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A08989 Christian see to thy conscience or a treatise of the nature, the kinds and manifold differences of conscience, all very briefly, and yet more fully laid open then hitherto by Richard Bernard, parson of Batcombe in Somerset-Shire. Anno 1630. Bernard, Richard, 1568-1641. 1631 (1631) STC 1928; ESTC S113805 87,184 494

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at the last day And therefore by this so large an Epistle Right worshipfull you may see how it is not onely fit but very necessarie also to be acquainted with Conscience which in most is without all authority to bind them to the good behauior so loosely so licentiously do most men liue But blessed be God that you haue better learned Christ and haue felt the commanding power of the word and the comfort of a good Conscience by shewing your selues Patternes to that your wel reformed Family In which true pietie is attended vpon with loue vnfaigned one towards another and your profession adorned with workes of charitie abroad Your frequent reading of holy Scriptures I well know affords you examples not a few of holie duties but you want not a rare president at home that most honorable Ladie Marchionesse your noble Mother Whose singular humility great bountie desire to please God loue to his word in the powerfull plainnesse thereof and performance of good duties are much to be admired especially in so great a Personage in one so verie aged full of daies in one so long brought vp in her former yeares in the most eminent place of royall seruice vnder that famous Queene Elizabeth I hope I need not to stirre your readie minds to a thankfull acknowledging to God of this and other his mercies nor to excite you to striue for the euerlasting hope of blessednesse seeing that your iustifying Conscience accompanying your iustifying faith as I am perswaded giueth you good assurance in your waies of well doing For your happie continuance wherein I am bold in this ample manner to present vnto your courteous acceptance the excellencie of Conscience and to commend the same to your Christian meditations And so I humblie take leaue in my heartie prayers commending that right Honourable Lady with your worthy Selues beloued Children and all your religious houshold to the fauour and guidance of the Almighty euer resting Your worships in any Christian seruice at command Ric. Bernard Batcomb Calend. Ian. 1630. THE CONTENTS of the insuing Treatise THere is such a thing as is called Conscience Chap. 1. Conscience is distinct from all other faculties of the soule Chap. 2. Of the rule and power of it ouer them and how knowne Chap. 3. Of the name of Conscience and of the distinct knowledge thereof from the vnderstanding Chap. 4. What this knowledge of Conscience is and how described Chap. 5. Of Con-science as it is knowledge with another Chap. 6. Of the rule binding Conscience Chap. 7. With whom Conscience hath to doe Chap. 8. What it meddles with inwardly in man Chap. 9. What outwardly it hath to doe concerning him whose Conscience it is Chap. 10. Of the first act and office of Conscience Chap. 11. Of the second Chap. 12. Of the third touching things commanded forbidden indifferent Chap. 13. Of the fourth act Ch. 14. Of the fifth act witnessing with or against vs and here are three questions touching the qualitie of Conscience accusing Chap. 15. Of the sixth and last act of Conscience Chap. 16. Of the reasons why God hath placed such a thing within Man Chap. 17. Of the excellency of the Conscience aboue all other faculties of the soule Chap. 18. Of the causes why men are not subiect to the power of Conscience as they ought Ch. 19. What is to be done to make vs become obedient to Conscience Chap. 20. Of the kinds of Conscience and first of the euill Conscience Chap. 21. where is shewed in whom it is how it comes and continues and the remedy to amend it Of the twofold distinction of the euill Conscience the still and stirring Chap. 22. Of the still euill Conscience in generall of the causes how to know it of the effects with the remedies Chap. 23. Of the dead Conscience Chap. 24. Of the blind Conscience in Heathen in Christians the misery of such so led and the remedy Chap. 25. Of the sleepy Conscience with the causes and the remedie Chap. 26. Of the secure Conscience in whom it is the causes thereof and the remedies Chap. 27. Of the lukewarme Conscience Chap. 28. Of the large Conscience Chap. 29. The Cheuerill Conscience Chap. 30. The benummed Conscience Chap. 31. And cauterized Conscience with all their causes and remedies Ch. 32. Of the stirring ill Conscience in generall with the causes effects remedies C. 33. Of the erroneous Conscience with the difference betweene it and the blind Conscience in whom it is the causes thereof effects and remedy Chap. 34. with certaine questions about the same Of the superstitious Conscience and whereabout it is exercised with the causes and remedy Chap. 35. Of the scrupulous Conscience the causes effects and remedies Chap. 36. Of the terrifying Conscience with the causes effects and remedies Chap. 37. Of the desperate Conscience the causes thereof effects and remedies Chap. 38. Of the good Conscience in generall Chap. 39. Of the naturall good Conscience Chap. 40. Of the morall good Conscience with the helpes thereto the goodnesse of it and yet insufficient to assure a man of hope in heauen who they bee which only haue this Conscience Chap. 41. Of the regenerate Conscience what it is in whom it is the causes the excellency and effects of it Chap. 42. Of the Gospell binding this Conscience to what it bindeth and yet from what it freeth the regenerate Conscience of the difference betweene the Conscience regenerate and vnregenerate Chap. 43. Of the tender Conscience in whom it is the effects of it meanes to get it that it may be troublesome the difference betweene it and scrupulositie and how to keep it from it Chap. 44. Of the wounded Conscience the causes the continuance longer or shorter time the effects and preparatiues to cure it of the soueraigne Salue and Cordialls after how to keepe from a wounded Conscience of the difference betweene it and the desperate and betweene it and melancholike passion Chap. 45. 46. 47. Of the quiet good Conscience how obtained the effects with the difference betweene the quiet ill Conscience and it Chap. 48. Of the vpright Conscience how gotten and the effect thereof Chap. 49. Of the pure Conscience in whom it is how gotten the effects of it the signes thereof how to keepe it pure Ch. 50. Of the iustifying Conscience how it iustifieth wherein it consists how it differs from a iustifying faith of the comfortable effects thereof and how to keeke it Chap. 51. Of the singular benefit of the regenerate quiet pure vpright and iustifying Conscience Chap. 52. Of the difference betweene Confidence of a good Conscience and presumption from a deceitful heart Ch. 53. where is set downe in whom the one and the other is with their differing causes and effects Lastly of Conscience continuance here in this life at death at last Day in Heauen and in Hell Chap. 54. CHRISTIAN SEE TO THY CONSCIENCE CHAP. 1. That there is such a thing in Man as is called Conscience COnscience
is a better intelligencer then the morall conscience hath for the moralist hath not his mind renewed as the regenerat man hath who knoweth what that good acceptable and perfect will of Rom. 12. 2 God is 3. This Conscience is informed by the renewed mind in the sauing knowledge of Gods will according to the law written anew in the mind and heart Heb. 8. 10. 4. This works sincere obedience so that in simplicity godly sincerity the regenerate haue their conuersation in the World 2. Cor. 1. 12. Lastly this obedience is performed both to the law and Gospell For the regenerat mans Conscience is bound as well by the Gospell as by the law vnto all holy obedience and the mind renewed propounds the precepts of the one as well as of the other vnto Conscience to worke obedience Section 2. In whom it is THis Conscience regenerate is in all the Elect of God called by the Gospell of Iesus Christ such as be borne againe of water and the Holy Ghost Ioh. 3. 5. and are made new Creatures in Christ 2. Cor. 5. 17. hauing Gods image repaired in them in knowledge holinesse and righteousnesse Eph. 4. 24. Col. 3. 10. whereby they do wholy entirely resigne vp themselues in obedience and humility to be guided by such a Conscience without restriction or euasion in respect of pleasure profit or preferment thoroughout the whole course of their liues Section 3. Of the causes hereof THis regenerat Conscience is wrought by Gods Spirit which reneweth vs Tit. 3. 5. The instrumentall meanes is the Gospel called the ministration of the spirit 2. Cor. 3. 8. because the spirit is receiued by it Gal. 3. Section 4. Of the excellencie of it THis Conscience so regenerate First hath acquaintance with Gods spirit Rom. 9. 1. 2. Secondly vpon this holy acquaintance they ioyne together to beare the regenerat man witnesse that hee is the Child of God Rom. 8. 16. that hee is desirous of others saluation and grieued for their obstinacy and blindnesse Rom. 9. 1. 2. Thirdly Farther vpon this acquaintance the Regenerat man hath now a kind of holy familiarity with God yet so as it is with all reuerence and humility Hee can now heare Gods law laid open without terrour He now can poure out his soule before God lay open all his sinnes in the sight of God with hope of remission which before he durst not though neuer so morally honest Fourthly This Conscience through such spirituall acquaintance is alwaies accompanied with spirituall graces with vnfaigned faith a pure heart Christian charity 1. Tim. 1. 5. with willingnesse to liue honestly Heb. 13. 18. with simplicity and godly sincerity 2. Cor. 1. 12. Section 5. Of the effects hereof SO as the effects of it cannot but bee admirable For first it exacts of vs attendance to Gods seruice and herein it cannot endure dead workes from which it is purged Heb. 9. 14. so as it puts life in vs and cannot endure to haue vs heare read pray sing nor preach coldly drowsily deadly nor to rest vpon the worke wrought Secondly it requireth vniuersall obedience for matter in all things for time alwaies Heb. 13. 18. Act. 23. 1. Thirdly it discouereth vnto our selues the most secret and intricate closet of the heart whatsoeuer is ill it pursueth it till it worke in the heart detestation Fourthly it lets not the regenerat man slip without a caueat and remurmuration and if he fall it lets him not rest but pincheth and nippeth him till hee take knowledge of his sinne till he see it sorrowes for it and returneth It cannot endure to haue him sinke vnder sinne nor sleep securely till he hath sought reconciliation with God Fifthly If it find him to grow slack in good duties it will euer be telling him of it it lets him not wax remisse and carelesse but by stinging instigations pricks him forward to his due obedience And therefore should we striue to get this Conscience and hauing it to make much of it as that which will guide vs well worke vs peace and neuer leaue vs but will be our comfort in aduersity in temptation in death and at Christs appearing CHAP. 43. Of the Gospell binding the Conscience of the Regenerate THe regenerate mans Conscience is not onely tyed by naturall Principles as all mens be nor by the Law of Moses as moralists in the Church be but also by the authority and power of the Gospell Section 1. That the Gospell hath a binding power FIrst for the Gospell is a Law 1. Chr. 16. 17. Psal 105. 10. and called the Law of faith Rom. 3. 17. now it is the nature of the Law to bind according to the authority of the Law-giuer God himselfe whose power is not lesse in the Law of faith and his will in the Gospell then in that morall law Secondly the Gospell doth not onely promise but also commandeth and requireth obedience to it It commands faith 1. Ioh. 3. 23. repentance Ma. 1. 15. Loue Ioh. 13. 34. and 18. 12. Charitie and bowels of mercy kindnesse humility of mind meeknesse Col. 3. 12. to deny our selues Mar. 8. 34. to mortifie the deeds of the flesh Col. 3. 5. to seeke the Kingdome of God and the ritheousnesse thereof Mar. 6. 33. to haue our conuersation in Heauen Phil. 3. 20. and to waite with loue for the appearing of the Lord Iesus Luk. 12. 35. 36. Mar. 13. 33. 34. 2. Tim. 4. These and many moe precepts doth the Gospell command which the moralist neuer thinks of nor euer can attaine vnto Thirdly The Gospell condemneth vnbeliefe Ioh. 16. 9. 1. Ioh. 5. 10. and other sinnes Fourthly it denounceth vengeance against the contempt of it and more seuere wrath then against the transgressours of the law 2. Th. 1. 8. Heb. 10. 29. Lastly men shall be iudged by the Gospell Rom. 2. 16. Therfore it is of a binding power For the renewed mind being acquainted with the Gospell propounds Euangelicall precepts to the regenerate Conscience which it vseth and applyeth to enforce the Regenerate man to a true and sincere obedience according to the Gospell Section 2. Whom it bindeth THe Gospell hath not so large an extent as the Law which is in nature and so binds all mankind but the Gospell bindeth such as do receiue it for the receiuing argueth two things first the enlightening of the vnderstanding to conceiue the doctrine of the Gospell and then faith to embrace it which two together bind conscience to the obedience of that which the Gospell commandeth Thus it bindeth all professors of it but most powerfully the regenerate to whom it is most effectuall by the speciall operation of Gods Spirit Section 3. To what it bindeth vs THe Gospell doth bind vnto the precepts which it prescribeth such are those before mentioned to beleeue to repent to loue the brethren to receiue the holy Sacraments with the rest of the Commandements of the Gospell It bindeth also vnto the law to make it a rule of
God requireth truth in the inward parts And the want of this vpright Conscience is the cause of all fraud cousenages and villanies committed any where in all the world The meanes to get it is consideration of Gods all-seeing eye and the word for the rule and warrant in all our actions Now the same that begets it keepes it making a Paul to haue his conuersation in all simplicity and godly sincerity with cheerefulnesse CHAP. 50. Of the pure Conscience THis is the Conscience which euer accompanieth vprightnesse for he Iob. 8. 6. that hath the one hath also the other he that is pure is vpright Of this pure Conscience the Apostle maketh mention 1. Tim. 3. 9. 2. Tim. 1. 3. This is the conscience that cannot endure defilement Section 1. In whom it is and how attained THis is the Conscience of such as be sanctified by Gods spirit for the 1. Pet. 1. 22. Spirit purifieth the soule And faith purgeth the Act. 15. 9. heart and conscience taking hold of Christ by Heb. 9. 14. whose bloud the Conscience is purged from dead workes Moreouer it becommeth pure by the puritie of the mind the minds 2. Pet. 3. 1. of the regenerate are pure and therefore so is their Conscience for vpon the defilement of the mind the Conscience saith the Apostle Tit. 1. 15. is defiled Lastly it is pure by the wisdome giuen Iam. 3. 17 of God from aboue for it being pure and the light of the Conscience it must also be pure Section 2. Of the effects hereof THis sanctified purged and pure Conscience worketh first a detestation of all vncleanenesse for it looketh to the rule with a pure mind and the purity of wisdome from aboue 2. Cor. 7. 1. Iam. 1. 27. which rule forbids all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit all defilements and Isai 30. 22. spots of the world and all Iude vers 23. fleshly seruice impurity in Religion And therefore Conscience auoideth all such filth and vncleanenesse whatsoeuer Secondly it stirres vp a man to purity as the Rule commands it and religion tieth vnto it Hence is it Tit. 1. 15. Psal 18. 26. Prou. 15. 26. that from this pure Conscience men regenerate are called Pure and because this puritie of it causeth them to flie all impurities in Religion and in conuersation which other of defiled minds and Consciences make no matter of they are reproached with the ignominious name of Puritans the name of old Hereticks called Catharists and Nouatians whose heresie these so nick-named are farre from Section 3. Of the signes of this pure Conscience NOw lest any bee deceiued by presuming of this pure Conscience as if they had it which haue it not the word of God giueth vs euidence hereof to know where it is First it holdeth the mistery of 1. Tim. 3. 9 and. 1. 5. faith for this is kept in a pure conscience Secondly it is accompanied with a Heb. 9. 14. pure heart Thirdly hee 2. Tim. 1. 3. that hath it serues God purely following the steps of holy forefathers Fourthly and lastly it is shewed by a pure life for this must needs come from thence because if the word be pure the rule of it Religion pure the Gospel pure the heart pure the mind Heb. 13. 18. pure Conscience pure then must needs the life be Prou. 21. 8. pure in liuing honestly in working righteousnesse Phil. 1. 10. and walking without giuing offence Section 4. How to keepe it pure WHen the Conscience becommeth pure it is to be kept pure which is by auoiding that which may defile it which is sinne for it is called filthinesse and Christ telleth Iam. 1. 21. Mat. 15. 18. 19. vs that it defileth the man We must labour for Gods spirit faith purity of mind and for the wisdome which is from aboue which maketh Conscience pure and will so keep it CHAP. 50. Of the iustifying Conscience THe last difference of the regenerate Conscience is the Conscience iustifying This witnesseth our righteousnesse before God euen that which the law requireth and this it doth not by the law but by the Gospell in all those in whom it is the power of God to saluation and are iustified by faith in Christ Section 1. How the Conscience comes to iustifie Q. HEre it may be asked how the Conscience by the Gospell doth so iustifie a man Answ First The Gospell commandeth to beleeue in Christ Iesus 1. Ioh. 3. 23. Secondly it teacheth first to reiect righteousnesse of workes by the law in our owne persons Rom. 3. 20. Phil. 3. 9. the Gospell is vtterly against this Secondly it teacheth and reuealeth not an other righteousnes●● but an other way to attaine it which is not by works but by faith in Christ for the Gospell Rom. 10. 30. 31. 32. and 3. 28. 2. Cor. 5. 21. Rom. 4. 23. 24. hath made known that the righteousnesse of the law is in Christ and that such as beleeue in him haue it imputed to them and so become they righteous before God Thirdly what the Gospell commandeth and teacheth that it maketh Eph. 1. 13. good through the effectualnesse of the Spirit and so bindeth Conscience to beleeue and obey the same If any professing the Gospell feele not this binding power it is for that they remaine ignorant of it or that their knowledge is not sanctified to them or for that it is not pressed home to the Conscience Section 2. In what the iustifying Conscience doth stand and how it differs from a iustifying faith Q. HEre it may be demanded wherein is this iustification of Conscience Answ It stands in the witnessing of our faith in foure things First that we beleeue what Christ Iesus is in himself as the Eunuch did Act. 8. 37. Secondly that we beleeue what he 1. Cor. 1. 30 was made for vs that beleeue in him euen our wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Rom. 10. 4. 30. and 3. 26. the end of the law for righteousnesse to all that beleeue and our iustifier Thirdly that we doe beleeue to be iustified by him and onely stand iust by his righteousnesse imputed Gal. 2. 16. without the workes of the Law Fourthly that we beleeue in thus beleeuing that God for his Son Rom. 4. 3. 5. 23. 24. 2. Cor. 5. 21. Iesus Christs sake will yea and doth account vs righteous before him All these acts of faith it doth 1. Ioh. 5. 10 witnesse for vs vnto God and this is the witnesse within vs. Some may say we haue often heard of a iustifying faith but not so of a iustifying Conscience and therfore desire to know the difference of them Answ Iustifying faith is the instrumentall meanes by which we apply Christ to vs for our iustification Iustifying Conscience is the witnessing of those forenamed acts of faith for vs vnto God Faith is as one receiuing money and paying it to his credit our to acquit him
of his debt Conscience is a witnesse standing by iustifying that payment by which he is freed from the debt Section 3. Of the comfort which ariseth from this iustification of Conscience SIngular is the consolation which a godly Christian reapeth by this Conscience so witnessing his faith in Iesus Christ as before is shewed For what benefit by Christ through faith is obteined in Gods mercie in that this Conscience doth comfort vs Now the benefit is manifold First It comforteth against Rom. 8. 4. the terrour of the law for in Christ wee fulfill it Secondly against the Rom. 5. 10. feare of Gods iustice for attonement is made his wrath appeased and he reconciled Thirdly against 2. Cor. 5. 18. all Satans accusings for Christ hath ouercome him for vs. Fourthly against Ioh. 14. 30. falls of infirmitie and sinning after we be in Christ for Christs bloud clenseth Heb. 2. 14. 1. Ioh. 1. 7. Mat. 1. from all sinnes He saues his people from their sins and when they do sinne he is their Aduocate with the 1. Ioh. 2. 1. Father and their propitiatiation Fifthly against fainting vnder afflictions for they are changed from punishments into chastisements Heb. 12. 5. 6. and from the signe of Gods anger into the witnesse of his loue for as many as he loueth hee chastiseth and scourgeth Sixthly against all sad sorrow because of our great imperfections our too much ignorance our vnrighteousnesse our defect in holinesse and the remainders of sinne and corruption in vs. For Iesus Christ is our purity wisdome righteousnesse sanctification 1. Cor. 1. 30. and redemption Seuenthly against the feare of death for he hath ouercome death abolished 2. Tim. 1. 10. Ioh. 10. 28. it and giuen life and immortality Lastly against the dread of damnation Rom. 81. 33. 34. Hell and destruction For Christ hath freed and iustified vs who can then condemne Conscience by witnessing our faith in Christ affordeth vs consolation against the feare and dread of all these things We must therfore labour for it by the meanes whereby it is attained of which before So must wee endeuour to keepe it when we haue it Section 4. How to keepe this iustifying Conscience TO keepe this comfortable conscience there are two things to be obserued of vs 1. To take heed of such things as may ouerthrow it and make vs to lose it and they chiefly are these three First to vphold a couenant of workes betweene God and vs his people professing the Gospell Secondly to maintain iustification by workes and not by faith without the workes of the Law Thirdly to lose our faith For he that loseth his faith loseth his good Conscience 1. Tim. 1. 19. And whosoeuer doe hold a couenant of workes and righteousnesse thereby are in bondaged to the Law are fallen from grace propounded Gal. 5. 4. by the Gospell they cannot attaine to righteousnesse Rom. 9. 30. 31. 32. and 10. 2. Christ profiteth them nothing so remain they vnder the curse from which by Christ onely they must be freed Therefore such cannot Gal. 3. 13. and 5. 4. haue this iustifying Conscience but by these means doe lose it because it witnesseth it through faith of the Gospell and not by the Law 2. To keepe this Conscience as we must take heed of that which may ouerthrow it so must we be carefull to maintaine and nourish that which will preserue it and that is by strengthening of our faith by holding to the Couenant of Grace by meditating vpon not onely the sufficiencie but also vpon the efficacie of Christ his satisfaction and merit of his obedience particularly for euery one of vs beleeuing to be saued onely by him by considering of Gods faithfulnesse and truth in his gracious promises made to vs in Christ and by the frequent vse of the Lords supper in which our faith may be greatly strengthened First by beholding God the Father giuing Christ his Sonne Secondly by considering how Christ offered himselfe Thirdly by both these to gather the infinite loue of both towards vs Fourthly by assuring our selues first that we may apply Christ particularly secondly that Christ is receiued into vs for I am in Ioh. 17. them saith hee Thirdly That we can no more lose Christ then the elements which we haue receiued Thus by the Sacrament may our faith bee strengthened and so our iustifying Conscience preserued which witnesseth onely so as wee haue faith to beleeue so as if faith faile it faileth if faith haue it work then this Conscience hath it worke and affordeth vs singular comfort betweene God and vs. And thus much now at the length concerning a good Conscience and all the differences thereof the generall fruit and benefit of all followes CHAP. 52. Of the singular effect which ariseth from a good Conscience regenerate quiet vpright pure and iustifying WHen man hath attained to a good Conscience regenerat and that it be quiet pure vpright and witnessing our faith in the Lord Iesus through the binding power of the Gospell it worketh a holy and reuerent boldnesse with confidence 1. Ioh. 3. 21. Eph. 3. 12. Heb. 4. 16. Ioh. 21. 17. 2. Tim. 4. 7. to haue accesse vnto God to make vs euen after fearefull falls being truly penitent to appeale to God concerning our loue to him to be assured of our saluation to be comforted in great afflictions being able to say let him slay me Ioh. 13. 15. 18. and 16. 19. yet will I trust in him I shall be iustified for my record is in heauen and witnesse 2. Cor. 5. 6. 8. on high and lastly to desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ For through this good Conscience so quiet pure and vpright Psa 44. 8. our hearts are freed from feares and we haue a holy glorying in the Lord with giuing him thanks and praise for our place Rom. 8. 33. 〈◊〉 and attonement with God concluding that nothing can separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus But here lest many bee deceiued it shall not be amisse to shew a difference betweene this holy Confidence arising from Conscience and fleshly presumption of which in the Chapter following CHAP. 53. Of the difference betweene confidence from a good Conscience and presumption from a deceitfull heart THere be two rocks on which man split their Soules the one is desperation which most feare and fewest feele the other presumption which almost none dread and yet by it most are tumbled into Hel before they be aware not one of tenne thousands shall we heare of despairing but tenne thousands to one of them presuming as the whole World in the daies of Noah a whole City yea many Cities while one Lot feared and the rest by presumption perished Now holy Confidence with a good Conscience preserueth from both from the one and from the other so that a godly man shall neither despaire nor presume Confidence is opposite to
no. But better it were for vs voluntarily to bee acquainted with it then of necessitie All holy bookes tend to informe vs of Conscience to reforme the euill to direct the good and so to rectifie vs for effecting of this the Booke of Nature the Law written in the heart the Law of the tenne Precepts the Law of Faith the holy Gospell are all helpes All these are for instruction of Conscience and to make vs conscionable Not onely these bookes of Gods owne making but also Bookes Sermons and pious Labours of all holy men doe aime at this to worke Conscience in vs. Conscience is it selfe a The excellency of Conscience Booke whereof all other Bookes are expositions It is as the Text they the interpretation In reading therefore these wee must haue an eye to it our knowledge in them must informe vs in this else we reade them to no purpose They that grow cunning in the Booke of Conscience by reading Gods and good Mens Books are vndoubtedly the best Christians the best Lawyers to pleade their owne Cause and the best Iudges to Iudge of themselues aright This book is of Gods own hand writing it is also very legible to any that will giue themselues to reade it If we open this booke marke it and consider well what it aduiseth what is it that shall not then be reformed It is the fashion of people generally to cry out of the world and the manners thereof in the meane space they know not the cause or will not know it and yet is it neere them and within them and that is the badnesse of mens Consciences For amend these and the world shall not be blamed for as mens consciences be so is it also reforme these and reforme it better them and the World will bee good enough and the complaint will cease Conscience as it is good or euill so it makes or mars a man by a good Conscience he becomes good thinks desires affecteth and speaketh of good things and doth them by a bad Conscience hee turneth a cleane contrary course For as our Consciences be euen so are we if it be naught we are vicious we are vaine lewd and naught too if it be good we fly from sinne as from a serpent and feare to offend God and our Neighbour Conscience is appointed by God to bee our carefull watchman to eye vs well to record all our thoughts sayings and doings so to witnesse against or with vs vnto God when he shall call vs to an account It attendeth when God shall summon us then will it plead hard howsoeuer it seemeth now to be silent in most By Cōscience we become well acquainted with our selues else to our selues we remaine meere strangers for nothing within vs but it can make vs to know our selues which is the most excellent point of knowledge To see themselues many looke into glasses Let us looke then into this glasse of Conscience that we may see our selues and that not only in some outward part as by the Artificiall glasse we do but by this also as well inward as outward By the artificiall a man may see himselfe and soone forget what manner of one he was but this will not only shew vs what we bee but will also keepe vs in remembrance of our selues that in no businesse we shall forget our selues Conscience is a thing so diuine and hath such acquaintance with God as it can and will tel vs whether God be with vs or against vs whether he be friend or foe and how our case standeth betweene him and vs which to know is so necessary and behoouefull as all knowledge in respect of this is but vaine and in the end to little purpose Conscience next vnder God is that to which we may most safely commend and commit our selues our whole estate the disposing and ordering of all our affaires It is a good counsellour to vs aliue and a most faithfull Executer of our last will and Testament left in other mens hands for our Children and posterity Conscience is onely that which will and can make vs honest men and of credit among men for as our Conscience is knowne to be so are we reputed and so shall we be trusted It is that which alwaies wee must bring with vs for our suretie in all promises contracts and bargaines or else none will credit vs. The word of Conscience when it is once knowne wil procure vs more credit then we for the present are worth The honesty of it is aboue all bonds It will carrie great matters in few words when without it by many words we shall not be trusted for trifles For Conscience will not giue it word for any dishonest man though clothed in silk and satten yea though he haue Lands and large reuenues Conscience will not be bound for him It onely will be surety for honest men whom it both may vrge and will make them keep day with others punctually As for Time seruers loose companions shifting Fellowes Hypocrites cogging Merchants and irreligious persons it will haue nothing to do with them which appeareth by this for that it forbiddeth such to vse their wits to coozen and to defraud one another But for whom it once giueth its word it is still calling on them and charging them to remember honesty equitie fidelitie and to doe as they would be done vnto Conscience is the chiefest maintainer of iustice and equity among men And men generally are content with what it decreeth concludeth and alloweth as may appeare by such speeches as these In Conscience giue what you thinke fit I appeale to your Conscience in this and that betweene God and your Conscience be it From Conscience do arise all the commendations of all our actions or the discommendations If any do ill straightway Conscience is questioned Is this your Conscience Can you do this of your Conscience Conscience is a mans best friend or his worst foe in trouble distresse here in this life at death and at the last iudgement It will speake with or against a man as the cause requireth It pleads without fee it respects no person be he Poore or Rich. It will side with none it hateth to the death partiality lying equiuocating flattery and all falshood Conscience is the consort of charity of faith of truth and of vprightnesse It is the Caske wherein to keep the mistery of faith and true godlinesse without which all these perish A man making shipwracke of Conscience loseth all power of religion of which he hath no more then he maketh Conscience of Conscience is that whose aduise a man must first take in all his actions before he vndertakes to do them For if it be either neglected or opposed or carelesly slighted the act will turne to sinne Conscience in a word is Gods Record out of which hee will take notice of euery man and as there he finds him so will he iudge him and thereafter pronounce sentence either of absolution or condemnation
preaching concerning the matter as also for the manner of their preaching 2. Cor. 1. 12. and how thereby they profit their Hearers 2. Cor. 4. 2. and 5. 11. or deceiue them with doctrines of Diuels through a seared Conscience 1. Timoth 4. 2. 3. With our hearing and learning as also with vs for the keeping of the misterie of Faith 1. Tim. 3. 9. So as lose Conscience we lose our Religion 1. Tim. 1. 19. 4. With vs in the defence of our Religion and in making an answer for it as also how and in what a commendable manner we doe it to wit readily meekely and reuerently as it becomes Christians 1. Pet. 3. 15. 16. 5. With vs in our morall honesty as we bee naturall men led according to the light of nature and Principles of Reason Rom. 2. 15. 6. With vs touching our seruing of God purely 2. Tim. 1. 3. without dead workes not resting in the outward act Heb. 9. 9. 14. as also concerning Idoll-worship to which no allowance must bee giuen 1. Cor. 8. 7. 10. As soone as Naaman acknowledged the true God his Conscience wrought in him to disauow Rimmon their false God Conscience is a great stirrer in matters of Religion yea in matters seeming indifferent 1. Cor. 8. 13. by which scandall may arise 7. With vs about the meanes of our attonement with God both vnder the Law as now vnder the Gospell Heb. 9. 9. 14. through Christs blood by which it is so pacified as it is not popishly troubled about making any sacrifice for sinne Heb. 10. 2. 8. 8. With vs about our drawing neere to God with confidence and assurance 1. Ioh. 3. 20. 21. Heb. 10. 22. 9. With vs concerning our words as our swearing and cursing of others Eccles 7. 22. as Shemei did Dauid 1. King 2. 44. and Peter himself for the Rule Christs words came to his remembrance and then his Conscience wrought sorrow for the Rule toucheth our words Mat. 5. 22. and 12. 36. 37. 10. With vs about our whole life and conuersation Act. 23. 1. Heb. 13. 18. 2. Cor. 1. 12. And here if we sinne secretly and bee holy in shew as Scribes and Pharisies Ioh. 8. 9. It lookes to our charitie which must come from a pure heart and a good conscience 1. Tim. 1. 5. It obserues how we can and do endure iniuries and wrongs offered and with what patience we can beare them 1. Pet. 2. 19. 20. It markes our obedience to authority Rom. 13. 3. 11. With vs touching our affection in desiring the saluation of others Rom. 9. 1. 2. and that we pray for such as be faithfull Ministers of Christ and thanke God for them 2. Tim. 1. 3. 4. 12. With vs when wee are ready to goe awry and out of the way Isai 30. 21. and to fall from the truth for it would not haue us nor will suffer vs to fall from our Religion except wee put it away as did Hymeneus and Alexander because it too busily troubled them 1. Tim. 1. 19. Thus wee see what a charge Conscience hath vpon it and how many things it hath to looke vnto within and without vs. CHAP. 11. Of the acts and offices of Conscience and first here of the first act COnscience must needs haue much to doe for it hath many offices wherof the first is to bee Mans Ouer-seer By the helpe of the Vnderstanding it is the eye looking thorow the whole Man within and without him for his thoughts words deeds This is the Lords Candle searching all the inward parts of the belly Prou. 20. 27. But how is this By beholding the Rule with the Act as before is noted for by this Dauids Conscience expressed by the word reines taught him Psalm 16. 7. 8. setting the Lord that is his Commandements before him as the Rule for direction The Rule and Act seene together is the very life of Conscience these two together make Conscience as body and soule make a Man If these be feuered Man is not led by Conscience but by some other thing as Sense Will Appetite Fantasie Imagination examples of other custome commands counsell and aduise of men or by Satans suggestion deluding and beguiling Remember this Ouerseer this Eye if I may so say of God within vs for what it seeth God seeth we care to hide ourwayes from men but we cannot couer them from our Consciences which will be as a thousand witnesses one day and now here behold vs as we be CHAP. 12. Of the second act of Conscience COnscience seeing and diligently obseruing Man in all his courses open and secret within him and without him it then acquaints himselfe with himselfe making him to see and know himselfe to bee truly that which indeed hee is by beholding the Rule with his actions The glasse without the eye seeing into it cannot shew to a man his countenance nor the eye if the glasse bee wanting but both together So is it in this the eye of Conscience beholding the Rule and reflecting vpon mans thoughts words and deeds it tells him plainely betweene God and him that hee is honest or dishonest chaste or vncleane mercifull or a niggard compassionate or hard-hearted humble or proud vpright or fraudulent easily intreated or reuengefull Therefore learne truly of thy Conscience what thou art and how thy state stands betweene God and thee Rest not vpon thy conceit nor vpon the report of thy Neighbours neither vpon mens flatteries nor vpon mens euill speeches but goe to the plaine dealing of thy Conscience looking to the Rule and what it saith that belieue to be true whether it speake well or ill For it feares not to tell thee the truth it cannot flatter lye nor cogge neither will it slander thee nor lay any thing to thy charge vniustly but as the Rule and Act agree so will it tell thee what thou art in Gods presence CHAP. 13. Of the third act and office of Conscience COnscience playing the part of a true friend and not of a flatterer and discouering man to himselfe concerning his waies either good or euill in the next place it becomes to be his Director and Teacher as Dauids Conscience taught him Psalm 16. 7. It is like a good Schoole-Master teaching and well ordering his Schollers Now this office of Conscience is exercised as a Guide Director in three things either commanded or forbidden or indifferent Section 1. Of things commanded COnscience directeth in duties commanded and this it doth by instigation vpon the Vnderstandings information Isai 30. 21. In which place the Knowledge informeth saith This is the way then the Conscience stirreth and sets Man forward saying Walke in it Thus did it with Pilate who was informed that Christ was righteous that he of enuy was deliuered to him yea also he himselfe found nothing in Christ worthy of death therfore his cōscience moued him to do him iustice it said to him Deliuer him set him free pronounce him innocent wash thy hands of innocent blood This
present we haue an example in Saint Paul who had his Conscience witnessing with him for his present estate 1. Cor. 4. 4. for his words and also for the inward affection of the heart Ro. 9. 1. 2. The like wee haue in Peter after his fall whose Conscience after repentance vnfained made him to appeale to Christ touching his loue his conscience encouraged him to say to Christ Thou knowest that I loue thee Ioh. 21. 15. 16. 17. Thus we see how Conscience witnesseth for vs for time past and present Some mens consciences may beare witnesse for the time past as Hymeneus and Alexanders and Demas might but not for the present because they fell away But a Pauls conscience will witnesse for the time past and time present too 2. Tim. 1. 3. Heb. 13. 18. Touching the time to come conscience is not altogether silent not that it can witnesse for vs what wee yet neuer thought spake or did but in respect of our resolution for the time to come it can witnesse with vs that wee doe resolue to doe well and endeauour it as Paul speakes Act. 24. 16. and as Iob said that his heart should not reproach him so long as he liued Iob 27. 6. 2. For the thing it beares vs witnes of which is both for matter manner For matter Nehemiah his conscience stood for him Nehem. 13. 14. 22. for manner Saint Pauls in his teaching 2. Cor. 1. 12. that it was in godly simplicitie and sincerity so Abimelechs conscience witnessed for his integrity and innocency in taking Sarah Gen. 20. 6. For both matter and manner in Hezekiah Isai 38 3. he walked with God and this he did vprightly Labour to haue Conscience witnesse both for many mens consciences will witnesse for them that they haue been at Church heard the Word prayed sung Psalmes receiued the Sacraments but it will not witnesse for them for the name of doing but rather condemne them for their vnpreparednes their hypocrisie meere formality c. Section 2. Of Conscience witnessing against vs. THis act of Conscience is called accusing Ro. 2. 15. and as in excusing it hath regard to time and thing so here in this likewise Concerning the time First past it accused Iosephs brethren of that which was committed long before Gen. 42. 21. so it did Shimei 1. Kin. 2. 44. Dauid 2. Sam. 24. 10. Adonibezek Iudg. 1. 5. and the Iewes Act. 2. 37. Secondly for the time present it wrought vpon the Scribes and Pharisies Ioh. 8. 7 9. So vpon Belshazzar Dan. 5. 6. the Lepers of Samaria 2. King 7. 9. and vpon Felix Act. 24. 25. accusing them for their sinfull courses wherein they liued as also of their irresolution to mend for the time to come As touching matter and manner Conscience will not halt It will tell Dauid of his blood-guiltinesse 2. Sam. 12. Psal 51. and it will accuse Iudas for his treason As also other for the ill manner and by-end in their otherwise good actions as Hamor and Sichemites for receiuing circumcision for worldly and carnall respects Iehu for his counterfeit zeale Scribes and Pharisies for their fasting praying giuing of almes Simeon and Leui for pretending Religion to bee reuenged some for following Christ for loaues Ioh. 6. 22. 24. and the Iewes for their hypocriticall fasting for a day Isai 38. And thus much for the fifth act and office of Conscience Section 3. Of some questions propounded and answered concerning the accusation of Conscience Quest 1. WHether this power to accuse was in Adam before his fall Answ It was but not in act because there was in him no matter or cause wherby conscience should accuse him yet that it had power it is cleare for presently vpon his transgression it accused him And the Text saith that their eyes were opened that is the eye of the Vnderstanding and the eye of the Conscience by which they knew what they had committed against God Their eyes were opened but no new qualitie wrought in the soule other then they had before Quest 2. If aptnesse to accuse was in the Creation it may bee asked Whether it bee now an euill Conscience that accuseth Answ It is not simply euill First because this power was and is from God Secondly because God doth approue of it when it accuseth rightly 1. Ioh. 3. 23. Thirdly because herein it is as Gods Register booke by which he will proceed against the wicked at last day Reuel 20. Fourthly because it is a meanes of much good through Gods blessing as of sorrow for sin of feare to offend and becomes as a preparatiue to repentance sometime Act. 2. 37. Fiftly because it is in the best of Gods children and a blessed meanes to worke in them renewed repentance vpon a fall Quest 3. If it be not to be called an euill Conscience whether may it be termed a good Conscience Answ From the accusation simply it cannot bee called a good conscience First because it is a defectiuenesse in respect of that peace which man had in the Creation and shall enioy in heauen Secondly because it followeth vpon Adams fall as a punishment for sinne here and the worme in hell hereafter Thirdly for that all the wicked haue an accusing conscience but not a good conscience Therefore the conscience from the very act of accusing cannot haue the name of either a good or an euill conscience but as the person is in whom it is For if hee bee euill his conscience is euill though in some thing it excuse him and if he bee a good man his conscience is good though it sometime accuse him CHAP. 16. Of the sixth act and office of Conscience WHen Conscience hath eyed well Man made him acquainted with himselfe written downe his thoughts his doings and sayings accused or excused him then it sits downe as a iust Iudge of Oyer and Terminer to heare and determine to giue sentence against which there is no appeale to be made This sentence is twofold either to acquite and absolue or to bind and condemne Rom. 14. 22. 1. Co. 11. 31. 1. Ioh. 3. 20. 21. In condemning it makes him see his sinne and so causeth him to thinke and speake basely of himselfe and of his ill deeds as Dauid did I haue done very foolishly 2. Sam. 24. 10. and was as a beast Psal 73. 22. and to confesse with the prodigall sonne that he is vnworthy to bee called Gods childe Luk. 15. Lastly it will make him apply as iustly deserued the hand of God against him as Ionah did Chap. 1. 12. and Dauid 2. Sam. 24 17. and withall to acknowledge the Lord to be righteous as did Rehoboam 2. Chron. 12. 6. In absoluing it doth not reproach a man Iob 27. 6. but doth make him stand vpon his innocency wherin he is guiltlesse as it did Dauid against Sauls malice enuy and false accusations This Iudge let vs take notice of and labour for absolution from it and beware of its sentence of condemnation for God will
reforme his people but lets them quietly runne on to destruction Section 1. In whom it is THis is the Conscience of all dull Nabals and the muddy spirited of such as rest vpon their conceited good and quiet natures of such as be ciuilized and rest vpon their ciuility of the high and proud conceited fellow in his outward prosperity wise in his owne eyes and cleane in his owne sight yet not clensed from his filthinesse and it is the Conscience of all such in whom the strong man keeps peaceable possession Luk. 11. 21. Section 2. It is an euill Conscience THis is an euill Conscience be it neuer so quiet because it performes not it office because it lets man alone in his wicked courses which a good conscience neither can nor will permit Because it suffers a man to runne to hell headlong without stay Section 3. The causes hereof THis ill Conscience thus quiet happeneth many waies First through ignorance and especially willfull when a man knowes not the rule that binds conscience nor cares at all to be acquainted with it nor ruled by it They say of the Rule as Pharaoh did of the Lord who is the Lord I know not the Lord neither will I let Israell goe 2. Through selfe-pleasing and an vnsound applauding of a mans selfe because he professeth religion though it be without power because as a Herod he doth many things and heares a Iohn Baptist now and then though in his beloued sin hee hates to be reformed because hee seeth himselfe perhaps free from the fall of a Dauid of a Noah of a Lot of a Peter 3. By his blessing of Deut. 29. 19. himselfe upon the former grounds against all threats and legall denunciations as not belonging vnto him but to persons more vile for his part he hath made a couenant with death and hell Isai 28. 4. By seeing and knowing that his waies course is conformable to the common fashion and esteeme of the world that his state is quiet and hee liuing Neighbourly as others do and held to be a quiet man 5. By auoiding whatsoeuer may stirre the Conscience to make it vnquiet any way as the reading of Gods word meditation vpon his law a sharp reproouing ministery comming home to the heart And lastly serious examination of themselues in Gods sight by his Law These be the causes why many cry peace peace when there is no peace Section 4. How a man may know when his quiet Conscience is this ill Conscience THat a man therefore may not bee deceiued with this false peace hee may know this quietnesse of his Conscience not to be good thus 1 From the false ground of this quietnesse such as before is mentioned and not from faith and repentance 2. From the euer quietnesse thereof neuer hauing felt it to disquiet thee for no man naturally being corrupt hath a quiet good Conscience 3. By it suffering thee in euils and especially in these In formall worshipping of God hearing praying receiuing the Sacrament without any power at all of Religion In continuall neglect of religious gouernment of thy family In liuing out of or idlely in a calling for such a one is slothfull vnprofitable and wicked Mat. 25 and therefore cannot haue a good quiet Conscience In being respectlesse of thy Pastor especially for seeking thy reformation in prophaning the Lords day Sinnes which these quiet Consciences neuer trouble themselues with and yet are the most liuely touchstone of an vnregenerate spirit 4. By not daring to bring thy thoughts words and deeds to the rule and there take a streight account thereof which a good Conscience dare doe 5. By thy vnquietnesse without comfort at the preaching of the law at the pressing of the strict marks of Gods children and the discouery thereby of thy selfe to be none of them but one as yet separated from them A good conscience will comfort a man in hearing such marks and of such a close pressing of these things to their consciences because he that hath a good Conscience hath these marks and is free from the rigour and curse of the Law Lastly by the trouble and feare it workes in thee in sickenesse because of death in time of affliction and Gods hand vpon thee apprehending GODS wrath without any comfort for surely then the former quietnesse was not good because a good quiet conscience is not so terrifying at such times but speakes peace to him that hath it as well then as in health and prosperity except it happen otherwise vnder some strong temptation Section 5. Of the effects of this still quiet ill Conscience IT shall bee profitable to euery man to trie the quietnesse of his conscience for the effects of the still il Conscience are very fearefull First it lulles him a sleep in an vnsanctified course of life making him beleeue that hee hath a good Conscience because it is quiet Secondly it makes him hereupon carnally secure till death and destruction come vpon him so it deceiueth him and damneth him Here it lets him bee wicked and hereafter to become most wretched here at rest there in torment here it will not disquiet but there be the gnawing worme for euer Section 6. Of the remedie hereof THe fault of this ill conscience is that it is still and quiet when it should not the remedy therefore is to make it speake when and as often as it ought in directing man that hee go not amisse and in checking man for sinne when he hath trespassed and this is by remouing the false grounds of this false peace before named Then secondly by knowing the sound causes of a quiet conscience faith in Christ Iesus repentance for sinne and a holy conuersation and search whether wee haue them Thirdly By informing our vnderstandings of our duties according to the Rule and applying it dayly to our conscience till it speake and performe it offices as the Rule binds it CHAP. 24. Of the dead Conscience the first difference of the still quiet ill Conscience THe dead Conscience is the quiet ill Conscience as it were without all life and motion as a thing that is dead This is the Conscience of Infants as not yet hauing the vse of their vnderstanding also of mad persons which haue lost their reasō franticke and lunatick It is the conscience of all such Ephes 2. 1. as be dead in sins and trespasses as the prodigall Luk. 15. 31. 1. Tim. 5. 6 sonne once the wanton widow and all meere naturall persons accustomed to sinne and such as be past Ephes 4. 18. feeling committing wickednesse with greedinesse The causes of this deadnesse is the losse of the light of the vnderstanding the life of conscience without which it is dead Also the vncapablenesse of instruction in some sorts and insensiblenesse of the authority of the Rule to bind Conscience The remedy is the light of vnderstanding to labour for knowledge and instruction and to feele the power thereof upon Conscience CHAP. 25. Of
iudgment to finde out the true Religion and to be able to difference it from all false religions or rather superstitious See a little Booke intituled Good Christian looke to thy Creed and Satanicall inuentions Fourthly to striue to feele the power of this true Religion that so Conscience may be bound to hold vs to the vnfeigned performance of the same CHAP. 29. Of the large Conscience THere is an euill large Conscience a spatious and wide Conscience like the way to Hell This is the Conscience of such as can swallow downe sinnes great and many that can admit of cart-loades thereof without any rub or let to this Conscience This is the conscience of some worldlings some of all sorts of professions vsurers extortioners and such like The cause of this spacious and so large a Conscience is the vnderstanding highly esteeming of profit and preferment and in respect hereof vnder-valueing and vnder-prizing of Religion of iustice and of vpright dealing Whence followes sinfull practises to gaine and to come to aduancement giuing way to any sinne that may hale in profit make a man rich and exalt his estate in the World No sinne stickes in the way as sinne but onely for the infamy thereof if openly knowne or the danger of the Law by which may ensue punishment otherwise through largenesse of Conscience all is fish that comes to net all is lawfull prey and booty that may finely and cunningly bee come by The remedie to bounde this wide conscience is by tying it strictly to the Rule of righteousnesse and by vnderstanding iustice iudgment equity and euery Prou. 2. 9. good path for our right dealing CHAP. 30. Of the Cheuerill Conscience THere is a Cheueril ill Conscience which is like Kids leather which may bee made wide or strait This is the Conscience of him that can as occasion serues his turne make large or straiten his conscience playing fast or loose for his owne aduantage for hee chuseth and picks out particular duties to obserue as best pleaseth his humour neglecting the rest This was the Conscience of Saul in his warfare 1. Sam. 15. 14. 34. 22. 17. 18. against Amalek who could spare the best and destroy what was vile and naught hee made conscience of the peoples eating of blood but it was nothing to hate Dauid to persecute him and to murther 1. Chro. 13. 3. the Lords Priests and to neglect the Arke of God This was Ioabs conscience he could abhorre Dauids command to number the people yet to kill treacherously Abner and Amasa it was no scruple Iehu could destroy the idol-seruice to Baal but hold vp the golden Calues in Dan and Bethel The Scribes and Pharises had their consciences straite to put Iudas Mat. 27. 6. wages into the Treasurie and to goe into the Iudgement Hall but it was Ioh. 18. 28. wide enough to giue money to betray Christ and to cause Pilate to put him to death causelesly Iewes would not haue Christs Ioh. 19. 31. body and the two with him to hang all night on the Crosse because of the Sabbath following but it troubled them not to consent to his death Such a conscience they had in 2. Cor. 11. 24. whipping the Apostle giuing one stripe lesse then forty but not what cause they had to whip him at all Scribes and Pharisies could tithe Mint Commin and Annise but yet let passe the weighty matters of the Law This is a Papists conscience that will eate no flesh on Friday but can seeke by Gunpowder to blow vp the Parliament The Cause of such a Cheuerill Conscience is First that a man makes the Rule of Conscience subiect to his owne will by false interpretations by subtill distinctions thereby weakning the power of the Rule that it hath not force vpon Conscience Secondly the secret and hypocriticall reseruations in his minde and heart in obeying the Rule to which hee neuer wholly can nor will submit himselfe Thirdly a deceitfull and very false imagination of minde that the Rule is alterable and may bee enlarged as may best serue their turne as Cardinall Cusanus once deliuered in a letter to the Bohemians The Remedy is to hold the Rule euer to bee one and the same impartiall constant vnalterable without varying as God himselfe also to be perswaded that we are to be wholly led by it and not it to be framed to our owne lusts CHAP. 31. Of the benumbed Conscience THe benumbed conscience is that which hath lost it mouing as dead for a time as a member benumbed This is the conscience of such as haue lost the feeling thereof by some foule offence lying therein without repentance This may happen sometime to the godly to Iosephs Brethren to a Dauid for a while The causes hereof may bee expressed by a similitude taken from a member benumbed First A member becomes so yea the whole body after violent heate and exercise by suddenly attracted cold So a man very forward in Religion and religious exercises growing cold by suddenly leauing them liuing where the word is not and companying with others of no Religion or with contemners of it Secondly By a dead Palsey So Conscience by some deadly sinne Thirdly by tying it hard so as the bloud wherein the life is can haue no passage till it be loosed So Conscience is benumbed when the mind is tyed to the world so as it cannot bee free to meditate vpon Gods word for the freedome of the minde for holy meditation is as the life and bloud to the Conscience Fourthly by some violent blow So Conscience by some violent suggestion of Satan which for the present may make a man senslesse of his sinning Fifthly by being put out of ioynt So Conscience which is put as I may say out of ioynt when memorie hath lost and forgotten what it should keep to carry it from the mind to the Conscience touching things past either of sin committed or of duty omitted In this case if memory faile the vnderstanding and Conscience are put out of ioynt Sixthly a member becomes deadish by lying still but crookedly vpon some hard thing and weight vpon it as the Arme will be in bearing vp the head and the elbow vpon some hard bord or other thing So Conscience is benumbed when the vnderstanding is crookedly bent to crooked paths the heart hardened and some heauie corruption pressing it downe The effect is that during this time that the Conscience lyeth as dead the partie is without remorse for sinne he cannot out of generall reproofes see his fall without a liuely and cleare application as appeares in Dauid when Nathan spake to him parabolically The Remedie is to haue the word applyed as a Nathan did it to Dauid and to bee content to bee rubbed vpon by wholsome reprofes priuat admonitions and mutuall exhortations that the heart be not hardened by the deceitfulnesse Heb. 3. 13. of sinne CHAP. 32. Of the cauterized Conscience THe last and worst
the Scribes and Pharisies Mat. 15. 2. 6. the following whereof is called by Saint Peter a vaine conuersation which Christ by his bloud came to deliuer vs from 1. Pet. 1. 18. Thirdly By the precepts and commandements of men Mat. 15. 9. Col. 2. 20. 22. Fourthly By custome which becomes as a law to the ruder sort to bind their Consciences Fifthly By the shew of wisdome and shadow of great humilitie in such a voluntary worship Col. 2. 18. 23. Sixthly By examples of Forefathers and Elders which strike a great stroak in many as formerly it hath done with such superstitious hipocrits as Christ calls them Mar. 7. 3. 4. 5. 6. Section 4. Of the remedie TO remoue this superstition from Conscience and to acquit it from such slauish feare and bondage is to settle iudgement in fiue things First wee must know that the doctrines and commandements of men binde not conscience of themselues but as they be grounded on Gods Word Secondly else the Scripture condemneth them Matth. 15. Mark 7. Col. 2. 20. 21. 22. 1. Pet. 1. 18. as vaine worship and vaine conuersation Thirdly That we must know our Christian libertie purchased by Christs blood from these yoakes of bondage 1. Pet. 1. 18. and that wee must stand fast in this libertie Gal. 5. 1. Fourthly we are to be resolued in this point that all will worship though neuer so wisely contriued by man and though it carry neuer so faire a shew is condemned of God as the forenamed scriptures doe shew Lastly we must be well assured that where God giueth no law himselfe there is no transgression Rom. 4. 15. and 5. 13. and so no bond to tye Conscience Section 5. Of the second thing about which the superstitions Conscience is exercised THe other thing about which the Conscience of the superstitious is troubled is about some works of Gods prouidence which men though falsly take to be Gods forwarnings and forbiddings and as signes and tokens frō him of some good or of some ill to befall them as a hare to crosse in a morning to stumble in going out salt falling burning of the right or left cheek or eare finding of siluer gold or old iron sudden bleeding at the nose and many such obseruations of superstitious people Section 6. Of the causes hereof THe causes of this feare in this superstitious conscience and the awing of it in respect of this prouidence are these First a strong conceit that there is here in a will of God forewarning people wherupon the conscience becomes bound and the heart made fearefull Secondly the obseruing of the euent which hapneth according to the conceited opinion to the more confirming therof and the further binding of the superstitious to credit the same Section 7. Of the remedy TO heale this and to free the Conscience from such a superstitious bond and the heart from this idle feare note these things 1. That God neither by his word foretels nor by his prouidence doth prognosticate either good or ill in the falling out of such things 2. That albeit such things happen according to mens vaine imaginations yet no credit is to bee giuen thereto nor any conscience to be made thereof First because the opinion in these things is Heathenish and from pagans which Christians are therefore to Ier. 10. 1. 2. detest and not feare their feare Secondly because Satan workes herein and seekes to weaken our faith in God Thirdly because these sometime haue been found false by religious mens true obseruations who contemne these fooleries Fourthly because if they proue true sometime that 's but to try vs whether we wil be wise or become vaine and superstitious Lastly because it is well obserued that the more naturall men be and ignorant of the Gospell the more foolishly superstitious are they the more fearefull and vaine in such obseruations and the more inthraled in their minds to such vanities On the contrary the more people increase in knowledge of the Gospell faith in Christ and be renewed in the inward man the lesse they regard yea the more they contemne these things and are lesse troubled with them as held altogether idle and vaine And thus much for the superstitious Conscience CHAP. 36. Of the scrupulous Conscience THis scrupulous Conscience is the stirring ill Conscience about vncertainties of which the iudgment is vnresolued and passeth neither this way nor that way Section 1. In whom THis is the Conscience of the Ignorant especially in particulars Of such as be Questionists in and about commonly things indifferent or disputable not necessary to life and saluation of such as be like Scribes and Pharisies straining at Gnats and swallowing Mat. 23. 24 Eccl. 7. 16. Camels Of such as will be ouer righteous iust ouermuch straining duties beyond the rule or making somethings which be indifferent necessary to be either done or left vndone These are troublers both of themselues and of others too very often Section 2. The causes hereof THe Conscience of a godly man may haue sometime a scruple in it through ignorance or errour in some particular but his Conscience for a scruple is not to be called a scrupulous Conscience for that which is scrupulous is commonly and for the most part so This happeneth first through the iudgment very vnsetled vnresolued ambiguous wauering this way and that way suspicious hauing no certaine ground to settle upon but onely running vpon coniectures disputing too and fro with and against so as Conscience is much troubled 2. This happeneth by misapplying generall rules about things indifferent according as they conceit to particular actions as to suppose that they edifie not that they be offensiue not decent not to Gods glory deciding within themselues sometimes positiuely that which an other makes disputable by conference with whom their former conclusion is shaken and so stand vnresolued in their iudgement 3. This scruple happeneth when a thing indifferent is needlesly questioned vpon which the Apostle laboured to preuent among the Corinthians saying aske no question for Conscience sake 1. Cor. 10. 27. For in truth there is nothing that more breedeth scruple than idle questioning of matters which might bee well passed ouer 4. By stretching a thing for want of knowledge beyond the nature of a thing indifferent so taking it to be worse than it is through some shew of euill in his apprehension as some did among the Corinthians 1. Cor. 8. 7. 5. By vncharitably expounding such things as be established and onely proposed as indifferent by authoritie beyond the intent of the Church Lastly by giuing way to doubts and to trouble themselues needlesly with vnprofitable disputations of things vndetermined Such peruerse disputes the Apostle liked not 1. Tim. 6. 5. Section 3. Of the effects FRom this scrupulositie ariseth inward trouble feare heart burning vncharitable censuring and iudging one an other and outward diuision sects vnwarrantable courses oppositions forcible impositions and much euil euery way for want of peaceablenesse both on
to learne and beleeue these things 1. That God is infinite in mercy slow to anger and of great kindnesse Ioel 2. 13. Secondly that he hath no pleasure in the death of a sinner but rather that he should repent and liue Ezek. 18. 23. 22. which he confirmeth to vs by an oath Chap. 33. 11. Thirdly that hee will pardon euery true penitent for so hath hee promised Ezek. 18. 27. 28. and this must they know that not sinne but the not repenting of sinne damneth man for if wee repent and belieue wee shall bee saued Fourthly that God in Christ Iesus is well pleased Matth. 3. 17. who is our Aduocate with the Father who is our Propitiation for our sinnes 1. Ioh. 2. 1. 2. Fifthly that hee is become all in all for to pacifie Gods wrath and to procure his fauour for vs 1. Cor. 1. 30. 2. Cor. 5. 21. Heb. 9. 12. and 10. 14. Rom. 8. 1. 33. 34. Sixthly that he inuiteth vs louingly to come to him promiseth refreshment Mat. 11. 28. with these adde a holy and reuerent vse of the Sacrament for the exercise and strengthening of faith in Christ offered to them therein applyed and receiued particularly greatly furthering to the comfort of Conscience and to preuent despaire And thus much now at length touching the euill Conscience still and stirring with all the differences of them both now followeth the good Conscience CHAP. 39. Of the good Conscience in generall OF a good Conscience the Apostle maketh mention very often in diuers places as in Act. 23. 1. and 24. 16. 1. Tim. 1. 5. and Heb. 13. 18. A good Conscience is that which performeth it offices rightly for the comfort of man The goodnesse of it stands in seeing aright in acquainting a man truly with himselfe in well directing of him in witnessing with and so rightly excusing and acquiting him This is the conscience which Saint Paul speaks of without offence that is which hath no stop or impediment to hinder it from excusing Act. 24. 16. This Saint Paul knew he had in this he liued and this he endeuored to keep for hee desired to liue honestly Heb. 13. 18. This was it that made him reioyce 2. Cor. 1. 12. to be without feare and to speake boldly to the faces of Gods Enemies Act. 23. 1. not to be daunted before the mighty in a good cause no more then Paul was Act. 24. 10. 16. nor Peter with other Apostles Act. 5. 29. nor Luther when he entred into Wormes not caring if all the tiles there had been Diuels This good Conscience bare vp Iob against all his friends ouer vncharitable censure of him in so great affliction This vpheld Dauid in all his distresses and Sauls persecuting of him and slanders raised vpon him by his Courtiers This made Saint Paul to 2. Cor. 6. 8. passe through honour and dishonour good report and bad This good Conscience may bee said to bee threefold the naturall morall and regenerate CHAP. 40. Of the naturall good Conscience BY the naturall good Conscience I meane that which was in man by Creation in Adam before the fall The excellency hereof stood in these things First in bearing Adam witnesse that he was good holy innocent righteous and therfore happy and blessed Secondly in bearing sway and rule in him so as hee was euery way obedient to Gods will Thirdly in comforting him in Gods presence with ioy without terrour or dread of diuine maiestie This was the goodnesse of his Conscience then while he abode in his innocencie harmelesse and without sinne And this shall be the goodnesse of it when we attaine to perfection in glory The causes hereof were First the perfection of Adams knowledg who knew exactly Gods will and all and euery duty on his part to be performed to God to man and to himselfe Secondly the perfection of his memorie euer constantly and firmely retaining those duties for obseruing of them Thirdly the perfect freedome of the will free from all peruersenesse and rebellion and inclined to all goodnesse readily obeying the rule of reason and dictate of Conscience Fourthly The hearts vprightnesse with all purity and sincerity Lastly the affections orderly setled and free from sensuality inconstancie disorder and excesse Vnruly passions bare then no sway But now since the fall this naturall Conscience hath lost it soueraigntie in the grosse vulgars as well Christian as heathen who haue onely some common principles but rudely apprehended on which sometime their Conscience workes otherwise for the most part they are led but by sense or experience or examples doing as they see others to doe and are little better then brute beasts through their sottish ignorance sauage qualities vnruly passions and beastly sensualitie doing many things against cōmon reason and the light of nature it selfe if they would but attend vnto it For want whereof they feele in a manner no worke of Conscience at all so farre haue innumerable Pagans and a numberlesse number of the ruder sort liuing among Christians and vnder that name most vnworthily degenerated from the goodnesse of the naturall Conscience which was in Adam The losse whereof is to bee bewailed we are to labour for to repaire it and to desire the perfection thereof in Heauen CHAP. 41. Of the morall good Conscience THe morall good Conscience is that which is exercised in and about matters onely of right and wrong and common ciuill honestie This Conscience is in two sorts of some out of the Church and of others within the Church Section 1. Of those out of the Church THere are many out of the Church which haue had and yet haue this morall Conscience Ancient Heathen Philosophers and many now among the Turks and Persians and other ciuilized Nations How farre these may go with this their morall conscience commendably it may appeare by these things First by some writing of morall vertues ethicks and politicks excellent well Secondly by many golden sentences dispersed here and there in their works Thirdly by wholsome lawes enacted and established among them Fourthly By praise worthy examples left recorded to all posterities some for iustice some for temperance and chastitie some for prudence some for fortitude and magnanimitie and so others for humility patience charity and the like of which histories are full Section 2. Of their helps hereto THis their morall Conscience is gotten First by ciuil education and by being trained vp in good manners Secondly by humaine sciences and good literature as ethicks Oeconomicks and Politicks Thirdly by the common naturall notions of right and wrong which by education and instruction they doe improue and make better vse of then others can Fourthly by some acquaintance sometime with practicall principles of supernaturall truths by getting some light from Gods booke through acquaintance with some of the Church Thus of those out of the Church Section 3. Of those in the Church THere are not a few which liue in the bosom of the Church and yet haue no more but
righteousnesse for the Gospell First commendeth the law vnto vs as spirituall holy iust righteous and good Rom. 7. 12. 14. 1 Tim. 1. 8. Secondly It repeateth the Commandements with approbation and for continuing vse Rom. 13. 9. Thirdly it interpreteth the Commandements and the imposed duties therein more largely in a more spirituall sense Mat. 5. and 6. 1. Ioh. 3. 15. Fourthly it vrgeth the duties commanded by the law to be done Eph. 5. and 6. Col. 3. and 4. Rom. 13. 1. Tit. 3. 1. 1. Pet. 2. 13. and such vertues as it prescribeth Phil. 4. 6. Eph. 4. 32. 1. Tim. 6. 11. 18. 2. Pet. 1. 5. 6. 7. Fifthly these are vrged in Christs name as his commandements Eph. 6. 6. 1. Th. 4. 1. 2. 3. and as his wholsom words 1. Tim. 6. 3. Sixthly the doing of such duties are commended by Christ himselfe Mat. 5. 19. By Saint Iames cap. 2. 8. and by Saint Paul 1. Cor. 7. 19. and by Saint Peter 2. Pet. 1. 8. 9. Seuenthly the ministers of the Gospell are commanded to teach such duties 1. Tim. 6. 2. Tit. 2. 13. and 3. 1. 8. Lastly the sinnes forbidden by the law are condemned in the Gospell and disswaded from 1. Th. 5. 15. Eph. 4. 28. 31. Col. 3. 9. 1. Cor. 7. 8. 14. 1. Ioh. 5. 21. And to auoid such sinnes the Apostle saith was the commandement of Christ 1. Thes 4. 2. 6. and to teach otherwise is contrary to wholsome doctrine 1. Timoth 6. 3. 1. 10. 11. Yea Christ condemneth the breach of the Law Matth. 5. 19. and in the Gospell wrath is denounced against such as liue in wicked transgression against the Law Rom. 2. 8. Ninthly they erre therefore that teach that wee vnder the Gospell are not tyed to the Precepts of the Law to obserue them as a rule of life for the Law is established Rom. 3. 31. it remaineth perpetually Matth. 5. 18. Christ came to fulfill it not to destroy it and condemneth such as teach the breach of the least Commandement Matth. 5. 17. 19. Quest Here it may bee asked in what manner doth the Gospell bind the regenerate Conscience to the Law Answ It doth it not as the Law requireth to wit to obey it in the rigour thereof to bee thereby iustified or else to remaine accursed but it bindeth according to it owne nature as the word of grace that is Euangelically and this is first to take it now as from the hand of Iesus the Law-giuer to vs who hath written it by the new Couenant in our hearts by his holy Spirit Secondly to obserue it onely as a rule of life we hauing already attained to the righteousnesse of the Law in full perfection through faith in Christ Thirdly to performe the prescribed duties thereof by vertue Ioh. 15. 4. 5 Gal. 2. 20. Psal 40. 8. from Christ in obedience to him willingly without any seruile feare in vprightnesse of heart though imperfectly performed done to adorne the doctrine of the Gospell of God our Sauiour Christ in all things To this Euangelicall obedience the Gospel bindeth vs and not otherwise to the Law Section 4. From what things the regenerate mans Conscience by this power of the Gospell is freed in respect of the Law VPon the Gospell thus binding to the Law Euangelically the Conscience of the Regenerate is free from the Ceremoniall Law because it is bound by the Gospell to make him stand fast in the libertie purchased by Christ Gal. 5. 1. who hath abolished the law of Commandements of ordinances Eph. 2. 15. and blotted out the hand-writing of ordinances against vs Col. 2. 14. 16. Hence is it that the conscience of the Regenerate troubles him not about meates holy dayes nor offering vp any legall sacrifices Heb. 10. 2. It is also quit from the morall Law in respect of the rigorous dominion of it in respect of iustification by personall fulfilling it in respect of the malediction and the irritation thereof of which the Apostle speaketh Rom. 7. 8. Hence likewise it is first that the Regenerate conscience cannot vrge vs to the exact fulfilling of the Law nor can condemne vs for that wee doe not perfectly in our selues fulfill it Because the Gospel and Law of faith binds the Regenerate conscience as it is regenerate to the contrary to wit to witnesse that we fulfill it in Christ that therefore in him wee cannot bee condemned Rom. 3. 1. 4. 32 33. for this but if it accuse it accuseth for want of sincerity sometime and for failings but cannot condemne vs for not perfectly fulfilling the Law 2. Hence is it that it vrgeth not iustification by workes nor condemneth vs for not so seeking to be iustified Because by the Gospell the Regenerate is bound to cast off righteousnesse by the works of the Law Gal. 2. 16. and 5. 14. And to seeke by faith to be iustified which is the righteousnesse taught by the Gospell Rom. 3. 21. 22. without the workes of the Law Vers 28. 3. Hence is it that the Regenerate Conscience doth not condemne the regenerate man for the irritation by reason of sinne taking occasion from the commandement to worke all manner of concupiscence as it doth in others Rom. 7. 5. 8. Because the Conscience of the Regenerate is bound to beare him witnesse and so doth witnesse through the worke of the Spirit by the Gospell that after the inner man hee delighteth in the Law of God and hath a will to doe it Rom. 7. 22. Psal 1. 2. and 40. 8. that he would doe more good then he can that he hateth the euill hee doth Rom. 7. 15. 18. 19. that he hath an vnfeigned resolution to keepe Gods Commandements Psal 119. 57. 107. and that in studying the Law by grace receiued from the Gospell hee is more delighted in it and more desirous to doe it Of all these conscience beareth the Regenerate man witnesse and therfore cannot condemne him for that irritation by the Law through inbred corruption to grow worse 4. And lastly hence is it that it cannot nor doth not conclude the malediction and curse of the Law vpon the man regenerate because now this his Conscience is bound by the Gospell to witnesse his faith in Christ by whom he is freed from that curse Gal. 3. 13. that hee is the Child of God Rom. 8. 15. and that therefore belongeth to him the blessing with Abraham Gal. 3. 14. and eternall life by Iesus Christ Rom. 6. 23. Thus may we see what a happy acquittance the regenerate Conscience hath by the power of the Gospell from the Law Section 5. Why the Regenerate man is yet so much troubled about the Law THis before being so and the Conscience so freed by the authoritie of the Gospell it may bee demanded here Why a Regenerate man in his Conscience is more troubled about his legall omissions and committing of euill against the Law then for his omissions commissions against the Gospell hee not being now vnder the Law but
vnder grace Rom. 6. 14. To this I answer first Because the law is better knowne then the Gospell the one being naturall the other spirituall Secondly for that the one is more pressed vpon Conscience and more often laid to heart then the other Thirdly because the remainder of seruile feare sooner apprehēdeth wrath by breach of the Law then filial feare the obseruance of dutie from Gods goodnesse and mercie Fourthly because of scandalls which are sooner taken when they are giuen and more marked of the worst when the regenerate doe fall in transgressing the law then omission of euangelical duties or euils against the gospell cōmitted which world lings and naturalists take no notice of Fifthly because of the more frequent vse of the law for morall vertues within for oeconomicall duties and offices of loue to be performed one to an other and in commerce with men daily abroad wherein a regenerate man findeth his often failings by reason hee knowes the law in a high and spirituall sense Sixthly because Euangelicall precepts of knowing Christ of belieuing in him of repenting for sinne of Christian loue do expresse themselues in obseruing the duties commanded in the law of which the regenerate failing Conscience will accuse him Seuenthly because the law more easily bindeth and worketh vpon the Conscience naturally when the Gospell though it bind yet it doth it supernaturally and that not without the speciall worke of grace euen in the regenerate man Eighthly because the regenerate in their failings to the law consider them only and that too often as sinning against the law without any apprehension of any their default therein towards the Gospell when in deed and truth their failing in obedience to the Gospell maketh them transgressours of the Law for let a man haue the vertue of Christ haue a liuely faith Euangelicall repentance and loue hee will not easily faile of his duty commanded in the law but if he doe he will quickly see by his sinning against the law that he hath been disobedient against the Gospell Section 6. Of the difference betweene the Conscience regenerate and vnregenerate SEing the regenerate Conscience vnder the Gospell will yet accuse and trouble a regenerate man for transgression of the law it may bee demanded how the same differs from the Conscience vnregenerate I answer they differ first in the binding power the vnregenerate onely by the law as a Naturalist but not by the Gospell for it hath no power nor command ouer his conscience to work in him obedience by reason First of their strong corruptions not abated Secondly for want of the spirit of illumination with sanctification Thirdly the vneffectuallnesse of the Gospell in them and lastly because they doe conceit the Gospell a law of liberty not requiring obedience at all But the Conscience of the Regenerate is bound both by the law and Gospell to obedience Secondly they differ in excusing and witnessing for one The vnregenerat mans Conscience though neuer so morally honest cannot excuse him nor witnesse his righteousnesse before God Rom. 3. 19. 23. But the regenerate Conscience will by vertue of the Gospell The vnregenerate Conscience cannot witnesse for the vnregenerate any one of these three things that he liueth in new obedience to God by Christ liuing in him as the regenerate conscience will Gal. 2. 20. That he hath the Spirit of adoption as the regenerate conscience doth with the aid of Gods spirit Rom. 8. 15. And that if he doe fearefully fall yet he loueth the Lord as the regenerate Conscience in Peter will Ioh. 21. 15. do after true and heartie repentance Thirdly they differ in accusing The vnregenerate Conscience in accusing may driue the vnregenerat from the meanes of saluation as it did the Pharisies make some tremble Ioh. 8. 9. Acts 24. as a Felix but not reforme them it fills them with legall sorrow as a Iudas to repent but not with Euangelical But now the conscience of the regenerate accusing neuer driueth them from the meanes the ministery of the word but it worketh reformation a godly sorrow in them as it 2. Sam. 12. 24. did in Dauid and also in Peter Mat. 27. and in the prodigall sonne Luk. 15. And thus much for the regenerate Conscience now follow the many differences thereof as the tender Conscience the wounded Conscience the quiet conscience the vpright the pure the iustifying and confident Conscience CHAP. 44. Of the tender Conscience THe tender conscience is the passible conscience easily touched with the least sin in thought word and deed as well in omission as commission Section 1. In whom it is THis is the Conscience of a Dauid whose heart smote him in cutting off but the lappe of Sauls garment This is the Conscience of a soft hearted Iosias which will tremble and melt at the word This is the Conscience of such as be easie to be intreated endued with wisedome from aboue gentle and mercifull This is the Conscience of all such as haue bin wounded in spirit such as haue felt the smart for sin anguish of heart and the burthen of Gods displeasure by former follies Section 2. Of the effects hereof THis tender conscience so rarely to bee found in these our daies hath singular effects First it makes a man humble in his owne eyes willing rather to condemne himselfe for euery sinne then to excuse colour or defend any sin Secondly it makes a man watchfull for it hath a quick sight and diligently attendeth vnto the rule carefully thereby to guide all his actions It is like the beasts in Reu. 4. full of eyes before to preuent sinne behind to recall our selues if any sinne hath of infirmity beene committed Thirdly it makes a man fearefull to offend and therefore moues him to auoid the very appearance 1. Thes 5. 22. of euill and to flie the occasions of sinning as Ioseph did who would not be in the roome with his Mistresse Fourthly It makes him vpon this feare to walke precisely not doing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 5. 15. Mat. 2. 8. any thing but vpon a diligent inquisition it will not permit a man to fall vpon a businesse rashly at an hap hazzard This causeth a man to be nice in that which other make a iest of This tendernesse made Daniel to refuse to eate of Dan. 1. 6. the Kings meat to pray three times a day when it indangered his life This made Dauid that he would 2. Sam. 23. 16. not drink of the water of the wel of Bethlehem this made the sons of Ionadab to Ier. 35. 14. dwel in Tents and to drink no wine this made Mordecai Ester 3. 2. not to bow his knee to Haman Naboth not to sell to Ahab his Garden and old Eleazer not to dissemble 2. Mach. 6. the eating of a little swines flesh Fifthly this will make a man carefull to auoid offence in things questionable whether good or ill if it be in a mans own power to doe or
see the forenamed booke and the first Fol. 409. volume of Master Perkins touching consolations to a troubled Conscience 6. And lastly is their ignorance of the true remedies or inability to apply thsm rightly Section 4. Of the effects of Conscience afflicted THe sorrowfull effects of a wounded spirit are not a few as a deiection of spirit without cheerefulnesse in religious exercises as in hearing the word praying receiuing the Sacrament Christian conference and the like Terrours and feare beset them sometime and they are troubled with terrifying dreames sorrow of heart also oppresseth their spirits Hence is it that they neglect their callings lay aside the duties therof are carelesse of their verie necessarie worldly businesse and much addicted to solitarinesse and to sit musing in a dump Their soule is vexed and finds no rest Dauids soule was Psal 6. 3. 6. 31. 10. troubled within him hee was full of griefe sighes wearied with groanes and washed his couch with teares This was it that made Peter to goe out Matth. 27. and weepe bitterly This weakeneth the bodie yea Dauid telleth vs that his Ps 31. 10. strength failed him and his bones were consumed by reason of his sinne for a broken spirit dryeth th● Pro. 17. 22. bones It will make a man weary of his life and to vtter sometimes very vncomfortable words such as Psal 77. 7. 8. 9. these will the Lord cast off for euer will he be fauourable no more Is his mercy cleane gone for euer Doth his promise faile for euermore Hath God forgot to bee gracious and hath he in anger shut vp his tender mercies Yea hee will cry out My God my God why hast thou for saken Psal 22. 1. mee These other such like bee the lamentable effects of the wounded soule and therefore let vs beware of wounding it and if it be wounded labour the curing of it Now for the curing of it note two things the preparatiues and the Remedie Section 5. Of the preparatiues to the curing of the wound THere are excellent preparatiues which help to make way to the remedy and they be these 1. Resist the Diuell and that in three things neuer dispute with him beleeue him in nothing hee saith and cast backe his secret blasphemous suggestions vpon himselfe when hee would make them thine thus resisting he will flie Iames 4. from thee 2. Beware of all causelesse feares and groundlesse suspicions of Gods fauour and loue 3. Do not deny Gods graces in thee extenuate them not nor vnderualue any of his gifts whereby thou shouldest falsely mistake thy selfe and iudge of thy selfe worse then thou hast cause to do 4. Know and beleeue that it is not sinning but the not repenting of sinne that damneth man For the best haue sinned and note also a difference betweene the regenerate and vnregenerate in sinning for in the one the man sinneth in the other it is not hee that doth it but sinne that dwelleth in him Rom. 7. 20. 5. Vnderstand that weaknesse and imperfection of graces and heauenly gifts makes not a nullity therof not that therefore they are not true graces in them 6. Conceiue thus much that the least degree and measure of Gods graces are true graces are a testimonie of Gods good fauour and aduanceth a man aboue his naturall condition and state 7. Take heed of making sense and feeling the Iudge of thy spirituall estate with God whilst thou art in affliction of Conscience and in perplexity of spirit for Cant. 3. 1. 5. 6. the Spouse may seeke her beloued and not find him for a while hee may withdraw himselfe for a space and not bee found nor answer And consider withall that it is one thing to haue graces and an other to feele them liuelie at the present Graces in their working are sometimes weak it ebbes and flowes waxeth waineth is more strong liuely at one time and lesse at an other so that a good Christian prayeth not beleeues not heares not ioyeth not loueth not goodnesse nor good men euer a like For he that faith he is alwaies the same in all holy duties did neuer any such duty well and much deceiueth himselfe 8. Thou must know a comfortable lesson which is this that a Christian mans obedience to the law is not legall now but Euangelicall performed vnder the Couenant of grace and not from the Couenant of of works which lieth not vpon any in Iesus Christ 9. When any comfortlesse or desperate thoughts molest thee checke thy selfe with Dauid and say Ps 77. 10. It is my infirmity I will remember the yeeres of the right hand of the most Highest call to mind thy former comforts thy foretaste of Gods fauour and experience of his loue and meditate and stay on that 10. And lastly in what anguish soeuer thou be yet cease not neglect not to pray to cry and call to cast vp eiaculations from thy Psal 77. 2. heart vnto God for Dauid sought God when his soule was without comfort yea in the sorrowes of death and paines of Hell euen then he prayed Ps 116. 4. and said O Lord I beseech thee deliuer my soule By these preparatiues the Medicine for the soule will worke Section 6. Of the soueraigne salue to cure the wound THe afflicted and sicke Patient hauing receiued these ten preparatiues the Medicine will worke well In the ministring whereof note first what it is secondly who must administer the Physicke thirdly what is the instrumentall meanes for it fourthly after the receipt what bee the Cordials for comfort The remedy for curing fully the wound is onely one and that is the sauing knowledge of Iesus Christ with faith in him For if wee bee truly informed in these things first what Christ is in his person secondly what hee was ordained to be for vs thirdly what here he hath done for vs fourthly what hee now doth for vs and fifthly what he will doe for vs hereafter at his second comming Then knowing first what wee by him are freed from secondly what wee are made by him thirdly what we haue here attained vnto by him fourthly and what in the end we shall be by him By the knowledge of all these things distinctly marked and vnderstood our faith will wholly rest vpon him our Conscience will be greatly comforted and all the obiections met with and fully answered which may bee made by Satan or by man himselfe and so the wound perfectly cured Section 7. By whom to be administred THe Physitian to administer the Medicine is inward and outward The inward and principal is Gods holy Spirit who begets faith confirmeth it makes man to take hold on Christ and giueth him spirituall comfort this is hee that is called the Comforter without whom no comfort spirituall we must therefore pray for this holy Spirit because God hath promised him Luk. 11. 13. The outward is Gods 2. Sam. 12. Act. 2. 37. 38. 16. 2.
King 22 Minister a Nathan to Dauid Peter and the other Apostles to the Iewes Paul and Sylas to the Gaoler Huldah to Iosias For the Minister must be a faithfull Messenger from God to whom God hath giuen ministeriall authority to bind and to loose He must be learned in the Schoole Esay 50. 4. of temptations and know how to deliuer a word in season to the wearied soule He must be one that vnder afflictions hath tasted of Gods comforts so as he can tell to comfort others 2. Cot. 1. 4. with those comforts wherewith he himselfe hath been comforted Such a one knowes how aptly to apply the salue to the wound for the best working of it Section 8. Of the instrumentall meanes THe meanes to be vsed in administring this spirituall physick is onely the Gospell of Christ from out of which all those former things touching Christ and our selues are to bee learned For this is the power of God to saluation Rom. 1. 16. this is the ministration of the spirit and righteousnesse this is it by which 2. Cor. 3. 8. 9 Eph. 1. 13. faith is wrought and wee made to trust in the Lord Iesus And therefore to heale the wounded Conscience the Gospell must be well knowne Section 9. Of the Cordials to strengthen the heart settled vpon Christ FOr the better working of the heauenly and pretious Potion and for the comforting of the heart vpon the receipt more and more these Cordials must be giuen which are meditations full of consolation 1. That we are not vnder Rom. 6. 14 the Law but vnder Grace we are in the couenant of Grace 2. That this couenant is confirmed to euery true Christian by an oath and Heb. 6. 18. sealed by the pretious Heb. 9. 12. blood of Iesus Christ 3. That parte of this couenant is that Gods law should be written in our Heb. 8. 10. hearts to make vs affect it and in our minds to cause vs to vnderstand it and that God will remember our Heb. 10. 17 sinnes and iniquities no more 4. That Iesus Christ vpon this his Fathers couenant and promise inuiteth Mat. 11. 28 all that trauell and are heauy laden promising to refresh them 5. That now wee may boldly goe to him beleeue 1. Ioh. 3. 23 in him not thinke it presumption to take hold of him for wee are commanded to beleeue in him in whom God is euer well Mat. 3. 17. pleased 6. That God in Christ is become our Father full of compassion to pittie vs gracious to heare our requests Ps 86. 15. long-suffring to forbeare vs and plentifull in mercy to pardon and plentifull in truth to keep with vs what he hath promised Hee will not the death of Ezech. 33. 11. a sinner but rather that hee should liue If wee confesse 1. Ioh. 1. 9. our sinnes wee are bound to beleeue them pardoned as he is faithfull and iust who hath promised to forgiue them Hee will looke vpon the humble poore Esay 66. 2. 57. 15. in spirit the contrite heart and one that trembles at his word will hee dwell Ps 11. 27. with and will not despise such a one 7. And lastly meditate vpon the holy sacrament and vse it often for great comfort may an afflicted spirit reape thereby if men did well know how to vse it aright Section 10. How to keepe vs from the wound of Conscience IT is not enough to bee nealed but when wee are sound so to keepe vs. It is here then fit to know how wee may keepe our Conscience from wounding And this is to keepe our selues from sinne for this onely wounds it Now to doe this 1. Make Gods word euer the rule of all our actions and enquire from it what warrant for the matter for the manner for the end how conuenient and seasonable and how lawfull for thee Then in doing see and obserue the agreement touching these things with the rule 2. Bridle will and affections and keepe them euer vnder reason and this vnder religion 3. Hearken to the dictate of Conscience and take heed of sinning against the light thereof 4. Make not light of any sinne the verie least sin seeme it neuer so little in thine owne or in the eyes of other men for the not auoiding little sinnes is to make way for greater transgressions And heere note fiue things not to bee carelesse of the least sinne First that Gods wisdome is in the Law forbidding that sinne Secondly that God hath power to maintaine his Law Thirdly that hee is iust to punish the contempt of his wisedome and power Fourthly that not the least sin can bee redeemed but by the precious bloud of Christ Lastly that little sinnes in mans conceit haue been most seuerely punished as Lots wife for looking back Vzzah for touching the Arke all mankind for Adams eating of the forbidden fruit 5. Be very willing and glad to be preuented in sin by check of Conscience by reproofe of thy Teacher by Christian admonition by any crosse in the way and by others example And if thou beest ouer-taken ly not in it return speedily and aske heartily forgiuenesse Thus shalt thou preserue thy Conscience from any deadly wound CHAP. 46. Of the difference betweene the wounded Conscience and the desperate Conscience SEing the effects of a wounded spirit in the regenerate are very lamentable and that such a one may vtter desperate speeches yea more sometime become so weary of life as he or shee may seek their owne death it may be asked how the desperate and this do differ I answere that the difference is much betweene them in many respects 1. Of the parties the afflicted Conscience may befall a Dauid and is the Conscience of the regenerate though it afflict them sore but the desperate Conscience happeneth to a Saul a Iudas either to men lewdly vicious or deeplie hipocrites 2. They differ in the causes The desperate conscience is from Gods iustice to punish the wicked the other is a fatherly chastisment of God and for triall The desperate conscience ariseth from apprehension of Gods fierce anger and wrath for sinne for feare of vengeance from losse from outward crosses shame and reproach among men The other is most from the consideration of sinne and want of grace of which things they most complaine and more bewaile these then grieue or fret at crosse shame disgrace or terrified with apprehension of Gods heauy indignation desperately as others be 3. They differ in the manner of working the desperate is very violent condemning damning and making a man to giue way wholly to the terrours thereof and to the suggestions of Satan for they are wholly vnder the power of the Law they haue no part in the sauing power of the Gospell neither haue they any assistance from God Iob 8. 20. The other is very troublesome but not so violent but reproueth argueth conuinceth and murmureth euer against man but yet is
hee not wholly giuen ouer to the terrour thereof nor to Satans malitious suggestions Because they are not vnder the Law but vnder Grace their graces also do worke as their faith and hope though but weakely for the present and God doth not vtterly forsake them Iob 8. 20. neither doth hee suffer them to be tempted aboue that which they are able to beare 1. Cor. 10. 13. 4. They differ in some effects the desperate conscience makes man to seeke ease and to get freed from the torture here if he may not to change his former euill life but to liue quietly as before in his vaine course of his conuersation vexed to haue in this world a Hell of which hee is regardlesse till after death But the wounded soule seeketh deliuerance not to follow the world for profits or pleasures but with a resolution ●o walke more carefully in holy duties and to haue his heart set at liberty to runne more chearefully the way of Gods Commandements 5. They differ in the remedies vsed to cure the griefe The desperate conscience driues men to vaine company foolish pastimes wanton delights or to thrust them into worldly businesses or to seeke help of ill instruments Witches Wizards as Saul did or to goe to their companions in sinne as Iudas did but without comfort The afflicted spirit is not moued to any of these but flyeth from them and hateth them it finds no rest by worldly vaine and fleshly meanes it therfore seekes spirituall meanes godly mens aduise Christian conference and labours continually with earnest desire to feele comfort in a fauourable acceptance with God through faith in Iesus Christ 6. And lastly they differ in the end the desperate Conscience workes mans destruction makes some to kill themselues or to die with damnation vpon themselues in their own mouthes or else suddenly 1. Sam. 25. 37. with terrour haue their hearts die within them and become as a stone like Nabal But the godly afflicted in conscience attaineth to Psa 37. 37. a more happy end and that is peace after much and long conflict as examples haue shewed CHAP. 47. Of the difference betweene the afflicted Conscience and the passion of Melancholy IT is the fashion of vaine men to iudge the wound of Conscience Melancholy because they are altogether ignorant of the one and not so of the other according to their naturall knowledge therefore they fondly iudge of a spirituall malady And for that they may sometime meet together to the greater griefe of the aflicted spirit and not discerning the one from the other they rashly iudge all to be onely a fit of Melancholy when as they differ much For first the Melancholike humour workes a sad pensiuenesse in such as bee neuer troubled about cases of Conscience nor euer grieued for sinne or failing in religious duties but the wound of Conscience workes heauinesse of heart for these things 2. Melancholy filleth the head often with vaine fantasies and imaginations of such things as if the parties had lost their wits and vnderstandings the conceits being to others so euidently false and foolish But he that is wounded in spirit loseth not his right apprehension of the iust cause of sorrow neither is he so mistaken in his imagination as the other be 3. Melancholike passions arise from naturall causes in the body the other from the sight of sinne in the soule 4. This may bee somewhat discerned by bodily complection so cannot the other for affliction of conscience may befall such whose complection is s●●guine as Dauids was as by his description may appeare 1. Sam. 16. 12. 17. 42. and by his delight in Musicke 5. The meere melancholike person grieueth not for Gods dishonour for other mens rebellions against God and because men keepe not Gods Law hee is not touched with these things as a Dauid was and afflicted soules be for their owne sins which moueth them to mourne and lament for others 6. The melancholy is cured by physicke as being a bodily disease but so is not the wound of spirit 7. The melancholike cured and amended is not ioyous in the Lord speaks not of spirituall comforts and peace obtained with God by faith nor delighteth in the company of the godly nor in any holy conference with them nor seekes after spirituall meanes nor finds comfort in meditation hearing and reading of Gods Word often praying and many eiaculations vnto God but the afflicted in Conscience cured takes delight in these things and doth expresse much ioy herein euen to the reioycing of the hearts of the pious and religiously-minded Lastly the melancholike humour is neuer so cured but the parties of that complection will easily bee ouertaken therewith either vpon no occasion or vpon light crosses of the world and discontentments and so bee cast into a sudden dumpishnesse without being able to render a sound reason thereof But men of wounded conscience once cured and their peace obtained with God they are neuer sad but for some new sinne or being in company with such as grieue thē by sinning the worlds crosses may trouble them but finding inward peace they are chearefull or soone made chearefull by comfortable conference with religious people The Melancholike humour and the wound of conscience doe very much differ one from the other and require differing remedies and differing Phisicians to cure the same CHAP. 48. Of the quiet good Conscience WE may see by that which hath before been deliuered in the 44. Chapter that a good Conscience regenerated may bee yet sometimes troubled which is as a disease for a time till it be healed and made a quiet Conscience Which is the peaceable Conscience clearing acquiting and absoluing like Saint Pauls who knew 1. Cor. 44. nothing by himselfe This is the Conscience of an Henoth walking with God of an Abraham vpright in his walking before God and of a Zachary and Elizabeth liuing blamelesse in all the Commandements of God Section 1. How come by THis peaceable Conscience is attained by hauing Iesus Christ Melchizedech Heb. 7. 2. for our righteousnesse and our King of Mat. 11. 28 peace for he it is that giueth his rest and peace Secondly by iustifying faith Ioh. 14. 27 apprehending and applying his righteousnesse for so haue wee peace with Rom. 5. 1. God which workes peace of Conscience Thirdly by assurance of pardon for sinne through Iesus Christ for what can then disquiet Conscience Dauids Conscience was quiet after hee had obtained pardon and where there is remission Heb. 10. 2. 18. there is no more sacrifice for sinne nor conscience of sinne to vexe and trouble the penitent Fourthly by being a liuely member and subiect of the Kingdome of God and of Christ because there is ioy and peace Ro. 14. 17. in the holy Ghost Fifthly by God Spirit the fruit whereof among other is peace Sixthly by the exercise Gal. 5. 22. of praier making our requests known vnto God so shall