I was eyes to the blinde and feet was I to the lame I was a father to the poor c. Religious Obadiah left it to Elias to judge of his sincerity and whether he truly feared God or no 1 Kin. 18. 13. Was it not told my Lord what I did when Jezabel slew the Prophets of the Lord how I hid an hundred men of the Lords Prophets and sed them by fifty in a cave with bread and water Nehemiah that matchlesse pattern of a self-denying Magistrate had much comfort in relating what oppressions he had removed and what ease he had procured to his Country how chargeable others had been how charitable he not so much as ever requiring the Governours bread nor his ordinary allowance but had at his own charge redeemed many Captives relieved many impoverished and when he hath done concludeth to the comfort of his Conscience Nehem. 5. 19. Think upon me my God for good according to all that I have done for this people To be short it is one of the good mans Characters Psal 112. 5. That he is mercifull and giveth and of the good womans That she stretcheth out her hand to the poor and in her heart and mouth is the law of kindness Prov. 31. 20 26. Abraham and Lot so famous of old for faith and piety were persons as eminent for their charity liberality and hospitality What should I speak of the Alms of Cornelius who hath a compleat description of a god●y man applied to him That he was a devout man one that feared God with all his house who gave much Almes to the People and prayed to God alway These Alms of his are said to come into remembrance with God Acts 10. 2 4. Yea Every liberall soul deviseth liberall things and by liberall things shall he stand Isai 32. 8. When the Instruments of the Churle are evil he deviseth wicked devices
against the poor to make empty the soul of the hungry and to cause the drink of the thirsty to fail Isa 32. 6 7. Conscience knows it is bound in duty as much to shew charitie to neighbour as love to God and to the poor neighbour this love of beneficence and compassion as to God the love of obedience and complacency This is indeed cum aliis scire to know and feel the heart of a stranger and widow and Exo. 23. 9. to say with Adrian What I would have the rich be to me were I poor that must I do to him my self being rich Yea this is cum Deo scire who considers the poor and needy relieveth the stranger He doth execute saith Moses Deut. 10. 18 19. the judgement of the fatherless and widow and loveth the stranger in giving him food and raiment Love ye therefore the stranger for ye were strangers in the Land of Egyp But alas the ill consciences of these times What meaneth the bleating of the sheep and lowing of the exen shall I say Or What meaneth the beating of the poor to pieces and grinding of their very faces saith the Lord Surely he will enter into judgement with the Antients of the People and with the Princes thereof because the spoil of the poor is in their houses Isa 3. 14 15. What judgments do you read threatened in all the Prophets for this unmercifull neglecting or oppressing of the poor Amos 2. 6. God threatens Israel not to turn away their punishment because they made no more of the poor man and his cause then of a pair of old shooes The like Micah 3. 3 4. Surely this is one of the crying sins of our times that the cause is not judged the cause of the poor and the right of the needie But Jer. 5. 28 29. may we not say Hath not the Lord begun to visit for these things and shall be not be avenged on such a Nation as this ere he hath done Rom. 14. 15. When the Apostle in a certain case would tell a man he walks not conscientiously he tels him Thou walkest not charitably What is it therefore to walk charitably but undeniably to walk conscientiously I conclude this therefore with the Apostles exhortation Col. 3. 12. Put on as the Elect of God holy and beloved bowels of mercies kindness humbleness of minde c. And 2 Cor. 8. 7 9. As therefore ye abound in other graces in faith utterance and knowledge see ye abound in this grace also for ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ who though he was rich yet for your sakes he became poor that ye through his pove●ty might be rich This is to be like-minded unto Christ you see 2. There is another charity of benevolence 2 To thy Neighbour to be shewed to thy neighbour whom thou art to love as thy self this is the second great Commandment which so great a part of the Law and Prophets do hang and comment upon Hast thou a friend then shew thy self friendly Mat. 22. 39. Pro. 18. 24. Rom. 13. 8. owe no other debt to any man but this to love one another and this we must owe to every man yet owe it so as to be also paying the debt and pay it so as also to be yet owing the duty alwaies owing and alwaies paying Debts of Justice must be so payed by every honest man that they may be no longer owing but debts of charitie though daily paid must daily be acknowledged and yet we are daily in debt till we come thither where the love of God and brother shall be consummate and where love shall be all in all O what a pleasant and delightfull sight it is to see neighbour with neighbour brother with brother living in this mutuall unity and benevolence there is best living there is best air there is best earth Psal 133. 1 2 3 4. There is best aire perfumed with like ointment to that which Aaron was consecrated with like which none other for any use was to be Exod. 30. 32. compounded and there the best and richest Soile As the dew of Hermon and as that dew that fell upon the Hills of Sion There the Lord commandeth his richest blessings and life for ever But what stinking Aire is Meshech and what noisome Earth is Kedar Ill dwelling with those that hate peace and are still for war Psal 120. The third Charitie and Love is to thy Enemies a love of forgiveness at least and a 3. To thy enemie contending with him for the most glorious victorie not to return him like evil for like or greater for less but to overcom any evil he hath done thee with all that good which thou canst do for him This is the hardest and therefore highest pitch of Love A Lesson not to be learned in the Philosophers Schools Rom. 12. 20 21. Luke 6. 27 28. or in the Pharisees Synagogues but in Christs Sanctuarie and is one of the highest points of Gospel Divinitie and Christian Perfection The Pharisees of old had said Thou must love thy neighbour but corrupted the Text with another addition Thou maiest hate thy enemie Our Saviours command is that thou Love also thy enemie that thou bless them that curse that thou pray for them that revile and persecute yea that we reach out the hand to help those who have lift up the heel to hurt us What thank is it to be but as Heathens and Publicans Mat. 5. 46. Luke 6. 32 33. They are friendly to their friends yea this may be found in Hell Satan is not divided against Satan the devil himself will carrie it fair with those who correspond with him But to cross thy nature and to overcome thy self first that thou maist overcome thy enemie at last Nobile vincendi genus hoc This is a divine and heavenly Spirit and a divine kinde of Love this is to be like Our Father which is in heaven who is kinde to Luk. 6. 35. the unthankful and unkinde and like to his Son on Earth who praied for his enemies and gave his life for those who sought his death Therefore the Apostle addes Col. 3. 12 13. to bowels of mercies and kindeness which we should put on humbleness meekness long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiving one another if any man have a quarrell against any as Christ forgave you so also do ye This Love then must not bee a bare negative Magna virtus est si non laedas cum à quo laesus es Magna gloria si cui nocere potuisti parcas Nobile vindictae genus est ignoscere victo Bern. de inter domo 2. Inward and Ecclesiasticall and Non-revenging Love not to render railing for railing in●urie for injurie vim vi repellere but it must bee an over-flowing over-coming and a Non-removed and unabated Love that when hee doth strive to weare out thy patience by continually reiterated and new provocations thou maiest