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

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holy Ghost is that sin unto death hath no more sacrifice for it but becomes eternally unpardonable but because it is ever perpetrated and committed in despight of 1 Jo. 5. 16. Heb. 10. 26. conscience against his most clear and strongest convictions and against the most peremptory checks and dissenting restraints of the awakened and enlightened conscience Nothing heightens sin so fast conscience may say If I had not come unto you you had no sin If I had not done my Office faithfully you had some cloak for your sin which now you have not This makes sins of knowing men greater then of ignorant Englands sin greater then the Jndies Judas's perfidiousnesse worse then Sauls persecutions The one did it ignorantly and therefore obtained mercy The other had no cloak for his sin Christ gave him warning by the sop all took notice 1 Tim. 1. 13 he replyed upon consciences enforcing Is it I And he therefore died a son of perdition because he lived and persisted a son of conviction This is the servant who shall be beaten with many stripes Luk. 12. 47. To him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is sin Jam. 4. 17. Corollary 4. When a man lies under the lash of conscience in respect of his two last offices viz. testimoniall and judiciall he lies under the greatest misery Maximus angor conscientiae Dr. Ames Mar. 9. 44. maxima poena Then the worm never dying devours him the fire ever burning the fire not blowen takes hold of him Cains mark is Iob. 20. 26. upon him His punishment is greater then he can bear This is the first woe and the hell on earth for Revel 1. 18. there is a hell before death and Revel 20. 14. an hell before the lake of fire How fearfull was Herods case to be given up to wormes to eat him alive Infinitely more dreadfull to be given up to this worm of conscience to be eaten up both alive and dead How dolefull a sight is it to see a wolfe or a Cancer on the womans tender breast ever gnawing and stinging never cured But a worse wolf is the gnawing and accusing conscience No fits of convulsion so tearing and pulling and racking as convulsion fits of conscience no ulcer in the bladder or bowels so painfull as the exulcerated conscience See this in Judas now brought to a sight of his sin and sense of his misery he is like Isa 57. 20. the raging sea that cannot rest Out he cries I have sinned take your money it hath damned me from person to person from place to place he goes but his hell he carries with him from the terrour and sting of conscience he cannot run To death he saith Fall on me to hell bury me so I may be hid from sight of conscience he strangles himself because he could not strangle conscience into hell he leapes not longer able to abide himself and indeed if there were any place in hell where this Apollyon of destroying conscience came not into it would all the damned get to case themselves Hell were not hell if raging conscience ruled not there if this worme could ever die that fire might then be quenched Judas hung himself to ease himself but then was death and hell cast into the lake of fire Revel 20. 14. He at first brake the neck of conscience that at last brake his neck he had strangled good conscience an ill conscience strangled him and being dead all his bowels fell out of his body because all his conscience fell out of his bowels while he was alive To conclude this Corollary The wrack of Mat. 15. 11 Subijciatur corpus in paena in jeiunijs macere●ur verber ibus lanietur equuleo disiendatur gladio trucidetur crucis supplicio affligatur secura erit conscientia Bern. de in t dom c. 22. Pro. 18. 14. good conscience is the saddest shipwrack for poena damni it is the greatest losse And the rack of an ill conscience is the sharpest rack for poena sensus it is the greatest pain Not all from without doth so defile a man as that from within nor all from without doth so torment a man as that from within All the windes blustering abroad about our ears paine us not but a little winde enclosed in the bowels how much doth it torment and put the body into the extreamest pains All troubles from without are easily undergone if conscience be sound But the wounded spirit who can bear He shall flee from the iron weapon and the Bow of steele shall stricke him through It is drawne commeth forth of his body The glistering sword commeth out of his Gall Terrors are upon him All darknesse is hid in his secret places h. e. he hath an Epitome of all the woes and miseries of Hell in his soule a fire not blowen shall consume him as Zophar excellently Allegorizeth Job 20. 24. 25. 26. Coroll 5. VVhen conscience hath done all these foure Offices faithfully and then giveth Peace This is the right peace of conscience This is the Son of Peace upon which the peace Luk. 10. 6. of God and the peace of the Minister ever comes Thus have you seene what a good conscience is h. e. when it is purified and when it is pacified purified from Ignorance Error deadnesse pacified from the raigne of sinne the rage of Satan and displeasure of God both purified and pacified by the word blood and spirit of Christ And after all doing his four-fold Office in due time and place of a Minister of a King of a Witnesse and of a Judge And thus much of good conscience in generall CHAP. V. Of severall good Consciences in particular and first of the Conscience in which Faith is HAving hitherto treated of the good conscience in generall we shall now descend to speak of some Particulars and give you in the severall sorts and best kindes of good consciences that are to be found in all the Sciptures commended to us that when you see such an one you may know a good conscience againe and say there goes a good conscience Ten particulars I shall recommend to you and after speake somewhat to Ten good consciences laid down in scripture each of them Their names are 1. The conscience of Faith 2. Of Purity 3. Of Sincerity 4. The Vnoffensive conscience 5. The well-sighted conscience 6. The well-spoken conscience 7. The Honest-handed conscience 8. The Tender conscience 9. The Passive or Hardy conscience 10. The conscience of Charity The first and most excellent conscience is that in the Text the good conscience of faith The conscience of Faith This onely makes a good conscience Nor can all the other nine make it such without this It is impossible that any thing or person should be good and please God without faith Heb. 11. 6. Precious faith makes the conscience of great price It is therefore very observable that in three places of this Epistle The Apostle
Ce●titudo Sal●tis non e●t ab aliis neque alias per●ipitur ni● ab iis qui una●um fide ●●tinent bo●am Conscienti●m idque dwn eam retinent sine graviore aliquo vulnere quod à peccatis iis infertur quae vastare solent Conscientiam Dr Ames in this respect Look saith he how much thy Faith and good Conscience do rise or fall so is thy Comfort and Assurance of Salvation more or less Therefore saith he Assurance of Salvation is neither had by other men nor by any other manner then by those who together with Faith do keep a go●d Conscience and that onely while they keep Conscience from any greater wound which is usually given by those sins which do waste and make havock of Conscience And at last he concludes Qui igitur sine ulla fidei Resipiscentiae sensu aut cu●â certò sperant Salutem praesumendo sperant sperando pereunt Whosoever without care had of Faith Repentance and good Conscience persuade themselves they have Assurance of Salvation that Perswasion is their Presumption and that Presumption will be their Perdition Conscience doth not use to collogue and flatter any man it will tell every man his own If you make it sad it will make you as sad And if you be found to it what you should not wonder not if you finde that to you what you would not who can make me glad but the same who was made sorrie by me said the Apostle in another case 2 Cor. 2. 2. When thou hast put away Puritie of Conscience wonder not if thou wantest Peace of Conscience The Bell when cracked loseth not onely his former soundness but the pleasantness of his former sound The crackt Conscience makes but harsh musick What man could exspect a song of the Lord in a Babylon of sin There was no voice of Bridegroom or Bride or sound of Harp to be heard any more Revel 18. 23. But the Harpers and Singers are onely to be found upon Mount Sion Revel 14. 1 2. 8. This informs us whence it is that many come to die so Tragically despairingly and to make such fearfull ends They have like Zimri set their own house of Conscience afire and now must perish in it Some have attempted to make away themselves some have done it as Saul Judas and Abithophel some have accursed themselves as Spira some have blasphemed God as Cain and they mentioned Revel 16. 11. All fruits of this shipwrack of Conscience All these fierie and devouring flames break out of the AEtna of a sulphurie and hellish Conscience Maxima violatio Conscientiae maximum peccatum Ames The more thou doest wound another mans Conscience thou dost offend against Charitie and therefore dost the more wound Christ 1 Cor. 8. 12. The more thou woundest and grievest thy own Conscience thou offendest against Pietie and therefore thou sinnest against and grievest the holy Ghost Paul while a Pharisee had done worse acts then Judas he had been a raging Persecutor a desperate blasphemer of Christ a compeller of others to blaspheme he had his hand in the bloud of holy Martyrs Judas did none of these hideous Acts yet Paul saved Judas damned Paul found mercie because what he did he did ignorantly in unbelief he had never gone 1 Tim. 1. 13 against the light of his own Conscience Therefore he said Act. 23. 1. he had walked in all good Conscience before God to that day The like 2 Tim. 1. 3. I thank God whom I serve from my forefathers with a pure Conscience But as for Judas he could have no cloak for his sin he went fully against the clear light of his own Conscience therefore he had the more sin and the more horrour The consumption of Conscience doth not onely bring the outward state into a consumption that such die beggers or bankrupts but it as usually brings the inward man into fits of Convulsions which are hardly cured and at last they die in one of those fits in great horrour When Conscience hath been often fretted and grated upon by known and allowed sins at length it breeds an Vlcer in Conscience which is the most tormenting disease in the world beyond any Vlcer in Bowels or Bladder These live and die in great extremities of Miserie The stroke at Conscience is the stroke at the fift Rib the fatall and deadly stroke 9. Lastly it informs us whence it is that some have arrived at the highest pitch of impietie to commit that sin of sins that sin against the holy Ghost It is ever first by muzzling and snubbing their Conscience and afterwards intreating it worse wasting worrying and stabbing of it No other way of coming up to this incurable disease and unpardonable state but by violation of Conscience Keep this fierie sword in thy hand The Word of God turning every way in the door of Conscience and the Tree of Life is guarded The Gate of Paradise kept no danger of committing the sin against the holy Ghost But on the other side when thou dost cross the Line and swim through and over and beyond thy Conscience then is the Gulf fixed and the Gate of Hell shut that there is no coming thence for them that would as no coming thither but over this Gulf. CHAP. XX. Of the second Application of the Point by way of Lamentation THe second Use is of Lamentation And it may 1. Be a Generall Lamentation carrying a Wo in the mouth of it for the Generall want of Good Consciences in this age And I may justly make it as large as that of our Saviour Matth. 18. 7. Wo to the world saith he because of offences All the world is faultie in this kinde more or less So may we say Wo to the world because of ill Consciences All the world in generall and most called Christians in particular herein being blame-worthy Run to and fro into the Cities of Israel and in the streets of Jerusalem Jer. 5. 1. and enquire and see if you can finde a man of Conscience in this Generation We may change Job's Quaere Vbinam invenienda est sapientia Job 28. 12 20. ubinam est locus Intelligentiae Where is wisdom to be found and where is the place of understanding into ubinam invenienda est Conscientia ubinam est Locus Integritatis where is Conscience to be found and what is the Place of Integritie The best of men that make Enquirie after her complain that shee is not seen so much abroad as she was wont to be The most of men say that shee is either departed or drawing on toward her departure And prophane ones say that Conscience was hanged many a day ago indeed my Text tells us that shee was drowned long ago and perished in shipwrack but they are much mistaken to say it was good Conscience for it was the ill Conscience that perished The Good Conscience fears neither the Gallowes nor Hell it is the best Preservative against both But sad it
200. 2. Ecclesiasticall or Christian charity the more excellent p. 201. In what it is to be shewed p. 202. The great and dolefull want of it in these times p. 206. CHAP. XV. The reasons of the point p. 212. Three generall heads of reasons whereof the first is taken from the excellency of good Conscience and shewed in five particulars p. 213. CHAP. XVI The second reason from the danger and mischief of an evill Conscience p. 225. This set out in foure Particulars p. 225. 226. CHAP. XVII The third reason from the difficulty of getting and keeping a good Conscience and escaping an evill p. 232. This made plaine in three particulars p. 233 CHAP. XVIII The application of the Doctrine p. 237 A seven-fold application propounded ibid. First by way of information ibid. This information looketh two waies 1. To discover errors 2. To assert Duties and Truths 1. Error discovered that to preach Conscience and presse duty is legall preaching p. 238. 239. 240. 2. That Conscience is a snare not security p. 243. Third mistake of such who judge thier conscience good when it is yet but a naturall conscience p. 244. Naturall conscience may have some good in it yet cannot be call'd a good conscience p. 244. What good may be in naturall conscience shewed in 8. particulars p. 244. 245. What is wanting in naturall conscience to make it truly good shewed in four particulars p. 246. 247. Fourth mistake To judge conscience therefore good because quiet p. 247. Foure quiet consciences never an one of them good p. 248. 1. The ignorant mans conscience p. 248. 2. The unawakened conscience p. 249. 250. 251. 3. The deluded conscience p. 252. 253. 254. 4. The hardened conscience p. 255. A six-fold hardnesse of heart or conscience p. 255. 1. Naturall hardnesse p. 255. 256. 2. Voluntary and attracted p. 256. Eleven steps to hell discovered p. 256 257. 3. Judiciall hardening by Impostors and Seducers p. 259 4. Ministeriall hardening by Ministers and Ordinances p. 259. 260. 5. Divine hardening by God himselfe ibid. 6. Satanicall by the prevailing efficacy of Satan p. 261. 5th Mistake of such who judge conscience therefore good because troubled p. 263. Three notes of an ill troubled conscience p. 264. Six notes of a good troubled conscience p. 271 A sixth Mistake to judge erroneous conscience a good conscience p. 273. Seven common and ordinary notes of an erroneous conscience p. 274. A seventh mistake to judge scrupulous Conscience a good Conscience p. 278. The eighth mistake to judge the conscience of and for liberty a good conscience p. 280. Sinfull liberty of conscience branded and decyphered p. 281. Right liberty of conscience asserted p. 282. Set out in five particulars p. 283. CHAP. XIX The other part of the use of information to assert Truths p. 285. 1. That good conscience is the Christians greatest charge ibid. 2. To looke after conscience in selfe and others the ministers greatest charge p. 286. 3. Conscience decaying is the decay of State p. 290. 4. Conscience decaying grace decayes p. 292. 5. Tolleration not to be granted to all sorts of consciences p. 293. 6. Whence the world is so poysoned with corrupt Doctrines and blasphemous errors p. 249. 7. Whence many have lost former peace and comfort ibid. 8. Whence many come to dye Tragically and dispairingly p. 296. 9. Whence men come to commit the sin against the Holy Ghost p 298. CHAP. XX. The use of Lamentation p. 299. The generall want of conscience lamented ibid. The generall losse of conscience more lamented p. 303. CHAP. XXI The use of reproofe p. 309. Want of conscience reproved ibid. Want of conscience the greatest want p. 313. Losse of conscience reproved p. 314. Losse of conscience the greatest loss p. 315. CHAP. XXII The use of terror to foure sorts of men p. 317. 1. Such as are regardlesse of conscience ibid 2. Such as have an accusing gnawing conscience 318. 3. Such as have a stupified and feared conscience p. 320 4. Such as are falling into the consumption of conscience p. 321. CHAP. XXIII The comfort and happiness of such whose care is to get and keepe a good conscience p. 323. CHAP. XXIV The use of examination p. 327. CHAP. XXV The use of exhortation p. 333. 1. By way of Dehortation ibid. 1. By way of Adhortation to All Christians Ministers chiefly p. 334. This exhortation backed with Motives perswading p. 335. Meanes directing p. 349. Motives to perswade foure p. 345. c. Meanes directing two-fold principall Subservient p. 349. Principall meanes two The blood The spirit p. 350. Subservient meanes 13. whereof 6. prescribe what is to be had and done 7. what is to be avoided p. 352. 1. Meanes to get and keepe good conscience faith 353. Three-fold faith necessary for a good conscience Justifying for the heart p. 354. Orthodox for the judgement 355 particular warranting faith for our particular actions p. 356. 2d. Meanes To exercise and renew repentance p. 357. Repentance a Gospell duty ibid 3d. meanes To attend the Hints and Items given by Christ and his Spirit p. 360. 4. To attend and observe the hints and motions of our own Spirit p. 361. 5. To confer our conscience with Scripture p. 365. 6. The last meanes to be used Prayer p. 366. 2. The evills to be avoided are seven p. 370. 1. Beware of the smallest sinne allowed ibid. 2. Of one sinful Act deliberately committed p. 373 3. Beware of living under a loose cold freezing ministery or an unsound ministery p. 375. 4. Take heed of an ill companion p. 381. 5. In things doubtfull forbeare to Act or chuse the safer part p. 382. 6. Shun worldly mindedness p. 383. 7. Beware of erroneousness of conscience p. 385 2. The other part of the exhortation concerneth ministers especially p. 387. Ministers have a double charge given them concerning conscience 1. Personall 2. Doctrinall His personall charge is that he be a man Exemplary a man of conscience ibid Here 1. A particular encouragement to younger Timothyes p. 389. 2. An Item to Hymenaeus p. 390. His Doctrinall charge is that he bee aman for Conscience in all his ministery applying himselfe to the conscience of his hearers p. 396. A Good Conscience THE Strongest Hold. 1 Tim. 1. 19. Holding faith and a good Conscience which some having put away concerning Faith have made Ship-wrack THese two Epistles to Timothy and that to Titus may well be called the Ministers Directory made up of Canons clearly and undubitately Apostolicall Directing the Minister how to Govern himselfe and how to Guide his People The Ministers charge is looked upon by all as the greatest and the Apostle who best knew what it was doth not spare to lay it home to him and to give it him to the full Each Minister hath a double charge The one ad extra concerning others The other ad intra which concernes himselfe Both are 1 Tim. 4. 16. summed up in those few words 1 Tim. 4.
is certaine whatsoever Trade the other was of how ominously fatall is it to the undertakers themselves when private Mechanickes do presumptuously invade the Ministery and become publique Preachers 3. There is no dividing between Faith and a good Conscience leave Orthodox Faith and farewell good Conscience or let go good Conscience and you have seene the last of Faith it sinkes it shipwracks 4. How true is that of 2 Tim. 3. 13. That evil men and Seducers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waxe worse and worse deceiving and being deceived seldome staying when they begin to shrinke from their former sincerity and strictnesse till they arrive at the highest of impiety going from sinne to sinne and from Error to Error till by the just judgement of God they are given over to become open Blasphemers and outragious Persecutors 5. Every vicious and infectious Teacher and every bold Broacher of Doctrines corrupting and staining the simplicity of the Faith and every Member of a corrupt and dissolute Conscience are not to be Tollerated and permitted in a new Testament Church but all such are deservedly excommunicated the Church who have once excommunicated Conscience and they justly suffer in being delivered up to Sathan who have wickedly sinned in delivering Doctrines of Sathan No liberty here you see for every kinde of Conscience 6. Yet are not visible and open censures but for visible and open sinnes not for Errors in judgement concealed but published not for want Publice declarantur pertinere ad regnum Satanae quippe qui non pertineant ad regnum Christi Piscator of faith but for opposing it 7 Excommunication Clave non errante is a solemne and dreadfully operative Ordinance a shutting out of Heaven a shutting up in Hell him who is justly cast out of the Churches fellow●hip by that censure He is delivered up to Satan 8 The end of Excommunication and all Church censures is not to serve to the destruction 2 Cor. 10. 8 13. 10. 1 Cor. 5. 5. of the Censured or Private revenge of the Censurers but to edification onely That the offender may be terrified and reclaimed The Traditi sunt ad emendandum non ad perdendum Sedul in locum flesh destroyed that the soule may be saved and that others may be warned and so the infection stayed That they may learne not to blaspheme Vt Castigatione hac adducti desinant falsum suum dogma spargere Piscator But none of these doe I intend to stand upon though I shall have occasion to meet with them in prosecuting the intended Doctrine To the words Holding Faith and a good Conscience c. Holding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Piscator It signifies properly Having and so translated 1 Pet. 1 Pet 3. 16. 3. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Having a good Conscience here Holding To have and to hold in our English speaking are usually put together It is not enough once to have or for some while to have Had unlesse we ever have and hold them Faith Either take it first for that which we call Grace-faith Fides quâ creditur That hee should Hold Act Maintaine Exercise the grace of saving and lively Faith Or Secondly for the Doctrine of Faith Fides quâ creditur In which sence it is used Chap. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. Jud. v. 3. And Expositors do generally understand it so here that Timothy should 1 Tim. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. ●ud v. 3. hold the whol●some forme of sound words and still retaine the old received Faith in Orthodox Doctrine for the grace of saving Faith will not be long kept in the heart unlesse we keepe the Doctrine of sound faith and principles in the head And a good Conscience Conscience you seldome 1 Tim. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19 see it without an Epethite and this usually is his Epethite Good Conscience so in many places Cap. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19. Faith had no Epethite of Good you doe not Ordinarily see other Graces called Good as good Love good Repentance Zeale Hope Patience or the like But ever good Conscience The other graces are commonly Nemo tam perditus est ut sit omni conscientia planè expers Ames good or few have them but those that are good But Conscience is a thing which all have though a good Conscience but few therefore get and hold a good Conscience or have none at all Which some having put away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua repulsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de trudo depello arceo ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trudo pello Act 7. 27. 39 Beza Expulsa Piscator quam Repellentes Vulgar Transl thrusling it away This word is used Acts 7. 27. He that did his Neighbour wrong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trust Moses away as a busie body and an intruding intermedler so did these thrust away Conscience as if it had been a troublesome usurper over them So after Act 7. 39. The rebelling Israelites thrust him from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They would cast off and eashiere Moses no more receive his Dictates nor obey his directions but would set up another Captaine whom they would follow or lead rather into Egypt Thus did these in the Text cashiere and throw off conscience from his be trusted employment and would follow their owne swinge This word is used also Rom. 11. 1. 2. Hath God cast away Ro. 11. 1. 2 his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and v. 2. He answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath not cast away or reprobated his people whom he foreknew But these did reprobate Conscience and would make it a cast away as not to be retained in times of Gospell Light and liberty So that in this place the Translation is with the softest and more gentle it is here then in any other place when it is rendered they put away good Conscience It might have been read they thrust off threw away cashiered disclaimed and even reprobated it Concerning faith made Shipwrack Fide Vacui facti sunt They were emptied and eased of their faith Syriack transl Their souls are Shipwrack'd their Faith Grace Ship-wrack'd aleak being sprung in Conscience the Vessel they lost all they had and saved not the use Comfort Confidence Joy or feeling of former Faith and beleeving Nor did they preserve their former simplicitie and integrity of judgement in matter of Doctrine and Truth But as Conscience was reprobated to their judgement their judgement is now wholly reprobate concerning the Faith Now the words being opened you see they are a Magazine or Panoply of Armor and Ammunition to furnish Timothy and each good Minister yea every Christian with the most necessary and usefull armes both to warre that good warfare v. 18. And to prevent this evill shipwracke v. 19. Timothy thy charge is that thou war a good warfare thy duty is
wildernesse of Kadesh doth tremble when he speaks terror who can give peace His word is as fire in the Bones He sendeth his word the Snow is scattered like woll It s like morsels who can stand before his cold There is a winter and trembling in the conscience But he sendeth Psal 147. 17. 18. forth his word againe and melteth them All the mighty workes wrought upon the soule are by meanes of the word of Christ By this word Act. 10. 36. Christ commeth to the Mar. 4 50 Luk. 24. 38 soule Preaching Peace He saith why are ye fearefull oh ye of little faith why are ye troubled why doe thoughts arise in your heart By his word he coms into the sad solitary soule as Jo. 20. 19. he did to the Disciples all doores being shut and saith Peace be unto you Yea ordinarily that you may waite on the word for tydings of Peace The Peace which Christ doth create is the fruit of the lips of his Ministers Isa 57. 19. I create the fruit of the lips Peace Peace to him that is farre off and to him that is neere saith the Lord and I will heale him The Ministers Feet bring Peace by Preaching the word of Peace Isa 52. 7. And the feet of Beleevers are said to be shod with Peace to walk in waies of Peace through the preparation and Eph. 6. 15 preaching of the Gospell of Peace When the minister comes to a place or people Preaching Peace if there be a Son and Heire of Peace there his Peace shall remaine upon that Person Luk. 10. 6. 2. By the Blood of Christ This is the Procuring cause of all our Peace Col. 1. 20. Having By the blood of Christ made Peace by the blood of his Cross The Peace of our Conscience is the meer issue of that blessed Personall Treaty made between the Father and the Son in behalf of undone and Ruined man the blood of Christ being the whole price of it and all the satisfaction to be made Rom. 3. 23 24 25. For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of all sins past c. The blood of the Paschall Lamb upon the door post was the peace and security of Israel against the destroyer Exo. 12. 23 and the blood of Christ upon the soul is the consciences security alone against all remaining guilt and corruption of sin rage of Satan and danger of Gods displeasure This blood gives the soul all boldnesse to enter into Heb. 10. 19 the holyest by a new and living way and gives us assurance before God 3. By the Spirit of Christ This is the Procreating 3. By the spirit of Christ and Producing cause of Peace in us as the blood of Christ was the Procuring cause of Peace for us For this reason Christ and the Holy Ghost are called by one and the same name because their end and businesse is the same to procure Peace to the soul Christ is an Advocate or Paraclete 1 Joh. 2. 1. The holy Ghost is an Advocate or Paraclete Joh 14. 16. The word is the same in the Originall But here is the difference Christ is our Advocate the holy Ghost is Gods Advocate Christ is our Advocate with the Father procuring peace the holy Ghost is an Advocate or Paraclete from the Father producing peace Christ is our Advocate to God prevailing with him for granting peace The Spirit is Gods Advocate Jo. 15. 26 14. 16 26 Gen. 8. 11 to us prevailing with us to entertain peace This is the Dove with the Olive branch which goes and returns till the waters are asswaged dry land appear and danger be over This applyes the word and promise which proclaims our peace this applyes the blood of Christ which procures our peace this hath the last hand and consummating stroke in our peace making Therefore this joy and peace of conscience is denominated from the Spirit joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. The fruit of the Spirit is joy Peace Gal. 5. 22. CHAP. IV. The Offices of Conscience III. IN our definition of a good conscience Chap 4. The Offices of conscience I said it was that conscience which being purifyed and pacified doth regularly perform all his Offices Conscience is absolutely the greatest Officer under Heaven and is without contradiction the greatest Representative in all the world it is Gods immediate Vice-gerent hath a delegation from God Whence we commonly say vox Conscientiae vox Dei The voice of God is in the voice of Conscience And the Acts of Conscience are the Acts of God what conscience doth binde or loose on earth in foro suo God doth ratifie in heaven in foro suo 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. So that what the Canonists impudently and blasphemously assert of the Pope we may in a safe and modest sense apply to conscience Deus Papa say they unum habent Consistorium a bold and impious saying Deus conscientia unum habent Consistorium A true saying God and the Pope have but one Consistory or Judicatory say they God and Conscience say we Prov. 20. 27. The Spirit of man is the candle of the Lord. Pluralist respectu Officiorum non Beneficiorum Conscience hath four Offices Now conscience is a Licensed and allowed Pluralist hath four distinct Offices 1. Propheticall or Ministeriall 2. Regal or Magistratual 3. Testimoniall or witnesse bearing 4. Judiciall or sentence passing Consciences Ministeriall Office 1. Consciences first office is Ministeriall or Propheticall that is to do the Office of a Minister Watchman or Seer to give warning from God from whom it hath his Commission Ordination and Station all Jure Divino To warn inform direct reprove admonish charge See you refuse not him that speaketh within you This is your Domestick Chaplain to whom as Jotham said to the men of Shechem you must hearken that God may hearken Judg. 9. 7. unto you We dislike that a Minister should be dumb in his charge or a Watchman should sleep on the Sentery take heed of maintaining a Conscience or silencing a speaking conscience In Libera Civitate Linguas liberas esse oportet Augustus was wont to say Say thou among Freemen conscience should have his freedom preserved at least as to his own charge Give thy conscience all freedom to inform propound yea reprove and smite This Liberty of Conscience none will question all will contend for There is some other Liberty of Conscience the world cries out for I dare not plead for that But give conscience leave to be bold with thee it will give thee boldness another day that thou shalt assure thy heart before God We called it Tyrannicall and Antichristian dealing when the Prelates outed suspended and deprived the godly and
faithful Ministers for delivering Gods minde and rebuking the sins of their wicked hearers sometimes Take heed thou tread not in their steps to interdict and silence thy own conscience this is more to be hearkened to in many cases then any Divine or Minister whatsoever this is the mouth of the Lord the Candle of the Lord searching and discovering Pro. 20. 27. the secrets and inward things of the belly We say conscience in some cases is above all witnesses a thousand witnesses it is a thousand Preachers too God saith to conscience as he Conscientia mille Ministri did to Moses once Exod. 7. 1. See I have made thee a God to Pharaoh and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet Conscience shall be to me in stead of a mouth saith God and to thee in stead of God as Moses was to Aaron Exo. 4. 16. Consciences second office is Regall or Magistratuall 2. Consciences Regall office a higher office then the former Conscience hath a commanding and legislative power to binde even kings in chains and nobles with fetters of iron He is thy Perpetuus Dictator whose dictares are Laws They were a law to themselves Rom. 2. 14. This king may neither be deposed nor resisted but ever informed counselled and treated with and then ever obeyed as Gods vicegerent Whosoever cast off the imperiall commands of conscience God saith to them as he did to Samuel concerning Israel 1 Sam. 8. 7. They have not rejected thee but they have rejected me that I should not reigne over them God giveth to conscience a large Commission and saith to it as to Eliakim in the day of his investiture in his office I will clothe thee with a new robe and commit the government into thy hand The key of the house of David will I lay on thy shoulders Thou shalt shut and none shall open thou shalt open and none shall shut Isay 22. 21 22. What conscience peremptorily commands or forbids is more to a godly man then what Kings or States command And the religious man resolveth Conscientia mille Reges mille Leges rather to disobey any unjust commands of Kings or States and fall under any displeasure of men then to go against the dictates of his own rightly informed conscience We are not carefull O King to answer thee in this Dan. 3. 16. matter said they to Nebuchadnezzar although they heard his expresse commands and saw the fiery furnace before them Julian the Apostate forbad the Christians to sing Psalms Risui ei catui furias suas esse intellexit Magd. cent 4. cap. 3. the very women and virgins did purposely sing the louder when the Emperour was to go by their doors that he saw his wrath was by them derided And those Psalms they picked out that condemned his Idols as that Psalm 135 ver 15. 16 18. Conscience rides in the second Charet and is Gen. 41. 40 43. 44. solo Deo minor soli Deo secunda Without thee saith God to conscience as Pharaoh once to Joseph shall no man lift up his hand or foot Onely in the Throne will I be greater then thou Conscience hath a kingly or magistratuall power but must not exercise an Arbitrary power It must be it self at his beck who is in the Throne Of whose subordination to God and his written Word and Law we shall speak afterwards in his proper place His third office is Testimoniall or to bear Consciences Testimoniall Office witnesse Rom. 2. 14 15. The Gentiles who had not the Law in Tables of stone as had the Jews had the Law written in their hearts which did shew it self in this work of Conscience Their consciences also bearing witnesse Rom. 2. 14. 15. c. This is the witnesse in a mans self a greater testimony then that of John This is the Epistle of Christ written in the heart Our rejoycing is this The testimony of our conscience 2 Cor. 1. 12. A testimony and certificate which Gods Spirit doth attest to and consent with Rom. 9. 1. My conscience bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost In the mouth of these two great witnesses the state of a Christian is established For the Spirit it self witnesseth with our spirit that we are the Rom. 8. 16 sons of God Rom. 8. 16. This testimony of conscience is above a thousand witnesses be it Conscientia mille testes for thee or against thee 1 Job 3. 19 20 21. Turpe quid acturus te sine teste time Take heed wheresoever thou art what thou dost Conscience will out with all the secret passages it hath observed It is like Joseph among his brethren who carried home their ill report to their father and made them much anger Thou never sinnest without a spie or Gen. 37. 2. an observer and informer Do therefore as was said of Mr. Latimer who being examined in private spake more freely till he over-heard one behinde the Hangings whom he saw not present to take in writing what he said then he spake more warily Take heed what thou dost remotis arbitris Curse not the King no not in thy thought conscience the margin reads it scientia Arias Mont. conscientia Junius Nor the rich in thy bed-chamber for a bird of the air shall carry the voyce and tha● which hath wings shall tell the matter Eccles 10 20. Thine own conscience may be that bird Elisha did relate what was in agitation at the 2 Kin. 6. 12 King of Syrias Councell-table yea what passed in his Bed-chamber Such an observing witnesse hath every one continually with him do he good or evil Conscience is a witness and is like one of those two famous witnesses spoken of Revel 11. 3. who prophesied in sackcloth despised and opposed by the men of the world as the great Rev. 11 3. 5. 6 c. heart troubler and worlds tormenter they rejoyced made merry and sent gifts when they were slain these brought all plagues from heaven among men and could shut up Heaven it self fire came out of their mouth yet kill this if thou darest and keep it down if thou canst it will rise again after a few days stand upon his feet the sight thereof will terrifie and dismay thee but thou shalt know it will go up to Heaven there to accuse and condemn thee 4. The fourth Office of conscience is Judiciall Conscienecs judicial Office and Judge-like It doth passe sentence on thee and read thy doom Hence men are said to be convicted of their own Consciences Joh. 8. 9. Some are said to be self condemned Tit. 3. 11. Happy is he that condemneth not himself Rom. 14. 22. If our heart that is our conscience condemn us God is greater then our hearts to condemn us further But if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. Consciences sentence is the fore-runner of the last judgement Praejudicium Divini judicii as Joseph interpreted
Therefore Satan commonly begins here and seeks Entrance for less sins upon the Conscience as House-robbers put in their less boies into the windowes to set open all the doors of the house for all the companie to enter Nemo repente fuit Turpissimus No man arrives at the height of impietie at once And this is commonly the first step One unclean spirit entertained makes room Mat. 12. 45. for seven worse to follow When Conscience likes not to retain the knowledge of God God gives up to vile affections at length to a reprobate minde at last to be filled with all manner of unrighteousness Rom. 1. 26 28 29. The hopefull Professour by this meanes soon becomes a dangerous Apostate and at last a down-right Atheist in life as the Apostle saith Titus 1. 15 16. when once the minde and Conscience is defiled they may profess still to know but in works they denie God being abominable disobedient and to every good work as any reprobate When the wormwood star falls into the fountain of Conscience all the rivers become bitter the sun beginning to set in Conscience night hastens on in the affections Then farewell Grace And when the sun goes back in the heaven of Conscience the shadow must needs go back as many degrees in the Diall of Comfort Then farewell Peace 2. As the first decay is here commonly begun so it proves the worst decay and danger that can befall a man a breach in Conscience is like a breach in the Sea banks proves desperate or like the Leake sprung in the ship drowns men in utter perdition after a crack in Conscience a man proves an utter Bankrupt after other shipwracks one may recover and get up again there are post naufragium Tabul● but this is a fatall and commonly irrecoverable shipwrack Some sins and slips are like breaking of a Leg or an Arm which may be set again this is like breaking the Neck few recover to take hold of the paths of life after this Judas brake his Conscience Neck and that brake his Neck Enquire as oft as you will by what degrees any is come up to the highest sins As for instance how some came to give themselves over to lasciviousness to the committing of all uncleanness even with greediness Ephes 4. 19. The Apostle tells us they had been practising upon their Conscience first they had first blinded their mindes and had stunted their Conscience to bring them to that dedolencie that they might bee past feeling Again do you wonder and enquire how it is that in these last daies so many do depart from the faith and give heed to seducing spirits yea to the very doctrines of devils as was foretold 1 Tim. 4. 1. the answer is at hand in the next verse They had first seared and stupified their Conscience Do you enquire again how it comes that some most hopefull Professours become at last most violent and enraged Persecutors and as bold broachers of accursed errours you have the answer in the Text Hymeneus and Alexander laid down their Old-Testament weapons Faith and a good Conscience then became filled with new wine then grew corrupt themselves then vented blasphemies then were delivered up to Satan as fitter for Hell then the Church They fell into prodigious opinions and conceits making a fable of the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2. 17. At last this Alexander came to be an open enemie to Paul and Persecutor of his doctrine whom he praieth against more then he doth against any other 2 Tim. 4. 14. This is indeed the readie way nay the onely way to sin that unpardonable sin the sin against the holy Ghost which never hath forgiveness because it never hath Repentance A man that hath lost his Conscience is like a Bee that hath lost his sting becomes a Droan ever after and is at last expelled the Hive The beginning of the Decaie of Conscience is like the beginning of the Hectick feaver which at first as the Phisitian saith were easily cured but that it is hardly known but at last it is easily known but hardly cured 3. The third danger and mischief is that either thou must resolve to make this Good warfare required in the Text for a Good Conscience or to suffer an ill warfare made upon thee from an ill Conscience either thou must make this Tree good and his fruit good or else make the tree corrupt and his fruit corrupt but Mat. 12. 33. know that this war is the worst war which can bee made All wars are bad and end in bitterness but of all wars civil wars are the most dreadfull worse when it is between Citie and Citie then if it were Nation with Nation and of all civil wars domestical in the same Familie when divided is worse then when a Kingdom divided And in the same familie again Matrimonial war when in the same bed is worse then any other war in the same house between father and son for where the Relation is nearest division there is unkindest But there is one war yet worse then all these the personal division is worse then any division between man and wife This is to speak properly the onely Intestine war when two are divided against three and three against two Vnderstanding and Conscience joyning together to keep in order Will Affections and Practises but these joyntly rise up to suppress their Legall and Rightfull Superiours Vnderstanding and Conscience It is a sad Storie to read that of the father and his two sons who separating from our Churches in England kept together a while but ere long the two brothers divided among themselves again and when the father could not reconcile them he left the one childe to adhere to the other but after that differences grew between the father and this one son and they must Anathematize each other Here was a lamentable Example to see in three persons of nearest naturall Relation such an Enmitie each stood aloof from the rest all three stood excommunicated and accursed by each other But this separation and difference I speak of is beyond that when a man doth separate from his Conscience and excommunicate it first then after doth Conscience separate from him and accurse him yea and he shall be cursed Many have thought that they have been able to make offensive war against Conscience none have ever been able to make the defensive To fight aginst Conscience is to fight against God and who hath ever hardened himself Job 9. 4. against him and prospered Pharoab would begin with God and make an offensive war Who is the Lord I know him not I will not let Israel go but he was wearie of the defensive Exod. 5. 2. Let us flie for the Lord fighteth against us So if thou thinkest it a light thing to Exod. 14. 25. challenge and provoke Conscience while it would be at peace with thee know thou wilt finde it next God himself the heaviest adversarie that thou couldst have had If Conscience
like the going to the fire in a melancholy Quartan Ague to get outward heat when the cold is inward and the man shaketh before the fire his Aguish fit is thereby increased and made more violent 2. When men again rest in the Outward use and observation of Religious means without any inward change of heart and a thorow-Reformation of life Ahab humbles himself fasts mourns puts on sackcloth goes softly All good but all this not enough Good to do these not to rest in these Ahab was Ahab still no inward change at all in him Judas is full of inward horrour he makes an outward confession of his particular sin makes plenarie Restitution of what he had sinfully gotten but there he rests he goes not penitentially to God he goes not fiducially to Jesus Christ whom he had sold or given up all his former interest in but all this he doth to stop the mouth of Conscience and to dead that hideous noise that was within Thus do we see others taking up duties often and here they rest They fast pray read hear more then formerly all to gratifie Conscience and keep it from grumbling and clamor Somewhat they do all they do not that they should do All this to a sin-troubled Conscience is no more to the cure of it then a draught of cold water inwardly or pouring cold water outwardly on a bodie burning in a feaver It may allay at present but removes no part or cause of his disease These torment and task themselves turning themselves up and down as Solomons sluggard on his bed or the door turning on his hinges there is no departure from Pro. 26. 14. the bed or from the door-Post So is here much turning no returning therefore Jeremy calls all this but gadding a wilde and disorderly gadding not a regular going or penitent returning Jer. 2. 36. Why gaddest thou about so much to change thy way Thirdly which is much worse then the former when men have recourse to Diabolical and sinful means as Saul goes to the witch 1 Sam. 28. 7 8. 2 King 1. 2 Abaziah sendeth to Baalzebub to enquire sendeth not to enquire of God Belshazzar in his perplexitie sends for the Magicians to give him comfort Dan. 5. 7. To such as take these courses the Prophet speakes Isai 47. 12 13. Stand now with thy inchantments and with the multitude of thy sorceries if so bee thou shalt be able to profit thy self Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels Let now the Astrologers the star-gazers and monthly Prognosticators stand up and save thee from those things that shal come upon thee These all die in their sin and perish as Ahaziah did because they go 2 Ki. 1. 6. to Baalzebub not to God and never come away with more comfort then Judas had at the High Priests hands when hee must go tell them what he wanted and what he felt He might go and die of despair for all they could say or do to him The stroke is from Gods hand the cure must bee from the same hand These should say Hos 6. 1. Come let us return to the Lord for he hath smitten and he will heal us he hath broken and he shal binde us up Lastly which is worst of all when men despairingly give over all hopes and all use of means saying There is now no hope This latter Jer. 2. 25. 18. 12. evil in putting away Gods mercie is worse then all the former in abusing and defiling Gods mercie As Tamar said to Amnon this latter evil in putting me away is worse then the former This was Cains case I am 2 Sam. 13. 16. Illa desperatio quae in hac vita tollit omnem spem quae ex Dei gratia potest oriri non tantum est aerumnosè molestè mala sed vitiosè Ames sentenced I must be damned I am accursed I must bear it God hath no mercie for me and none will I ask him Out he goes from the Presence of God full of black despair his countenance is cast down and he that was of late too stout to speak to his brother Abel is now as stout and sullen he will not once open his mouth to speak to God for a pardon So likewise Judas confessed repented restored but despairing of mercie never once went to speak with Christ to finde mercie So also Magus whom Peter bade Repent and pray then perhaps his sin might have been forgiven him Hee never made one Praier or so much as once set upon the work of Repentance This is trouble of Conscience that Hell is full of This the most desperate trouble in the world when one shall cast himself away wilfully and say This evil is of the Lord 2 King 6 33. why should I wait or pray or repent or believe or read or hear c This is to forsake our own mercie A childe of God may sometimes bee Jonah 2. 8. overwhelmed with troubles but he is still driven to God thereby not from God He saith I am distressed on every side yet I am 2 Cor. 4. 8. not in despair To despair I have cause in respect of my own desert To despair I can never have cause in respect of Gods mercie and Christs Redemption In distress I am in Hell I am not therefore I may yet seek and obtain mercie In the bellie of hell I may be yet I will look up to Gods Temple and Mercie-seat as Jonah said what though I cannot believe Jonah 2. 2. yet I will not despair though I cannot pray yet I will look up Though I cannot get out of the bellie of hell yet God can bring me out and can make the Whale land me and make all tempests and dangers to be means to preserve me Though I have sinned against the Grace the Gospel the Promise and the Spirit yea against Christ Jesus yet have I not sinned nor can I above and beyond the help and saving benefit of Grace and Gospel and Promises and of Christ and his Spirit Now there is also a troubled Conscience then which there can be none better it is the Sacrifice of Sacrifices which God will not Psal 51. 17 Isai 57. 17. 66. 2. despise it is the Temple of Temples in which God hath promised his residence it is the Holy of Holies in which the Mercie-seat of God is placed And this trouble of Conscience is then Six notes of a good troubled Conscience good when you see these six notes there 1. When this trouble is rather for sin then miserie when the soul crieth out Lam. 5. 16. Wo to me for I have sinned Thus was repenting Ephraims case described He smote Jer. 31. 19. his hand on his thigh because the sin of his youth lay heavie upon him which was more then if he had cried out ten times more because the hand of God had lain heavie upon him 2. When in this condition the poor troubled soul doth confess
to dissert the faith of Christ yet afterwards by his wives means she being an Arrian he was perverted and being Co-Emperour with his Godly Brother Valentinian he grew a Pseudo-Christian first nec Arrianus nec Christianus propemodum visus est He was neither perfect Arrian nor a perfect Christian afterwards grew a Persecutor at last he went to enquire of the Devill who should be his successor and upon the Ambiguous answer of the Diabolicall Oracle that his successours name should begin with Theod He put to death many a man all such whose name began with those letters as Theodorus Mag Cent. 4. cap. 3. Theodotus Theodoulus Theodosiolus and the like The third kind of Faith necessary to good 3. A particular warranting Faith Conscience is that particular warranting saith as I may call it to legitimate our actions which particular warranting faith may be also called a kind of Justifying faith in a certain sense I mean not justifying the person from all guilt but that action from sin Every action that is good in it self hereby becomes sanctified to the use of Conscience by the word of God the word of faith as it is called Of this particular warranting faith the Apostle speaks when in things of an indifferent and doubtfull nature he saith Let Every Rom. 14. 5. one be fully perswaded in his own mind that is let him be fully satisfied in his Conscience concerning his wayes whether for practising or forbearing this or that Whatsoever is not of this faith is sin that is whatsoever a man doth practise Conscientià fluctuante or much more Conscientiâ reclamante his Conscience wavering or gain-saying must needs be sinful in him though it be not sinful to another Of this that Aphorism also in the same Chapter is to be understood He that Rom. 14. 23. doubteth is damned if he eat he meaneth not that in what ever faith laying hold on Gospel and saving promises there is not full assurance but many doubts yet arising and fears yet remaining that soul hath no true faith and therefore is in the state of Damnation but his meaning is that he who is bold in practising what he yet sees no warrant for in the word doth wound his Conscience having not that sincerity and tendernesse of Conscience which he ought to look after and therefore is justly condemned and blamed Secondly Repentance and the daily renewing 2. Means Repentance thereof is the next means to get and keep the good Conscience This ever goes along with true faith Mar. 1. 15. Repent and beleeve the Gospel Repentance is as necessary to be taught and practised as Remission of sins to be preached and beleeved Luk. 24. 47. Paul where he came taught both this was the total sum of all he taught Act. 20. 21. They who would set your Conscience free to the commission of sin and yet keep it free from confession and contrition for sin while they promise you liberty they proclaim themselves the very servants of all corruption The Scripture rule is Job 11. 14 15. If Iniquity be in thy hand put it far away and let not wickednesse dwell in thy Tabernacles For then shalt thou lift up thy face without spot yea thou shalt be stedfast and thou shalt not fear But if thou do evil sin will lie at the doors not to be driven away but by repentance and there it will lie to keep in Terror to keep out Comfort If sin and guilt have not yet come in they lie at the door when thou steppest out at death they will fly at thy face and tear out thy throat therefore if thou lovest thy own peace and safety put it far away from thy Tabernacle saith Zophar Conscience must shut all known sin out of doors or sin will soon thrust Conscience out of doors Conscience well maintained resists and disarmes sin sin once entertained and a while maintained grows too hard for Conscience Take heed then of harbouring this Guest or turning in to this Host sin it will Jael-like after soft language sugred entertainment in thy sleep assault thee and fasten thee to the ground Take not in this Jonah at a venture though he pay his fare when he comes in he will raise a storm ere he be gotten out Revive this discontinued duty and work of repentance Dream not of lodging sin and peace together in the same heart or at most with a small partition to have Peace within doors and Sin without doors David once thought without the labour of repentance to have secured himself from the trouble and infamy of his foul Adultery what doth he he sends for Vriah pretends businesse with him and after discourses past dismisseth him home to his house Vriah would not be gotten from Davids door To prevent the shame that David would have smothered sin must be added to sin next day Vriah is made drunk yet at the door he lies again Then must he be made away to send the shame packing But did not Davids sin find him out break in upon him and at last made his bed too hot to hold him and too we● for him to sleep in He may now too late swim in tears and wash his defiled bed with weeping ere he recover his Peace So dangerous it is to play neer this Cockatrices Den and to put the finger upon the hole of the Asp See the like again in Amnon the son of David who having committed that villanous act of an incestuous rape upon his Sister Tamar thought it was but driving her down stairs and shutting the door upon her and the sin and danger was over But did not his sin lie at the door and after two years come up and stab him Conscience may be unkindly dealt withall and turned out of doors as the Levite did his Concubine and then forced ravished abused yet it will come home to thee again and though it cannot get in will lie at thy door and be at thy Threshold if it cannot go it will creep and if it cannot cry out Jud. 19. 27. there it will lie and in the morning when thou art to go out there thou shalt find it lying to accuse thy unkindnesse and to terrifie thee for thy ill usage of such a bosome friend Zophar tels Job that sin though sweet in Youth will lie downe with thee when old and sick and will not be beaten away This makes a miserable sicknesse and death when sin is in thy bed This is an unquiet bed-fellow Sin and guilt is the worst bed-fellow better death should be thy bed-fellow than sin Sicknesse poverty yea death it self may lie with thee in the same bed and thou take no hurt so that sin and an ill Conscience lie not in the middest between thee and Sicknesse or Death an ordinary bed may hold these two but what bed can hold these three Observe if thou wouldest have a good The third Means Conscience what hints at any time thou hast from
knowledge 2. It implies a knowing together not a common single abstracted Theoretick knowledge but a double or multiplied knowledge it must be Hence the learned say Conscientia est Aqninas Ri vet alij cum alijs scientia In this sence it intends a four-fold knowledge Conscire 1. cum Deo to know together 1. with God 2. cum seipsis 2. with our selves 3. cum alijs 3. with others 4. cum rebus ipsis 4. with things themselves In all which Idem est conscire consentire The Conscientious man is ever a Consentientious man 1. Cum Deo scire Conscience is first to know Conscientia est notitia vel sensus internus judicij proprij vel alieni praecipue Dei de nostris bene vel male factis Paraeus in Ro. 13. together or consent together with God whence commonly Divines say Conscientia is cum deo scientia When we have the same Idaea apprehension and esteeme of things in our minde that is in Gods when we allow or disallow thinke speake doe according to the rule of Gods word when wee are not swayed by mans judgement or the wisedom of the world But what God commendeth is approved what God commandeth is obeyed what he promiseth is beleeved what hee threatneth is avoyded what ever God propoundeth is regarded and received this is conscience when we light our Candle at the Lampes of the Sanctuary Hence we say Vox conscientiae is vox dei The voyce of a right enlightned Conscience is the voyce of God so saith Solomon Pr●v 20. 27. The spirit of a man is the Candle of the Lord Lumen ex ipsius Prov. 20. 27. lumine lighted at his Word then searching the inner parts of the Belly and the secrets of the heart and is become a discoverer of the secret thoughts nothing being hid from the view of these two heart-searchers What is Conscience other then the hewing and squaring our Tables according to the Tables delivered to us from the hand of God Mr. Burroughs Moses selfe denyall p. 39 As it is reported of Boleslaus King of Poland who used to weare the Picture of his Father in a plate of Gold hanging about his neck and whensoever he was to do or speake any thing of importance he would take his Picture and kissing it say Deare Father I wish I may not do any thing remissely unworthy of thy name c. So Conscience still hath a remembrance of God before his eyes and when any thing is to be done saith Lord Col. 1. 10. Give me to walke worthy of God to all Pleasing fruitfull in every good worke This is to have our works to be wrought in God Jo. 3. 21. And as in the sight of God 2 Cor. 2. ult 2 Conscire is cum seipso scire aut consentire Conscience is the knowing of a man with himselfe Cor quando se novit appellatur conscientia quando praeter se alia scientia Bern. Conscience maketh an identity in the same man throughout Hence it is that Bernard often calls Conscientia Cordis Scientia When the head and heart are agreed Knowledg in the head alone is barely Science oft so falsely called Knowledge in the heart too is then Conscience rightly so called In this respect I may say Ecl. 10. 2 Let thy right hand know whatsoever thy left hand doth Thy heart must lye at thy right hand yea and lye neare thy mouth too That is to say to Weigh Trye Examine Observe Order all that thy mouth speaketh or hand acteth or thought intendeth Caleb spake as it was in his heart Joshu 14. 7. And in the next verse he saith I fully followed the Lord. Here is nothing but Conscience in both these expressions His heart followed the Lord there is cum Deo Scire And he fully followed his heart There is cum seipso scire Psal 15. 2. The Godly man speaketh his Conscience he speaketh the truth in his heart So the Apostle Ro. 9. 1. I speake the truth in Christ and lye not there is cum Deo scientia My conscience also bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost There is the other Cordis Scientia There is conscience when these two meet happy is the man who condemneth not himselfe in his heart for what he alloweth approveth in practise Hic murus ahaeneus esto Nil conscire sibi That little quantity of Ayre which wee breath in at our nostrils which goes into the man even to the heart and which thereafter is breathed out thence againe is more to a man it is indeed his life then all the three regions of Ayre which fill up that vast space between Earth and Heaven However Philosophers conceive there is purer Aire in the highest Region Certainely that lesser proportion of Knowledge of Divine truths which we take downe and sucke into the heart and after draw out and deliver thence is more to a Christians life and Comfort then all your ref●ned speculations even of the third and highest Region 3. Conscire cum alijs To know together with others and consent with them This is Conscience to put our Soules into their Soules Iob. 16. 4. stead as Job speaketh Then to doe to others as wee would they should do to us Mat. 7. 12. To know the heart of a stranger Ex. 23. 9. that thou doe not oppresse him Cognoscit justus Animam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jumenti sui Prov. 12. 10. The righteous man is Arias Montan Conscientia est notitia sensus internus judicij proprij alieni c. Paraeus ubi supra mercifull to his Beast Because hee considereth the heart and condition of the poore dumb Creature with Sympathy much more doth he know and consider the case of the poore of the oppressed in the Gate of the Orphan of the widdow when as Job said of himselfe Job 31. 18. they were still with him either in his presence to releeve and support them or in his Bowels to commiscrate and condole with them The conscientious man saith who is weake and I am not weake who offended and I burne not How can I wound my Brothers conscience and sinne against him but I wound my 2 Cor. 11. 29. 1 Cor. 8. 12 selfe and sinne against Christ O what a worthy speech was that of Hadrian a heathen Emp. Emperatorem Erga unum Cent. Mag. Cent. 2. Cap. 3. quemque debere esse talem qualem si privatus esset sibi vellet esse imperatorem The Emperour should so carry himselfe to every private person as he would desire were he in that poore mans case the Emperour should deale with him This is to approve our selves to every good mans conscience in the sight of God 2 Cor. 4. 2. This is cum alijs scire Be ye as I am I am as you are Gal. 4. 12. This is to provide things honest Not onely in our owne sight or in Gods Bernard lib. 2. de consc sight in seeret
soul that was formerly as tender of sin as the mother of her childe with her own hands slaies and strangles it 14 Note This man again you shall finde him ever consulting rather with honesty justice and duty then with honour commodity and safety If he promiseth passeth his word giveth his hand bond or oath he changeth not though it be to his own prejudice and Psal 15. 4. damage That famous Regulus I now speak of having given his faithfull promise to return again being discharged upon his Paroll though he knew he should die if he did make it good returned again yeelded himself their prisoner again delivering this memorable Maxim to his eternall fame Fides hosti data est servanda Faith is to be kept with whatsoever enemy and upon whatsoever perill This also made Austin so much to extoll him as I said before as a man not altering with his fortunes greatnesse made him not swell nor affliction could make him shrink ●ad tanta exitia revertit Intrepidus Aug. ubi supra Mr. Latimer though he had notice before that the Pursevant would come for him would not absent himself yea when the Pursevant having delivered his Message was willing to have left him behind that he might have made an escape he made himself ready to go along with him Here was no consulting with flesh and blood but with conscience duty and the honour of the Gospel 15 Note Lastly this man alone in the cause of Christ and Religion dare stand it out against the whole world as Athanasius and Luther in their severall Generations sustained the rage and fury of the age they lived in yet were nothing discouraged The three most eminent of all David's valiant men purchased their honour by some singular exploit one of them did the work of many Adino the Eznite the first lift up his Spear against eight hundred at one time and slew them Eliazar the son of Dodo stood his ground and endured the shock of the Philistines Army when all his men had left him The like did Shammah the third of them 2 Sa. 23. 8 9 10. The Philistines were gathered together in a Troop where was a piece of ground full of Lentiles the people fled and left him he stood the charge and beat off the Philistines and made good his ground These things did those three mighty men So a man of conscience considers not so much the danger that lies before him as the duty and necessity that lies upon him to appear in such a time and cause A fiery Elias is the more jealous which is the greatest measure of tenderness and love of the cause truth and worship of God when the whole world is halting between a God and no God and when all his fellow Prophets were slain and butchered and he himself was left alone yea his life laid out for then was a fit time for him to shew his courage and fidelity or jealousie as he calls it 1 Kin. 19. 10. We finde by experience the fire to burn most scorchingly in the extreamest frosty weather and the most generous conscience is then most forward and fervent when he lives in a cold and freezing climate And so much of the tender Conscience CHAP. XIII Of the suffering Conscience THe last conscience we spoke of was the Of the Passive and suffering Conscience Tender Conscience here we are to speak of another Conscience as good as that but quite of a different nature that is the Passive and hardy Conscience which is to admit of no fear timorousness or tenderness at all in it as to suffering as the former was not to allow of any patience or boldnesse at all as to sinning Yet are they not so opposite neither as they may seem to be but both are to be found in the same persons gracious dispositions alway agreeing together and one helping and increasing another The more of that Tenderness we spoke of in the last Chapter the more of this Passiveness if need be will be found of which we speak here yea this hardiness proceeds from that tenderness and is inseparable from it therefore it is fitly handled next to it For as there is a bad base and sinfull tenderness that proceeds from as sinfull a hardness or hardness so is there a holy and honourable hardness that proceeds from the best tenderness There is a childish softness and effeminate tenderness of face and flesh which comes from hardness of heart and there is again a gallant and resolute hardness of face and back as unto men to indure all kinds of pains and tortures which comes from reall tenderness of heart and conscience before God Good Conscience then must not be bred so daintily and kept so tenderly but that it may digest the worlds hardest usage and coursest fare it must be Patiens famis frigoris ensis ignis Patient to all sufferings impatient onely of sin This puts within a man a heart of adamant and upon a man a face of brass or flint He is not dashed out of countenance with the fiery countenance of inraged Tyrants nor made to tremble at the sight of a seven-times-heated fiery furnace We are not carefull to answer thee O King in this matter This is that Conscience which St. Peter so highly commendeth 1 Peter 2. 19. This is thank-worthy saith he if a man for conscience toward God indure grief suffering wrongfully You have not such an expression in all the Bible again that any thing should be thank-worthy with God for our Saviour saith Luke 17. 9 10. Doth any Master thank his Servant when he doth what he commands I trow not So nor can we expect thanks but when we have done all we are to say unprofitable servants we have but done out duty But here St. Peter ver 19. saith This is thank-worthy c. and repeateth it again ver 20. If ye do well and suffer patiently this is acceptable or thank-worthy with God This is a mighty honour put upon this Conscience we must therefore get it Know that all is nothing if this be wanting Not thy Conscience of faith puritie and sinceritie not thy Quick-sighted well-spoken well-doing not thy Inoffensive or Tender Conscience if thou have not also this Propertie All is not worth a Thank As all thou canst do is not worth a Thank if not for Conscience sake so it seems Conscience it self is not worth a Thank if not for suffering sake This did commend the Christians in old times they had learned to suffer as much for Religion as we to dispute for it or rather against it They could be content to be bound that Truth might be at libertie and to die that Religion might not die and they chose rather to suffer for the Gospel then that the Gospel should suffer through them They were more willing that Religion should live upon them and their ruines then we are to live upon Religion and its ruine now adaies Any thing was easie for them
Consciences witnessing with them saith the Apostle of the naturall Heathens and their thoughts as well excusing as accusing them They may have tranquillam but not securam conscientiam as Bernard distinguisheth And thus it is said of Socrates who living according to the rules of his naturall enlightened understanding when he came to die and was put to death he took his death with much Resolution and Tranquillitie of minde He said of his enemies They could but kill him they could not hurt him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet for all this no naturall Conscience can be a good Conscience 1. Because though it may cum seipso cum aliis scire yet it doth not cum Deo scire At the best it is liable to that rebuke given unto Peter Matth. 16. 23. Get thee behinde me Satan thou art an offence unto me for thou savourest not the things that Mat. 16. 23 be of God but those which are of men onely 2. Because it is not purged by the bloud of sprinkling It is without Christ therefore without God and Covenant and Promise and Eph. 2. 12. Hope and Mercie 3. Because as it hath not the purifying bloud of the Lamb so nor the purifying water Ezek. 36. 25. of the spirit sprinkled on it whereby it should be cleansed now whatsoever is born of the flesh is still but flesh and onely that which is born of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3. 6. 4. Because it hath not Faith which is that whereby the heart is further purified Act. 15. 9. And the Apostle when he bids Timothy hold faith and a good Conscience tells us as much that first faith must be had and then good Conscience Good Conscience is never without Faith never before Faith This Conscience how ever many may lull themselves asleep on it yet is it a bed shorter then that a man should stretch himself on it and a Isai 28. 20. covering narrower then that a man should wrap himself in it No sure Refuge is it and a strong fort it is not to endure a storming It is not the Ark of Noah of Moses it may be not an Ark of Gopher wood but made of Paper Rushes not pitched with Pitch but daubed with slime not furnisht with all manner of Provision as Noahs was to hold out to the utmost for a whole year and longer Gen. 7. 11. with Gen. 8. 14. but utterly unfurnisht for a day that unless he be taken out of it as Moses was he may there lie and crie and famish and perish This fort is no better then that hold of the idol Berith to which when the men of Shechem fled for Refuge it was fired over their Judg. 9. 46. 49. heads and they perished miserably in it A poor man and this naturall Conscience may perish and burn together Oportet Conscientiam non solum bonam esse tranquillam sed securam Bern. Par. Ser. 4. The fourth use discovers another mistake of theirs who judge their Conscience good when it is nothing so With many that is held for the best Conscience that is most still quiet and sleepie as ignorant people think of a Minister he is the best Minister who is the good neighbour the quiet man who troubles none even he in whose mouth is no reproofs Whereas the Prophet saith They who bless the people cause them to erre and they who are called blessed of them are destroyed Isai 9. 16. and 3. 12. The blinde lead the blinde into the ditch But a man may have so much of this Peace till he be the worse again He may have this Peace too soon he may have it too long There is a Peace of Satans giving Luk. 11. 21. As there is a sword and variance of Christs sending Luk. 12. 51. The kingdom of God is righteousness Peace and Joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. The kingdom of Satan is ignorance and peace and joy in unholy courses yet this is the Conscience which most men call good if it be Pacatè bona they care not though it be malè Pacata Cain desires his Conscience would be quiet therefore he sets upon business of building and travells to go from his discontents Saul makes use 1 Sam. 16. 16 17 23. Act. 24. 25. of musick Felix would stop his present trembling by an abrupt diversion I will take another more convenient season purposely for this Meditation Judas would fill up the mouth of hell and clamours of Matt. 27. 3 4 5. Conscience with loud and bitter Confessions fearfull Exclamations and plenarie Restitution Some call for wine and Mirth to cheer themselves against a day of slaughter All James 5. 5. which is like the drinking cold water to one who is in a feaver who for the present findes relief but his feaver is increased thereby There are four Quiet Consciences and never Four ill quiet Consciences 1. The ignorant mans conscience Luk. 11. 44. an one of them good 1. The ignorant mans Conscience is quiet and still and as the blinde man eates many a hair and drinks many a flie so these know not that they do evil no more then the graves are aware who goeth over them Blindeness of minde makes men past feeling when they commit all uncleanness with greediness Ephes 4. 18 19. Abimelech talks much of his Integritie and Gen. 20. 4 5. Vprightness and stands much upon his Conscience when all was but moralitie or ignorance Without knowledge the Conscience cannot as without Conscience knowledge is not good The Scripture somewhere cals Knowledge the Key but if Knowledge be the Luk. 11. 52. Key Conscience must be the Lock The one must be made fit to the other therefore Paul cals Good Knowledge the Knowledge according to Godliness Now what is a Lock Titus 1. 1. good for without a Key what Conscience good for without Knowledge to open and shut to lock and unlock it and what is the Key good for without the Lock Get both Science and Conscience Glorie not that thou hast got a quiet that is a blinde deaf silent and speechless Conscience The dumb and deaf spirit was the worst spirit to cast out of all the evil spirits wee read of in the Gospel Mar. 9. 25 26 29. The other roaring devils were more easily ejected Better a roaring raging and racking Conscience then a dumb Conscience Mar. 1. 23 26. The second Conscience that is quiet yet 2. The unawakened conscience not good is that Conscience that was yet never well awakened But sin lies at the door like a Mastiff asleep and makes no noise Here is quiet indeed but a dangerous quiet This Conscience either is given over to sleep a perpetuall sleep as God threatens Jer. 51. 39 40. In their heat I will make their feasts and I will make them drunken that they may rejoyce and sleep a perpetuall sleep and not awake saith the Lord. Then will I bring them like lambs to the
a good When quiet Conscience good Haec est bona tranquilla Conscientia eorum qui carnem spi●●●ui subdiderunt qui cum his qui oderunt pacem sunt Pacifici Bern. Par. Serm. Conscience when it is purified as well as pacified as was said before when it hath done all his four Offices and speaketh peace that is a happy peace and when it hath those ten properties of good Conscience before spoke of viz of faith of puritie of sinceritie of inoffensiveness and of charitie and when it is a well sighted well spoken and an honest dealing Conscience when it is rightly tender and rightly hardy and after all these speaketh peace This is the onely right peace of Conscience the peace that passeth understanding 5 Vse The fift use is to discover another ordinarie mistake in men who are apt to judge a troubled Conscience a good Conscience and for no other reason but because troubled These are the third sort of men who are mistaken in judging of Conscience these are as much out as the former they judged Conscience good because quiet these on the other side say I have a good Conscience because I have had troubles in Conscience therefore I hope the worst is past bitterness of death and hell is over But so had Cain and Ahab and Judas and Simon Magus There is Conscientia mala turbata as well as mala pacata Thou maist have had great horrour and a dreadful sound in thy ears yet onely felt Job 15. 21. the beginning of sorrows Eccles 9. 3. The wise man saith that there are they whose heart is full of rage and madness while they live yet after that they go to the dead and damned out of one hell they go into another and out of one Ex inferno ad inferuum Eze. 15. 7. fire into another Then is Death and Hell cast into the Lake of fire Now there is a troubled Conscience which is not the better for it And there is a Conscience troubled again then which there is no better The ill troubled Conscience is known by 3 Marks of an ill troubled conscience these three marks When those troubles have an ill originall or rise whence they take their beginning 2. When there is an ill carriage and frame of spirit under them 3. When an ill course is taken to remove them Then from first to last these troubles are evil troubles 1. Troubles are then evil when the root is 1. When proceed from an evil root and cause evil whence they spring Ahab is much troubled till he is sick again not because his covetous lust is unmortified but becaus unsatisfied Amnon is sick because his brutish lust is nor satisfied Herod was troubled in his minde Mat. 2. 3. when he heard Christ was born But no good trouble this it had no good spring but came from hence that he feared he should be disturbed in his Dominion and his usurped power should be abolished So Prov. 4. 16. There be they that cannot sleep if they have done no mischief all day These troubles are not from sin but for it that they may effect it Hell is full of such troubled spirits This is indeed the Devils trouble The unclean spirit going thorow places where there is no good to be done for his purpose seeketh rest but findeth none This is cum diabolo conscire or consentire and may be called the Devils Conscience 2. When if it be at all for sin it is not so much for the intrinsecal evil and sinfulness that is in sin as in regard of the eventuall and consequential evils that attend sin and the punishment that follows Thus Ahab after his sin is troubled walks heavily puts on sackcloth and is humbled and fasts and lies in sackcloth 1 King 21. 27. But all this ado is not for grief of the sin committed but for fear of the punishment threatened So did Cain crie out because of his punishment Judas because he must be damned Magus desires praiers that none of those evils told him of by Peter should come upon him and Act. 8. 24. there was all his trouble This is to be troubled for Hell not for sin Hell it self is full of such troubled Consciences where there is continuall weeping wailing and gnashing of teetb for their pains but not the least Repentance for their sins 2. When the Carriage under the troubles 2. When attended with an ill carriage under it is evil then it is an evil trouble as 1. when the man doth rage and swell and storm under the stroke of God but his uncircumcised heart is never a whit broken to accept of the punishment of his iniquitie Cain was troubled enough at his sentence pronounced by God he was not troubled aright it was not at all for his sin nor did he at all humble himself under the just sentence of God but rageth and stormeth at his punishment My punishment is greater then I can bear So those Isai 8. 21 22. who fret themselves curse God and King and all that comes in their way And they look upward and downwand upon the earth and behold trouble and darkness and they are driven to darkness 2. When you see a man go on in sin under his Troubles these are ill troubles Eelix sometime trembled while Paul was at work upon his Conscience but all this trembling did no good upon his Conscience Paul left Felix as he found him an incorrigible sinner sinning against checks of his own Conscience And Felix left Paul as he found him He could not be moved ere the more to do Act. 24. 27. 1 King 12. 33. 2 Chron. 28. 22. him Justice Felix left Paul bound Jeroboam was as ill and that wicked Ahaz much worse after judgements upon them Simon Magis waxed worse and worse after that warning given him by Peter Hell is likewise full of such troubled Consciences there is continuall sorrowing but yet continuall sinning Rev. 16. 11. 9. 20 21. They gnaw their tongues because of their pains yet blaspheme God with their tongues and repent not to give him glorie as they Revel 16. 11. It is not the thorn in the hand throbbing and burning which makes the hand well but the pulling of it out 3. Those are ill troubles whose cure is 3. When an ill cure sought evil or when an evil course is taken for their removal as 1. When men go to outward means to remove an inward grief and go not to God Cain goes and travels first leaves his Countrey to see if he can leave his sting of Conscience he afterwards settles himself to emploiment in building but Cain carries his hell with him Saul while his ill fit is on him sends for David and seekes to still his distempered spirit by his musick An ill Diversion doth but Prorogue not end the disease It is like the casting of water upon the outside of the house when it is all of a flame within or
cannot say though he have the better Sword but his enemy may have the better Cause that the other cause may after carry it Fourthly The Conqueror may pay so dear for his victory that he doth not greatly joy in it Ezek. 32. 27. Fifthly The Conqueror may when all is done go down to Hell with his sword by his side and his weapons of war under his head though he was the terror of the mighty in the land of the living and then his iniquity shall lie heavie on his bones But we are more than Conquerours we have overcome to day and shall to morrow our cause is a victorious cause carries not Fortunam Caesaris but Honorem Christi therefore shall go forth conquering and to conquer and let Satan and all his Confederates unite their forces Principalities Powers height depth we fear them not all we are secure of victory and safety O glorious and happy condition when a man hath lost all he is as if he had gained all the world when killed all the day long as if he was triumphing all the day long I suffer and am bound saith the Apostle but the word of God is not bound my Cause is not bound my Conscience Dr. Stoughton in his Sermon before K. James is not bound a man takes no hurt while Conscience is safe Excellently Dr. Stoughton to this purpose Job was more happy when he fate upon the dung-hill than Adam when he sinned in Paradise because though his body were dissolved into worms and every worm acted by a Devill as Origen would have it to increase his torment yet he had not eaten the forbidden fruit which bred this worm of Conscience and made him fly from God The Bride that hath good Chear within and good musick and a good Bridegroome with her may be merry though the hail chance to rattle upon the tyles without upon her wedding-day Though the world should rattle about his ears a man may sit merry that sits at the Feast of a good Conscience Nay the Child of God by virtue of this in the midst of the waves of affliction is as secure as that child which in a Shipwrack was upon a plank in his mothers lap till she awaked him securely sleeping and then with his pretty countenance sweetly smiling and by and by sportingly asking a stroke to beat the naughty waves and at last when they continued boystrous for all that sharply chiding them as though they had been but his play-fellowes O the innocency O the comfort of Peace O the tranquility of a spotlesse mind There is no Heaven so clear as a good Conscience So that learned Doctor Good Conscience is to a man his closest and dearest friend that like Baruch to Jeremy will visit him in prison and will keep his Evidences safe for him in a time of common conflagration and calamity Jer. 32. 11 14. Or rather it is that Earthen vessel wherein alone our Evidences of our heavenly state are put and preserved from being corrupted both our Evidences our sealed Evidence and our open Evidence for a Christian must have two the sealed Evidence of Justification and the open Evidence of Sanctification are kept in this Vrne as Baruch was commanded to put both Jeremies Evidences of his purchase the sealed and the open in an Earthen vessel Yea good Conscience is not onely the Non est utilius remedium nec certius testimonium futerae beatitudinis bonâ Conscientiâ Bern. de in t domo preserver of Assurance but is a part of it for what is Assurance of Salvation but in the originall an Act of Grace passed in favour of a poor repenting and beleeving sinner in the Court of Heaven entred and ingrossed in the Book of Life which because procured by the Price of Bloud is written out in the precious Blood of Christ signed and sealed by the impresse of the Spirit of promise which is the Fathers and the Sons Agent on this behalf and attested by good Conscience as that which sets to his his seal next God and is then delivered into the hand of Faith as Gods Act and Deed for the sole Use and Benefit of a rightly purified Conscience Or Assurance is a Transcript taken out of the book of life that sealed book sealed in the bosome and counsell of the Father now unclasped by the hand of the Lamb written fair out in his Bloud attested by the Spirit of God within and endorsed without with the graces and fruits of the Spirit and at last passed in the Court and entred in the Office of good Conscience This this is the Assurance of the Saints when Gods Spirit attests to our Spirit and again our Spirit doth withal consent with the Spirit of God The other benefit of good Conscience 2 At Death here is at death when as it enables and directs ad benè beatèque moriendum an undertaking that all Philosophy could never make good nor did attempt but did onely promise the way ad benè beatèque vivendum yet fell short of that Conscience is the way to well-living it is the onely way to well-dying This gives rejoycing as the Apostle saith to him that is under the sentence and stroke of death and is now despairing altogether of this life 2 Cor. 1. 9. Good Conscience as it is sweeter than life so it is stronger than death and the good man and his Conscience are like Saul and Jonathan lovely in their life and which is above all in death they are not divided Hujusmodi comparandae sunt opes quae cum naufragio simul enatent Prideaux History pag. 247 The goods embarqued in good Conscience are the onely goods which will be saved when there is any shipwrack of State or Life And those are the goods we should get said the Emperour Lewes of Bavyer which in a shipwrack can swim out as well as thy self A saying also which Q. Mary is said to have Englished and much delighted in These are two great Benefits in this Life here But there are two greater for hereafter Conscience helping Ad tutò intrepidèque comparendum Ad Gloriosè aeternèque triumphandum 3 At judgment Conscience hath two other kindnesses which it will doe for the Soule beyond those two fore-named in life and death It will stand a man in stead when he is to make his appearance before the Tribunal of God Where Courage dares not shew his face nor Eloquence open his mouth where Majestie hath no respect and Greatnesse no favour and as the Martyr said Where money bears no mastery There good Conscience is known and befriended there it dares appear thither it doth appeal when the King and the Captain and the Great man and the Mighty man and the Chief Commander and the Rich and the Bond and the Free cry to the mountains to hide them and to the rocks to fall Rev. 6. 15. 16. on them that they may not appear Then doth good Conscience lift up
his Wine to wash cleanse and search it if defiled his Oyl to mollifie supple and heal it if bruised festered This is the first and great Experiment to be used The second is like unto it namely this 2. The Spirit of Christ to get and seek the Spirit of Christ which is the next principal ingredient in or efficient of a good Conscience It is the Spirit of God with our Spirit that makes the good Conscience In this sense we may allow that of Origen That Conscience is another Spirit in the soul therefore the Apostle saith of his Conscience that it did bear him Rom. 9. 1. witnesse in the Holy Ghost The single Testimonie of natural Conscience is not much to be regarded in many cases but when Conscience is cleared by the Spirit and seconded with the Spirit the Testimony of these two is great and weighty the Spirit of God witnessing thus to our spirit is the clearest Testimony of Rom. 8. 16. of our Adoption and Salvation which thy Conscience alone is not to be credited in for what could the light of our body the eye see and discern if it were not for the light of the Heaven the Sun we should have a continuall Night So without the Spirit the light of God what can Conscience our light see and discern of the things of God Therefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. that God doth reveal unto his servants the deep mysteries of the Gospel by his spirit for the spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God For what man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him So the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we may know the things which are freely given to us of Cod c. So that wheresoever the spirit of God is there is the good Conscience where it is wanting Conscience cannot be good Where the naturall enlivening Spirit is absent or departed there is no life or vegetation or sense or reason or motion but all death darkness coldnesse c. So where the enlivening Spirit of Grace is wanting to the soul there is no life sense motion comfort but all is dead within and all the works are but dead works But where the Spirit is there is life there is light there is liberty and there is purity there is peace and there is grace there is comfort and there is Conscience there is indeed all 2 Subservient means The subservient means are thirteen whereof the first six direct us what to do the other seven what to avoid First of all those subservient means next to Christ Jesus himself and his Spirit which are the principal Faith is to be sought to 1. Faith make thee a good Conscience Thefore how often do we find faith and good Conscience joyned This next to the bloud of Christ and the purifying water of the Spirit hath the greatest cleansing virtue Act. 15. 9. Christ hath given faith for this end to purifie the heart Where faith is pure the Conscience is pure this makes the good and mends the bad Conscience Faith and good Conscience are made one for the other as the woman and the man to be fellow-helpers each to other Faith is Consciences Keeper Conscience again is Faiths These two like Jonathan and his Armour-bearer may discomfit a whole Hoste 1 Sam. 14. of Philistins when they keep together nothing is hard for them to undertake or like Saul and Jonathan lovely in life and undivided in death Faith and good Conscience do many a good office each for other and are forced to unite in a league offensive and defensive In an offensive league as Simeon and Judah Jud. 1. 3. the one must help the other to expell the Canaanites out of his Coast first and then proceed to expell them out of the others Coasts after Good Conscience helps to expel the Canaanites of fear distrust and despair out of Faiths coasts and to slay Sheshai Ahiman and Talmai these Jud. 1. 10 three sons of Anak and faith again layes to his helping hand to expel the Canaanites of fear guilt deadnesse dulnesse erroneousnesse and Scrupulousnesse out of Consciences coasts And in a defensive league they are joyned as David said to Abiathar Abide with me fear not so saith Faith to Conscience Abide with me Conscience for he that seeketh my life seeketh thy life but with me thou shalt be in safety 1 Sam. 22. 23. Faith is the white Alabaster-box in which Consciences pretious Oyntment is put Faith is the bottle into which the wine of good Conscience is poured So again Conscience doth as much for Faith Faith is the light good Conscience is Faiths lanthorn the lanthorn shews forth the light within the lanthorn defends the light from winds and weather without that it be not blown out Conscience holds forth the light of Faith to be seen of men Conscience defends faith that it be not put out Faith is the Apple or sight of the eye Conscience is the eye-lid no eye-lid can see or doth it profit the body at all without the sight within nor can the eye see long if it have not the eye-lids to defend it from Sun dust smoak and the like annoyances and to keep the sight clear So what is Conscience without Faith but a blind and blundering Conscience And what is Faith without Conscience but as a naked weak raw sore eye A three-fold faith necessary to good conscience 1 Justifiing Faith Now this Faith that makes and keeps a good Conscience is three-fold First Justifying Faith there must be apprehending and applying the bloud of Christ Act. 15. 9. This is principally necessary to be sought this fides quâ creditur is the fides qua vivitur the fides quae creditur is not sufficient without this Secondly Doctrinal faith this is the faith 2 Doctrinal Faith here spoken of Hold faith and a good Conscience that is the sound Orthodox faith contend for it continue in it From this Hymenaeus and Alexander swerved and then left the plain path of good Conscience Say not any man is sound in faith and of a good Quam tu secretus es Deus solits magnus lege infatigabili spargens paenale ●caecitates super illicitas cupidita●e● Aug. Conf. l. 1. Conscience who is unsound in Judgement and opinions Corrupt opinions breed corrupt Consciences and corruption in morals usually follows the corruption in intellectuals Here begins commonly the first step backward to all Apostacy and the first step forward to all impiety It is a sad story of the Emperour Valens who while he was among the Orthodox had gained much Glory in the Church he had stood firme in the time of Julian the Apostate together with his Brother Valentinian chusing rather to lay down all his Military Honours and imployments than
the two prisoners dreams Pharaoh made it good Hic crucem sceleris precium tulit alter honores Gen. 41. 13. It came to passe saith the Butler to Pharaoh as he interpreted to us so it was me he restored to mine office him he hanged Joseph is then said to hang the one and restore the other because he foretold it so and it fell out accordingly so conscience is said to absolve and condemn because according to the sentence of this lower Court and Judicatory of conscience usually is the last sentence of that highest Court in Heaven If my conscience Job 31. 35. 36. clear me let my adversary write a Book and Libell against me I shall wear it as a Isa 50. 8. Crown my witness is at hand and he is near 1 Sam. 2. 25 that justifieth me But if my conscience Libell against me who shall Apologize for me If a Quamquam humana sub tersugiem judicia judicium propriae conscientiae fugere non valeo Bernard man sin against another the Judge shall judge them but if a man be condemned by himself who shall be his Dayes-man I may flie mans judgement seat or stop the Judges mouth but I cannot escape the Bar nor stop the mouth of my own conscience Prima est haec ultio quod se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur Improba quamvis Gratia fallacis Praetoris vicerit Vrnam Juven Sat. 13. I might adde to these four named Offices of Consciences registeriall office conscience a fifth his Registerial Office for conscience is the great Register and Recorder of Vbicunque vado conscientia mea ●●e non deserit sed prae s●ns ad s●s●it quicquid facio scribit Bernard the world It is to every man his private Notary or Secretary keeping notes or records of all his Acts and Deeds Hence it hath his name Synteresis given it Conscience hath the Pen of a ready writer and takes in short hand and in an illegible character from thy mouth as fast as thou speakest yea from thy heart what thou contrivest consciences writing at present is not legible as that which is written with the juyce of a Lemmon is not to be read by Day-light but against the fire by night you may read it so consciences writing will be read by fire light of distress or in that day when Heaven and earth are on fire then shall this book be opened and the Cypher be discovered Conscience is the poorest mans Historiographer who hath no Chronicler to write his Story Every mans Acts both first and last are written in the Apocryphal Book of conscience The sin of Judah is written with the pen of iron and with the point of a Diamond it is graven upon the Table of their heart Jer. 17. 1. It is not the lot of every mean man to have his Acts and memory perpetuated it is the honour of Kings and sometimes of some other more eminent persons of David it is said 1 Chro. 29. 29. Now the rest of the Acts of David the King first and last behold they are written in the Book of Samuel the Seer and in the book of Nathan the Prophet and in the Book of Gad the Seer But of every man of whatsoever quality it may be said the rest of his Acts though they be not mentioned in the book of the Chronicles of the Kings yet first and last they are all written in the book of the Chronicles of conscience by Syneidesis the Seer and Synteresis the Recorder Now to draw to a conclusion conscience I said was then a good conscience when it doth discharge all his forenamed Offices A Magistrate a Minister a Judge a Witness is then good when each of them is good in his proper place and function and indeed that every one is in truth which he is in discharge of his particular Calling Then is conscience good when it doth officiate well and doth the part of a Minister of a Magistrate of a Witnesse and of a Judge In these four tespects I may say of conscience Ipsa indicat ipsa imperat ipsa observat ipsa judicat as Bernard excellently Ipsa testis ipsa judex ipsa tortor ipsa carcer Ipsa accusat Lib. de consc cap. 9. ipsa judicat ipsa punit ipsa damnat A good conscience is a good Minister a good Magistrate a good Witness a good Judge the best of friends but an ill conscience is an observer of thee will be an informer against thee and both thine adversary and accuser and witness and Judge and Jaylor and Executioner and Tormentor too the worst of enemies Hence flow five Corollaries or conclusions Corollary 1. Conscience is to perform his two first Offices viz. of a Minister to inform and direct and of a King to command and prescribe before a work is to be done or when in fieri Conscience should call in Understanding and Faith to advise with and herein imitate God who Gen. 1. 26. intending to Create Man propounds his Action propounds his End and propounds his Model Let us make man in our Image after our likenesse and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowl of the ayre and over the cattell and over all the earth c. So should we say Let me upon deliberation do such an Act after such a manner to such an end This is to Act according to conscience and consequently according to God Corollary 2. When a work or action is already done In facto esse conscience is to discharge his two last Offices of a witness and of a Judge to accuse or excuse to approve or reprove and so to passe sentence Thus did God after every dayes work finished he reviewed his worke and saw with much content and fulness of approbation it was good And at last Gen. 1. 31. God saw every thing that he had made and behold it was very good So should we review all our actions before we passe from them to new businesses Let thine eyes look right on and let thine eye-lids look strait before thee Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy ways be established Prov. 4. 25 26. There you have these two rules in the well learning and practising whereof lies the chiefest businesse of Practical conscience Coroll 3. When a man goes wilfully against the two first Acts or Offices of Conscience viz. Ministerall Regall he commits the highest sin and draws on the greatest guilt Maxima violatio Conscientiae maximum peccatum Ames What made the sin of the lapsed Angels unpardonable but because they went against a full and clear light of a fully informed conscience and divinely irradiated understanding Their sin had many ingredients of that sin against the holy Ghost in it being committed against clear light much received grace with full consent of will having much of malice in it therefore no wonder it became unpardonable And whence is it that the sin against the