Selected quad for the lemma: conscience_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
conscience_n heart_n pure_a sprinkle_v 1,554 5 10.8871 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64963 A heaven or hell upon earth, or, A discourse concerning conscience by Nathanael Vincent. Vincent, Nathanael, 1639?-1697. 1676 (1676) Wing V409; ESTC R27575 204,858 337

There are 54 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

them a Worm continually gnawing and which will never dye they would answer that their Consciences now cannot be silenced that there is no respite from their clamours that they are continually upbraiding them with their madnesse in sinning and their more than madness in refusing to turn to God and to come to Christ for Life and for Salvation Barnard has a very useful passage (t) Optimum est tunc sentiri vermem conscientiae cùm possit etiam suffocari itaque mordeat nunc ut moriatur paulatim desinat mordere Mordendo rodat interim putredinem rodendo consumat ut ipse quoque pariter Consumatur nec foveri incipiat in immortalitatem Vermis inquit eorum non morietur ignis eonum non extinguetur Bernard de Conversione ad Clericos cap. 6. pag. 845. 'T is best of all says he that Worm of Conscience should be felt presently while 't is possible to destroy this Worm Let it bite now that it may dye and by degrees give over biting at all Let it feed upon and eat away corruption that it self also may at length be consumed for 't is sad to cherish this worm against hereafter for then the worm will never dye and the Fire will never be quenched I have finished that first particular which was to prove that there is a Conscience in Man In the second place I am to tell you what this Conscience is And first I shall speak of the Name And secondly of the thing it self 1. I shall speak of the Name Conscience in Latin Conscientia into which the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Holy Ghost uses in the original is very well translated is so called for several reasons 1. 'T is called Conscience because 't is Cordis scientia (u) Conscientia est cordis scientia cor enim se novit multa alia cùm se novit appellatur Conscientia cùm praeter se alia nominatur Scientia Bernard de Interior dom cap. 22. the knowledge of the Heart The Heart of Man is capable of knowing it self and other things when it understands other things this is science but when it reflects upon it self this is Conscience And indeed the Heart is in a special manner observed both by Conscience and by the Lord himself Conscience if it be rightly informed will not be contented with a Conversation which Men look upon as blamelesse unlesse the Heart be upright and pure (*) Nam scelus intra se tacitum qui cogitat ullum Facti crimen habet Juv. If a man harbour malice in his breast Conscience will charge him with Murther If he look upon a Woman to lust after her it will call him before God Adulterer If he abound never so much in profession and external performances yet if when he honours God with his lips his Heart be removed far from him Conscience will say he is a meer Hypocrite 2. 'T is called Conscience because it is concludens scientia a concluding knowledge which is gathered from some premises that went before Conscience therefore is styled by some a practical Syllogism in which the major or first proposition is the VVord of God the minor or second proposition is from a reflecting on our selves whether we have done according unto or against the VVord of God And the conclusion is a passing sentence upon our selves according to the same VVord The Scripture says To be carnally minded is death and the Conscience of a sinner adds but I am carnally minded and I savour nothing else but what is carnal and therefore I am a Childe of Death And again thus He that loves the World the Love of the Father is not in him but sayes the Conscience of a worlding I love the World am greedy after it and desire nothing comparable to it therefore I neither Love the Father nor have an interest in his Love On the other hand the Scripture affirms He that receives Christ is the Son of God but sayes the Believers Conscience I am willing to receive Christ to rule me and to save me therefore I am the childe of God And again those are blessed that Hunger and Thirst after Righteousness but sayes the Believers Conscience I Hunger and Thirst after Righteousness I desire to be made truly Holy to be sanctified throughout in Body Soul and Spirit therefore I am in a blessed State 3. 'T is called Conscience because it is cum alio scientia a knowledge together with some other Conscience supposes that we are known to some other as well as to our selves and this is the best reason why 't is called Conscience But you will ask me who does know us as well as our selves 1. The all-seeing God does know us perfectly (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia sciamus cum legislatore Deo ejus lege insinuante se animis nostris his idem testantibus Vossius de Orig. prog Idol l. 3. c. 42. The Apostle tells us that there is not any Creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do Heb. 4. 13. The Psalmist speaks to the same purpose Psal 94. 8 9 10. Vnderstand O ye brutish among the People and ye Fools when will ye be wise He that planted the Ear shall He not Hear He that formed the Eye shall He not See He that Teacheth man Knowlege shall not He Know Questionless His Eyes run too and fro beholding the Evil and the Good And indeed if there were not a God who knows us as well nay better than we do our selves we should not regard our own being privy to our wickednesse there is so much Self-Love that we should not stand in awe of our own knowledge but when we consider that the Lord also knows us this causes Grief and Fear and Trouble when we do Evil. 2. Our Lord Jesus who is ready to judge the quick and dead does also know our works In all those Epistles which he sends to the seven Churches of Asia he sayes I know thy works 'T is expresly said that Jesus knew all men and needed not that any should testifie of Man for he knew what was in Man John 2. 24. 25. He understands the very secrets of the Heart as well as what appears in the practice and our Lord being to give every one his final doom and to passe that sentence which can never be repealed surely his knowledge should damp the fiercest Temptations and make us diligent that we may be found of him in peace without spot and blamelesse 3. The Elect Angels are witnesses of more than we are aware of Upon this score it is that the Apostle in his charge to Timothy mentions the Angels as well as God and Christ 1 Tim. 5. 21. I charge thee before God and the Lord Jesus Christ and the Elect Angels that thou observe these things Sayes Calvin (y) Angelos Christo adjungit
fellowship with him that we endeavour to do that which is good in his sight And as we would escape his anger and his smoaking jealousie which will utterly consume us that we beware of that which is worst of evils sinning against him 2. Consider the Power of Conscience if we take Power for Authority God has given great Authority unto the Conscience And a Man must rather disobey Kings and Emperours then disobey Conscience Nebuchadnezzar commanded the three Children to Worship the Golden Image that he had set up Conscience commanded them to refuse to Worship it They obey Conscience and rather than Conscience should fly in their faces for idolatry they venture to be cast into a fiery furnace Dan. 3. If we take Power for Ability Conscience is a thing of greater force and strength If it be good how can it sweeten any condition though in it self never so calamitous but if Conscience be bad 't is sufficient to put gall and bitternesse into all your Comforts 3. If you heed Conscience 't is the way to have you and your Consciences agree together Conscience will dwell with you and you cannot help it Oh therefore hearken to it and satisfie it for this will be much for your own peace and satisfaction There is a twofold Peace which it highly concerns us to look after Peace above and Peace within Peace above with God we should be sollicitous about there is no contending with Him that is Almighty Let the Potsherds strive with the Potsherds of the Earth but wo unto him that striveth with his Maker Esa 45. 9. How earnest then should we be that being justified by Faith we may have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ And next unto peace with God we should endeavour after peace within even peace of Conscience and if we hearken and do what an enlightned Conscience commands and walk before God in Truth Conscience will speak Peace and that peace it will be true 4. Consider That in the hour of distresse and especially at the time of your dissolution the good Word of Conscience will do more good to you than all the World A cleer Conscience makes a triumphant Saint before he does expire Mark the perfect man and behold the upright for the end of that man is Peace Psal 37. 37. How many have lookt death in the face undaunted because Conscience has born witnesse to their sincerity * Melch. Adamus in vitâ Lutheri pag. 154 155. When Luther was sick of his last distemper and grew towards his end he waked at midnight and perceiving his Earthly Tabernacle was falling to the ground he brake forth into Thanksgiving to God for revealing Christ to him whom he believed whom he professed whom he loved whom he celebrated and whom the Pope with the Company of the wicked did persecute Then he prayed to his Heavenly Father to receive his spirit and added though I must now lay down this Body yet I know most certainly that I shall ever be with the Lord and none shall pluck me out of his hand Here was a Conscience cleer a Death without Fear and an abundant entrance into the Everlasting Kingdom 5. Heed Conscience for 't will go with you to the bar of God (t) Quando Deus judex erit alius testis quàm Conscientia tua non erit Inter Judicem justum Conscientiam tuam noli timere nisi causam tuam Augustin Enarrat in Psal 37. pag. mihi 323. and certainly 't will be sad to be followed to that Tribunal by a guilty Conscience crying out against you If Conscience excuse you and plead for you before your Judge how sweet and comfortable will that be if it produce sincere obedience and the Righteousness of Christ apprehended by Faith to cover all your guilt and make up all your imperfections this will make you lift up your heads with joy and confidence But if Conscience does accuse you of impenitency in sin all your days though it often warned you to mourn and turn these accusations as they cannot be evaded so they will be unconceivably terrifying and confounding to you 6. Heed Conscience for 't will remain in you forever 't will be Eternally with the Saints in Glory After a Believer has fought the good fight has finished his course has kept the Faith has been acquitted at the judgement seat and has received the Crown of Righteousness then Conscience will be fully at rest Work is now done danger is now past and the possession of the inheritance is secured Rev. 3. 12. Him that overcometh will I make a Pillar in the Temple of my God and he shall go no more out Conscience also will be eternally with the reprobates in misery And as Job's Messengers did tell him that his Cattel were destroyed and his Substance taken away and they only were left alone to tell him So Conscience will speak after the same manner unto the damned O you self-destroying Sinners your consolation is all received your good things are come to an end your profits and Pleasures are quite fled away and gone And I only am left alone to tell you To tell you of your madness in loving sin in idolizing a vain World in slighting Salvation and bringing your selves notwithstanding all warnings into Eternal misery I have done with the first Doctrine That God has placed a Conscience in Man Doct. 2. The second Doctrine is this To have a good Conscience should be every one 's greatest care This is one end of the Commandement not onely that there may be Love a pure Heart and Faith unfeigned but also a good Conscience 1 Tim. 1. 5. so 1 Pet. 3. 16. Sanctifie the Lord God in your Hearts having a good Conscience that whereas they speak evil of you as of Evil doers they may be ashamed who falsly accuse your good Conversation in Christ 'T is the observation of Augustine (u) Ecce quid prodest plena bonis arca inanis Conscientia Bona vis habere bonus non vis esse Non vides te erubescere debere de bonis tuis si domus tua plena est bonis te habet malum Quid enim est quod velis habere malum Nihil omnino non uxorem non filium non filiam non servum non ancillam non villam non tunicam postremò non caligam tamen vis habere malam vitam August De verbis Domini Serm. 12. pagin mihi 57. Tom. 10. that Men are willing to have all things else good but their Consciences are bad and they themselves are Evil. There is no man but desires his Wife should be good his Children good his Servants good the House that he dwells in good the An he lives in good the Food he eats good the Clothes he wares good he does not care to have any thing bad about him How comes it to passe that he is too well content to have a bad Conscience within him This is our natural
Conscience Flatter us it will but injure us if it deal Faithfully though it speak never so terribly it may do us a great kindness You must know that a good Conscience may Accuse as well as Excuse It Accuses indeed of evil but 't is not evil that it does Accuse (i) Neque magis vitio verti potuit conscientiae postea cùm juste accusavit condemnavit quàm ipsi legi Judici summo qui idem fecit post ingressum peccati non ante Tantum vero abest conscientiae accusatio justa ab omni justâ reprehensione ut a peccatoribus imprimis requiratur tanquam unica via de peccatis admissis agendi paenitentiam Ames De Conscien l. 1. c. 12. but a part of its Duty and truly this is Necessary unto our Humiliation and Amendment 1. The Accusations of a good Conscience are just sin is the ground of those Accusations and the better the Conscience is the more immediately there will be a smiting of the heart after the prevailing of a Temptation Thus David's heart quickly smote him after he had numbred the People and he said I have sinned greatly in that I have done and now I beseech thee O Lord take away the Iniquity of thy Servant for I have done very Foolishly 2 Sam. 24. 10. And when a good Conscience Accuses 't is not easily satisfied 't will not be quiet till there be a confession of sin before God a loathing of it and pardon and healing are obtained through our Lord Jesus While David kept silence that is refused ingenuously to confess his fault his Conscience was clamorous and his Bones waxed old through his roaring all the day long and his moisture was turned into the drought of Summer Psal 32. 3 4. but at length he has Peace v. 5. I acknowledged my sin unto thee and my Iniquity have I not hid I said I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord and thou forgavest the Iniquity of my sin Selah 2. And as the Accusations of a good Conscience are just so it will Excuse if there be good Reason for it It will call Grace Grace if it be true though it be but weak God does not despise the day of small things neither ought Conscience It ought not by taking notice onely of sin and over-looking the Spirits work in the Soul to go about to break the bruised Reed and quench the smoaking Flax. It must be granted that Believers Consciences do bring in a false Testimony against them at some seasons and they make bold to call themselves Hypocrites and to affirm that there is nothing in them but what may be found in Reprobates But this is no part of Consciences goodness and they are to be reproved because upon every light ground they are so apt to question their Estate and to rank themselves among the Hypocrites in doing thus they gratifie Satan exceedingly and hinder their own Edification because they are ever questioning whether the Foundation be rightly laid and God has little or no thanks from them though in giving them the least measure of saving Grace he has done more for them than if he had put Scepters into their hands and Crowns of pure Gold upon their Heads But you will ask how may Conscience be made thus Faithful in its Testimony I Answer 1. If you would have Conscience bear witness truly neither add unto nor diminish from the Word of God Call not those Sins which are not transgressions of his Laws and call not those Duties which he never commanded God has so fully revealed his mind in his Word that whatever is not expresly contained in it or by firm consequence deducible from it Conscience is not to take notice of either as Truth or Duty Look not into false Glasses which Satan will be apt to set before you The Scripture is the true Glass and 't is the thankful Glass too which mends the eyes of them that look into it 2. Look well into your selves be willing to take notice of the evil in you as well as the good and which is needful to be added for the sake of humbled Souls be willing to Observe that good which God has wrought in you as well as the evil which you labour under 3. Let it be your earnest request at the Throne of Grace that your own Hearts may not deceive you As Satan is a lying Spirit so your own Spirits are false to you and are ready to joyn with him God is able to discover you unto your selves though the Heart be so deceitful above all things that the Prophet crys out who can know it Yet the Lord searcheth the Heart and tryeth the Reins Jer. 17. 10. 4. Be willing that Conscience should speak truth whether that truth make for you or against you That was a bad temper of Ahab who hated Micajah because he Prophesied not good concerning him but evil 1 Kings 22. 8. and because he could not endure to hear of Evil at length he feels it and there was no Remedy When Conscience does speak most against you in some Respects 't is for you because whatever you aile there is a Remedy provided in the Gospel To know the truth of your Condition if it be bad does not make it worse but is one good step unto the alteration of it for the better That 's the Fifth thing A good Conscience is Faithful in Witness-bearing 6. The goodness of Conscience lies in the purity of it Nothing in the Soul of Man can be said to be good in a Scripture-sence unless purged for as the whole Soul is Corrupted by Nature so renovation in the whole is needful our Understandings are not good till Sanctified to depart from evil is Vnderstanding our Affections are not good till cleansed our Consciences are not good till purged I do not I dare not affirm that this purity of Conscience in this Life is so compleat as to exclude all manner of defilement in this sence who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin Prov. 20. 9. But that which the Gospel accounts purity of Conscience lies in these particulars 1. Where the Conscience is pure no sin is concealed or covered If we cover sin God will not cover it we shall not be of the Number of those Blessed ones whose Transgressions are forgiven whose Iniquities are covered and to whom the Lord will not impute sin A pure Conscience therefore without any guile or reservation confesses all before God and as it confesses all it knows so 't is willing to know more that more may be acknowledged and bewailed Job among other Arguments uses this and 't was a strong one to prove the purity of his Conscience that he had not covered his Transgression as Adam by hiding his Iniquity in his Bosom Job 31. 33. He that conceals a Thief sides with him and he that hides sin 't is a sign his heart is not turned from it A pure Conscience is free and
open does not mince or extenuate but aggravate Iniquity It can appeal to God concerning its unwillingness to conceal any of his Enemies for Mens Lusts are Gods Enemies and their own too and it can challenge Satan to Name a sin which 't is not ready to acknowledge 2. When the Conscience is pure every sin is hated Hatred is never better placed than upon sin Our Brother is not to be hated nay we are forbid to hate our Enemy but sin we may hate without sparing David tells us that through Gods Precepts he got Vnderstanding therefore he hated every false way Psal 119. 104. By the Word his Conscience was Informed and Sanctified and this Universal Hatred of sin followed Hatred is an Affection which aims at Destruction and when 't is high 't is against the whole kind Thus Haman hated Mordecai and thought it scorn to lay hands on Mordecai alone but sought to destroy all the Jews that were throughout the whole Kingdom of Ahasuerus even the People of Mordecai Esth 3. 6. The pure Conscience strikes at the whole kind of sin (k) Est intentio Odii nocere nec cessat in laesione peccati sed in exterminio verè poenitens juratus est in mortem peccatorum Guil. Parisiensi De Rhetor. divin c. 23. where-ever 't is whether in the Mind in the Will in the Affections in Word in the Actions What Moses speaks concerning Idolatry it does apply unto all sin Deut. 7. 26. Thou shalt utterly detest it and thou shalt utterly abhor it for it is a cursed thing 3. When the Conscience is pure The whole Image of God is desired and that the Soul may be like unto him in all things wherein 't is its Duty to resemble him What the Moral Philosophers say concerning the Mortal Vertues that they are inter se concatenatae that they are linked together holds certainly true concerning those Graces which are wrought by the Spirit of God they are so linked together that you cannot have one in truth but you must have all in some measure This is a sweet Truth to a pure Conscience for all Grace is longed after Therefore Christ's fulness is eyed and prized and application is made to him that out of that fulness we may receive and Grace for Grace John 1. 16. That is that we may receive Graces answerable to those Graces which Christ has received of his Father for us Thus the Wax does receive Character for Character from the Seal and the Child Member for Member from the Father though not of the same bigness and proportion The pure Conscience is not double minded 't is not partly for God and partly for Mammon partly for Christ and partly for Satan But this is the desire that the God of all Grace would work every Grace in Truth and make all Grace more and more to abound 4. When the Conscience is pure the Mystery of Faith is held fast The Apostle joyns Faith and a good Conscience together 1 Tim. 1. 19. Holding Faith and a good Conscience which some having put away concerning Faith have made ship-wrack And 1 Tim. 3. 9. Holding the Mystery of the Faith in a pure Conscience Whoever are truly purified do prize the Gospel and the Mysteries of it they admire the contrivance of Mans Redemption by Christ Jesus and are perswaded since his Blood is the Blood of God that 't is sufficient to purchase lost Souls and to purchase the lost Inheritance The Mystery of Regeneration they are acquainted with and the absolute Necessity of it And though Justification by the Imputed Righteousness of Christ be Argued against as absurd by deluded Papists and their wretched followers though the work of the Spirit in renewing changing of the Heart be derided by Profane Wits nay by some that would be accounted Masters in Israel A pure Conscience notwithstanding retains these Mysteries Thus the Church of Pergamus though they dwelt where Satans Seat was yet they held fast Christs Name and did not deny his Faith and that even in those days wherein the Faithful Martyr Antipas was slain among them Rev. 2. 13. 5. Where Conscience is pure God is Served in sincerity and there is a willingness to live honestly The Apostle tells us that he Served God from his Fore-Fathers with a pure Conscience 2 Tim. 1. 3. he did not Preach a new God but the same which Abraham Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets were the Servants of This God he Served with a perfect Heart and with a willing Mind his Conscience did bear him witness that his very Soul was engaged in the Lords Work and that he was very well pleased both with his Master and with that business which his Master had Employed him in and they were not his own things but the things of his Lord which were sought by him And as a pure Conscience engages to the Service of God so to the living honestly Heb. 13. 18. We trust we have a good Conscience in all things willing to live honestly Where such a Conscience is that of the Apostle is heeded Rom. 13. 12 13. The night is far spent the day is at hand that is the present time which is compared to the night because most are asleep in it and much wickedness lies hid and is not yet disclosed the present time is far spent is almost come to an end and the day is at Hand that is the day of Judgement when all secrets will be brought to Light Let us therefore cast off the works of Darkness and let us put on the Armour of Light let us walk honestly as in the day not in Rioting and Drunkenness not in Chambering and Wantonness not in strife and Envying and make no Provision for the Flesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof 6. VVhere Conscience is pure a greater measure of Holiness is aspired unto and endeavoured after Though sin does remain in a sanctified Heart yet does it not remain quietly Conscience deals hardly with it as Sarah did with Hagar Abrahams Egyptian Concubine and is not satisfied till 't is turned out of doors though Grace is incompleat yet compleatness is desired the promises of Sanctification are lookt upon as very great and precious and they are pleaded that the Divine Nature may more and more be partaken of by them the Corruption that is in the world through lust more fully escaped A pure Conscience will not suffer us to rest in that Grace which is already attained but causes us to presse towards the mark and to cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of the Flesh and Spirit perfecting Holiness in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7. 1. But now it is to be inquired How Conscience may be made thus pure unto which I answer 1. The Word of God is like a fire to purifie Jer. 23. 29. Is not my Word like Fire saith the Lord and like an Hammer that breaketh the Rock in pieces the word is compared to an Hammer because as the hammer does
break the Rock so does the Word the the Heart though never so hard and senseless 't is compared also to fire because like fire it does both give light and refine and purifie the Conscience Yeare Clean sayes Christ but how through the word that I have spoken unto you John 15 3. Let the Word of Christ therefore dwell in you richly 't will be an Excellent and effectual Antidote against sin and temptation when your Hearts stand in awe of the Word of God as David's did how will it preserve you from defilement 2. Affliction is like a Furnace to refine That Conscience may be pure Affliction is to be improved The Rod of Affliction though it seem to be dry and withered yet like Aaron's 't will bud and blossom and bring forth the Fruits of Righteousness Heb. 12. 11. Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous nevertheless afterwards it yieldeth the Peaceable Fruits of Righteousness unto them that are Exercised thereby And before the Apostle informs us that 't is God's design in Afflicting to refine and purifie v. 9 10. We have had Fathers of our Flesh who Corrected us and we gave them Reverence shall we not much rather be in subjection to the Father of Spirits and live For they verily for a few days chastened 〈◊〉 after their own pleasure but He for our profit that we might be partakers of his Holiness The smart of Affliction does help very much to awaken Conscience and to discover the evil and danger of sin and then sin is found to be ten thousand times more bitter when we reflect upon it than ever was fansied to be sweet in the time of Temptation We may indeed with submission pray against Affliction and intreat that gentler ways may be used to sanctifie us and we may take the more comfort and our sincerity will be the more Evident when milder Methods are effectual One of our English Poets speaks Excellently to this purpose (*) Herbert Discipline pag. 173 174. Throw away thy Rod Throw away thy Wrath. O my God Take the gentle path For my hearts desire Vnto thine is bent I aspire To a full consent Not a word or look I affect to own But thy Book And thy Book alone Though I fail I weep Though I halt in pace Yet I creep To the Throne of Grace Then let wrath remove Love will do the deed For with Love Stony hearts will bleed Love is swift of foot Love's a Man of War And can shoot And can hit from far Who can scape his bow That which wrought on thee Brought thee low Needs must work on me Throw away thy Rod Though Man frailties hath Thou art God Throw away thy Wrath. But if the Father of Spirits sees it meet and needful to use the Discipline of the Rod it concerns us to hear the Voice of it and understand the meaning and this it always speaks and that very plainly that our Consciences and indeed all within us should be more clean and Holy 3. The Blood of Christ purges the Conscience from dead works This is the Fountain which in the Gospel is set open for S●n and for Uncleanness 'T is He who hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his Blood Rev. 1. 5. So Heb. 9. 14. How much more shall the Blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit Offered up himself without spot to God purge your Consciences from dead works to serve the Living God Though our Lord aimed at our Justification and the Remission of sin when he shed his Blood and Sacrificed himself for us yet he had our sanctification and cleansing also in his eye Upon this Account the Apostle Peter tells us That he bear our sins in his own Body on the Tree that we being dead unto sins might live unto Righteousness 1 Pet. 2. 24. And we read Eph. 5. 25 26 27. that Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might Sanctifie and cleanse it and present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be Holy and without blemish Apply this Blood unto your selves be perswaded that it has a sanctifying vertue and pray for purity as that which is a great part of Christ's purchase as well as your own Perfection 4. If you would have Conscience pure you must not resist but yield unto the Spirit of Christ 'T is his Work not onely to shew sin but to slay it he convinces of sin and also Mortifies the deeds of the Body Rom. 8. 13. If ye live after the Flesh ye shall dye but if ye through the Spirit do Mortifie the deeds of the Body ye shall live The Power of sin is great and this Power is strengthned by the Principalities and Powers of Darkness who do endeavour to keep up sins Dominion So that if the Spirit of the Lord did not shew the exceeding greatness of his Power our Hearts and Consciences would still remain defiled we should never have our Fruit unto Holiness nor the end everlasting Life I have done with that sixth particular The goodness of Conscience lies in the purity of it 7. The goodness of Conscience lies in the calmness and peace of it What the Apostle speaks concerning the wisdom which is from above That 't is first pure and then peaceable may be applied unto a good Conscience first 't is pure then peacable there may indeed be purity without peace but there cannot be true peace without purity There is a false peace which is too commonly found in the ungodly and the Hypocrite this peace sin does not disturb but increase and by this peace the strong man armed does keep possession But true peace is peculiar unto them that are sanctified and when once they have attained unto it they are brought as it were within the Suburbs of Heaven and see the dawning of that Light which is everlasting That you may the better discern this true peace of Conscience I shall set it forth in these particulars 1. True peace of Conscience is founded upon the Blood of God So Christs Blood is called for as he was made of the seed of David according to the flesh so he is expresly affirmed to be over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9. 5. There could be no remission of sin without shedding of blood and no other blood would serve the turn the blood of Bulls and goats would not take away sin Heb. 10. 4. Nay supposing that Mans blood had been shed for us it would not have been expiatory Shall I give my first born for my transgression the fruit of my body for the sin of my Soul Mic. 6. 7. Nothing but what satisfies the justice of God will satisfie and pacifie the Conscience and bring it to a well-grounded tranquillity but 't is the blood of Christ alone that satisfies divine justice Conscience therefore can have no true rest till that blood be applied Luthers Conscience
second Conscience its acting would be insignificant it would be little or not at all heeded nay it self would become dull and heedless 2. The Spirits motions do differ from the impulses of Conscience Where the Spirit of the Lord does move more immediately his motions are with greater power and with greater Liberty The ungodly themselves are not altogether strangers unto the Power of the Spirit How doth it check them and restrain them and dam up the stream of Corruption for a season as long as 't is put forth but chiefly this power is apparent in them that are effectually called The Spirit impelling them to come to God does bring them quite home his impulse shall fetch them out of the farthest Country and bring them to their Fathers house Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is power and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is Liberty 2 Cor. 3. 17. The Spirit not only moves us to obey but also enlarges our hearts that we may run the way of the Lords commandments 3. The Spirits Convictions differ from the Accusations of Conscience as the Cause and Effect as the Antecedent and the Consequent The Spirit first sets sin in order before our eyes and then Conscience does accuse and reproach us because of it And where the Spirit does by a more immediate operation give a sight of sin and bring it to remembrance Oh how is the heart affected What self-abhorrency and abasement what Sorrow and Shame what Knocking of the Breast and Smiting upon the Thigh is there Surely sayes Ephraim after I was turned I repented and after I was instructed I smote upon my Thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my Youth Jer. 31. 19. Now 't was the Spirit that did thus instruct and turn him Thus Ezek 36. 27. I will put my Spirit within you And it follows ver 31. Then shall ye remember your evil wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations 4. The Spirits witness concerning our adoption differs from the witness of our own Spirits from the testimony of our own Consciences The Apostle speaks very plainly of a twofold witness that of Our Spirits and that of Gods Spirit Rom 8. 16. The Spirit it self beareth witness with out Spirits that we are the children of God This witness of the Spirit does not lye onely in his declaring in the Scriptures what kind of Persons are the children of God but he also helps Believers to see that they are such kind of persons and then enables them to draw the conclusion that they are Children and Heirs Heirs of God and Joint-heirs with Christ unto the incorruptible and undefiled inheritance Now the difference between the witnesse of the Spirit and that of Conscience touching our adoption is in these particulars 1. The Spirits witness is more clear Consciences more conjectural As we see things ten thousand time more plainly by the Light of the Sun than by a dim Lamp that burns by us and yet by that Lamp we may see something 2. The Spirits witness causes greater Boldness and Confidence than that of Conscience When the Spirit of Adoption is sent into the heart it makes Believers to come with Boldness to the Throne of Grace and to cry Abba Father that is Father Father the word is doubled to shew with what confidence the Spirit makes it to be spoken Gal. 4. 6. Then they draw nigh with high Hopes and raised Expectations that their Father will deal bountifully give liberally and though they open their mouths never so wide that yet they shall be filled with his fulness 3. The Spirits testimony is more firm and not so easily questioned that of Conscience is more apt to be cavill'd at by Satan If I see a thing plainly in the day time I know I see it and though many should question whether I saw or no yet I make no question nay though some distracted persons that are kept in darkness and chains should say they see when they don't yet I know I see when I do The Spirits testimony does make things thus clear And the objections of the Accuser of the Brethren 't is evident they are but cavils Thus says the Apostle We have known and believed the love that God hath to us 1 Joh. 4. 16. But the testimony of Conscience Satan will be more bold to question and will start an hundred things whereby a weaker Faith may be puzled and the heart still kept under doubts and fears 4. The Spirits testimony produces joy that of Conscience at best onely a calmness and tranquillity I confesse the Apostle sayes the testimony of Conscience was his rejoycing but you must know that he had also received the witness and earnest of the Spirit so that he had more than Consciences bare testimony The joy that the Spirit creates by his assuring Believers of their adoption is unspeakable and full of glory 'T is such as no Tongue can utter and no Heart can conceive it but such as have had a taste and experience of it 'T is not meerly a negative thing or freedom from trouble but positive and carries with it such a delight as is not to be found in the highest sensuality The Malefactor is at peace when he receives a pardon but if he be not only pardoned but Preferred this causes joy The Spirit lets the Soul see 't is pardoned and preferr'd to be a Child of God an Heir of Glory and gives a taste how Gracious the Lord is this causes not only peace but joy and triumph of Spirit in the God of Salvation I come now to the third thing I proposed to give you the reasons why it should be every ones great care to have good Conscience 1. We can have no Communion with God without a good Conscience unless our Hearts are sprinkled from an evil Conscience we cannot draw nigh to him neither will he draw nigh to us Though we say with never so great confidence that we have Fellowship with God if Conscience knows that we walk in darknesse and we allow our selves in the works of darkness the Holy Ghost gives us the lye to our face and we do not the Truth 1 John 1. 6. There cannot be a question asked of greater importance than this wherein does mans happinesse lye and the truest answer unto this question is Mans felicity does lye in Fellowship with God Therefore the happinesse of the triumphant Saints is so full because they are admitted unto so near Communion with God Therefore the Misery of the damned is so great because they are banished from the Lords presence and despair of ever coming neer to him or enjoying of him And therefore the happiness of militant Saints is imperfect because the remainders of sin in them do hinder them from enjoying so much of God as otherwise they might enjoy But where Conscience is evil there is
(q) As dirty hands foul all they touch And those things most which are most pure and fine So our clay-clay-hearts ev'n when we crouch To sing thy praises make them less divine Yet either this Or none thy portion is Herb. Misery p. 93. 6. Till Conscience be good how extreamly dangerous is our Estate We are the Children of Wrath the Sons of Death Condemned already not sure to be a day or hour out of that place of Torment where the Worm does not dye and the Fire none can quench When the Lord speaks to the Ungodly his mouth is full of threatnings his words are woes and curses and not one syllable of Encouragement or hope does he give them as long as they are resolved to continue in their wickedness Indeed if they are willing to have their Consciences and Conversations cleansed then he declares himself inclined to Mercy and to make them white as Wool or Snow though before red like Scarlet or like Crimson Isa 1. 16. 18. But as long as Conscience is secure and the sinner is resolved and obstinate alas God is angry with him every day the Vial is continually filling fuller and more wrath is treasured up against the day of wrath If the sinner turn not the Lord hath whet his Sword he hath bent his Bow and made it ready and who knows how soon the Arrow may be shot that may dispatch the sinner in the twinkling of an Eye and both kill and damn together 7. If Conscience be not good how great and intolerable may be the torture of it when it is awakened Solomon tells us That the Spirit of a Man may sustain his Infirmities but a wounded Spirit who can bear These wounds are made by sin as the Meritorious caus e and by the hand of God himself as an Holy Righteous Dreadful Sin-revenging Majesty The buffetings of Satan indeed are sometimes very troublesome and terrible but what are the buffetings of a Creature if compared with the blows and wounds of Him that is Almighty When God shall say to a sinful soul Behold I am against thee Ezek. 5. 8. When God shall run upon a Transgressor as a Giant and break him with breach upon breach surely his hands will not be strong his heart will not be able to endure 'T was a saying of Luther (q) Animus malè sibi conscius potiùs in mille rerum formas verteretur ac citiùs per saxa per ignes per ahaeneos montes denique ad Diabolum ipsum ferretur quam ad Deum accederet Luther Tom. 1. In Genes c. 43. That an evil Conscience being indeed wounded had rather be turned into a thousand forms had rather venture upon Rocks and Flames Mountains of brass nay upon the Devil himself than have to do with God The Design of which passage is to shew how terrible the Lord is unto a guilty and enraged Conscience Such are said to be Drunken but not with Wine unless it be the Wine of Astonishment and they are compared to a wild Bull in a Net being full of the Fury of the Lord and the Rebuke of God Isa 50. 20 21. If you look into Scripture you may find the Saints themselves complaining of these wounds in their Consciences Listen to Job Chap. 6. 2 3 4. O that my grief were throughly weighed and my Calamity laid in the Balances together For now it would be heavier th●● the sand of the Sea therefore my words are swallowed up for the Arrows of the Almighty are within me the Poyson whereof drinketh up my spirit the terrors of God do set themselves in array against me The Psalmist speaks to the same purpose Psal 88. 14 15 16. Lord why castest thou off my soul why hidest thou thy Face from me I am Afflicted and ready to die from my youth up while I suffer thy terrors I am distracted thy fierce wrath goeth over me thy terrors have cut me off And if Saints have drank so deep of this Cup of Trembling oh how bitter may it be to sinners (r) Est intus animi vigor Arce conditus abditâ Haec venena potentius Detrahunt hominem sibi Dira quae penitus meant Nec nocentia corpori Mentis vulnere saeviunt Boetius l. 4. Met. 3. pag. mihi 122. As therefore you would avoid the Lords contending with you which will make your spirits fail before him it should be your care to have a good Conscience 8. A good Conscience as it will make those that have it to be better and better themselves so it will render them exceedingly beneficial and make them blessings unto others A good Conscience like Rebecca of old is weary of the Daughters of Heth and is not satisfied unless the Flesh be like the house of Saul growing weaker and weaker and the Spirit be like the house of David growing stronger and stronger Conscience puts the Saints upon following on to know the Lord and following harder after him and though the least Grace deserve Infinite and Eternal thanks and Conscience urges unto praise yet withall it adds that the highest measures of Holiness are not to be rested in but still there must be a growing up into Christ in all things untill we arrive unto a perfect stature in his Kingdom A good Conscience will also make us publick Blessings unto others (s) Vir bonus est commune bonum It considers we are not Born or New-born onely for our selves It will make us beneficial to the Church and to the World 1. To the Church If there were more of Conscience it would hinder Animosities Contentions Divisions Declinings the decay of Love and of the Power of Godliness Conscience is for Peace and Unity and for walking as Saints and Brethren Mens Passions and Interests put them upon those courses that tend to Dividing and Destroying the Church of Christ 2. To the World A good Conscience will make us to put on Bowels and to compassionate Mankind 't will hinder us from Offending them and hardening them against Religion 't will make us pray for and endeavour the gaining and saving of them It will cause our Light so to shine before Men that they seeing our good Works may Glorifie our Father which is in Heaven and at length they may be brought to desire to become themselves of the Number of his Children I have done with the Reasons of the Doctrine I come now to the Application VSE 1. Shall be of Reproof If it should be the care of all to have a good Conscience alas whose heart may not smite him who has not Reason to acknowledge that a sharp Reproof is but justly due Conscience in these last and worst days seems to have left the Earth and truly till there are better Consciences there may not be better days or if there should be better times they would but prove a Judgment For if Mens Hearts are stupid under Adversity Prosperity is not likely to awaken them The Lord looks down from Heaven
A HEAVEN or HELL UPON EARTH OR A DISCOURSE CONCERNING Conscience By Nathanael Vincent M. A. Minister of the GOSPEL Acts 24. 16. Herein do I Exercise my self to have a Conscience void of Offence towards God and towards Man Multi quaerunt Scientiam pauci Conscientiam si vero tanto studio sollicitudine quaereretur Conscientia quanto quaeritur secularis vana scientia citiùs apprehenderetur utiliùs retineretur Bernard de Interior dom cap. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hierocl in Pythag. aur Carm. pag. mihi 213. 214. London Printed for Thomas Parkhurst at the Three Bibles and Crown at the Lower end of Cheap-side 1676. TO THE Much Honoured Sir Nathanael Herne Henry Ashurst Sen. Esq Mr. Abr. D'olins Merchant John Gould Esq Mr. Kiffin Merchant Grace Mercy and Peace be Multiplyed Honoured Sirs IF a Wish might be Granted to hear the Apostle Paul in the Pulpit one would be ready to Wish again that Christ or Conscience might be the Subject of his Sermon Were He to Preach how would he set forth Christ who is the Beloved Son of God! the brightness of his Fathers Glory who is Adored by all the Angels and deserves to be the Desire of all Nations How plainly and impartially would he deal with Conscience examining searching and reproving it and thereby commend himself to it in the sight of God One (a) Vnicuique Liber est sùa Conscientia ad hunc Librum discutiendum emendandum omnes alii inventi sunt Bernard De Interior Dom. Cap. 28. of the Fathers calls Conscience a Book and Affirms that other Books were invented that the Errata in this might be Corrected The Scriptures themselves were given by Inspiration of God to this End that the Evils of Conscience might be Discovered and the Man of God made Perfect throughly furnished unto all good Works 'T is therefore a bad World because Conscience seems to be Exiled and Banished out of it Conscience has in these Days lost its Power and does not Exercise that Authority which by right it should as Gods Vicegerent here below But Mens Wills and Lusts have got the head so that neither God is feared nor Man regarded And for their own Souls they are least of all concerned If it be a sad Sight to see Beggars on Horse-back and Princes Walking as Servants upon the Earth much more is it to be Lamented that Mens Corruptions which ought to be held in perpetual Restraint should sway and Command all and Conscience the mean while be slighted stifled stupified and kept under which as a Prince should be Obeyed in every thing and from God give Laws to the whole Man What One said of a good Magistrate may be applyed unto a good Conscience that (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is a Benefactor and Friend to Mankind 'T will never be well with us till this have a Resurrection This is the way to obtain a Blessing from God the way to have Prosperity Trade Reputation and which is more than any than all these the Honour and Credit of the Christian Religion revived which has sunk in the esteem of many because so little of Conscience has appeared in those who have Professed it That thus it may be is the end both of this Book and of its Author And I have Dedicated it unto you Honoured Sirs who are of different Perswasions to shew that great Respect I unfeignedly bear unto you All and because Persons of all Perswasions have need to study the Subject here Treated of How many bad Consciences are there of every Opinion And if all of every Opinion would but look well to their Consciences and be so self-denying as to lay aside their Passions and their Interests This would be one of the most probable means to bring all to a better Agreement They are the Carnal and Hypocritical of every Party who endeavour to make breaches wider that are the Quarrellers and Disputers The truly Conscientious abhor Contention the sincere are very inclinable unto Peace I shall add no more but Conclude this my Address to you with an earnest Wish that All of every Perswasion may imitate You All in regard of Conscientiousness Moderation and Wisdom And 't is not a Complement to tell you that in thus Wishing I Wish well to the whole Nation and to the Churches of Christ in it Your most Humble Servant for Jesus sake Nathanael Vincent An ADDRESSE TO THE Conscience of the READER Conscience MY Expectation is greater from Thee than from any thing in the Reader besides I make no question but what I have written being opposite unto the sinfull and corrupt Inclinations of men will also be displeasing to their Humour but I have hope that Thou wilt side with me 'T is easie to convince Thee that Sin is to the prejudice of the whole Man that a Redeemer is to be prized by Sinners who are under the worst kind of Bondage and that Holiness is for men's Honour and Interest and Safety 'T is easie to convince Thee that those Pleasures and Advantages which are offer'd in Temptation are inconsiderable and that 't is the heighth of Folly to yield unto the Tempter to forsake an All-sufficient God to hazard an immortal Soul and venture the enduring of Eternal Misery for the sake of those Profits and Delights which are so mixed and unsatisfactory while enjoyed and which can continue at longest but a very short season And since it is most certainly thus O Conscience keep not silence produce the Word of God and there shew how the Lord has given thee a Negative Voice and allows nothing to be done that may defile or wound thee Protest loudly and peremptorily against all Sin call Heaven and Earth to witness and God himself unto thine assistance Vigorously oppose the Enemy of Mankind who hath his Name Apollyon because he endeavours to destroy all Bestirre thy self and joyn with Me in endeavouring to hinder the everlasting Ruine of every Reader who shall take this Book into his hand My design is not to turn People to a Party but to turn them unto God that which I preach up is Faith in our Lord Jesus and Purity in Heart and Conversation And surely such a design Thou canst not but approve such a Doctrine Thou must needs grant is faithful sound and consequently worthy of all Acceptation O Conscience I am pleading for God! that He who is so Great and Good may be obeyed and that the Sons of Men would submit their Wills to His And this is a thing but very equal since their Wills are corrupt and foolish and strongly inclin'd unto what is mischievous to themselves but His is wise and gracious and never commands any thing but what is really for the Profit of him that is to yield Obedience I am likewise O Conscience pleading for Thee that Thou mayst be allowed the free Exercise of thy Authority and Power and mayest be hearkened to whenever thou dost declaim against Sin and
urge unto those Duties which the Lord requires The design of this Book is that Thou mayst be more fully enlightned that thou mayst be more pure and peaceable that those wounds which Sin has made in thee may be healed and that wounds which are so intolerable may for the future be prevented and above all that thou mayst not be forced to torture Thy self and any Reader for ever in another World O Conscience next unto the Spirits gracious and powerfull Concurrence which with my whole Soul I do implore the Success of this Treatise will very much depend upon Thy Faithfulness in doing of thy Office Bid the Reader mind what he reads apply to himself what he minds practice what he applyes and having begun to practise never grow weary of well-doing Tell him 't is not enough to profess Religion nor to (c) Nos qui non habitu sapientiam sed mente praeferimus non magna eloquimur sed vivimus Minut. Foel pag. mihi 94. talk at a great rate nor to be highly esteemed among men (d) Quid mihi prodest si me continuis laudibus totus mundus attollat Non malam Conscientiam sanat praeconium laudantis nec bonam vulner at conviciantis opprobrium Augustin To. 7. l. 3. contra Lit. Petilian Donatist pag. mihi 168. for Godliness as long as God and Thou do know that his Heart is not upright and sincere Now that the Readers Conscience may be better his Heart better his Conversation better and more to the Honour of God and Credit of Christianity and that it may be best of all with him at Death and Judgement is and shall be the Prayer of Nathanael Vincent THE CONTENTS THE Text divided and opened Page 3 Six Doctrines raised 4 Doct. 1. There is a Conscience in Man ibid. This proved first by the Light of Nature 5 Secondly by Scripture-Arguments 9 Thirdly 't is evident by Experience 12 The Reason of the Name Conscience 25 Several Descriptions of Conscience out of Origen Aquinas c. 29 Conscience defined 31 Conscience is a Power in the Soul of Man ibid. Conscience implies some Knowledge of the Will of God 32 A Three-fold Light whereby Conscience is directed ibid. Conscience urges a complyance with the Will of God 37 Conscience bears witness 40 This Witness is an Accusation upon doing evil 42 Six things observable concerning the Accusations of Conscience ibid. This witness of Conscience is an Apology upon wel-doing p. 46. 'T is the Office of Conscience to Judge 48. It passes a sentence of absolution ibid. And of condemnation 49. Six reasons why God has placed a Conscience in Man 54. Vse 1. Of Information Eight weighty Truths inferred from this Doctrine 59 Vse 2. Be excited to blesse God for giving such a power as Conscience this urged by several arguments 63 Conscience of all other Powers does struggle most to prevent mens ruine 65. Vse 3. Of Encouragement to Ministers Conscience sides with them 67 Vse 4. Think not you shall ever be able to extirpate Conscience 68 Vse 5. Be exhorted to heed Conscience 69 Motives to perswade unto this 70 Doct. 2. To have a good Conscience should be every one 's greatest care 73 Several things premised that we may the better understand in what sence Conscience since the fall may be said to be good 74 1. The goodness of Conscience lies in its illumination and being rightly informed 81 What kind of knowledge the knowledge of a good Conscience is 82 Of an erring Conscience and how far it bindes 83 Of a dubious Conscience 85 Of a scrupulous Conscience 86 The way to have Conscience well informed 88 2. The goodness of Conscience lies in the due exercise of its authority and power 92 The Power and Authority of Conscience is of great extent pag. 92 Directions given how this power of Conscience may be put forth 97 3. The Goodness of Conscience lies in its be wakefull and attentive 100 How Conscience may be made attentive 104. 4. The Goodness of Conscience lies in its tenderness 105 The properties and signs of a tender Conscience 106 How Conscience may be made tender 111 5. The Goodness of Conscience lies in its faithfulnesse in witness bearing 119 The way to have Conscience faithful in its testimony 122 6. The goodness of Conscience lies in its purity ibid. The characters of a pure Conscience ibid How Conscience may be made pure 127 7. The goodness of Conscience lies in the calmness and peace of it 131 True peace of Conscience set forth 132 How this peace may be attained 137 8. The goodness of Conscience lies in its being void of offence 142 Directions to prevent taking offence 144 Directions to prevent giving offence 145 Wherein the acts of a good Conscience and the acts of the Spirit of God are to be distinguished 147 Eight reasons why it should be every ones care to have a good Conscience 152 Vse 1. Of Reproof which is directed 160 1. To those whose Conscience are ignorant 161 2. To those whose Consciences are large 164 3. To those whose Consciences are at peace but that peace has no solid ground 166 Ten signs of a false peace of Conscience 167 How unreasonable to give way to this false peace p. 176 4. They are to be reproved who offer violence to their Consciences 181 Of a Seared Conscience ibid. Of a Despairing Conscience and the torture of it in five particulars 183 5. They are to be reproved who go about to wound and to ensnare the Consciences of others 186 Vse 2. Of Direction 1. How secure Consciences may be awakened 189 2. How awakened and troubled Consciences may be comforted 202 Several Mistakes about trouble of Conscience ibid. Six sorts of trouble which are not right 203 Eight differences between MELANCHOLY and trouble of Conscience 207 Right trouble of Conscience described in eleven particulars 213 Ten grounds of Consolation proposed for the comforting of troubled Consciences 226 Objections of those under trouble of Conscience 1. Concerning the greatness of Sin answered 251 2. 'T is too late to come to Christ answered ibid. 3. They fear they are judicially hardened answer'd 254 4. They are not able to come to Christ answer'd 255 5. They have backsliden after Illumination answered 257 6. They do all for fear of Hell answered 258 Vse 3. Of Exhortation Let it be your care to have a good Conscience this backed with eight arguments 260 Vse 4. Of Advice to them that have a good Conscience Be thankfull for this unspeakable Gift 270 Compassionate them that are without it 272 Keep a good Conscience p. 274 Several Directions how to keep a good Conscience ibid. 275 276. Be not acted onely by Conscience but let Love constrain you to Obedience 276 Doct. 3. A good Conscience will make men set themselves as before God continually 277 We are alwayes before God 278 How we are to look upon God when we set our selves before him 279 What 't is to set our selves
before God ibid. 280 c. Why we should do thus 283 The Application 288 Doct. 4. A good Conscience has a great and lasting influence upon the Life and all the Actions 291 There is no Action but Conscience is to examine ibid. A good Conscience will not admit of loose Principles 292 'T will not abuse Christian Liberty ibid. It takes notice what Principles we are acted from 293 It eyes the matter of our Actions 294 Our Obligation to the Moral Law ibid. The Precepts of the Gospel 295 A good Conscience looks to the Manner of our Obedience ibid. And to the End of it ibid. A good Conscience particularly has an influence upon our holy Duties 296 The works of our Calling 297 Our Words and Discourses 299 The Manner of spending our Time ibid. Our Natural Actions 300 Our Recreations ibid. Our carriage in Relations 301 Behaviour in Prosperity and Adversity c. p. 302 Application 303 Doct. 5. A good Conscience steels a mans heart with courage and makes him fearless before his Adversaries 305 The Grounds of this Fearlesness 306 The Vses 307 Doct. 6. Those that are truly Conscientious love their Enemies and wish them no worse than if they were their Brethren 308 The Reasons of this ibid. 309 The Application 309 310 The Conclusion of the whole Discourse in an Address to Conscience 311 c. There is in Man a Conscience ACTS 23. 1. And Paul earnestly beholding the Council said Men and Brethren I have lived in all good Conscience before God untill this Day IN the foregoing Chapter the Apostle Paul declares at large unto the Jews the miraculous manner of his conversion to the Christian Faith and being thus converted he was very forward to propagate that Faith which once he endeavoured to destroy He tells them plainly that in opposing Jesus of Nazareth he had been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fighter against God himself and that the Stone which heretofore he had stumbled at is that chief Corner-stone which is laid in Zion for a Foundation on which whoever builds his building shall never fall This he perceived evidently in his way to Damascus as he was journeying with Authority and Commission to persecute the Christians Christ himself both meets and stops him at Mid-day he saw a Light from Heaven above the Brightness of the Sun which did both strike him Blind with its excessive Shining and yet also opened his Eyes to behold his former Errour in setting himself against the Lord of Life and Glory The design of this Relation was to convince the Jewes and to perswade them to embrace that Jesus who was crucified indeed that he might redeem them from the curse which they could never escape by any other means but liveth by the power of God and is exalted far above all Heavens that he might fill all things Well They hear the Apostle with patience untill he told them of his Commission to preach the Gospel to the Gentiles and then a most Satanical Envy and Fury stops their Ears and they cry out Away with such a Fellow from the Earth And truly from the Earth they had quickly sent him if the chief Captain Lysias understanding that he was a Roman that is though a Jew by birth yet having the priviledge of a Roman Citizen (a) N●runt historiae Romanae periti quosdam in provinciae civitate fuisse donatos si de Republicâ bene meriti hanc sibi mercedem à Proconsulibus rogarent ita nihil absurdi est natum fuisse Romanum civem qui tamen ex provinciâ remotâ oriundus nunquam in Italiâ pedem posuisset Calv. in Act. Apost had not rescued him out of their hands Being thus delivered from the multitude he is brought and set before the Councel He stands alone indeed to make his defence but as the Lord stood by him to strengthen him so he brings with him a good Conscience which was as much nay more to make him undaunted then if he had had a thousand witnesses of his innocency And Paul earnestly beholding the Councel said Men and Brethren I have lived in all good Conscience before God unto this day The words contain the Apostles profession in which several particulars are very remarkable 1. He professes that he had lived in good Conscience he speaks of Conscience to his Adversaries that he might awaken Their's to do their Duty that hereby they might be hindered from doing wrong to him but more wrong to themselves by unrighteous judgment He farther adds that his Conscience was good and did not at all accuse but cleer him 2. He had acted as before God and had good Assurance that God approved of what he had done he had cause to be confident that the Supream and Most Righteous Judge would not condemn him but was pleased at that for which the Jews were so much offended Chrisost observes (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in Act. Apost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the Apostle speaks thus to take away the Jewes prejudice against him and to convince them that he had done nothing which was injurious to them or worthy of the bonds which were upon him 3. He had approved himself unto God and Conscience in all things he was not ruled by carnal interest or fleshly Wisdom but there was simplicity and godly sincerity in the whole course of his conversation since his first conversion to the Christian Faith 4. Neither was this only for a while but even unto that very day wherein there were such loud exclamations against him as if he were unfit to live any longer in the World 5. You are to take notice of the persons before whom he professes all this and those were the Council of the Jews And 1. He stedfastly and earnestly lookes upon them to shew both his Courage and his Innocency he is not afraid to face them neither does he cast down his eyes through guilt or shame 2. He calls them not only Men but Brethren His Brethren they were according to the Flesh and though full of hatred against him yet he had a Brotherly love to them and his Hearts desire was that they might be saved I shall observe from the Text several points of Doctrine 1. God has placed a Conscience in Man The Apostle had a Conscience and 't was a good Conscience all others have a Conscience likewise either good or evil 2. To have a good conscience should be every one 's greatest care Every one should strive to resemble the Apostle and be able to say I have lived in good Conscience 3. A good Conscience will make men to set themselves as before God continually I have lived in good Conscience before God 4. A good Conscience has a great and lasting influence upon the Life and all the Actions I have lived in all good Conscience and that unto this day 5. A good Conscience makes a Man fearless and and steels his Heart with courage when he stands before his Enemies Paul
earnestly beheld the Council 6. Those who are truly Conscientious love their adversaries and wish them no worse then if they were their brethren Paul said Men and Brethren Doct. 1. God has placed a Conscience in Man Such a thing as Conscience is supposed in the Text else 't were not capable of being good or bad To have a Conscience is common to all though to have a good one as the Apostle had is very rare In the handling of this Doctrine I shall undertake three things First I shall prove that there is a Conscience in Man Secondly I shall tell you what this Conscience is Thirdly I shall assign the Reasons why the Lord hath given unto Man a Conscience After these three things are dispatched will follow the Application 1. In the first place I am to prove That there is a Conscience in Man There is great need that this should be made evident because (c) Ita in multorum animis extincta est conscientia ut licet interdum tacitos ejusdem stimulos sentiant tamen quae de eâ audiant pro ludibrio habeant ac si figmentum somnium inane 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esset Conscientia Baldwinus De Conscientiâ lib. 1. cap. 1. many regard Conscience no more then if it were a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a meer Bug-bear to fright those who are timorous then if it were a dream or phancy But as the reason why the fool sayes in his Heart there is no God Ps 14. 1. t is not because there is no God indeed but because being afraid of God he wishes there were none at all So the true cause why stupid sinners say there is no such thing as Conscience is this Conscience does accuse and reproach and disquiet them and they first wishing there were no such thing employ their corrupt reason to argue against it But I shall prove that there is really a Conscience in Man three wayes First By the Light of Nature Secondly By Scripture And lastly By Experience 1. That there is such a thing as Conscience is evident By the Light of Nature Though there is a further light which shines from the Word of God yet the light of Nature is much to be regarded for those Truths are of very great importance and use that by this light are made manifest (d) Praemisit Deus Naturam Magistrum submissurus propheliam ut facilius credas prophetiae discipulus naturae Tertul. The light of Nature informs us of an eternal Power and God-Head Rom. 1. 20. The same light also tells us of a Conscience which is ever with us always observes us and unto whose Power and Authority we ought to submit our solves The Apostle speaks fully to this purpose Rom. 2. 14. 15. The Gentiles which have not the Law are a Law unto themselves which shew the work of the Law written in their Hearts their Conscience also bearing them Witnesse and their Thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another 1. There is a Law written in the Hearts of the Gentiles They were not altogether unacquainted with the duties of the first Table but knew that as there is a God so this God is to be loved pleased praised served and that there should be a trusting in him that he should be Worshipped with a pure mind 'T was the saying of Cato (e) Si Deus est animus nobis ut carmina dicunt Hic tibi praecipuè sit purâ mente colendus Cato De moribus lib. 1. dist 1. If God be a Spirit then with a pure mind chiefly he is to be Worshipped But as to the second Table of the Law they were more fully instructed concerning the duties therein required They knew that Parents were to be honoured that Murther was to be abhorred that Adultery was not to be committed that Theft was a sin to be avoided that they were not to bear false Witness against others nor to Covet what belonged to them Now by this Law in their Hearts the Consciences of the Heathens were informed and obliged and hereby they were able to discern the difference between Good and Evil. Seneca sayes that (f) Scias subesse animis etiam ad pessima abductis boni sensum nec ignorariturpe sed negligi Sen. Epist 97. there is a sense of good even in those minds that are carried away unto the Commission of the greatest Evils neither are they ignorant what is abominable but neglect what they understand 2. The Consciences of the Heathens did bear them witnesse in this respect the Lord may be said not to have left himself without a witness even in them to whom his written Word never came The Gentiles took notice of something within themselves which as it did urge them to what was good and endeavoured to restrain them from evil so it took notice of all they did and was ready to witness for them or against them according as the Law written in their Hearts was observed or transgressed 'T is a notable injunction of Pythagoras g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythag. Aur. Cor. Above all others reverence thy self that is chiefly regard Conscience the witness within thee and be afraid and ashamed to do any thing before this witnesse which may be matter of just accusation against thee 3. The Thoughts of the Gentiles did accuse them upon their doing Evil. These accusations were accompanied with great Torment and this torment was the more tormenting because Conscience could not be avoided but guilty sinners were forced to hear the disquieting reproaches of it The Fable concerning Tityus who after he attempted to Ravish Latona was adjudged to have a Vulture to feed upon his Liver which grew with the Moon and consequently was still the Vultures food (*) Natal Com. lib. c. 19. did signifie the gripings of a guilty Conscience for sin which are incessant The Furies which the Poets talk of are the torments of an accusing Conscience and such kind of punishments are a great deal worse than the severest judge on Earth is able to inflict Juvenal Satyr 13. speaks notably to this purpose Cur tamen hos tu Evasisse putes quos diri conscia facti Mens habet attonitos et sur do verbere caedit Occultum quatiente animo tortore flagellum Poena autem vehemens et multo suaevor illis Quas et Caeditius gravis invenit aut Rhadamanthus Nocte diéque suum gestare in pectore testem Which verses may be thus translated into English But think'st thou he escapes whose conscience makes Whips that unheard his guilty Soul still shakes The Judge Caeditius cannot here invent Nor Rhadamant in Hell a punishment To equal his that 's day and night opprest Bearing about his Witness in his brest 4. The Thoughts of the Gentiles did excuse them upon well doing They found a great satisfaction in going according to the dictates of their own Consciences and this tended very much to their support (h) Conscientia rectae
be so unfaithful as seldom to admonish yet at length 't will awake and then 't will be found that it knowes and remembers all misdoings The Regenerate likewise have a Conscience which is enlightned and purged and renewed by the Blood and VVord and Spirit of our Lord Jesus 3. As 't is clear from Scripture that there is a Conscience in Man so 't is evident by experience And here I shall make an appeal unto every ones sense and observation in three following questions 1. What is it that speaks to you when (*) Nemo minus solus quam cum solus alone and tells you that there is an All-seeing God but Conscience (l) NOTE Whenever Conscience performs its office aright t is inlightned and acted by the Spirit of God The Spirit therefore is to be acknowledged for without him Conscience would have no light or life or power or feeling 'T is this which brings to your remembrance that the Lord who is so holy is alwayes present that no darkness or retired corner can hide you from him but he compasses your path and your lying down and is acquainted with all your ways 2. What is it but Conscience that forbids the yeilding to temptations even unto the most secret sins Secret places can hide the Sinner from the eye of man and there are some Sins namely heart wickednesses which man can take no cognizance of and yet we are checkt when we are giving way to these which shewes there is a Conscience as well as a God privy to them When Satan and a deceitful Heart do plead for Sin and perswade to it by this argument that never any are likely to know it yet even then conscience declares against it and cryes out Oh do not that abominable thing which God hates 'T was well said by one of the Ancients to the Gentiles Vos conscios timetis nos conscientiam You are afraid lest others should be conscious to what you do we fear even our own Consciences 3. What is it but Conscience that impresses a fear of a Judgment which is to come (m) Beatus erit quisquis non sine memoriâ divini judicii omnia gesserit Hillar in Psal 118. Rythm Bernard Expavesco miser multùm Judicis severi vultum Quem latebit nil occultum Nec manebit quid inultum Et quis nostrûm non timebit Quando Judex apparebit Ante quem ignis ardebit Peccatores qui delebit It many times with a great deal of Power does mind us of such Scriptures God has appointed a day wherein he will Judge the World in Righteousness Acts 17. 31. We must all appear before the Judgment-seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his Body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad 2 Cor. 5. 10. And Conscience knowing these Terrors of the Lord perswade Men to Repentance and to labour that whether present or absent they may be accepted of him 'T was a saying of Tertullian Conscientia est prae-judicium extremi judicii Conscience is a Judging before the last Judgment but still it tells of and referrs to the last Judgment that hereby the Heart may be over-awed 4. What is it but Conscience which urges unto secret Duties the Omission of which the World can take no notice of There is a Monitor within us which tells us that our Father is and sees in secret and will reward openly such as secretly and sincerely seek him Mat. 6. When our Hearts the desperate wickedness whereof is not quite cured in the best of us draw back from Prayer in the Closet Conscience then presses to it and pleads the Command the Advantage what an Evidence 't is of uprightness to be often with God alone This same Monitor likewise puts us upon the searching into and study of the Scripture for 't is the Character and property of the Blessed Man to have his Delight in the Law of the Lord and in that Law to Meditate Day and Night Psal 1. 2. 5. What is it but Conscience that applies Truths particularly which are more generally delivered in the Ministry of the Gospel I grant indeed that this application is the Work of the Spirit of God but the Conscience of Man is made use of herein by the Holy Spirit The Preacher shoots a great many Arrows The Spirit does direct them to particular Persons and Conscience takes notice where the Arrow sticks The same Language which was in the Prophet Nathan's Mouth to David after his so foul a fall is in the Mouth of Conscience The Word speaks in the general The Soul that sins shall dye the Wages of Sin is Death But then Conscience crys out Thou art the man that hast sinned and therefore Death and Destruction will quickly over-take thee unless there be a coming by Faith unto a Saviour and a turning out of thy Destructive ways 6. What is it but Conscience which does comment upon Afflictions Folly is bound up in thy heart says Conscience therefore thou feelest the Rod to drive it far from thee Thou art Worldly-minded therefore thou meetest with Losses to wean thee from that which if still doated on will both deceive and ruine thee Thou art too much like a slothful Servant therefore says Conscience Affliction is sent to make thee mend thy pace and follow them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises (n) Tempestuous times Amaze poor mortals and object their crimes Herbert When Joseph's Brethren were all put into Ward in Egypt their Consciences commented upon their Restraint and brought their injurious handling of their Brother to remembrance Gen. 42. 21. And they said one to another we are verily guilty concerning our Brother in that we saw the anguish of his Soul when he besought us and we would not hear therefore is this Distress come upon us 7. What is it but Conscience that traces us in all our Actions Conscience takes notice what Principles we are Acted by what Ends we aim at it Observes both the Matter and the Manner of our Actions Conscience Examines whether Love to the Lord constrain us to his Work whether the pleasing honouring and enjoying of God be our great Design whether our Hearts and Affections be in our Services After thy Praying and Hearing and Receiving are ended doest thou not find something within thee running over all thy performances and calling thee to Account whether thou hast Prayed with Faith and Fervency whether thou hast heard believingly and with attention whether thou hast received worthily This is Conscience 8. What is it but Conscience which haunts us upon miscarriages It s Mouth is full of Reproaches and these Reproaches are unanswerable After sins especially presumptuous ones have been committed there is a secret gnawing within and that is the Worm of Conscience (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch De his qui sero à Numine puniuntur pag. mihi 554. Plutarch compares the pleasure of sin which is
offered in Temptation unto a Bait and this is presently and greedily devoured but afterwards Conscience as an Hook holds the sinner and does torment him 'T is a sore trouble to have an House that is really haunted with Spirits to be disturbed with noises voices and frighting Apparitions 'T is likewise exceeding grievous to be haunted with an evil Conscience to have this continually Objecting the guilt which we have contracted and affrighting us with the Wrath of God the Chains of Darkness and the Vengeance of Eternal Fire which are threatned against the Workers of Iniquity 9. 'T is Conscience reflecting upon our sincerity which produces such Peace and Satisfaction The Persons whom we converse with and that take notice of our Actions are not competent Judges of our sincerity for 't is not in their Power to look into our Hearts But Conscience as it does discern so it approves uprightness That Italian Philosopher and Poet Petrarch has an Excellent saying What though thy Neighbours celebrate thy Name they deceive one another and all deceive thee Be not lifted up with the Testimony of others there is within thee a more uncorrupted and certain Witness and that 's thy Conscience ask this concerning thy self and give credit to it And in another place he says (p) Vulgus te notum faciet virtus clarum conscientia securum Petrarch The People will make thee known Vertue will make thee Famous but 't is Conscience approving thee that makes thee comfortable and secure Oh Conscience how insuperable are thy Consolations Though Satan the Accuser of the Brethren call me Hypocrite though Romish Pseudo-Catholicks do call me Heretick though furious and uncharitable Protestants do call me Schismatick yet if Conscience rightly informed by the Word of God say I am sincere I shall have Peace whoever endeavour to disturb me Thus have I proved at large that there is a Conscience in Man I now add these following particulars 1. This thing called Conscience is in every one there is no Man without it You may as well suppose a Man without an Understanding as without a Conscience and without a power to know any thing as without a power to reflect upon himself Every reasonable Soul being capable both of Sin and Grace is endued with a power of reflecting upon it self that sin may be condemned and Grace may be approved All are called upon to consider their ways Hag. 1. 5. 7. but to take our own ways into consideration is the work of Conscience Conscience therefore is in all Let none therefore sin presumptuously and securely as if they had no Conscience at present to Observe them or at any time to Reproach and torture them 2. This Conscience when awakened will deal plainly with the greatest It regards not the high Estate of Persons but will tell them their own without Flattery Pharaoh at first crys out Who is the Lord that I should Obey his Voice I know not the Lord neither will I let Israel go Exod. 5. 2. But afterwards the Lords Miracles which he wrought and the Plagues which he inflicted upon the Egyptians awakened the Conscience of Pharaoh and he crys out unto Moses and Aaron I have sinned the Lord is Righteous and I and my People are wicked Exod. 9. 27. He speaks this Language unto Moses because Conscience had before spoken the same Language to him and had told him of his sin and wickedness and the Righteousness of that God whom he had exalted himself against Conscience did flie in the Face of Belshazzar though so great a Monarch when the Hand did write his doom upon the Wall and put him into such a consternation * Sa. Danyel Life and Reign of Henry 1 pag. 65 66. that his countenance was changed the joynts of his Loins were loosed and his Knees smote one against another Dan. 5. 6. After King Henry the First had put out the Eyes of Robert his Eldest Brother and had lost William his Eldest and onely Son in a Storm at Sea this sudden clap of Gods Judgment did make his Conscience shrink with terror his sleeps were very tumultuous and full of Affrightments wherein he would often rise and take his Sword and be in Act as if he defended himself against assaults of his Person And the Historian says the King was never seen to Laugh afterwards Sir Walter Rawleigh Observes how the Consciences of Kings have been startled when Death has been within view and have forced them to do what before they refused and then adds these words (*) Hist of the World lib. 5. c. 6. Sect. 12. pag. 669. O eloquent just and mighty Death whom none could advise thou hast perswaded what none hath dared thou hast done and whom all the World hath flattered thou onely hast cast out of the World and despised thou hast drawn together all the far-stretched greatness all the Pride Cruelty and Ambition of Man and cover'd it over with these two narrow words Hic jacet here it all lies buried Conscience respects not the Persons of Princes but will flie in the Face of the proudest of them when God does give it a Commission 3. Conscience is not to be escaped we can no more flie from Conscience than we can run away from our selves When the Lord gives this Officer a Command and Power to speak we are forced to hear it as David speaks concerning God himself Whither shall I go from thy Spirit Whither shall I flee from thy presence If I ascend into Heaven thou art there if I make my Bed in Hell behold thou art there if I take the wings of the Morning and fly to the uttermost parts of the Sea thy Hand will reach me if I say the darkness shall cover me the Night shall be light about me Psal 139. 7-11 So truly these words may in part be applyed unto Conscience Whither shall we go from our own Spirits whither shall we flee from the presence of our Consciences 'T will go after us to Heaven 't will follow us down to Hell if we travel into the remotest Regions we cannot shake off Conscience but 't will be our Companion and Observer No darkness can hide any thing from its view but the Night shineth as the Day the darkness and the light are both alike to it Hieroclus upon Pythagoras calls Conscience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Keeper most intimate and unavoidable Nec fugere nec fugare potes You can neither fly from it nor cause it to fly from you Very Devout is that Meditation of Bernard (q) Peccata mea celare non possum quoniam quocunque vado conscientia mea mecum est secum portans quid in eâ posui sive bonum sive malum Servat vivo restituet defuncto depositum quod servandum accepit Si malè facio adest illa si autem bene facere videor inde extollor adest illa adest vivo sequitur mortuum ubique mihi gloria vel confusio inseparabilis pro
qualitate depositi Sic sic in domo propriâ à propriâ familiâ habeo accusatores testes judices tortores Bernard Meditat. devot cap. 13. pag. mihi 1060. My sins I am not able to conceal because where ever I go my Conscience is continually with me and carries with it what I have put in it whether it be good or evil It keeps for me living it will restore to me dying what I have delivered to be kept by it If I do evil Conscience is present if I seem to do good and am lifted up with Pride Conscience is present It accompanies me all my Life long 't will follow me after Death and will be my inseparable either Glory or Confusion according to the Quality of what it has Observed in me Thus thus in my own House in my own Soul I have Accusers Witnesses Judges Tormentors if I dare to give way unto Iniquity 4. Though Conscience may seem to be quite banished and for the present does no more its Office than if there were no such thing yet this Exiled and Banished thing will at last return or to speak more properly this Conscience that was imagined to be in a dead sleep or altogether careless will shew that it has been too much present with the guilty all along These six particulars are here to be Observed 1. Some great Affliction may awaken Conscience When the Widow with whom Elijah sojourned her Son fell sick and his sickness was so sore that there was no breath left in him her Conscience was exceedingly startled and she said to Elijah What have I to do with thee O thou Man of God art thou come unto me to call my sin to remembrance and to slay my Son 1 Kings 17. 17 18. The Locusts which were so very grievous that came over all the Land of Egypt extorted a Confession from Pharaoh's Conscience though his Heart was before hardned He called for Moses and Aaron in haste and said I have sinned against the Lord and against you now therefore forgive I pray thee my sin this once and intreat the Lord your God that he may take away from me this Death onely Exod. 10. 16 17. How does Affliction give new Eyes and make sin appear in other colours than before it seemed to have When the Body of a sinner is first struck with a Disease and the mind apprehends this Sickness may prove deadly and that now being Arrested the sinner must quickly appear before the Judgment-seat Ohthen what a commotion is there in the Soul and how fierce and clamourous is the Conscience which before was deeply silent 2. Conscience may awake after a fall into some scandalous sin When the long covered Hypocrisie is detected and the sly sinner which waxed worse and worse and yet was secure at length does commit some sin that the World crys shame on Oh then Conscience may joyn in with the VVorlds clamors (r) Non aurem solam percutit iracundia criminantis verùm etiam conscientiam mordet veritas criminis August l. 3. contra lit Petilian Tom. 7. and tell him that now his sin has found him out and that Heaven has revealed his iniquity and that because he has despised God he has been suffered to do that which has made himself to be lightly esteemed 3. Conscience may awake at the hearing of a powerful Sermon The messengers of the Lord are commanded to lift up their Voices like a Trumpet and the design is to startle Conscience and that sinners may be made sensible of and to know their Transgressions Isaiah 58. 1. God speaks thus to the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 6. 11. Smite with thine hand and stamp with thy foot and say Alas for all the evil abominations of the House of Israel These gestures this earnestness and crying out of abominations is used to affect the Hearts which before were stupid And truly the VVord of God has oftentimes taken impression even upon those whose Souls were more than ordinarily senseless The Apostles hearers were mockers and yet the VVord being set home they were prickt at the Heart and said Men and Brethren what shall we do Act. 2. 37. Now when the VVord does awaken the Conscience there is more ground to hope that God has a design to work a saving change and that the troubles of Spirit are but as it were the pangs which fore-run the new Birth 4. Conscience may awake when Death is within view I grant indeed that 't is too common for the ungodly to dy stupid and that there may be no bands in their death Psal 73. but yet experience shews that the approach of death does also fill many ungodly ones with horrour and amazement What made Balaam to cry out let me dye the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his Num. 23. 10. Surely he had pre-apprehensions how terrible a thing 't is for the ungodly to dye When nature is almost spent and the earthly Tabernacle is tottering and falling to the ground when Physicians are at a losse and friends stand by weeping and 't is whispered in the room Alas he cannot live many hours to an end Ah then Conscience may wake in terrible fright and the sinner may be confounded and as death comes with its sting so it may prove indeed the King of terrours 5. To be sure at judgment Conscience will be awaked thoroughly though sinners possibly may look death yet they cannot look the Judge in the face without being daunted He will strike terrour into the Hearts of those sinners that were most obstinate and unbelieving VVe read that at the great day the Books will be opened Rev. 20. 12. The Book of Scripture will be opened for by that every one must be judged The Word that I have spoken sayes Christ the same shall judge at the last day The book of Conscience will also be opened and what things are found written there will be taken notice of and must be answered for No Conscience at that day can be stupid The Heavens passing away with a great noise and the Elements melting with fervent heat and the Earth and the works therein being all in a flame every unjustified and unsanctified sinners Heart will smite him and as the Judge will condemn him so he will be condemned by his own Conscience Chrysostome (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in Epist ad Rom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 advises every one to look into his own Conscience presently and to be strict in self-searching that he may not be condemned with the world for 't is a dreadful Tribunal which all must appear before and the trial of every one will be thorow and impartial 6. Conscience will be with the ungodly in Hell to all Eternity Could we go down indeed to the gates of Hell and have some discourse with the damned there and ask them concerning their Consciences they would answer that a great part of Hell lyes there and that they feel within
non tanquam Judices sed tanquam futuros testes negligentiae aut temeritatis ambitionis aut malae fidei adsunt enim spectatores propter injunctam sibi ecclesiae curam Calvin he adjoyns the Angels to Christ not as if they were to be Judges but because they are witnesses of our miscarriages The work of the Angels lies very much here in the Church Militant they are Ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them that are Heirs of Salvation they rejoyce at the Conversion of a Sinner and surely then the sins of men displease them and they are ready upon Gods command to be the instruments of his revenging justice upon those who dare to Rebel against him 4. The Devils who are ready to be our Accusers are also our Observers They tempt us to sin and if we yeild to their Temptations are forward to cry out against us Satan indeed is a Spirit and so invisible but We are not invisible he knows where we are and what we do nay he can give a very shrode ghesse at our very thoughts and he does accordingly suit his baits and Temptations with marvellous subtlety And because the Enemy observes us and if we do wickedly though secretly will accuse us before God and take advantage against us to get us more under his power therefore it infinitely concerns us to be sober and vigilant against this Adversary and to resist him being stedfast in the Faith who goes about like a Roaring Lion seeking whom he may devour 1. Pet. 5. 8. Thus you see the reason of the Name Conscience it implies that others know us together with our selves Ah! let us not flatter our selves with hopes of secrecy in sinning More eyes than we imagine behold us when we are committing the most concealed abominations Devils look on for they egg us to them Angels look on and are angry God looks on who hates Sin with a most perfect hatred Christ also takes notice whose wrath is terrible for who can appease it whose Eyes are as a Flame of Fire and who has said I will make all the Churches to know that I am he which Searcheth the Reines and Hearts and I will render to every Man according to his Deeds Rev. 2. 23. 2. Thus of the name Conscience next of the thing it self And here I shall not trouble you with those debates and disputes in the Schools about Conscience I shall not take up time in determining those questions whether Conscience be a distinct faculty in the Soul from the understanding or an Act of it whether 't is to be restrained to the understanding or belongs also to the will and affections whether it be an habit or no These and such like questions will have a small influence unto the bettering of Conscience and therefore I wave them Origen gives this description of Conscience that (z) Spiritus corrector paedagogus animae socialis quo separatur à malis adhaeret bonis Origen lib. 2. in ep ad Rom. It is a Spirit which accompanies the Soul as a Schoolmaster and corrector whereby 't is separated from what is evil and adheres and cleaves to what is good If by Spirit here Origen mean a good Genius or Angel as some interpret him then 't is to be reckoned among his phancyes which have no Scripture-foundation but if by Spirit he mean a mans own Spirit then 't is a profitable description for Conscience is indeed a Schoolmaster to instruct us in our Duty and 't will correct us sharply when we sin and the lashes given by this Corrector are very dreadful and that which Conscience aims at is that we may be deterr'd from Sin and follow after Righteousnesse Aquinas defines Conscience after this manner (a) Conscientia est actus quo scientiam nostram ad ea quae agimus applicamus Aquin. primae Qu. 79. artic 13. Conscience is an act whereby we apply our knowledge unto those things which we do Now he makes three wayes of applying our knowledge 1. When we take notice what we have done or not done and so Conscience is said to Testifie 2. When we judge that this or that is to be done or not to be done and so Conscience is said to Binde 3. When we pronounce what we have done to be well or ill done and so Conscience is said to Excuse or to be full of Remorse Amesius tells us that (b) Conscienta est judicium hominis de seipso prout subjicitur judicio Dei Ames De Cons lib. 1. cap. 1. Conscience is a Mans judgment of himself as he is subject unto the judgement of God The Lord has given unto Man his Word for his Rule and the Lord himself will be his judge now Conscience is perswaded that this judgement is certain and that an account of our selves and actions must shortly be rendred therefore it passes a judgement presently It meddles not so much with others only so far as Duty towards them is to be performed or we make our selves partakers of their Sins But Conscience has chiefly to do with our selves and truly it tryes and judges concerning both our Estates and Actions whether we be in an Estate of Nature or of Grace whether our Actions be Good or Evil. Others do call Conscience the Soul of Man recoiling and reflecting upon it self These Recoyls are Terrible and beat us to the Ground nay strike us down to the very brink of Hell many times when we look back upon our miscarriages and our Sins are set in order before us and our eyes are held waking so that we can neither shut them nor look away These reflections also are accompanied with great pleasure when the Lord does work in us both to will and to do that which is good of his own good pleasure and then shines upon his own workmanship so that we know both that God has made us upright and takes Pleasure in our uprightness 1 Chron. 29. 17. But the Definition which I shall give you of Conscience and at large Explain is this Conscience is a power of the Soul in Man whereby we understanding the Will of God are impell'd to comply with it and do bear witnesse concerning our selves and actions and accordingly judge that is acquit or condemn our selves This Definition I shall take into parts that you may the better understand it 1. Conscience is a Power in the Soul of Man 'T is a Power or faculty because it produceth acts and is not got or lost as habits are but is inseparable from the Soul immoveable from the Subject I will not affirm that Conscience is really distinct from the understanding but 't is the understanding it self acting by way of Reflection The Understanding does Act directly when it apprehends what is True and False what is Good and Bad Absolutely and without Respect But it Acts by way of Reflection when it applyes what it apprehends and Reflects thus Is that which is True and Good embraced which is so worthy
draw us after God as well as the Reins of fear to restrain us from sin It brings Mercies to remembrance all which and oh how great is the Number of them are as so many Obligations to Obedience and withal assures us that God is such a Master that if we follow him fully we shall not want renewed and multiplied encouragements in his Service What Nathan spake unto David after his sin Conscience does speak after the same manner before to keep us within the bounds of our Duty God has delivered he has loaded thee with benefits and if these are too little he is willing to give more and therefore leave him not but cleave unto him All these ways does Conscience take to move us to do the will of God and indeed especially at some times its impulses are very vehement and strong it fills its mouth with Arguments and evidently lays before us the unreasonableness and danger of sin and uses a rest less importunity to disswade us from it and if Conscience notwithstanding all this be stifled hereby we shall vastly increase our guilt and our sinning will become by far the greater provocation 4. As 't is the Office of Conscience to impell us to comply with the will of God so also to bear Witness concerning our selves and Actions As it tells us what we should do so what we do it exactly observes 'T is very evident from Scripture that this witness-bearing is a main part of the work of Conscience Rom. 9. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my Conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost So 2 Cor. 1. 12. the Apostle speaks of the testimony of his Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity he had had his conversation in the World Conscience is such a witness as is more than a thousand other witnesses for 't is privy to all we do it will many times cry out against us when others flatter us (g) Magna vis est Conscientiae Judicis magna in utramque partem ut neque timeant qui nihil commiserint poenam semper ante oculos versari putent qui peccârint Cicero Orat. pro T. An. Milone pag. 553. And if it testifies good concerning us it will not be controuled by mens censures nor by Afflictions which are seeming tokens of Gods Anger Job's burthen was very heavy his griefs and calamities were more weighty than the Sand so that his words were swallowed up His Friends charge him with Hypocrisie and yet Conscience witnessing for him does prevail Job 27. 5. Till I dye I will not remove my integrity from me and his Heart winessing to his Righteousnesse and sincerity he goes higher Job 16 12. Also now behold my witness is in Heaven and my Record is on High Three things are implied in this witnessing of Conscience 1. A recollection of what we have done It has a notable faculty in running back upon the footsteps which we have taken (h) Cambdens Remains pag. 26. The old English word for Conscience was In-wit because it knows whatever is within us whatever is done by us Those which we read of Jer. 8. 6. who when God hearkned and heard did not speak aright did not say What have we done 't is a sign their Hearts were hardned and their Consciences for the present cast into a dead sleep But here I must say that Conscience though asleep is like Noah who knew what his younger Son had done to him and how he had looked upon his nakednesse when he was asleep Conscience when it wakes will understand all that was done before and the sooner it begins to reflect the better will it discharge its duty 2. This witnessing of Conscience implies a comparing of what we have done with that rule which God has prescribed us What was feigned concerning Janus that ancient King of Italy that he had two faces may truly be affirmed concerning Conscience with one face it looks forward towards the VVord which is the rule of Righteousness and with the other it looks backwards towards our selves and then inquires whether there be that purity and uprightness of Heart and that living soberly righteously and godly which the VVord does so expresly call for 3. The witnessing of Conscience implies its bringing in evidence pro or con for or against us according as we have or have not taken heed to that rule which whosoever walks according to Peace and Mercy shall be upon them Gal. 6. 16. The witnesse of Conscience is an accusation upon doing Evil but an apology upon doing well 1. This witnesse of Conscience is an accusation upon doing Evil. Conscience does charge the soul with guilt and this is a very heavy charge where sinners are not without or past feeling The Conscience of David when Nathan came to him presently seconded Nathan The Prophet accused him Thou art the Man his Conscience also sides with the Prophet and he accuses himself I have sinned against the Lord 2 Sam. 12. 13. An accusing Conscience made David so sensible of his need of mercy and so earnest that he might obtain it the sight of his sins caused most deep dejection of spirit The thirty eight psalm is called a Psalm of David to bring to remembrance His conscience was busie in reflecting and accusing when he wrote it and how does he complain v. 3 There is not any rest in my bones because of my sin for mine iniquities are gone over my head as an heavy burthen they are too heavy for me I am troubled I am bowed down greatly I go mourning all the day long v. 4. 6. There are six things to be observed concerning the accusations of Conscience 1. Conscience accuses undeniably it does not charge the sinner upon hear-say or upon surmise but upon its own knowledge I accuse of nothing sayes Conscience but what I saw done with my own eyes and when I saw it I wrote it down with all the aggravating circumstances of it in my own Book of remembrance and here you may find it registred You may as well deny that you see at all when you see most plainly as deny Consciences accusing testimony We find therefore in Scripture that when Conscience has brought to remembrance sins committed a great while before its testimony even then could not be denyed Josephs Brethren many years after their cruelty towards their Brother cry out We are Verily guilty Conscience accused and they could not deny it Job's Conscience told him of the sins of his youth when he was grown up to riper years and he acknowledges them Job 13. 26. For thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my Youth 2. Conscience accuses boldly as 't is said of Death that it comes as easily to the Princes Palace as the Beggars Cottage so it may be affirmed concerning conscience 't will come and speak as plainly to the highest as to the meanest 'T is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a respecter of
persons Conscience has no more reason to fear the greatest than the poorest Can the greatest man punish his Conscience for being plain with him He may indeed wound it more and more but this will in the end onely increase his own smart and anguish Prophets and Ministers have not accesse unto some nor an opportunity to tell them of their misdoings and if they have and do discharge their duty they may suffer for it John the Baptist was sent to Prison for reproving Herod and afterwards his life was taken away But though Herod was no more troubled and rebuked by John yet his own Conscience does fearlesly and impartially deal with him and therefore when he heard of the fame of Jesus he cries out John is risen from the Dead which shews that his Conscience flew in his face about him 3. Conscience accuses of high matters of such crimes the least of which deserves damnation There is nothing which Conscience does accuse of but sin and sin is the Transgression of a Law and that Law is the Law of God and this God is an infinite Majesty and therefore sin does merit an infinite punishment Though Papists call some sins venial and make but light of them yet a serious Conscience looks upon every sin as justly deserving Eternal condemnation the Apostle speaks indefinitely concerning sin without excepting any The Wages of Sin is Death Rom. 6. ult and by Death he means Eternal Death for 't is opposed unto the gift of God which is Eternal Life by Jesus Christ our Lord. Among Men there are indeed some petty faults which a Malefactor is not so afraid when accused of but how pale does he look when Felony or Murther or Treason is laid to his charge alas the Gallows the Gibbet Hanging Drawing Quartering he now fears Conscience brings in an indictement against the sinner for nothing but what is damnable for every sin against the great God is so in its own Nature And if every sin makes the Soul liable to the vengeance of Eternal fire how may the sinner be amazed when all his iniquities are set in order before him 4. Conscience accuses a man to himself Luther tells us concerning a certain Cardinal that was wont to say Conscientia est mala bestia quae facit hominem stare contra seipsum Conscience is an evil Beast for it makes a man to stand against himself When Conscience is our accuser our accuser is within us and we can go no where without this accuser A man by this means becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-punisher These self accusations do break a mans spirit they imbitter all Temporal comforts and Oh! how bitter then do they make affliction 5. Conscience in its accusations lets us understand that God understands better then it self what it layes to our charge The Apostle tells us that God is greater than our Hearts and knows all things 1 John 3 20. This Text plainly informs us that God knows by us more than we know Many sins slip out of Our memories but none out of Gods Hos 7. 2. They consider not in their Hearts that I remember all their wickedness now their own doings have beset them round they are all before my face When Conscience is awakened and we are beset round with our own doings this causes the perplexity that they are all before Gods face he remembers all though we are not able to number half of them Moses cryes out We are consumed by thine anger by thy wrath are we troubled Thou hast set our inquities before thee our secret sins in the light of thy Countenance Psal 90. 7. 8. 6. Conscience is many times incessant and not to be silenced in its accusations Augustine (h) Qui malas habent uxores domus suas intrare nolunt ad forum exeunt gaudent coepit hora esse quâ intraturi sunt ad domum suam contristantur Intraturi sunt ad taedia ad murmura ad amaritudines ad eversiones Si ergo miseri sunt qui cùm redeunt ad parietes suos timent quantò miseriores qui ad conscientiam redire nolunt ne litibus peccatorum evertantur Vt possis libens redire ad cor tuum illud munda Aufer cupiditatem sordes aufer labem avaritiae malas cogitationes odia non dico adversus amicum sed etiam adversus inimicum aufer ista omnia Intra cor tuum gaudebis Aug. in Enarrat in Psal 33. pag. mihi 237 238. compares a clamorous Conscience to a brawling Woman whose Tongue being set on fire of Hell never lies still but is continually shooting forth bitter words Now Solomon tells us 'T is better to dwell in the corner of a house top than with such a Woman in a wide house Prov. 25. 24. nay 'T is better to dwell in the Wilderness than with a contentious and angry Woman Prov. 21. 19. But how much more intolerable are the reproaches of an enraged Conscience Flashes of Hell fire do issue as it were out of the mouth of it it is continually bringing guilt unto remembrance and speaking of those Flames unto which this guilt does render the Soul that sins obnoxious and liable Thus the witness of Conscience is an accusation upon doing evil and such an accusation as may very much be dreaded 2. The witnesse of Conscience is an Apology upon doing well It will bear witnesse for those that are sincere when they walk before God in Truth and with a perfect Heart It must indeed be granted that in many things all even the very best do offend Jam. 3. 2. But conscience takes notice of the bent and desire of the Soul to please the Lord and how burthensome and bewailed infirmities are Conscience will excuse and defend if there be a will to do good though evil at the same time be present as it was with the Apostle himself Rom. 7. 21. Conscience having looked into the Gospel understands that God does not deal with Believers according to the terms of the Covenant of Works which had a promise of Life only upon condition of perfect obedience but Death was threatned upon the least transgression No no they are not now under the Law but under Grace and in the new Covenant sincerity is accounted and accepted as our perfection before God through Christ Jesus Now Consciences excusing or defending is of great force and weight 'T is not to be checkt by the reproaches of men nor by the accuser of the Brethren 1. Conscience excusing us is not to be checkt by the reproaches of Men. How eager as I hinted before were Jobs friends in their censures and accusations They thought his Religion was but a meer shew and that he had used the Form of Godliness onely as a cover for his wickedness and injustice Heark how he speaks to them Job 19. 2 3. How long will ye vex my Soul and break me in pieces with words these ten times have ye reproached me you are not ashamed
that you make your selves strange unto me and yet notwithstanding all as long as his Conscience did clear him his confidence is not shaken and he says the Righteous surely including himself shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall wax stronger and stronger Job 17. 9. 2. Consciences excusing us is not to be checkt by Satan the Accuser of the Brethren As Job's Friends did censure him so Satan accused him of Mercenariness and selfishness in his Religion Doth Job fear God for nought But put forth thy hand now and touch what he hath and he will curse thee to thy Face These were the words of Satan Job 1. 9. 11. But instead of this when all was taken away Job blesses the Lord nay when his Bone and Flesh were touched he says Shall we receive good at the hand of God and shall we not receive evil Job 2. 10. Job's sincerity is proved and approved is evident to himself and Satan who 't is likely enough was busie to disturb him is demonstrated to be a Lyar. As the Devil does hide the faults of the profane and secure from their eyes so he is continually objecting to the sincere their failings and imperfections by his good will he would have us see no sin at all or nothing else but sin and from the remainders of Corruption he is bold to call the Saints Hypocrites though these remainders are never so much their burthen But if Conscience does give testimony that they delight in the Law of God after the inward Man and that the evil in themselves they hate and desire to be delivered from the Body of sin and Death Notwithstanding Satan's slanders they give thanks to God because there is now no condemnation to them being in Christ Jesus Rom. 7. latter end compared with Rom. 8. the beginning So much for this Office of Conscience which is bearing witness both by way of Accusing and Excusing 5. It follows in the Definition that 't is the Office of Conscience to Judge that is to acquit or to condemn us Judging lies in these two things in absolving and condemning The Judge if Righteous does acquit the Innocent does condemn the guilty Now condemning and not condemning or absolving are both ascribed unto Conscience by the Apostle 1 John 3. 20 21. For if our heart condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things beloved if our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God There is a kind of a Tribunal erected in the Soul of Man and after Conscience has brought in Evidence and Acted the part of a Witness then it Acts the part of a Judge and passes Sentence which is two-fold A Sentence of Absolution a Sentence of Condemnation 1. Conscience as a Judge passes a Sentence of Absolution and if being rightly informed Conscience grounds its Sentence upon Scripture we may conclude that what it looses on Earth is loosed in Heaven When Conscience does declare to the true believer that he is justified by his Faith and has Peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ it says no more than what God himself has plainly spoken Rom. 5. 1. When it declares unto humbled and penitent Souls who are humbled because they have sinned and perverted that which is right and see that it has not profited them and who also confess and are willing to forsake their Iniquities when it declares unto such that Mercy and abundant Pardon belongs to them truly there is plain and sufficient warrant from Scripture for this Declaration To be absolved in the Court of Conscience is matter of great consolation and if Conscience draw its conclusions from Scripture-premises it may be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong consolation such as has a firm basis and Foundation When Conscience does absolve much is contained in this Sentence it pronounces us free from punishment and also sentences a reward unto us it shuts Hell and opens Heaven for a reward and the greatest that can be conceived nay how great cannot be at present conceived is surely though freely promised unto them that are sincere Believers 'T is indeed a reward of Grace not of Debt but because of Grace therefore the more sure Rom. 4. 16. Therefore it is of Faith that it might be by Grace to the end the promise might be sure to all the Seed Conscience in Judging does Act as Gods Vice-gerent He himself will Judge at last as it if it have light and purity does Judge at present And those who are now acquitted in the Court of Conscience shall be also absolved at the great Tribunal The Apostle having said We have known and believed the Love that God hath to us presently speaks concerning boldness in the day of Judgment 1 John 4. 16 17. 2. Conscience as a Judge passes a Sentence of Condemnation (i) Exemplo quodcunque malo committitur ipsi Displicet authori prima est haec ultio quod se Judicè ne mo nocens absolvitur Juvenal Satyr 13. and this Sentence is passed upon the Impenitent the Hypocrites and the Unbelievers and because the Scripture does condemn these we may truly say that what Conscience binds on Earth is bound in Heaven I grant indeed that if Conscience should pass Sentence according to the Law of works every Child of Adam the Holy Child Jesus excepted would be condemned Hark what that Man after Gods own heart said Psal 130. 3. If thou Lord shouldst mark Iniquity O Lord who shall stand And Psal 143. 2. Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified His Conscience saw so much and God saw a great deal more of sin that in strictness of Law and Justice it told him he was a condemned Man But by the Law of Grace they who turn from sin and believe in Christ are acquitted But as for those who will not come to Christ that they may have Life but preferr their fleshly and worldly Lusts and those things wherewith these lusts are gratified before the Lord of Life and Glory as they are condemned by the Law of Works so likewise by the Law of Grace Conscience therefore doing its Office passes a dreadful Sentence upon them and tells them that the wrath of God abides on them John 3. ult But here 't will be needful to note a difference between Consciences condemning a sinner now and the Lords condemning him hereafter that Sentence which Christ will pronounce at the last day will be peremptory unalterable therefore that Judgment is called Eternal Judgment Heb. 6. 2. There is no appeal from that Tribunal no reversing of the Sentence but those that are then condemned Go they must and that immediately into everlasting punishment as the Righteous on the other hand into Life Eternal Mat. 25. ult But when Conscience does at present condemn a sinner it does not preclude and shut up the door of hope against him its Sentence of condemnation is but conditional in case
of continuance and obstinacy in sin But if the unbeliever will believe in Jesus and the impenitent will mourn for their Iniquities and turn from them to God then they shall no longer be under condemnation but as sin hath Reigned unto Death so shall Grace Reign through Righteousness unto eternal Life by Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 5. 21. I have told you how the Office of Conscience is to Judge that is to acquit or condemn Now there are four things that come under this Judgment of Conscience Our Actions our Communication our Thoughts and Affections our Estate to God-ward 1. Conscience judges of our Actions and Conversation and if our Conversation be such as becomes the Gospel if we shine as lights in the midst of a crooked and perverse Generation then it says Well done But if we profess to know God and in Works deny him being abominable and disobedient and to every good work Reprobate Conscience condemns such doings and says many times in plain terms that our profession is but meer Mockery 2. Conscience judges of our Communication though words are commonly called wind yet Conscience does not make light of them It does approve of Holy and Edifying Discourse when out of the abundance of the Word of God in the heart the mouth speaketh that which is good and which may administer grace unto the hearers For when they that feared the Lord spake often one to another the Lord hearkned and heard it and a Book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his Name Mal. 3. 16. But Conscience does condemn corrupt communication especially where the Tongue shews it self an unruly evil full of deadly poyson by that filthy talking lying swearing cursing backbiting which proceed out of the mouth And it does not stick to say The Tongue being not bridled all Religion is but vain James 1. 27. 3. Conscience judges of our Thoughts and Affections these as they ought to be agreeable to Rule so they come under censure The Law is so large that it reaches to our very Thoughts The wicked man is to forsake his thoughts as well as ways else he cannot be a sincere Convert nor obtain Mercy Isa 55. 7. Conscience here is very prying because these internal Acts these thoughts and desires and designs do very much discover what the heart is If wicked thoughts which are all vain and unprofitable and likewise hurtful are suffered to lodge in the heart and are delightful and welcome Guests to it 't is a sign the heart is unrenewed but if these thoughts when they arise in the heart are a burthen are conflicted with and help is implored against them that God himself would shew his power and bring them into Captivity this speaks the heart sanctified If there be a will and desire in the heart to sin though want of Opportunity or fear of Disgrace hinder the Act Conscience will condemn this as a transgression of the Law which does require inward Rectitude as well as outward Righteousness And on the other hand if there be a sincere desire and purpose to obey the Lord Conscience judges this to be Obedience because God is pleased to account it so Abraham is said by Faith to have Offered up his Son Isaac nay 't is twice said that he Offered him up Heb. 11. 17. when he onely had a purpose to have done it 4. Conscience does judge concerning our State to God-wàrd Whether we are or are not reconciled to him If we Live and walk after the Flesh if our main care is to provide for the Flesh and we account it our greatest happiness to fulfill the lusts of it and we are resolved to please our Flesh though God be never so much Angred truly Conscience may then judge our state to be bad But if we walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit if our hearts are renewed by the Spirit and in our lives we are led by him then Conscience may judge us to be in Christ and that there is therefore no condemnation to us Rom. 8. 1. I must here Observe that Conscience may condemn a particular Act when the Estate is not condemned David's carriage towards Vriah was very foul yet his state was not altered from Grace to Nature Asa his trusting in an Arm of Flesh and imprisoning the Prophet that rebuked him were Acts to be condemned yet his State was good and 't is said of him that his heart was perfect with God all his days 2 Chron. 15. 17. compared with Chap. 16. 2 3. 10. But if the state be bad all particular Acts must needs be bad also If the Tree be corrupt the Fruit will be like it for though Conscience may approve of some thing done by a man in a Natural state as being good for the Matter of it yet if it Judge aright it must condemn it as evil in regard of the Manner Thus have I at large explained the Definition which I gave of Conscience That it is a Power of the Soul in Man whereby we understanding the will of God are impelled to comply with it and do bear witness concerning our selves and Actions and accordingly Judge that is acquit or condemn our selves In the third place I am to assign the Reasons why the Lord has given unto Man a Conscience The Reasons are three 1. Conscience is given unto Man that it may be a remembrancer to put him in mind of God To remember God is mans great Duty he cannot begin too soon to do this therefore says Solomon Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy Youth Eccles 12. 1. and after we have begun we must hold on for there can never be any good reason why the Lord should be forgotten How many Millions of things are there which are appointed to put us in mind of God The invisible things of him from the Creation of the World are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal Power and God-head Rom. 1. 20. The Sun the Moon and all those thousands of shining Stars that our Eyes behold in the Firmament the Fowls that fly in the Air the Beasts of the Earth the great Sea and the Creatures that pass through the paths of it the Trees the Plants and Flowers that grow in the Field are all as so many remembrancers to bring God to the thoughts of the Children of Men so that they are without excuse if they forget him But besides all these there is a Monitor within something in their own Breasts and that 's Conscience which will be telling them of God which will be telling them of his Power and Presence and that which Conscience does inferr from hence is this Let all the Earth fear the Lord let all the Inhabitants of the World stand it awe of him Psal 33. 8. Conscience does Comment upon the Creatures How glorious is that God who made all these and he that made can also destroy and therefore
his Anger is to be dreaded He Rules and Governs the World He forms the Light and create● Darkness he makes Peace and creates Evil and therefore surely 't is wisdom to please him and the height of madness to provoke him 2. Conscience is given to Man that it may put him in mind of his own great Interest and concern which is to secure his Soul and to provide for Eternity 'T is not without reason that the Natural Man is called flesh in Scripture Gen. 6. 3. The flesh does so prevail against the Soul as to take up his whole time and care His great enquiries are What shall I eat what shall I drink and wherewithall shall I be cloathed Mat. 6. 31. And thus he would live as if he had no Soul to save or lose if Conscience did not put him in mind of that precious Jewel which he is intrusted with and bring to his remembrance that of our Lord Jesus Mat. 16. 26. What is a Man profited if he shall gain the whole World and lose his own Soul Or what shall a Man give in exchange for his Soul Conscience tells us of a Soul which is of greatest value and which is in greatest danger It calls a Man a Fool for saying Soul take thine ease eat drink and be merry thou hast Goods laid up for many Years Sumptuous Fare cannot satisfie the Souls hunger the most delicious Wines cannot quench the Souls thirst nor purple and fine Linnen cover the Souls Nakedness These things onely gratifie the senses but some thing that 's higher and more durable must be lookt after that may be a proper and sutable good unto the Soul of Man which is of a Spiritual and Immortal Nature and if you ask what that is I Answer the Eternal and All-sufficient God (k) Magnus es Domine laudabilis valde magna virtus tua sapientiae tuae non est numerus Tu excitas ut laudare te delectet quia fecisti nos ad te inquietum est cor nostrum donec requiescet in te Augustin Confes l. 1. c. 1. 3. Conscience is given to Man that it may tell him of his Duty and urge him to the performance of it Such is the corruption of Mans Nature that he hates Instruction and is apt to cast the Law of God behind his back Psal 50. 17. but Conscience observes what that Law requires and sayes 't is Holy just and good and therefore does protest against the Transgressing of it Conscience tells us that God is a better master than sin and Satan He rewards his Servants with Life and Joy but They theirs with Eternal Death and VVoe The Apostle speaks of all men even the Heathens that there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The work of the Law written in their Hearts Rom. 2. 15. The Consciences of Men are the Tables where the Laws of God are written and Conscience is continually opening these Tables and commanding men to read and do their duty I grant indeed that there is a writing of the Law in the Heart which is promised in the new Covenant which all men have not but is peculiar to Believers and when this promise is made good to any not only are their minds enlightned but their hearts changed there is a sutablenesse between their renewed wills and the Laws of God so that now they are desirous to keep them as before they were violently bent to break them But the writing of the Law in the Conscience is commune and Conscience understands this Law that it may presse obedience to it 4. Conscience is given to man that it may warn and caution him against the Tempter It is as it were the Watchman which gives notice of this Enemies approach Of all the powers of the Soul the Devil does least like this for it does most withstand him When Satan promises great matters to those whom he tempts Conscience sayes that a Lyar is not to be believed Either he will not give what he promises or if he does what he gives had better not be given because 't is given to the sinners hurt ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gifts of Enemies are no gifts at all or worse then none When Satan pretends to aim never so much at our advantage or advancement or delight Conscience sees the Snake in the Grass and tells that the Devil is a Murtherer and in every temptation is carrying on a murtherous design against us When Satan comes with the sweet cup of sinful pleasures Conscience sayes Drink not for there is rank poyson in it When Satan transforms himself into a Friend and seems to consult our safety and ease and gain Conscience cryes out Take heed a Murtherer is neer you and therefore yield not to him give him no admission 5. Conscience is given unto Man that it may give Testimony to the Word of God and side with it against all carnal reasonings Affections Our Lord Jesus had to do with Hearers which were captious which were still ready to start their frivolous objections against himself and against his Doctrine as when he said if I be lifted up from the Earth that is Crucified I will draw all men to me they presently object Christ abideth for ever and how then can he be lifted up Joh. 12. 32. 34. Now he does not answer directly to their objection but applies himself to their Consciences and tells them 't was but a little while that the light was to be with them and therefore says he Walk while ye have the Light lest Darkness come upon you for he that walketh in Darkness knoweth not whither he goeth v. 35. So the Apostle did commend himself to every mans Conscience in the sight of God and adds if our Gospel be hid 't is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4. 2 3. Conscience is more ready to close with Truth the Affections hang off because Truth does thwart them while they remain carnal The Consciences of the Jewes many of them were convinced that Jesus Christ was the true Messiah but their Hearts were against following of him for they loved the Praise of men more than the Praise God Joh. 12. 42 43. When a corrupt will sayes concerning a precept This is an hard saying 't is too strict Conscience will confesse 't is just and good to be obeyed When a carnal mind phansies absurdities (l) Prodigiosus certe humani ingenii furor quòd injustitiae potius Deum insimulat quam ut se coarguat caecitatis Calv. in Epist ad Rom. c. 9. v. 14. in the mysteries of the Gospel and says how can these things be Conscience is modest and replies that God is True and mans understanding is shallow and therefore man is to believe what God speaks for certain though he cannot fully comprehend it 6. Conscience is given unto man that this may side with the Lord when he passes Judgment at the great approaching day This day is called a day of the Revelation
of his Righteous judgement and whatever punishments he does sentence the Sons of Men unto they will not be able to charge him with the least injustice Their own Consciences will acknowledge every crime that the Lord then shall lay to their charge and when they are thrown down into that Lake which burns with Fire and Brimstone Conscience will be ready to speak the same language which you read Rev. 16. 5. 7. Thou art Righteous O Lord which art and wast and shalt be because thou hast thus judged Even so Lord God Almighty True and Righteous are thy judgments (m) Si reus Conscientiâ suâ premitur silet actacitus expectat suam damnationem suo jam silentio damnatus Calv. in Epist ad Rom. c. 3. v. 19. God will be justified when he speaks and cleer when he judges and sinners Consciences will cleer him fully and will acknowledge that his wayes are equal but theirs have been unequal Every mouth will then be stopped and the guilty will have nothing to object against their Judges proceedings I come in the last place to the Application Vse 1. Shall be of information several weighty Truths may be inferred from this Doctrine 1. If there be a Conscience in Man learn from hence that there is a God There are many arguments to prove this great fundamental Truth the Creatures would never have had a Being unless God had given a Being to them (n) If ever there had been altogether nothing there never could have been any thing His works do abundantly declare both his Being and his Glory But if we look into our selves we shall find this Truth written plain upon our own souls VVe are as I said before so full of self-love that we should not at all regard our own knowledge of our misdoings if Conscience were not convinced of the Godhead whose judgement we cannot possibly escape The Psalmist indeed tells us that the fool hath said in his Heart there is no God Psal 14. 1. but in this he rather speaks what his wishesare than what he is really perswaded of For it has been observed concerning those who have been most Atheistical that Conscience has prickt and terrified them sometimes and the dread of God has when they have heard it Thunder or have been in some great calamity returned upon them 2. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is omniscient If the Lord did confine himself to Heaven and there enjoying his own blessednesse did not at all take notice what is done here below we should sin securely and not be troubled that we have a Conscience perpetually observing us But therefore Consciences eye is regarded because God looks on as well as Conscience Our Hearts know much by us but God is greater then our Hearts and knowes all things Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Lord do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord surely it concerns us to walk circumspectly and exactly since there is not any Creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are open and naked unto the eyes of that God with whom we have to do Heb. 4. 13. 3. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is Holy and Righteous Therefore Conscience speaks so much against sin and reproaches after the commission of it because 't is contrary to Gods holy Nature and his Justice has a sword to be revenged upon the sinner Secure Transgressors are apt to imagine God altogether such an One as themselves but Conscience when it awakes tells them that this imagination is groundless that he is Glorious in Holiness that he is not a God who hath pleasure in wickedness neither shall evil dwell with him the foolish shall not stand in his sight he hateth all the workers of iniquity Psal 5. 4 5. 4. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is Great and Mighty and that 't is a fearful thing to fall into his hands 'T is the consideration of his irresistible strength and the power of his Anger which puts Conscience into such horrour after the commission of VVickedness Heark what the Prophet speaks Nah. 1. 5 6. The Mountains quake at him and the Hills melt and the Earth is burnt at his presence yea the World and all that dwell therein who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fiercenesse of his anger his fury is poured out like fire and the Rocks are thrown down by him The impressions of this anger must needs be terrible therefore Conscience causes such perplexity therefore the wounds of the Spirit are so intolerable because 't is the hand of a great angry God that makes these wounds 5. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him Heb. 11. 6. this is the ground and foundation that Conscience has to shew for that encouragement which it gives unto well-doing Conscience could not set Cursing and Death before us if God were not righteous and just neither could it set Blessing and Life before us if he were not good and gracious 'T is well for us that there is Mercy and forgiveness with the Lord and that with him there is plenteous Redemption else no Conscience could have any peace but every sinner unless strangely stupid would be overwhelmed with trouble and sorrow 6. If there be a Conscience in man learn from hence the Immortality of the Soul (o) Morte carent animae semper que priore relictâ Sede novis domibus habitant vivunt que receptae Ovid Metam l. 15. Beasts who dye for good and all and whose all dies together have no Conscience to disquiet them Man has a Conscience therefore his Soul dies not 'T is evident by the light of Nature that the Soul is immortal Many of the Heathens dreaded sin upon this account lest their Souls after death should be punisht for it But in the Scripture this Truth is evidently delivered Christ says Man cannot kill the Soul though he can kill the Body Mat. 10. 28. But if the soul did dye or sleep with the Body then Man would be able to do the one as well as the other nay he could not kill the Body but he must needs kill the Soul at the same time Besides the Apostle sayes we are willing rather to be absent from the Body and to be present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5. 8. Now what of Paul but his Soul could be absent from his body and present with the Lord The Soul then is certainly immortal How many awakened Consciences upon death-beds have dreaded the Souls immediate punishment how many Saints upon death-beds have been ravished with the assured hopes of their Souls being presently with Christ upon their dissolution 7. If there be a Conscience in a Man learn The certainty of a judgement to come The comming of the Lord to judgment Conscience is frequently bringing to our
thoughts I judge you sayes Conscience at present but One greater infinitely greater then I will judge you hereafter all must stand before his bar Hark what Solomon sayes Eccles 12. 13 14. Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole of man for God shall bring every work into judgment with every secret thing whether it be good or whether it be evil When Paul reasoned of Righteousnesse Temperance and Judgment to come Faelix trembled for his Conscience was convinced his Conscience judged him and condemned him as guilty of unrighteousnesse and he fears that God would much more condemn him 8. Is there a Conscience in Man learn what 't is that lays some restraint upon the lusts of Men and hinders them from running into such excess of Riot as Nature would incline them to When once sinners get victory over their Consciences and become past feeling then they give themselves over to Lasciviousnesse to work all Wickednesse and Vncleanness with greediness Eph. 4. 19. If there were no such thing as Conscience among the Sons of Men though the World is very bad yet it would be ten thousand times worse than ' t is Earth would be more a-kin to Hell though 't is too much too near a-kin already Vse II. Be excited to bless the Lord that he has given unto man such a Power as Conscience (p) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in Genesin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alas we know not how to value Priviledges the Word of God is an inestimable blessing but who is thankful for it Nay most had rather be without it Conscience also is of admirable Use but most are troubled at it as if 't were a thing sent on purpose to torment them before the time But by several Arguments I shall make it evident that you have great cause to be thankful that God has placed Consciences in you 1. Conscience is such a Power as scaped but in mans fall of any other Faculty The will of Man is full of enmity against God and therefore his heart is said to be deceitful above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Jer. 17. 9. But though there is no good or rectitude in the heart yet there is some Light remaining in the Conscience and though the heart be extreamly evil willing to deceive willing to be deceived yet the Conscience has some kind of tenderness and faithfulness left in it unless by long custome in sin it be made senseless and stupid I readily yield that Conscience is corrupted also in a great measure by the Fall the Apostle tells us that unbelievers mind and Conscience is defiled Titus 1. 15. There is a great deal of difference between the Conscience of Adam in the state of Innocence and the Conscience of a Natural Man Conscience is less acquainted with the will of God than it was It has not that Power and Authority to command Obedience that once it had it is prone especially in some things to be erroneous and mistaking to urge to sin instead of Duty it does not with such strength and vigour oppose temptation as it ought But yet still 't is a great Mercy that Conscience does so much as it does the light of it might have been totally extinguished and the Lord might have suffered us to have run full-speed in our wicked ways to Destruction without any Monitor within to check or controul us 2. Conscience takes part with God against sin and Satan 'T was the saying of an Heathen Poet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conscience is a God unto all Mortal Men the reason is because it sides with God and assents to the equity of his Commands It declaims against sin and calls the Devil an Enemy who tempts to the commission of it and calls the sinner a Fool and Mad-man for yielding it consents unto the Law of God that it is good and is not satisfied if God be displeased if his Law be transgressed Oh let 's be thankful for Conscience for by endeavouring to hinder our departing from God and our provoking him to Anger It does consult our Peace our Profit our Happiness and would have us lifted up above those slavish fears which are so great a torment to the Soul reflecting upon its evil doings (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philemon Comicus intra Poet. Minor pag. 523. 3. Conscience takes part with the Soul against the Flesh It cannot patiently endure that a vile Body should be onely minded and a precious Soul totally neglected How often does Conscience upbraid us with this That if our Bodies lack Food we are extreamly sollicitous to provide for them and prevent their starving but our Souls may want Spiritual food Days Moneths Years together and yet we are not concerned That if our Bodies want Cloathing we are ashamed to be seen and are not contented till we have gotten Raiment to cover their Nakedness But our Souls may be Naked Wretched and Miserable And this Nakedness is perceived by the Holy Eye of God yet we blush not nor apply our selves to Christ for the white Robe of his Righteousness to cover them Finally That if our Bodies are Distempered we send for a Physitian and are eager to be Cured But our Souls may Labour under many Spiritual Plagues as Hardness Pride Covetousness Concupiscence which Distempers if not healed will prove Mortal in the worst sence and yet Christ the Physitian of Souls is not valued neither do we cry to be healed but seem rather to be fond of our Maladies (r) Quae laedunt oculos festinas demere siquid Est animum d●ffers curandi tempus in annum Horat. Epist 2. ad Lollium Thus Conscience does reproach us to make us ashamed of our Folly and grow wiser Withall telling us that if our Souls miscarry our Bodies hereafter must be tormented which now we are so tender of but if our Souls are secured the Body will be safe in the same bottom 4. Conscience of all other Powers does struggle most to prevent our Ruine or rather when our other Powers are forward to promote our Destruction Conscience endeavours to hinder it Man is his own chief Enemy and has the greatest hand in his own undoing O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self Hos 13. 9. If you look into Scripture you will find how sinners are bent to transgress they will not be made clean all that is in them Conscience excepted joyns together to make them miserable Their eyes are full of Adultery and cannot cease from sin 2 Pet. 2. 14. Their Tongue is a fire a World of Iniquity that it defileth the whole Body and setteth on fire the course of Nature and is set on fire of Hell James 3. 6. Their Throat is an open Sepulchre the poyson of Aspes is under their lips Rom. 3. 13. They work Iniquity with both hands earnestly
and the Soul is still under the Dominion and Power of it 6. The Consciences of the regenerate are not good in respect of Legal Perfection and Exactness The first Adam before his Apostacy was able to reach this Exactness which the Law required he was able to Obey the Law of God without Offending in a tittle Christ also the second Adam did fulfill the Law without the least Transgression all his days He was like unto his Brethren in other regards but sin is excepted Heb. 4. 15. So Heb. 7. 26. Such an High-Priest became us who is Holy harmless undefiled separate from Sinners and made higher than the Heavens But truly the best of Saints fall short Surely they are unacquainted with the Law of God that imagine they are able perfectly to Obey it it may justly be suspected that they put short glosses upon it and then fancy they fulfill it but questionless they are ignorant of its strictness and Spirituality As 't is said of God himself that he is of purer eyes than to behold Evil and cannot look upon Iniquity Habak 1. 13. So it may be said of his Law 't is purer than to allow any evil than to approve of the least Iniquity No Conscience therefore in a Legal sence can be affirmed to be good for the Holy Ghost does not stick to say There is not a Just man upon Earth that does good and sins not Eccles 7. 20. The Consciences of Saints see sin but in part therefore David crys out Cleanse me from secret sins who can understand his Errors Psal 19. 12. and Psal 139. 23 24. Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any wicked way in me and lead me in the way everlasting And as the Consciences of the best are capable of more light than they have so more purity and tenderness may also be attained 7. Conscience may be good according to the Law of Grace though sin is not totally purged away This very Apostle Paul which says he had a good Conscience before God does yet say Not as though I ha● attained or were already perfect Phil. 3. 12. Nay he does acknowledge that sin did dwell in him he complains of a Law in his Members and crys out O wretched Man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this death Rom. 7. 20 23 24. Conscience is good in a Gospel-sence though sin remain as long as it does not Reign in us and we are no longer willing to Obey it in the Lusts of it Now if you ask me in what regard Conscience is good notwithstanding some remainders of evil I Answer 1. Conscience is good comparatively how vast a difference between Saints and Sinners How careful the one how careless the other How are the former afraid of offending God! how are the latter presumptuous and bold How are their Hearts set in them to do evil When Noah is said to be a Just Man and Perfect in his Generation Gen. 6. 9. This is hinted that he was Just compared with the men of his Generation and his Righteousness was the more to be admired since he kept himself unpolluted by their wickedness 2. Conscience may be said to be good sincerely when in the spirit of a man there is no guile as the Psalmist says Psal 32. 2. When there is no sin but the soul consents to be delivered from it and no Grace but the soul desires to be enriched with it and no Command but 't is willing to Obey it and where it falls short 't is grieved and because it has not attained therefore 't is continually pressing towards the Mark and perfecting Holiness in the fear of God (*) Perfecti et non perfecti Phil. 3. Perfecti viatores nondum perfecti possessores et noveritis quod perfectos viatores dicat qui jam in viâ ambulant Quid est ambulare Breviter dico proficere ne forte non intelligatis pigrius ambuletis Semper tibi displiceas quod es sivis pervenire ad id quod nondum es Nam ubi tibi placuisti ibi remansisti Si autem dixeris sufficit periisti Semper adde semper ambula semper profic Noli in viâ remanere noli retro redire noli deviare Aug. De verbis Apostoli Ser. 15. pag. mihi 338. Tom. 10. 3. Conscience may be said to be good so as to be accepted We Serve a very gracious Lord who is not extream to mark our Offences though we come short in point of performance yet if he sees we unfeignedly desire and purpose to please him such is his Fatherly indulgence that he does accept us not according to what we have not but according to what we have I know O my God says David that thou tryest the Heart and hast pleasure in uprightness 1 Chron. 29. 17. If upon tryal of the heart he finds 't is turned towards himself he takes delight in it 4. Notwithstanding many failings which are un-allowed of and mourned over Conscience may be said to be good so as to be rewarded Evangelical good works though they are not meritorious yet they are rewardable therefore a reward is spoken of and assured in Scripture to Believers Rev. 22. 12. Behold I come quickly and my Reward is with me to give to every Man according as his work shall be God promises to be himself a Reward to Abraham Gen. 15. 1. and so he will be to all the Children of Abraham Christ will Reward them with Salvation that do Obey him Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation unto all them that do Obey him If Conscience bear us witness that we are diligent in Trading with those Talents which are delivered to us we may be assured that at last we shall hear Well done good and Faithful Servants Enter you into the Joy of your Lord. We may wonder exceedingly that such a Reward should be promised to a good Conscience and shall we not wonder much more when that Reward is Actually received Since our Obedience is so lame and our goodness so imperfect But we must remember that the Saints imperfections are covered by Christ and in him all the promises of God and surely then the promises of Reward are yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. And therefore Eternal Life which is the Reward promised and expected is also called a free-gift and said to be given through Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 6. 23. These things being thus premised I am to tell you what a good Conscience is Bernard speaking of a good Conscience does very well and also wittily affirm (x) Faelix Conscientia in quâ veritas misericordia obviaverunt sibi justitia pax osculatae sunt Bern. de Int. Dom pag 1060. That Conscience is truly good where Mercy and Truth are met together and Righteousness and Peace have kissed each other The truth of the Gospel does reveal the mercy of God
assurance of understanding Col. 2. 2. Conscience which is good is certain both of the mysteries of Faith and the duties of Religion and entertains the one and urges unto the doing of the other This certainty is opposed unto dubiousness when the Conscience through infirmity and weakness is at a loss and knowes not what to do in some cases Just as a man Travelling meets with two ways and knows not which is the right when he turns to the right hand he doubts and so turns to the left and when he turns to the left Hand he doubts whether that will bring him to his journies end and so is ready to turn back to the right again Saints themselves may thus be in doubt sometimes but this is no part of the goodnesse of their Conscience but an Argument onely of their weakness And in this case as the Lord is earnestly to be sought to make their way plain before them So they are to follow the Footsteps of the Flock and in those doubtful matters to observe which way the Holiest and best both of Ministers and Saints do go and to accompany them When the Spouse sayes Te●l me O thou whom my Soul loves where thou feedest where thou makest thy Flocks to rest at Noon for why should I be as one that turneth aside by the Flocks of thy Companions Christ answers If thou would'st know O thou fairest among Women go thy way forth by the footsteps of the Flock and feed thy Kids beside the Shepherds Tents Cant. 1. 7 8. and So Prov. 2. 20. That thou mayest walk in the way of good men and keep the paths of the Righteous Misapprehend me not I do not make this a general rule that we are in all things to follow good men But where the Conscience doubts on both hands and is afraid it sins which side soever it takes In this case the Footsteps of the Flock are to be minded and we must keep close to the Shepherds Tents and being humble and teachable this weaknesse and dubiousness may be cured and the Lord may bless means of instruction to make us see that plainly which before we were in the dark about 4. The knowledge of a Conscience is satisfying in opposition unto scrupulousnesse As wisdome is profitable so also delightful Prov. 2. 10. When wisdom enters into thy Heart and Knowledge is pleasant to thy Soul As there is great contentment when the will embraces and enjoys good so there is great satisfaction when the understanding and Conscience have found out and do entertain Truth But on the other hand scrupulousness is very tormenting These scruples are things which arise from weak and sometimes from no ground at all and the Lord does permit Believers themselves to be exercised with them to correct former sins against Conscience and also to try their present tenderness In Melancholy persons these scruples are most frequent and in them whose knowledge is but small A scurpulous Conscience differs from a doubting in that a doubting is afraid on both hands a scrupulous is satisfied on one part but is sollicitous and full of fear in reference to the other He had a scrupulous Conscience that did question the lawfulness of eating all things but he was satisfied concerning eating Herbs Rom. 14. 2. Now this scrupulousness is really a fault as well as a vexation of Conscience and therefore by well weighing of things and diligent looking into the word and not making more sins than the word declares to be so and by understanding better our Christian liberty we should endeavour to be rid of our needless scruples These scruples if we take not heed will be so much attended to as that weightier matters may be neglected they will make the service of the Lord lesse comfortable and Satan will get advantage to represent his yoak as the more heavy and burthensome But when Conscience is freed from these 't is just as if a stone should be taken out of our shooe (y) Conscientia scrupulosa nomen habet à scrupo qui est lapillus in calceo hominem laedens in incessu impediens Bald. de Consc l. 1. c. 10. with greater ease and chearfulness we shall go nay Run in the way of Gods Commandments 5. The knowledge of a good Conscience is operative and incites to practice That passage of our Lord is deeply engraven upon a good and honest heart Joh. 13. 17. If ye know these things happy are ye if ye do them Barely to know will not make us happy nay 't will make us more miserable because more inexcusable Though a good Conscience eyes the obedience and sufferings of Christ and there is an hope of acceptation and pardon only upon that account yet because by Faith the Law is not made void but established therefore it urges obedience to the Law The Covenant of Grace having first said Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved in a qualified sence also sayes Do this and Live Sincere obedience is required or else Life will never be obtained Rev. 22. 14. Blessed are they that do his Commandements that they may have right to the Tree of Life and may enter in through the gates into the City The Light of a good Conscience urges to the casting off the works of Darknesse and to walk circumspectly and to do this without delay As the Egyptians when their first-born were destroyed hastned the Israelites to be gone for said they we be all Dead men So Conscience hastens us to part with such a deadly thing as sin and bids us not delay to keep Gods Righteous Judgements You see what kind of knowledge is that of a good Conscience but here the great enquiry will be how may Conscience be well informed and this kind of knowledge obtained 1. That Conscience may be well informed the Scripture must be well searched Holy men of old digged in this Mine for knowledge and found their labour well bestowed The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul the Testimony of the Lord is Sure making Wise the simple Psal 19. 7 There is more of God revealed and made known in a leaf of the Bible than in the whole Book of Nature Horace does commend Homer the Writer of the Trojan War upon this account Qui quid sit pulchrum quid turpe quid utile quid non Pleniùs meliùs Chrysippo Crantore dixit Because he tells best of all what is Fair and Lovely and what is Foul and Filthy what is Profitable and what is Hurtful But what are Homers Writings compared with the Holy Scripture This this does most fully inform the Conscience what is good and what is evill and what will do us good and what will be evil and injurious to us The Scripture must be searched we must look beyond the surface Truth sometimes lies deep therefore Solomon uses that expression Prov. 2. 4. 5. If thou seekest her as Silver and searchest for her as for hid Treasures then
shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and find the Knowledge of God As the Scripture contains such a full discovery of the Will of God so there are several promises made that it shall be a guide unto the Conscience and direct us in a safe way Prov. 6. 22 23. When thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee when thou awakest it shall talk with thee for the Commandement is a lamp and the Law is Light and the Reproofs of Instruction are the Way of Life So Prov. 4. 12. 13. Take fast hold of Instruction let her not go for she is thy Life when thou goest thy steps shall not be straitned and when thou runnest thou shalt not stumble 2. That Conscience may be well informed The Spirit of God must be begged for Conscience does very much imitate the Spirit Does the Spirit reprove for sin so does Conscience Does the Spirit Comfort so does Conscience Does the Spirit move us unto our duty so does Conscience And indeed 't is by the aid and Grace of the Spirit that Conscience does all this And as Conscience is a weak thing So also a dark thing without the Spirit Hark to the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. 17 18. Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is Liberty but we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. The Spirit in the glass of the Gospel does give the Mind and Conscience such a sight of the Beauty of Holiness as that there is a change wrought in the very Heart the Image of God which does consist in Righteousness and True Holiness is instamped upon it We should with great earnestness ask the Spirit for as he is the Spirit of Holiness so also the Spirit of Truth of Wisdom and Revelation who alone can open the Eyes of the Vnderstanding Eph. 1. 17. 18 And besides our Heavenly Father has promised to give the Spirit unto them that ask him with much more willingness than Earthly Parents will give bread to their own Children 3. That Conscience may be well informed We must walk with the wise that 's the way to be wise our selves Prov. 13. 20. He that walketh with the Wise shall be Wise but a Companion of Fools shall be destroyed There is a destructive infection in Sin error therefore those cautions of our Lord. Take heed what you Hear and Take heed whom you Hear And the Apostle tells us that the Words of false Teachers will Eat like a canker or like a Gangreen Gangreens spread strangely and the gangren'd member is cut of for the preservation of the Body On the other side there is a kind of sanative or healing contagion i● Wisdome by conversing with Saints and Spiritual guides that are humble and holy and well instructed in the things of God by degrees we shall come to have our senses better exercised to discern both Good and Evil. 4. Let this be your design in desiring that Conscience may be informed well that you may do well according to that information When Christ asked the blind man that had had sight miraculously given to him Dost thou Believe on the Son of God he answers Who is he Lord that I might Believe on him Joh. 9. 35 36. He askes who he was as being very ready to Believe on him So should we inquire Lord what is thy will that we may do it what are thy Commands that we may yeild obedience to them What is the reason why the Lord will teach the humble 't is because these desire to know that they may Do what is required they have submitted themselves unto God and he sees that if they are entrusted with the Talent of Knowledge they will Trade with it 5. Beware exceedingly of false Lights If a false Light get into the Conscience what sad work will it make there When men take a lye to be truth how zealous are they in a bad matter T is a high piece of cursed art in the Devil to winde himself into the Consciences of men he gets into their wills and into their affections more easily He layes before them his ordinary baits of pleasures and profits and preferments And in all this he is no other than the God of this world here is no need of any great Metamorphosis for he knows that these things will easily take with the foolish and corrupt hearts of sinners But that he may get into the Conscience he acts more subtilly He transforms himself into an Angel of light and he transforms his instruments too so that they seem to be the Ministers of Righteousness 2 Cor. 11. 14 15. he puts sheeps cloathing upon the ravening Wolves that they may more easily prey upon the flock of Christ Surely the cunning of this enemy especially since we are warned should make us wary But since every light doth pretend to be true how shall we know which is false Certainly we must try the Spirits by the written Word Esa 8. 20. To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to this Word 't is because there is no Light in them The VVord is of Divine Authority whoever rejects it has no understanding whoever does wrest it that is does make some passages of it to speak against it self and the whole design of it he does it to his own destruction nay though an Angel from Heaven should Preach a Doctrine contrary to it we must stiffly oppose him and boldly say He is accursed Gal. 1. 8. 2. As the goodness of Conscience lies in its illumination and being rightly informed So in the due exercise of its Authority and Power The force of Conscience is very great when 't is exerted so that good men have lookt upon themselves as Debtors and not to have paid their debts unless they have done their duty Rom. 1. 14. I am a debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians both to the wise and to the unwise so as much as in me is I am ready to Preach the Gospel to you that be at Rome also they have lookt upon themselves as bound in Spirit Act. 20. 22. And now behold I go bound in the Spirit unto Jerusalem not knowing the things that shall befall me there and being thus bound in Spirit he could not give himself a latitude and dispensation though the Holy Ghost did witnesse in every City that Bonds and Afflictions did abide him Conscience has made good men to conclude themselves under a necessity to obey and they have professed they could not do otherwise 1 Cor. 9. 16. Necessity is laid upon me yea woe is unto me if I Preach not the Gospel and so Act. 4. 20. We cannot but speak the things which we have Seen and Heard Now what that Power and Authority is which a good Conscience exercises I shall shew you 1. Conscience has Authority and Power to
dissemble upon any terms in those matters where the Glory of God is concerned what a fearful thing is it to be neer and almost a Christian Oh that God ●ould let loose his hand from me that it were with me now as in times past I would scorn the threats of the most cruel Tyrants bear torments with invincible resolution and Glory in the outward profession of Christ till I were choaked in the flame and my Body consumed to ashes Thus great is the Power and Authority of Conscience and a good Conscience does Exercise this Authority but because the Consciences of most seem to have lost all Power therefore I shall direct you how this Power of Conscience may be put forth with vigour VVould you be under the Power and Authority of Conscience then 1. Meditate upon this how Holy and equal the Law is Since we are reasonable Creatures 't is fit we be govern'd by some Law or other (a) Omnium quae in hominum Doctorum disputatione versantur nihil est profecto praestabilius quam plane intelligi nos ad justitiam esse natos neque opinione sed naturâ Jus constitutum esse Cicero de leg 1. p. 221. and what Laws are comparable to the Law of God man stands in need of a Law that may put bounds to his Will and Affections as well as regulate his Conversation humane Laws onely reach the latter but the Law of God principally requires Holiness in the former The Angels themselves are not without a Law the Apostate ones transgressed it and were cast down to Hell God spared not the Angels that sinned 2 Pet. 2. 4. the Elect Angels are affirmed to do the Commandements of God and to hearken to the Voice of his Word Psal 103. 20. And truly all the Commands of the Lord are Holy just and good the more we obey these the greater is our Liberty and freedom from the Power and Tyranny of Sin and Satan unto whom whosoever are subject they are defiled degraded debased and made miserable by that subjection 2. Consider not only the equalnesse of the Law but the greatness and goodness of the Lawgiver Conscience tells you of a Lord who has right to rule you He has given you your Being and upholds you in your Being you could not live or move or be without him And therefore by all right imaginable he is your owner and your Governour We are Debtors says the Apostle not to the flesh to live after the flesh for if we live after the flesh we shall dye Rom. 8. 12 13. he does not expresly say we are Debtors to God this was so evident there was no need to express it The Lord is so great that he may claim obedience from us for we owe him whatever we have and are and his goodness does fully match his greatness He is Optimus Maximus there is abundant reason then why you should listen unto Conscience pressing you to give him the pre-eminence before all other Lords whatsoever No King comparable to the King of Saints how ready is he to defend them how much does he consult his subjects welfare 3. Would you be under the Authority and Power of Conscience fix this upon your Spirits that a good Conscience alwayes uses its Power for your good I may here apply those words which the Apostles uses concerning Magistrates Wilt thou not be afraid of this Power do that which is good and thou shalt have Praise of the same for Conscience is the Minister of God to thee for good Name a sin which a rightly informed Conscience does bid thee abstain from which is not really a mischievous and hurtful as well as a moral evil and thou hast leave to keep it Name a duty which such a Conscience urges which is not for thy profit and thou shalt never be blamed for the omission of it What the Lord wishes Conscience speaks over again Oh that there were an Heart in you that you would fear your God and keep all his Commandments alwayes that it might be well with you forever Deut. 5. 29. Conscience aimes at this perpetually that it may be well with you and well for ever with you nay even then when it puts you upon the suffering of penal evils it does design your good they that are persecuted for Righteousness sake receive an hundred fold in this Life they have so much of grace and of the Presence of God as is an hundred-fold better than any thing that 's taken from them then in the World to come they are assured of everlasting Life 4. Think seriously of the destructiveness of those courses which Conscience would hinder you from taking Thou art not able to hurt the Lord by thy iniquity the Clouds are higher than thou but He is infinitely higher than the Clouds If thou sinnest what doest thou against him says Elihu or if thy transgressions are multiplyed what doest thou unto him Job 35. 5 6. His blessedness is so great and out of the reach of any Creature that by sin thou art not able to disturb it though failing in Duty towards him thou art justly punished So that thou hurtest not him but thy self by sin Do they provoke me to anger saith the Lord Do they not provoke themselves to the Confusion of their own Faces Death is at the end of the broad way says Conscience and therefore go no longer no further in that way but turn thy Feet into the way of Peace If thou goest on still in thy trespasses thy Feet really go down to Death and thy steps will most certainly at length take hold on Hell 5. Would you be under the Power and Authority of Conscience Beg that the Lord himself would stand by and assist this his own Officer and then its Authority will be Exercised to purpose Then strong holds and Imaginations will be cast down and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowlege of God and every thought will be brought into Captivity unto the Obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. When the under-Officer is opposed an higher Magistrate comes with a greater force to help him in the discharging of his Duty If the King himself with a great Military power should be ready to assist a Constable supposing he were resisted none would then dare to withstand When the God of Heaven does Second and strengthen Conscience then all within a Man bows before it and yields unto it As 't is the presence of God and his gracious concourse that does bring Faith and Love and other Holy habits of the Soul into powerful exercise so 't is this which does make Conscience vigorously to do its Office That 's the Second thing implied in a good Conscience The due Exercise of its Authority and Power 3. The goodness of Conscience lies in its being wakeful and attentive What Physitians say concerning Melancholy that it has a tendency either to stupifaction or to distraction may truly be affirmed concerning sin that it has
a tendency either to stupifie the Conscience cast it into a deep sleep or to terrifie the Conscience and to make it even distracted with the sense of the Lords Anger There is a strong inclination to a Lethargy in every Natural Mans Conscience and this Disease does grow more and more upon him But in a good Conscience this Disease is in a good measure healed and great care is taken lest there be a relapse into this sleepy sickness How often are we called upon in Scripture to Watch Mark 13. ult What I say unto you I say unto all Watch. Christ had before urged this Duty of Watching upon his Disciples Here he repeats it and extends it unto all But watch we cannot unless our Eyes are open unless our Consciences are awake Now this wakefulness and attentiveness of Conscience discovers it self in these particulars 1. The attentive Conscience eyes the Rule (b) In Sacris Scripturis inveniuntur illa omnià quae continent fidem moresque vivendi Aug. de doc Christ l. 2. c. 9. What was said of Apollos may be affirmed of a good Conscience that 't is mighty in the Scriptures What is the meaning of that injunction laid upon the Children of Israel That they should bind the words and Commands of God for a sign upon their hands and that they should be as frontlets between their eyes and that they should write them upon the Posts of their Houses and upon their Gates Deut. 6. 8. 9. The meaning is this that their Consciences should always remember and have a regard unto the Word of God when they sat in their Houses when they walked by the way when they did lye down and when they rose up Be ye not unwise says the Apostle but understanding what the Will of the Lord is Eph. 5. 17. Conscience regards not what is for our Carnal Interest what is for our Credit and Reputation among the generality of Men what is for our ease and the way to sleep in a whole skin but it 's inquisitive what it is that is pleasing to God and agreeing to his Will and nothing that is so can really be to our prejudice 2. The attentive Conscience Observes the Person in whom it is that he may not swerve from but square both Heart and Life according to that Rule which is given to him A good Conscience has a very good Eye and a very quick sight it has an inspection upon the whole Man It Observes what comes in at the Doors of the External Senses and whether there be a Covenant made with the Eye and the Ear be deaf to Vanity and especially to all manner of sollicitations to evil It observes how the Members are Employed that Sin and Satan may not abuse them and turn them into Weapons of unrighteousness for then our own Members will be Weapons to destroy us Nay it Observes our very Hearts Those motus primò primi those very first stirrings of Corruption in the Heart will not be long unespied by a watchful Conscience It looks with a very jealous eye upon our hearts because they are so treacherous and their Natural deceitfulness is but in part Cured And its care is that nothing may steal away our Affections from that God who does infinitely best deserve them and that we may not be biassed by any base carnal low ends in any of our Actions but that God may be Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end Rev. 1. 8. 3. The attentive Conscience takes notice of the wiles and devices of the evil One. It very well remembers how the Serpent beguiled our first Parents through its subtilty and therefore keeps a strict Guard against that Adversary It furnishes us with the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God whereby we may repell Satan in his Assaults Does he tempt to Pride Conscience says It 's Written God resisteth the Proud and giveth Grace to the Humble 1 Pet. 5. 5. Does he tempt to Covetousness Conscience says 't is written Covetousness is Idolatry and for this things sake the wrath of God cometh upon the Children of Disobedience Col. 3. 5 6. Does he tempt to injustice Conscience says 't is written Let no Man go beyond or defraud his Brother in any matter because the Lord is the avenger of all such 1 Thes 4. 6. Does he tempt to Uncleanness Conscience says 't is written Whoremongers and Adulterers God will Judge and no Whoremonger nor unclean Person hath any Inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ and of God Eph. 5. 5. An attentive Conscience meets Satan at every turn and is a very great Defence against him for it directs us to God in whom our strength lies and to the Armour of God which being put on we shall stand against the wiles of the Devil Eph. 6. 11. 4. The attentive Conscience heeds the Spirit of the Lord in his Holy Motions and Suggestions There are two ways whereby the Spirit of God may be known He glorifies Christ and he leads to Holiness He glorifies Christ John 16. 14. He that is the Spirit of Truth shall glorifie me says Christ for he shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you Those that talk of the Spirit and trample Christ under foot and count his Blood a common thing certainly are guided by a false Spirit the Holy Ghost always glorifies Christ Teaches that he is the onely Redeemer and Mediator by whom we have access to God and that we could never have had admission into the Holiest of all but by his Blood and whatever Benefits we receive they are the Fruit of his purchase And as the Spirit Glorifies Christ so he leads to Holiness therefore he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Spirit of Holiness Rom. 1. 4. When the Spirit accompanies Ordinances or Providences and we find in our selves more than Ordinary strivings to purge us from what does pollute us and strong endeavours used to perswade us unto a thorow-Sanctification Conscience takes Notice of the Spirits Operation and bids us to yield to him and by no means to thwart and grieve him If now you demand how Conscience may be made thus attentive I Answer 1. Deafen your Ears against perswasions to evil Adam hearkned to Satan we have been the more apt to hearken to him ere since and not to regard our own Consciences If you heed not Conscience Conscience may at length not heed you if your Ears are open to the Tempter and deaf to Conscience Conscience may at length be dumb to you and suffer you to go your own way 2. Cumber not your selves about many things (c) Foelix qui potuit boni Fontem visere lucidum Foelix qui potuit gravis Terrae solvere vincula Boetius de Consolat Philos met 12. pag. 1. 6. While Marth was cumbred about much Serving Conscience was not so attentive as it should have been to the Word of Christ therefore Christ prefers Mary before Martha for she sat at his Feet and
heard his Word and according as Conscience was perswaded it was her Duty and Interest she minded the One thing needful and made choice of that better part which could not be taken away from her Luke 10. 39 42. 3. Pray that the Lord would open your hearts When Lydia's heart was Opened then she attended to what was spoken by the Apostle Paul Acts 16. 14. The Seeing Eye and the Hearing Ear the Lord has made even both of them Beg that he would throughly awaken Conscience and keep it awake Scoffers do say that we do make Prayer a Drug in all our prescritps I confess we do so and are not ashamed of it to Pray is to call in the help of the great Physitian without whom all means that are used must needs be ineffectual for our Cure Every good gift is from above and comes down from the Father of Lights and therefore Conscience can be made to see and to be attentive by no other Thus of that Third particular The goodness of Conscience lies in its being Watchful end attentive 4. The goodness of Conscience lies in its tenderness A great deal of tenderness there is in the World how tender are many in points of Honour They cannot put up any thing that looks like an Affront but demand satisfaction their hearts rise against any that stand in their Light or lessen their Repute nay some are so tender of their Fame that they will venture even Life it self to secure it How tender are others of their Estates they will part with their Eyes almost as soon as part with their Wealth Their Gold is their Confidence and their God Others are tender of their Relations Wives Children how careful are they that no harm befall them and especially of their own Flesh they are tender the Body can lack nothing but many sollicitous thoughts are spent about it for its supply and if it be in any danger for its security But all this while where shall we find any tenderness of Conscience Some do look upon this as an Argument of a mean Spirit others fancy this tenderness to be be needless and that it onely betrays want of wit and will be prejudicial to our Interest But certainly since God is so tender of his Honour and Authority and since he will so severely punish them that break his Commandments Conscience cannot be over tender in this matter we are truly the more wise the more tender we are Some do think the English word Righteous is derived from Right-wise I am sure the Righteous Man is the right wise Man he whose Conscience is stupid is in the worst sence fool-hardy The tender Conscience has these ensuing Properties whereby its tenderness may be known 1. The tender Conscience is afraid of Secret sins as well as Open of heart-sins as well as those which appear in the Conversation Open sins are worse than Secret in this regard because of scandal but in secret sins there is a more fixed resolution many times against Reformation When sin retires to the Heart and is not so much taken Notice of by any breaking forth in the Practice its strength may be greatest just as an Oven unto which Wicked Mens hearts are compared Hos 7. 7. is then hottest when 't is stop'd closest Sin may Reign most absolutely in the Heart which is its Throne when 't is not at all discerned by the Eye of others Thus 't is said of the Persian Kings that none were more absolute Monarchs and yet they were very seldom seen by the People (d) Apud Persus Persona Regis sub specie Majestatis occulit●r Justin lib. 1. A tender Conscience is afraid of open sin because hereby the way of Truth may come to be evil spoken of 't is afraid of secret also because as these when they prevail do commonly abound more in Number so besides the Lord who is most offended at them is privy to them O the Foolish contempt of God when his Eye is despised and onely Mans is feared God hates sin ten thousand times more than Man can hate it and can likwise inflict ten thousand times a greater punishment Solomon tells us the Lord requires the Heart Prov. 23. 26. My Son give me thy Heart a tender Conscience dares not allow sin so much as a Lodging there though it seem content never to shew its Face abroad 2. A tender Conscience is afraid of little sins as well as great As Camels are not swallowed so Gnats are strained at (e) Quicquid nunc parvi pendendo transimus palpando tegimus dissimulando negligimus quanto illic cruciatu vindex flamma consumet Vtinam magis nunc daret quis capiti meo aquos oculis meis fontem lachrimarum fortè enim non reperi●et ignis exurens quod interim fluens lachryma diluisset Bern. de Dil. Deo p. mihi 408. Little sins are great enough if unrepented of to undo the sinner there is no sin so little but there is a need of the Blood of Jesus to make an attonement for it When we speak of the degrees of sin we should think of the degrees of torment in Hell though some places in Hell are hotter than others yet none are cool those that are least of all tormented shall be tormented for ever and shall have no cause to brag of ease So though some sins are more evil and hainous than others yet there are none but what are very bad and if made light of will prove heavy enough to sink the Soul into condemnation A tender Conscience is perswaded of all this and does not cry concerning any sin Is it not a little one A little Leak in a Ship is feared and stop'd a little fire in an undue place is feared and quenched a little sin by a tender Conscience is not allowed but mortified Little sins are not without their peculiar Aggravation for we stand with God in a small matter this Argues great carelessness and neglect of him And hence that saying holds true Quò levius mandatum eò gravius peccatum The easier the Command the more is the transgression aggravated 3. A tender Conscience is afraid of the Occasions of Evil it knows very well how vehement the bent of corrupted Nature is and upon this score 't is unwilling we should come where there is forbidden Fruit lest that Fruit be lusted after and then eaten He that ventures upon Occasions of sin 't is a sign that there is a secret hankering after it and then no wonder if he fall into it or at least that he has high thoughts of his own strength to withstand any Temptation and such self-confidence is ordinarily punished by Divine withdrawings and then to be sure Temptation will be prevalent Peter cryed out though all men should be offended because of thee yet will I never be offended and afterwards though I should dye with thee yet will I not deny thee Mat. 26. 33. 35. He unadvisedly follows Christ to the High-Priests
Palace and being there his sinful fear discovers it self he denies his Master to secure himself he denies him thrice and that with a Curse and Oath that he never knew him verse 74. See what became of all his Confidence A tender Conscience is always accompanied with self-diffidence and causes us upon this score to keep far off from what is evil God putteth no trust in his Servants yea his Angels he chargeth with folly surely then we have Reason to distrust our selves Enter not into the way of the Wicked says Solomon go not in the path of Evil Men avoid it pass not by it turn from it and pass away Prov. 4. 14 15. All Occasions of sin are heedfully to be avoided Tender Conscienced Joseph as he hearkned not to his Mistress so he cared not to be with her Gen. 39. 10. He thought it was not good to come too neer that fire so a naughty Woman is set forth Prov. 6. 27. for fear at last he might catch some heat 4. A tender Conscience if it suspect any thing to be sin it will forbear till satisfied 'T is better a great deal not to go to the utmost bounds of Christian liberty then to go beyond it better an indifferent thing should be abstained from as unlawful than that which is really unlawful should be ventured upon as if it were indifferent The Israleites when newly planted in Canaan were so tender that when they did but suspect that the Reubenites and Gadites and half Tribe of Manasseh had built an alter for Burnt-Offerings they they presently come out against them for as there is but one Mediator so there was to be but one Altar for Burnt-Offerings namely That which was made by Gods own appointment Josh 22. This unsatisfiedness concerning some things which yet we cannot peremptorily pronounce to be sinful is I grant an argument of infirmity and weakness in the Conscience but truly 't is bonum signum ex malâ causâ a good sign from a bad cause it argues a true fear of sin when not only all known sin but that which is suspected to be so is eschewed A tender Conscience is not bold and venturous 't is afraid of Errours in Judgement as well as wickedness in practise As Malice and VVickedness is compared unto leaven 1 Cor. 5. 8. so likewise errour and false Doctrine Mat. 16 12. Then understood they how that he bad them beware not of the leaven of Bread but of the Doctrine of the Pharisees and Sadduces Since Errour is like unto Leaven is of an insinuating and spreading Nature and Christ himself sayes Beware no wonder if a tender Conscience be cautious and flies from those who publish divers and strange Doctrines 'T was a notable saying of Augustine (f) Quae est enim peior mors animae quam libertas erroris omnes pacem quam omnis doctus indoctus intelligit praeponendam esse discordiae diligamus teneamus unitatem Hoc jubent Imperatores quod jubet Christus quia cum bonum jubent per illos non jubet nisi Christus Aug. Epist 166 ad Donat. That the liberty of Errour is the Souls death 5. A tender Conscience takes notice of Gods anger while it hangs in the threatnings and before that anger break forth urges unto deep humilation Thus Josiahs heart was tender and he did humble himself before God when he heard his words denounced against Jerusalem and the inhabitants thereof and did rend his Clothes and wept before the Lord 2 Chron. 34. 27. A tender Conscience is not satisfied unless contrition be true such as God calls by that Name and such as he has promised reviving to Esaiah 57. 15. 't is not satisfied unless the Heart be rent as well as the Garment and be broken off from sin as well as broken for it Oh how will a tender Conscience bring sins to Remembrance t will lay on load and not spare to this end that Christ may be prized who alone can give rest David cryes out Innumerable evils have compassed me about my Iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up they are more then the hairs of my Head therefore my Heart faileth me Psal 40. 12. and then he adds ver 13. Be pleased O Lord to deliver me O Lord make hast to help me 6. A tender Conscience is afraid of casting any of Gods Commands behind the back but presses a respect unto all the Lords precepts David was truly tender when he said I esteem all thy Commandements concerning all things to be right Oh that my ways were directed that I might keep thy Statues then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandements Psal 119. 5 6. 128. 'T is said concerning Zachary and Elizabeth that they were both Righteous before God walking in all the Commandments and Ordinances of the Lord blameless Luke 1. 5 6. A tender Conscience bids us eye such copies as these and write after them No Ordinance of Gods institution but God is ready to own it and to be found in it if he be sought in a due order and therefore no Ordinance is to be neglected To live in the omission of any duty which God has Commanded is to cut off a golden pipe whereby Grace may be conveyed to us and herein we do not consult our own good You see how the tenderness of Conscience discovers it self But the great question will be How may Conscience be made thus tender surely a question needful to be resolved For tender Consciences where are they to be found stupidness of Soul is an Epedimicall malady 't is the disease of the Age and the nearer the world approaches to its end the more is this Disease likely to prevail For such a security will go before the burning of the World at the last day as went before the drowning of it in the dayes of Noah The profane among us have so much lost that they laugh at tenderness of Conscience Multitudes of professors their Consciences can swallow almost any thing they can live in pleasures and care about the World more then about the better part they can fulfil their fleshly lusts and yet Conscience is so wretchedly blind and dumb that at present it does not disquiet them Nay the Wise Virgins themselves slumber Believers many of them have lost their first tenderness and therefore more then we are aware of are concerned in this question How may a Conscience be made tender I answer 1. Study better the Nature of Sin I will boldly say that a stupid Conscience knows not what sin is if once 't were understood it could not possibly be made light of All that are hardned in sin are deceived by it Therefore the Apostle gives that caution Heb. 3. 13. Exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardned through the deceitfulness of sin As God is an incomprehensible good so sin is an incomprehensible evil
(g) Philosophers have measured mountains Fathom'd the depth of Seas of States and Kings Walkt with a staff to heaven traced fountains But there are two vast spacious things The which to measure it doth more behove Yet few there are that sound them Sin and Love Hebert Agony pag. 29. No Creature can fully understand it onely God who knows how good himself is knows how evil sin is which is directly opposite and contrary to him But though we cannot sound the bottom of this evil no more then we can dig to the Earths Centre yet much is discovered by the VVord of God Sin is worse then the Devil for it made him a Devil Take sin from the Devil he will be a glorious Angel if sin get into a glorious Angel 't wil turn him into a Devil presently Sin will make us like the Devil if we go on in it and bring us into the same state of unalterable misery But let us view sin a little with relation to God 'T is a daring of his Power and Presence a bold challenging of the Almighty to do his worst 'T is an affront of his Majesty a casting off of his Authority Let us break his bands asunder and cast away his cords from us Psal 2. 3. 'T is a robbing him of his Glory which is so dear to him and which he is so unwilling to give to another 'T is a slighting of his Goodness which is so vast and large that it should attract the Love and Hearts of all and which alone can satisfie and be beatifical to the Soul of Man 'T is an injury to his Justice contrary to his Holiness denies his Truth makes him a Liar for neither Promises nor Threatnings are believed Nay Sin strikes at the very Being of God for if hating our Brother be murthering of him Ah! what is hatred of God to be called No wonder that the Lord is so angry at sin and turns those that will by no means turn from it into Hell and makes them for ever to bewail their Rebellion against him If Sin were but rightly understood Conscience would be tender of offending we should not dare to be so venturous upon so great an evil Would you grieve for sin cry out What have I done would you be tender and afraid to sin when tempted say What am I about to do how much shall I do against God how much shall I wrong my own Soul 2. That Conscience may be tender see him that is invisible Moses did thus by the eye of Faith and this made him so tender that he refused to be called the son of Pharoahs Daughter he esteemed the reproach of Christ greater Riches than the Treasures of Egypt and chose rather to suffer Affliction with the People of God than to enjoy the Pleasures of Sin which are but for a season Heb. 11. 24. 27. The thoughts of God do disturb the stupid Conscience therefore wicked men care not to speak or hear or think of him But Believers endeavour to imitate David who said I have set the Lord alwayes before me and this makes and keeps Conscience very tender Look up often to God and the frequent viewing of him will encrease both Fear and Love David having studied well the Omni-presence of God and perceived that in every place God was perpetually by him he desires to have his heart and thoughts searched and tried and every wicked way in him discovered and Conscience is so tender that he dares and cares to go in no way but the way that is everlasting Psal 139. 23 24. See God in every ordinance then Conscience will tell you he is jealous about his worship that he is a Great King and hath said Cursed be the deceiver who having a male in his flock voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing Mal. 1. 14. See God in every providence then Conscience will tell you that mercies are not to be abused nor consumed upon your lusts and that afflictions are sent to take away your Sin See God in every Temptation how easily then will Conscience silence the Tempter by telling him 't is not safe to provoke the Lord to his very face 't is not wisdom to forfeit his Favour to incurr his Anger for such poor things as Satan offers his greatest offers are but poor and oh how far does the Lord outbid him 3. That Conscience may be tender Bewail the stupidness of it and cry to have it cured Follow God with restless importunity Lord enlighten my eyes and awaken my Conscience lest I sleep the sleep of death He will be angry with you if you should think that you can cure your selves of this malady you cannot please this Physician better than to make use of him You have great encouragement to seek unto him for he has expresly said A new Heart will I give you and a new Spirit will I put within you and I will take away the Heart of stone out of your flesh and I will give you an Heart of flesh Ezek. 36. 26. The stone in the heart and the stupidness of the Conscience are diseases near a kin nay the one does include the other a stony Heart implies a senseless Conscience and an Heart of flesh a tender-Tender-conscience Hope in this word of Promise He is faithful that has made it Never any yet have found the Lord backward to heal that were indeed weary of their Distempers 4. That Conscience may be tender Eye the examples of Saints whose tenderness in Scripture is commended How tender was Joseph though his Mistress tempted him and he a Servant though he was a young man and Single though opportunity offered it self and there was a great probability of secrecy in reference to his Master though he was likely to be accused of an attempt to Ravish if he did not consent to commit Adultery and hereby his Masters rage might endanger his life Yet Conscience was so tender that he did not dare to do so great a wickedness O Joseph though thou hadst a beautiful outside yet thy inside thy Heart was much more amiable How tender was Job there was none like him in the Earth he feared God and eschewed evil and throughout chap. 31. you may read with what care and Conscience he Eschewed it He was so watchful against uncleanness that he made a Covenant with his eyes he was so just that he did not despise the cause of his own Servants He was so Merciful that he carried himself like a Father to the Poor and like a guide and Husband to the Widdow He was so free from revenge that he rejoyced not at the destruction of him that hated him neither did he lift up himself when evil found him Unto these Scripture instances I shall add another concerning one of the Fathers k He that writes the life of Anselmn relates this passage and ushers it in with this Preface My Conscience bears me witness that I lye not He feared nothing in the World more than
to sin We have often heard him profess that if 〈◊〉 the one hand he should see the horrour of sin and on the other the pains of Hell and must necessarily be plunged into one of the two he would chuse Hell rather than sin Another thing also which may seem no less wonderful he was wont to say He had rather be in Hell being innocent and free from sin than being defiled and polluted possess the Kingdom of Heaven This tenderness of others may make us wonder at our selves and if seriously considered might be a means to prevent our making so bold with sin any more 't is not good in dally with Divine wrath nor to play with Hell fire 5. That Conscience may be tender avoid every thing that is of a stupifying Nature Whatever does defile ● (h) Nihil in mundo quantum peccare timebat Saepe illum 〈◊〉 veritatis testimonio profitentem audivimus Quod si hinc pecc●●● horrorem hinc inferni dolorem corpor aliter cerneret necessa●● uni eorum immergi deberet priùs infernum quàm peccatum a●●●teret Aliud quoque non minus for san aliquibus mirum dicere● lebat viz. malle se puram à peccato innocentem gehennam ●●bere quàm peccati sorde pollutum coelorum regna tenere De ●● Ansel l. 2. in Oper. Anselm apt to harden Sins against knowledge that are committed presumptuously how do they waste the Conscience when Satan can draw us to these he gives us such a blow as stuns us David after his folly with Bathsheba how stupid was he after he had defiled the Wife how strangely did he carry it towards Vriah the Husband And thus stupid he does continue till Nathan the Prophet is sent to startle him One would have thought that assoon as ever the Prophet proposed the parable of the Ew-lamb that Davids Conscience should have made application but it was so stupid that it did not till Nathan deals plainly with him for his sin and his ingratitude Oh let every one cry out Keep back thy Servant from presumptuous sins let not them have Dominion over me Psal 19. 13. 6. That Conscience may be tender Remember how smarting sin has been to others See how it has put others upon the wrack that you may grow wise by their harms What made Pashur to have his name changed to Magormissabib but because sin made him a terrour to himself and to all that were round about him 'T was sin brought Cain to such a condition that he cryed out my punishment is greater than I can bear Gen. 4. 13. Nay how have the Saints themselves been wounded by Sin and groaned under the burden of it My sore ran in the Night sayes the Psalmist my Soul refused to be comforted I remembred God and was troubled I complained and my Spirit was overwhelmed Selah Psal 77. 2 3. So Psal 88. 7. Thy wrath lieth hard upon me and thou hast afflicted me with all thy Waves Hark how the Prophet Jeremiah cryes out in the Name of the Church I am the man that hath seen affliction by the Rod of his wrath he hath brought me into darkness be turneth his hand against me all the day he hath hedged me about that I cannot get out he hath made my chain heavy also when I cry and sho●● he shutteth out my Prayer He was unto me as a bear lying in wait as a Lyon in secret places he hath filled me with bitterness he hath made me drunken with Worm-wood Oh let Conscience think of this darkness and chaine and gall and VVormwood which are the dismal effects of sin and so be afraid of it 7. That Conscience may be tender Let Death and Judgement be still within view I am perswaded that was one reason why wickedness and security was so great in the old VVorld because it being ordinary for men to live seven or eight or nine hundred years they did banish the thoughts of their latter end but be you wise to consider it The Apostle Paul professes concerning himself I dye daily 1 Cor. 15. 31. that is he did not only dye more to sin and to the World every day but he continually lookt upon himself as mortal and at no time did he grow secure as if he were out of the reach of Death It argued some tenderness in the Consciences of the (*) Herodot l. ● Egyptians of old whose custom it was at the end of their Banquets to bring in the Image of a dead carcass made of Wood and to carry it about unto the guests and to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Look unto this when thou a●● Feasting for after thou art Dead thou shalt be like it 〈◊〉 the Lord did but teach you and teach you he would 〈◊〉 you were desirous to learn that holy Arithmetid● whereby you might be able to number your days aright you would apply your Hearts unto Wisdome Psal 90. 12. Death would have a mighty influence upon your Consciences especially if that which follows after judgement were believingly considered Conscience would stop thee when about to sin if it ask thee and thou dost think of these two questions seriously If I sin when I come to dye will it not be matter of trouble to me When I am judged how shall I answer for it many Consciences awake at Death all must needs awake at Judgment the Meditation of Death and Judgment would help much to awake them immediately 8. That Conscience may be tender meditate much upon Eternity Our Thoughts may endeavour to reach Eternity but they are quickly swallowed up and lost in the vastness of it Eternity is the word of all others that has an awakening sound VVhat is not to be done and suffered for the obtaining of Eternal Joyes How weak should all arguments be to perswade us to that which will bring us to ETERNAL Woes O Conscience get this word into thy Mouth and be alwayes ringing it in sinners Ears Eternity Eternity then thou thy self wilt be more tender and wilt also bear the greater sway O tell all that time is short and the fashion of this world passes away 1 Cor. 7. 29 30. and that 't is madness which nothing can be an Hyperbole to set forth when they may be happy for ever not to consent to their own happinesse and when they are warned to flee from Everlasting misery willfully to throw themselves into it Thus of that fourth particular the goodness of Conscience lies in the tenderness of it 5. The goodness of Conscience lies in its faithfulness in Witness-bearing As we are not to bear false Witness concerning our Neighbour so neither ought Conscience to bear false witness concerning our selves Conscience must not be like Fame Tàm ficti pravique tenax quàm nuncia veri Speaking more Ordinarily what is feigned than what is true God whose Officer Conscience is is a God of Truth and the Word which is given for its Direction is the Word of Truth and if that
could never be quieted with Popish pennance and severities but when he came to understand that great Article of Christianity Faith in the Blood of Jesus (l) In corde meo iste unus regnat articulus scilicet Fides Christi ex quo per quem in quem omnes meae diu noctuque fluunt refluuntque theolicae cogitationes Luther in Epist ad Gal. praefat Oh then the storm was laid by applying this blood of Christ he was able to joy in God through the Lord Jesus by whom he had received the atonement Where the Blood of Christ is not known and trusted there cannot possibly be true peace 2. True peace of Conscience supposes reconciliation with God As long as there is no peace above with God there can be no true peace within Where this is the covenant of peace has been taken hold of and the terms of reconciliation have been submitted to The Apostle tells us that God is in Christ reconcileing the World unto himself not imputing their trespasses to them Nay though himself be the party injured by sin though he be unsought to though he has no need at all of the sinner and be so infinitely high above him yet he stoops so low as to beseech him to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. and he does assure transgressors though never so great that if they rely upon Christ for pardon and are broken for sin and consent to turn from all their wicked wayes and thoughts he will multiply forgiveness and will have mercy upon them Now when these terms are consented to and Faith and Repentance are wrought in the heart God is now no longer a Foe but a Father All this is supposed in peace of Conscience 't is consequent upon peace with God and cannot go before it We must be the Sons of God before we can know we are so and rejoyce in our Adoption 3. True peace of Conscience is alwayes joyned with Righteousness just as the stars of the same Constellation part not but rise and set and keep together The Holy Ghost has joyned Righteousness and Peace Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is not meat and drink but Righteousness and Peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Righteousness is put first to shew that all Peace and Joy is false without it There must be the Righteousness of Christ imputed and there must be Holiness and Righteousness imparted where true peace is The fruits of Righteousness are called peaceable in Scripture because Conscience is so well satisfied in reflecting upon them If any known wickedness be practised in the life or so much as loved and regarded in the heart as it will be a barr to communion with God so 't will be an effectual impediment unto peace of Conscience Isa 57. 20 21. The wicked are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up mire and dirt There is no peace saith my God unto the wicked 4. True peace of Conscience is not without a Scripture-ground to warrant it Upon this account it is called the fruit of the Lips Isa 57. 19. I create the fruit of the lips peace peace because 't is built upon that word which the Lord has spoken The good Conscience does argue from Scripture-premises and drawes both a sweet and a safe conclusion There are indeed a great many paralogisms or false wayes of arguing as when we argue our state to be good because Members of the visible Church and Professors of Religion because we engage in ordinances and have a name that we live But a good Conscience uses other Mediums It observes what are the Characters of Believers which are not to be found in any Hypocrite in the world and finding these in the Heart it does justly conclude a man to be a right Believer From our prizing Christ above all it argues we have Faith in him From our loving of God and desiring after him it argues that we were first loved of him 1 Pet. 2. 7. 1 Joh. 4. 19. From our Repentance and Hatred of Sin it argues that Iniquity shall not be our Ruine From our being Spiritually Hungry it argues we shall be filed with good things From our Hearts being in Heaven it argues our Treasure is there and that there is a place preparing for us Such things as these are sound evidences of a good state and that peace that is thus warranted is highly Rational and though the Rain descend and the Floods come and the VVinds blow and beat never so vehemently they will not be able to disturb it 5. True peace of Conscience is spoken by the Spirit of God therefore it is called the peace of God Phil 4. 7. The peace of God which passes all understanding shall keep your hearts and mindes through Christ Jesus God is said to speak peace to his people and he does it by his Spirit Psal 85. I will hear what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace to his People and to his Saints but let them not turn again to folly (m) Est haec salutatio Gratia Pax c. nova inaudita mundo ante praedicationem Evangelii haec duo vocabula universum comprehendunt Christianismum Gratia remittit peccatum pax tranquillam reddit conscientiam Duo diaboli nostri qui nos excruciant sunt peccatum conscientia Sed haec duo monstra Christus ●icit conculcavit in hoc saeculo suturo Luther in Epist. ad Gal. c. 1. God speaks peace in that he promises good things to his Saints and in that he assures them they are Saints and that these promises belong to them If the Holy Ghost did not help the Conscience when 't is looking into us and prying after Grace and the Evidences of the new Creature we should never be able to discover any thing Satan and our own hearts together would so confound us that our doubts would be invincible and we must needs be strangers to peace Saints in Scripture have begged of the Lord to examine and to prove them and not without reason 't is from him we have eye-salve to discern our condition that we may not on the one hand say we are rich and increased with Goods when we are Empty and Miserable nor on the other hand say we are Empty when we are partakers of the unsearchable Riches of Christ 6. True peace of Conscience is ever accompanied with a Spiritual combat in which the Spirit does lust against the Flesh to be at peace with the Flesh and the Lusts of it is in effect to make a Covenant with death and to be at agreement with Hell The Apostle therefore tells us that in all true Believers the Flesh is opposed by its contrary the Spirit Gal. 5. 17. The Flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the Flesh and these two are contrary the one to the other By Spirit here we are to understand the spiritual and regenerate part in the Saints That which is born of
the Spirit is Spirit There is not only a combat between Conscience and the Flesh in sincere Believers but there is a Combat in their very Hearts and Wills Lusting or Desiring is an act of the Will now because 't is said the Spirit Lusteth against the Flesh 't is a sign the Heart is weary of it The Will would fain have the Flesh and the Affections of it crucified Peace of Conscience cannot be where sin is liked and cherished When Satan does object against a Believer the remainders of corruption Conscience has this to plead and reply that these reliques of the old man are a very Body of Death which Believers sigh and groan to be delivered from Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this Death But here it may be asked how may this true peace of Conscience he attained I shall say something at present though afterward I shall have occasion to speak to this matter 1. Would you have peace of Conscience be humbled more deeply and grieve more heartily because of sin The Apostle does not only say be afflicted but mourn but weep let your laughter be turned to mourning and your joy to heavinesse Jam. 4. 9. He uses several words importing the same thing to shew that 't is not a slight sorrow which sin calls for nor a little humiliation which will usher in peace Our Lord calls the mourners blessed for they shall be Comforted and the Prophet tells us that the high and lofty one that inhabits Eternity will dwell with them that are of an humble Spirit and to this end that they may be Comforted to revive the Spirit of the humble and to revive the Heart of the Contrite Ones Oh reflect upon your selves call to remembrance how much evil and how little good has been done by you all your days those evils which have been done how have they been aggravated that good that has been done how has it been lessened by your manner of doing it look so long on sin till you find your Hearts break and melt till you are utterly displeased with your selves This is the way to have a kind look and a good Word from God When Ephraim repented did smite upon his Thigh to shew that sin was matter both of his sorrow and indignation when he was ashamed and confounded in himself What does the the Lord say Is Ephraim My dear Son is he a pleasant Child for since I spake against him I do earnestly remember him still therefore my Bowels are troubled for him and I will surely have Mercy on him saith the Lord Jer. 31. 19. 20. 2. If you would have true Peace of Conscience acquaint your selves better with the Gospel The Gospel is called the Gospel of Peace the Word of Reconciliation Christ is called the Prince of Peace and the Father The God of Love and Peace and Ministers are stiled the Ambassadors of Peace that Preach glad tidings of good things Though upon Mount Sinai there be nothing but blackness and Darkness and Tempest though the Law does bind the sinner under the Curse and cause the Heart to quake and tremble yet upon Mount Sion we may behold Jesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and that Blood of sprinking which speaketh better things than that of Abel Heb. 12. 24. In the Gospel Christ is set forth as a propitiation and through him God is ready to forgive and Plenteous in Mercy and Redemption Here 's good news indeed to see all things thus prepared towards an union and agreement and all that is required of transgressors is that they should expect peace no other way but by Christ Jesus and that they should consent to rebell no more Now when the Conscience observes that Christ is alone relyed on for reconciliation and nothing else is trusted in and that the Heart is grieved at its Rebellions and now is willing to yield it self to God Peace hereupon follows 3. Be not strangers unto that duty of self-Examination The reason why sinners are not troubled is because they do not know themselves nor the danger of that Estate in which they are and the reason why Saints have not Peace is because they are not so well acquainted with themselves as they should be they do not so well understand what an happy change the Lord has wrought both relative and real both in their condition and in their Heart and Spirits What delving and digging and turning up the bowels of the Earth to find out Silver and Gold And surely 't is worth our while to ransack and search our selves throughly if that we may find what is much more precious then Gold that perishes The Apostles command is express Examine your selves prove your own selves and the end wherefore they were thus to examine and prove was that they might know themselves whether they were in the Faith whether Christ were in them yea or no 2 Cor. 13. 5. And while you are thus upon trial of your selves since a mistake may undo you for ever cry that the Lord who knowes you would teach you to know your selves and that you may think of your selves as he does 4. Plead the Promises of strengthning Grace For the more strong you are in Grace the more evident the Truth of it will be The Lord has promised you shall grow up as Calves of the stall and that you shall thrive as Willowes by the water-courses The Righteous shall flourish like a Palm-tree and grow like a Caedar in Lebanon those that are Planted in the House of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of our God Psal 92. 12 13. and all this to shew that the Lord is upright and there is no Vnrighteousness in him v. 15. So that these Promises may with confidence be pleaded and God will not be backward to fulfil them The more Grace you have the more 't will be exercised and the more 't is exercised the more plainly you will be able to discern it and consequently have the greater Peace and Comfort in it Those that have little Grace and are full of doubts should strive after so much Grace as to be past doubt 5. Love the Commands of God and do them If once your Hearts are pleased with the Laws of God 't is a sign that you are indeed in Covenant and that the Lord has put his Laws in your minds and writen them in your Hearts and has been Merciful to your Vnrighteousness Hearken to the Psalmist Great Peace have they that Love thy Law Psal 119. 165. Love of the Law will make us carefull to keep it and this is the way to have the Lord manifest himself to us as he does not manifest himself to the World Joh 14. 21. He that hath my Commandements and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that Loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will Love him and will manifest my self to him and v. 23. If a man Love me he
not in the least encourage or allow of How unreasonable 't is to take offence at the Gospel of Christ because of the Crosse since the Crosse is so needful is so much sweetned and the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with that glory that is to be revealed Rom. 8. 18. 2. Let your Love be stronger and stronger this will lift you up above and carry you over all difficulties and stumbling blocks They that Love the Law of the Lord the Psalmist tells us that nothing shall Offend them Psal 119. 165. Jacob's Love towards Rachel hindred him from taking offence at any thing his Wages are changed he must serve fourteen years yet Love made all to be swallowed Love to God and to his Word will make you content with any thing you will know how to want and how to abound how to go through Honour and Dishonour good Report and evil Report Love will break through all difficulties and make you follow hard after God 3. Consider the Happiness of those that are not Offended Mat. 11. 6. Blessed is he whosoever shall not be Offended in me When Discouragements are mighty and Temptations are strong to make us forsake our Lord and yet we cleave to him he takes it the more kindly and we shall in no wise be losers But Secondly Would you give no Offence Then 1. Seriously think of the danger of scandal thou that dost harden a sinner or grieve a Saint 't were better a Millstone were hanged about thy Neck and thou cast into the depth of the Sea Mat. 18. 6. Scandal does mightily Heighten Transgression and the punishment hereafter will be proportionable 2. Be encouraged with this That scandal is possible to be avoided You may Live so as to be Blessings in the places where you Live and justly an Offence to none I do not say you may Live wholly free from sin but you may be kept from grosse and scandalous sins altogether (o) Sanctorum vitam inveniri posse dicimus sine crimine s●● peccato autem qui se vivere existimar non id agit ut peccatum 〈◊〉 habeat sed ut veniam non accipiat Augustin Samuel had carried himself so that the Israelites could not charge him with any miscarriage I have walked before you from my Child hood unto this day behold here I am bear witness against me before the Lord and before his Anointed Whose Ox have I taken Whose Asse have I taken Whom have I defrauded Whom have I Oppressed Or of whose hand have I received any Bribe to blind my Eyes therewith 1 Sam. 12. 2 3. So the Apostles 1 Thes 2. 10. Ye are witnesses and God also how Holily and Justly and unbalmeably we behaved our selves among you that Believe that is You that were most Acquainted with us and did most Observe us could spye nothing scandalous or blame-worthy in us He that writes the Life of Mr. Robert Bolton tells us that he walked so with God that he could not be taxed with any grosse or scandalous sin from his Conversion to his Dissolution which was about thirty Years Be encouraged by such Examples and the same Grace which wrought such effects in them can work the same in thee 3 Plead the Honour of Religion and Gods own Name as an Argument to prevail with him to preserve you from scandalous Iniquities Tell him you desire to be kept without Rebuke that his Name may be secured from Blasphemy and that his Doctrine may in all things be Adorned Thus have I at large Discoursed concerning the first thing which I proposed I have told you wherein the goodness of Conscience lies and how it may be attained In the Second place I am to tell you wherein the Acts of a good Conscience and the Acts of the good Spirit of God are to be distinguished the one from the other And before I shew the difference between them I shall lay down these ensuing Propositions 1. All that good whether Light or Grace or Peace that is in the Conscience is wrought by the Spirit of God As Gifts are from the Spirit so is Grace most certainly from the same Spirit and all that comfort which has any Reason or Foundation proceeds from this Comforter Whatever means have been effectual to the bettering of the Heart and Conscience 't is from the Spirit they have had their Efficacy Whatever then we discern in our selves that is truly good we must eye the Spirit as the Efficient of it and without his working it would never have been in us at all 1 Cor. 12. 11. But all these worketh that one and the self-same Spirit dividing unto every Man severally as he will 2. When ever Conscience does its Duty and Acts as is ought 't is certainly Acted by the Spirit As the Spirit does insuse the Habits of Grace so 't is he that does produce them into Act and Exercise as he does cast the Seed of God into the Heart so he makes that Seed to grow and to bring forth Fruit. I Laboured says the Apostle yet not I but the Grace of God which was with me 1 Cor. 15. 10. If in a Natural sence we are said to Live in God and move in him also Surely the Spirit of God is the Author of all spiritual Life and of all spiritual and Holy Motions 3. Conscien●e though never so good must arrogate nothing to it self but all praise is due unto the Lord. For it is he that makes the difference between the best and the worst Conscience and the best would be the worst if he did not make a difference A good Conscience is said to bear witness in the Holy Ghost Rom. 9. 1. And as it bears witness in the Holy Ghost so it move to Duty checks from Sin encourages upon Welldoing and all this it does in the Holy Ghost by his illumination and assistance 4. 'T is true that the Spirit of God does make use of Conscience very much in his dealing with us He deals with us as those which have such a power as Conscience and that are in a capacity of reviewing our selves and applying what is spoken either by way of Terrour or by way of Consolation and if the Spirit aid us we shall review and apply to some purpose Having laid down these things I distinguish between the Acts of the Spirit and the Acts of a good Conscience thus 1. The Spirit of God is the Principal Agent the good Conscience Acts under him As in the work of Conversion the Act of the Minister and the Act of the Spirit are vastly different The Minister is a worker together with God that is he is honoured so far as to be employed as an instrument to good but what 's his Words or Arguments to raise the dead in trespasses and sins 't is the Spirit that causes Life to enter into the dead dry bones He that plants is nothing and he that waters is nothing so truly unless the Spirit did
no enjoying of God at all Where there is no true Holiness sinners are without God in the World they spend their Mony for that which is not Bread and their labour for that which satisfies not Isa 55. 2. They only have recourse to broken Cisterns that can hold no water but they neglect and by their iniquities are kept at a distance from the Fountain of living Waters Thus that which is the Hell of Hell they undergo on Earth and yet such is their stupidness they are little if at all concerned 2. Without a good Conscience no service that we perform can be acceptable A bad Conscience is like the dead Flie in the Apothecaries Oyntment that spoils the whole This was it that made the Lord to speak thus to Israel of old Isa 1. 11 12 13. To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me I am full of Burnt-Offerings and the fat of fed Beasts and I delight not in the Blood of Bullocks or of Lambs or of He-Goats When ye come to appear before me who hath required at your hands to tread my Courts Bring no more vain Oblations incense is an Abomination to me the Sabbaths and calling of Assemblies I cannot away with it is Iniquity even the solemn meeting When ye spread forth your hands I will hide mine Eyes from you yea when you make many Prayers I will not Hear And the reason of all this was because their Consciences were defiled with Blood with injustice with unmercifulness with oppression Thus also Isa 66. 3. because their Consciences were defiled by chusing their own way and their souls delighted in their abominations the Lord says He that kills an Oxe is as if he slew a man he that sacrifices a Lamb is as if he cut off a Dogs neck he that offers an Oblation as if he offered Swines Blood he that burneth Incense as if he blessed an Idol Two things are absolutely necessary unto the acceptation of our services one is the Mediation of our Lord Jesus and therefore our sacrifices though never so spiritual are said to be acceptable through Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. and the other the cleansing of Conscience from all known and allowed sin for iniquity will separate between us and our God and make him hide his face from us 3. Without a good Conscience there can be no quiet or Peace but will prove exceedingly to our prejudice (p) Malâ tranquillâ conscientiâ sicut nihil pejus ita nihil i●foelicius haec est illa quae nec Deum timet nec hominem reveretur Bern. De Conscien cap. 3. pag. 1109. The mirth of distracted and phrantick persons makes us ready to weep because we know how little reason there is for it and thus unreasonable is security and peace where there is an evil Conscience Sin is such a Master as none of its Servants have cause to be very jocund When Death and Hell which is the wages of sin is paid then I am sure 't will be sad day with sinners and all their jollity will be turned into the height of anguish and tribulation Art thou without a good Conscience and yet art quiet thy quietness is thy Disease As there is a Natural Lethargy whereby Bodies sleep unto natural Death so there is a Spiritual Lethargy whereby Souls sleep unto Eternal Death and they wake not till the sight of an angry God upon the Judgment-seat and the feeling of the unquenchable flames of Hell awake them He had a bad Conscience that said Soul take thine ease and so had he that fared sumptuously every day but their ease did them harm and was a means to bring them unto these torments where no ease is to be looked for Ah woe unto sinners that are at ease the ease of the simple does slay them and the prosperity of Fools destroyes them Prov. 1. 32. 4. Without a good Conscience 't is impossible that we should be truly good our selves If Conscience be bad all things else within us are likely to be a great deal worse If this which should restrain from sin connive at sin how will iniquity abound if this which should be urging unto duty does not it self do its Duty how will duty be cast off there will quickly be a saying unto God depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes what is the Almighty that we should serve him Job 21. 14 15. To say that a man has no Conscience is as much as to say that a man has no goodness When a sinner is indeed turned unto God one of the first things that is wrought upon in him is his Conscience and the more Holy he is still his Conscience does become more Pure and wakeful and tender When a sinner that is almost perswaded to be a Christian falls back again and becomes as vile nay viler than ever his Conscience rings him many a sad peal to prevent his relapse and 't is sometimes a great while before his Conscience can be charmed But if once this is laid into a Dead sleep the lusts of the Heart will grow impetuous and strong the affections will be vile and at length there may be a running out to all excesse of Riot in the Conversation Certainly if Conscience be bad the whole man is defiled if Conscience does exercise no Authority for God sinners will fulfill the desires of the Flesh and of the Mind and will walk according to the course of this World according to the Prince of the Power of the Air the Spirit which worketh in the Children of Disobedience 5. Without a good Conscience as nothing is good in us so nothing is good or pure to us The Apostlet ells us that unto the pure all things are pure but to them whose Minds Consciences are defiled there is nothing pure Tit. 1. 15. A bad Conscience defiles every thing A man that is Conscious to himself of loved and regining sin whatever Creatures he uses he abuses his Food his Estate his Health his Strength are all impure to him because his Corruptions are served with all these his blessings are turned into Curses because he makes a sinful and Cursed use of them Nay not only things secular but also things sacred even the Ordinances of God are prophaned and polluted by an evil Conscience Prayer is turned into an Abomination and the Lord calls it Howling Hos 7. 14. They have not cryed unto me with their Hearts when they howled upon their beds The word becomes a savour of Death unto Death the Eyes being shut and the Ears closed and the Heart being more hardened under it Receiving the Lords Supper is turned into a being guilty of the Body blood of the Lord and Eating and Drinking Damnation to our selves 1 Cor. 11. Thus a bad Conscience which suffers sin to rule without any considerable disturbance spoyls all we do turns good into Evil and the better things are in themselves makes them so much the worse to us
upon the Children of Men to see if there be any that do understand and seek him Psal 14. 2. But what kind of Hearts and Consciencs have the most of Men God is surely Angry and his Messengers are to be Reprovers and they must Reprove sharply that they may touch the Conscience to the quick And who knows but that the word in their mouths may be quick and powerful sharper than any two-edged Sword piercing even to dividing asunder of the Soul and Spirit of the Joynts and Marrow and may be a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Heb. 4. 12. My Reproof I shall Direct unto several sorts of Persons 1. They are to be Reproved whose Consciences are Ignorant They are Ignorant of God and Ignorant of themselves and which is worse they care to know neither Though God be the most Excellent Object that can be known though without Knowing him there can be no enjoying him though the knowledge of God be Transforming and change us into his Image and Likeness yet how many are willingly Ignorant they care not to know him nor his will nor what he is able to do either for them or against them There is a black veil upon their hearts so that they see not their Happiness nor their Misery This makes them unconcernedly and without fear to turn their backs upon Christ and Heaven and to make great speed after Satan in those ways that lead unto utter perdition They are miserably unacquainted with themselves they see not in what state they are they know not whither they are going They despise their own ways that is they take no more Notice of their own doings than we do of those whom we most of all contemn And as for their hearts they are Terra incognita like Land never yet Discovered They may truly say that their Hearts were born with them that the Hearts have been bred up with them and that they have carried their Hearts up and down with them at their days and yet they and their Hearts are utterly unacquainted Oh that these dark Consciences would but consider these three things 1. How much evil there is in Ignorance Let Papists say That 't is the Mother of Devotion the Scripture speaks otherwise That 't is the Parent of Wickedness The Prophet having said there was no knowledge of God in the Land presently adds by swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing Adultery they break out and Blood toucheth Blood Hos 4. 1 2. intimating that Ignorance of God was the cause of all the other abominations So Jer. 9. 2 3. They be all Adulterers an Assembly of Treacherous Men they bend their Tongue like their Bow for lies but they are not valiant for the Truth and they proceed from evil to evil Now from whence is all this They know not me saith the Lord. Certainly the Sons of Men are alienated from the Life of God and encouraged in wickedness through the Ignorance that is in them VVhen Conscience is Blind what is there to lay restraint upon Corrupted Nature And if there be no restraint the desperate Corruption of it will quickly appear and wickedness will be done with greediness Eph. 4. 18 19. 2. How inexcusable is this Ignorance considering the Light that shines and the means of Knowledge The Advantage of the Jews was great in that the Oracles of God were committed to them Rom. 3. 1 2. herein they were priviledged above the other Nations that the Lord had given his VVord unto them But we have an Advantage above the Jews because the Revelation of the Lords VVill and of his Glory is much clearer under the New Testament than it was under the Old How fully hath God spoken to us in these last days by his Son Life and Immortality are brought to light by the Gospel Death and Destruction are discovered Christ Crucified is Preached who is the Lord of Life and Glory and a Saviour from Destruction Oh how are they without Apology who shut their Eyes against so glorious a Light and will not know those things which are of so high concernment to themselves Oh you dark and heedless Souls you may be wept over as Christ did over Jerusalem because you will not know in this your day the things that belong to your Peace though quickly in a way of Judgment they may be hid from your eyes Luke 19. 41 42. 3. This Ignorance as light as you make of it is destructive None ever did hit upon the way to Life before they were aware The blind will never enter in at the straight Gate but must needs go on in that broad Road that leads to Death and Hell Solomon speaks expresly Prov. 29. 18. Where there is no Vision the People perish You read also Hos 4. 6. My People are destroyed for lack of Knowledge VVhen the Lord does save any he gives them an Heart to know himself and his Son Christ Jesus but if the Gospel be hid 't is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4. 3. I know many Ignorant sinners look upon their Ignorance as their excuse for their wickedness but how can Ignorance excuse them since they are glad of their Ignorance are not desirous to know nay hate the Light which might discover their evil deeds VV● are told that this is the Condemnation that is t●● cause of sore Condemnation that Light is come in the World and Men love Darkness rather than Light because their Deeds are evil John 3. 19. 'T is a common thing for Ignorant ones to have a Blind and presumptuous trust and confidence in God and nothing more usual in their mouths than this He that ma●●● us will save us But let such hearken to the Prophet 〈◊〉 tremble Isa 27. 11. It is a People of no understanding therefore he that made them will not have Me●●y on them and he that formed them will shew them 〈◊〉 Favour 2. They are to be Reproved whose Consciences are large and can swallow almost any thing Such 〈◊〉 suck in with greediness the loosest Principles and how are they pleased with an Argument craftily managed by a Profane Wit against that preciseness which the Gospel does require How do they grudge their time and pains to God and to their Souls But to the World and to their Lusts they are exceeding Liberal These large Consciences do stretch Christian Liberty even to a most sinful Licentiousness Quod libet id ●●cet They will plead for any thing to be Lawful which they like though never so much to be condemned Some will plead for sports upon the Lords day other for vain and foolish talking and jesting others for Oficious lying others for perjury to save a mans s●● from damage This largeness of Conscience how largely has it spread it self But the larger Conscience is the narrower will be our Obedience the less 〈◊〉 be done for God and more against him the less 〈◊〉 be done in Order to Salvation and more towards me● eternal
called the Prince of the Power of the Air the Spirit which worketh in the Children of Disobedience If you make nothing of disobeying the Word of God if you walk according to the course of this world and fulfill the desires of the flesh and the carnal mind Eph. 2. 2 3. 't is a sign that Satan does command you and your peace is far from being true 3. That peace of Conscience is false where there is a walking after the imagination of the evil heart Those words do sound like Thunder Dreadfully rattling in the air Deut. 29. 19 20. And it come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoake against that man and all the Curses that are written in this Book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under Heaven The heart of man is foolish deceitful wicked desperately wicked 't is a very sore judgment to be given up to our own hearts lusts and to be suffered to walk after our own counsels Sinners need not other enemies they are forward enough to go astray of their own accord and to ruine themselves let them follow their own hearts and they will infallibly come to Hell in the conclusion If any therefore do walk in the way of their hearts and please and gratifie their own sinfull affections and say they shall have peace they speak without book without Gods book I am sure 4. That peace of Conscience is false where the soul is intoxicated with sensuall Delights and Pleasures Thus the rich man was at peace whose ground brought forth plentifully who resolved to pull down his barns and to build greater that he might bestow all his Fruits and his Goods and since there were Goods sufficient for many years he was clearly for taking his Ease for Eating and Drinking and making merry Luk. 12. 16. 19. One great cause of Sodoms security was their giving themselves over unto sensuallity Whoredom and Gluttony and Drunkenness do take away the heart such consider no more than if they were brutes nay they come short of brutes even the most stupid of them Isa 1. 3. The Ox knoweth his Owner and the Ass his Masters Crib but Israel doth not know my People doth not consider Sensual Pleasures as also Worldly cares do overcharge the heart so that there is no trouble or concernedness about eternity and while they dream not of any such thing the day of the Lord does come on them like a snare Luk. 21. 34 35. And take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkenness and cares of this Life and so that day come upon you unawares for as a snare shall it come upon all them that dwell on the face of the whole Earth 5. That peace of Conscience is false which is built upon present dispensations of Providence Sinners are apt to argue wrong both from prosperity and from adversity that their state is good and so put a cheat upon their own Souls Some are perswaded that because the Lord loads them with external blessings this is a certain sign of his love But the Holy Ghost informs us that the ungodly prosper in the World and increase in Riches that they are not in trouble like other men that they have more than Heart could wish Psal 73. 12. Daniel tells us that even Kingdoms are given to the basest of men Dan. 4. 17. Luther said concerning the (u) Turcicum imperium quantum est nihil est nisi panis mica quam dives pater familias projicit canibus Luther Tom. 2. in Gen. in cap. 21. Turkish Empire that it was but a morsel cast unto a Dog And if whole Kingdoms are given to the ungodly who can argue himself a Saint and loved of God from his worldly enjoyments 't is not the having of the World but sitting loose from it looking upon our selves as Strangers and Pilgrims in it and improving it for God that will argue we are indeed his Children On the other side some are perswaded because afflicted at present that it will be well with them in the Life to come But wicked men may also be afflicted God does distribute sorrows to them in his Anger so that they are as stubble before the Wind and as chaffe which the storm carrieth away Job 21. 17 18. 'T is not then our being corrected that will prove us Children but our receiving of Correction and being humbled and reformed by it though never so often in the furnace if we are not at all Refined we are but Reprobate Silver 6. That Peace of Conscience is false which is built upon External profession and Priviledges Thus of old many because they were called Jews did rest in the Law made their boast of God though at the same time they did break the Law and dishonoured God by their presumptuous Transgressions Rom. 2. 17. 23. Many now a dayes are called Christians and beguile themselves with an empty name It will not advantage any to name the name of Christ if they will not depart from iniquity to call him Lord Lord if they are resolved still to rebell against him They had great Peace and confidence who said Lord Lord we have Eat and Drunk in thy presence and thou hast taught in our Streets And yet both their peace and confidence were without ground the door is shut against them they are excluded from the Kingdom for they were notwithstanding all their Profession workers of iniquity Luke 13. 26 27. By such a profession iniquity has the greater aggravation w he is most inexcusably ungodly who has most of the form but nothing of the Power of Godliness 7. That peace of Conscience is false that is built upon External Righteousnesse and escaping the more grosse pollutions of the World The Apostle Paul before his Conversion was touching the Righteousness of the Law blameless Phil. 3. 6. that is his Conversation was so agreeable to the letter of the Law and so free from any foul and scandalous sin that men could not blame him But though he was thus blameless yet he was graceless and though he thought himself to be alive and his state to be good and safe yet he was deceived as he found afterwards That Pharisee had a false peace who said God I thank thee I am not as other * Nos vero quid respondere pro nobis possumus tenemus Symbolum evertimus confitemur munus salutis pariter negamus Ac per hoc ubi est Christianit as nostra qui ad hoc tantummodo Sacramentum salutis accipimus ut majore postea praevaricationis scelere pecc●mus Salvian De Gub. Dei l. 5. pag. mihi 195 men are Extortioners unjust Adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice in
Little ah little indeed did I think that this was the place I was going to I did not imagine the Judge had been so Righteous the Trial at his Tribunal so Strict and that so few would have been saved I did not imagine 't was so ordinary for Souls to be deceived and that there was so much counterfeit grace in the world I thought my self safe when I was farthest from it and never perceived my mistake till now 't is too late to correct it I dreamt of Heaven but am in the lowest Hell I hoped to be saved but must be a damned wretch to all Eternity Oh that I had waked before How happy had I been if a right trouble of Conscience had been in the room of a false peace Wo is me that I flattered and by flattering did undo my self And now what course shall I take Ah this totally confounds me that no course can be taken for my relief Heaven now I see but so far off that I can never get thither and out of Hell there is no Redemption So much be spoken by way of reproof to them whose Consciences are in peace but that peace has no good ground upon which 't is builded 4. They are to be reproved who offer violence to their Consciences and very ordinarily do sin against them Conscience speaks once twice thrice speaks in the name of the Lord tells them of Life and Death of the Life that will be lost and the Death which will be incurred by sin and yet these Transgressors go resolutely on in an evil course and hate to be reformed They do in effect speak to their Consciences as the children of Judah did to the Prophet Jer. 44. 16. As for the word which thou hast spoken to us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee Let Such consider and that seriously 1. Sinning against Conscience is the way to Cauterize and Sear it 'T is bad to have a dul Conscience which does its office so remissly that no good effect at all follows this onely Almost perswades a man to that which is good onely Almost disswades a man from that which is evil 'T is worse to have a stupid Conscience which takes no notice of thousands of sins unless some very crying ones be committed and that commission followed with some grievous Plagues But 't is worst of all to have a seared Conscience which is not at all moved though there be a giving full way to the most foul abomination (y) Cauteriata conscientia est quae nullâ ratione commovetur ne atrocissimis quidem flagitiis in iis praecipue reperitur qui p●stquam fuerint illuminati sceleratae vitae sese dediderunt Ames De Conscient lib. 1. c. 15. Such a kind of Conscience as one observes is to be sound especially in those who have been enlightned but contrary to that Light do sell themselves to do wickedly Where Conscience is seared Light is extinguished there is no Grief or Shame because of sin but an impudence and rejoycing in evil the mind is reprobate and the affections vile and iniquity is committed with Greediness Even some Philosophers have called this searedness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the heart is senseless like a stone and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because such sinners become like brute Beasts made to be taken and destroyed 2 Pet. 2. 12. A Sinner whose Conscience is seared as with an hot iron how does he stand ready for the Devils service and commonly he is employed in the vilest pieces of Satans Drudgery When Richard the third did Murther his two Nephews that he might come to the Throne he employed a couple of villains to perpetrate that murther who were so senseless as to stick at nothing When Belzebub has any eminently and egregiously odious work of darkness to be done he does set a man with a seared Conscience about it such an one is likely to do the business effectually Such Transgressors declare their sin as Sodom they openly bid defiance to Heaven and how soon may the Just and Jealous God by some remarkable stroke destroy them What a madness is it to sin against Conscience since this has so great a tendency unto the fearing of it 2. Sinning against Conscience may bring you to despair If Conscience be not seared by Sin it may be so wounded as that a cure may be conceived impossible The Soul in a great agony may cry out My breach is wide like the Sea and who can heal me Great is the sin great is the horrour of Despair What the Poet sayes concerning Envy may very truly be applied unto Desperation Siculi non invenere Tyranni Majus tormentum The Sicilian Tyrants though infamous for their cruelty never invented a Torment comparable When Despair has once seized upon the Conscience then indeed there is Hell above ground A Despairing sinner is the truest and likest picture of a damned Reprobate The deplorableness of such a state wherein hope leaves a sinner and he gives over himself and all for lost I shall set forth in these particulars 1. A Despairing Conscience remembers God and is troubled it sees frowns in his Face and how terrifying is his Voice for he speaks unto such sinners in his wrath and vexes them in his sore displeasure Then sayes Luther (z) Verus terror nascitur cùm Dei irati vox auditur h. e. cùm sentitur conscientiâ Tum enim Deus qui antea nusquam erat est ubique qui prius dormire videbatur omnia audet videt ira ejus sicut ignis ardet furit occidit Luther Tom. 1. in Gen. c. 12. There is true Horrour when the voice of an angry God is heard and perceived by the Conscience then the Lord who was thought to be no where is every where and he that did seem to sleep before does now hear and see all things and his Anger like the Fire does burn and rage and kill all before it A despairing sinner apprehends what a terrible enemy the Lord is and then to think that this Lord is his Enemy and that justly and withall that he is now irreconcilable oh how does this confound him 2. A Despairing Conscience looks upon the creatures and findes them all miserable comforters Judas in temptation thought thirty pieces of silver a great matter but when he was seized upon with Despair he flung away the silver as that which was altogether unprofitable Mat. 27. 3. 5. Love of money had wounded him and money it self could not heal him nor buy a medicine for him Riches say to the despairing Conscience We are not able to deliver in this day of the Lords anger Pleasures say Help is not to be found in us 't is not in our power to sweeten that cup of trembling which is filled with the wine of Gods indignation Honours and worldly Greatness say We cannot skreen thee from Him that is higher than the highest and who if he will not
withdraw his anger the proudest helpers must stoop under him Job 9. 13. 3. A despairing Conscience remembers sin and those threatnings that are denounced against it and is overwhelmed Oh the mountains of guilt which it does behold and these are high trespasses are grown up unto the Heavens and then it applies all the Curses all the evils that it reads in the Book of God unto it self there is a roll opened before it written within and without with Lamentations and Mourning and Wo to allude to that place Ezek. 2. ult Wherever the despairing sinner goes he is dog'd and followed with Legions of sins and Conscience is still tormenting it self with such sad thoughts How shall all these be answered for How shall that vengeance be undergone which so many iniquities and so heinous do deserve 4. A Despairing Conscience looks upon Christ and the Gospel and is more than ordinarily tormented to think there is help for others but for it self none to be found It calls to mind that once the door was open and the sinner was invited to come in but refused but now concludes the door is shut eternally once the Spirit strived but being resisted is departed for good and all so as never to return again Once sayes the despairing soul I had a day of Grace but I did not know it I did not improve it but now am overtaken by an Everlasting Night and shall never see day more The Prince of Peace the Gospel of Peace are hid from me the hopes of Peace are quite gone I have outdone the very Devils themselves and may expect if it be possible to be more miserable they never refused one offer of Mercy but I thousands they never slighted a pardon but I have slighted it and was unwilling to be reconciled to God they never rejected a Redeemer but I have rejected him and preferr'd vanity nay sin which is of such a damnable Nature before the only Saviour 5. A despairing Conscience remembers Death and Judgement and Eternity and then there is even a Roaring out for Anguish something like unto the yellings of those that actually are in the burning lake Ah how shall I bear the wrath of the Almighty when all of it shall be stirr'd up What ease can I expect in Everlasting Flames How shall I bear the society of the Devil and his Angels How shall I endure to be tormented for ever in the presence of the Holy Angels and in the presence of the Lamb Rev. 14. 10. 'T is not more certain I must dye than 't is certain I must be judged 't is not more certain I must be judged than 't is certain I must be damned 't is not more certain I must be damned than 't is certain that my damnation will be Everlasting This is the Language of a despairing sinner and since to despair is to be upon such a wrack how are they to be reproved that sin against Conscience which has a tendency to despair 6. They are to be reproved who go about to wound and to ensnare the Consciences of Others How careful was the Apostle not to cast a snare upon the Corinthians 1 Cor. 7. 35. nor to enjoyn that as necessary where the Lord had not imposed a necessity and a little after he sticks not to say that they who sin against the Brethren and wound their weak Conscience do sin against Christ 1 Cor. 8. 12. And if I am not by an imprudent use of my Christian liberty to embolden another to venture upon sin against Conscience surely much lesse may I do this either by constraint or by perswasion If it argue want of Love and be a great sin to impair the Estate to blemish the reputation to hurt the body of my Brother how much worse than all this is it to wound his Conscience Those who have no mercy to the Souls of Others surely have little to their Own and they will make bold with their own Consciences who have no care no tenderness in reference to the Consciences of their Brethren Several sorts of persons are here concerned as being injurious to others Consciences 1. False Prophets are injurious to the Consciences of others These do speak perverse things to draw away Disciples after them the Apostle deals very sharply with these he calls them Dogs and bids us beware of them Phil. 3. 2. Beware of Dogs beware of evil workers No wonder that Paul stiles them Dogs since Christ before had call'd them Wolves nay ravening Wolves False Prophets especially strike at Conscience and endeavour to mis-inform That and if once they can prevail so as to make the Conscience put darkness for light and light for darkness a lye for Truth and Truth for a Lye how may souls be carried away truly so far at length as to fall into damnable Heresies and also into grosse impieties and wickedness Those deceived and deceiving ones spoken of 2 Pet. 2. They walked in the lusts of Vncleanness they counted it pleasure to Riot their Eyes were full of Adultery and could not cease from sin their Heart was exercised with Covetous practices and while they talked of Liberty they were themselves the Servants of Corruption 2. Dawbers with untempered Mortar are concerned Conscience is little beholding to them for they heal the wound of it slightly crying Peace Peace where there is no Peace Jer. 6. 14. How miserable is the condition of unfaithful Ministers and likewise of those Souls that belong to their charge The Watchman that gives not warning the Blood of Souls indeed will lye upon his Head but this implies that such Souls do also peris● Ezek. 33. 7 8. O Son of Man I have set thee a Watchman unto the House of Israel therefore thou shalt Hear the Word at my Mouth and shalt warn them from me When I say to the wicked man thou shalt surely dye if thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way that wicked man shall dye in his iniquity but his Blood will I require at thine hand If an unskilful Physician has need of a new Church-yard what shall be said of an unskilful or unfaithful Preacher I will not affirm he has need of a new Hell but I am sure he will help very much to fill the Old one Those that make the way to Heaven broad and easie and regeneration needless and the Death of Christ an encouragement to continue in sin and the Mercy of God so large that 't will put up any thing and will certainly be extended unto any that cry Lord have mercy upon us These are Dawbers enemies to Conscience they build a Wall that shall be rent with a stormy wind in fury and brought down to the ground and they shall be consumed in the midst of it Ezek. 13. 13. 14. 3. All enticers unto Wickedness are cruel Enemies to the Consciences of others If there be a Devil incarnate he is such an one whose businesse is to tempt those to sin whom he has to deal with
When any perswade you to intemperance to uncleanness to injustice or any other iniquity they do in effect perswade you to make deep wounds and gashes in your own Spirits to wrong your own Souls and to go along with them towards the lake that burns and burns for ever with Fire and Brimstone Oh the cruelty of those that stir up others to sin Oh the folly of them that are prevailed with by these wretched and evil instruments of the Prince of Darkness I have done with that first Use by way of reproof VSE II. Shall be of Direction And here I am to shew first how secure Consciences may be awakened and wounded and secondly how wounded Consciences may be cured and comforted 1. How secure Consciences may be awakened Though there is many a bad Spirit which does prevail at this day yet none does more prevail than the Spirit of Slumber closed Eyes drowsie Souls senseless Hearts are every where to be met with Though so much hath been spoken though so much has been done though so much has been felt and suffered in order unto our awakening yet whose Conscience is indeed starled Prophets have been full of Power by the Spirit of the Lord and of Judgment and of might to declare unto evil doers their Transgression and their sin Mic. 3. 8. Calamity and Judgments have been strange unwonted and extraordinary and it might have been thought that such a Plague and Flames as have raged in London would hardly have left one secure sinner but all would have learned to fear that God who is so Righteous and who knows how to take a course with them that provoke him unto jealousie But alas like Pharoah of old upon the least respite the generality of sinners do harden their Hearts and their Consciences sleep sounder than ever Now in order unto your being awakened follow these directions 1. Think of that Great and Glorious Majesty which by sin is affronted and which all the sin that is in the World is committed against He is the blessed and only Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords he is clothed with Honour and with Majesty and covers himself with light as with a Garment the Heaven is his Throne the Earth is his Foot-stool the whole world in comparison with him is but as the Bucket and the small dust upon the Balance and all the Nations of the Earth before him are as nothing and vanity Isa 40. 15. 17. The greater the person is that is affronted that affront is the greater crime God is the highest and greatest of all Oh how vile and hainous a thing is it to sin against him Sinner would'st thou have thy Conscience awakened believe seriously that There is a God Oh what work would this Truth make were it but firmly credited That famous Bruce of Scotland who (a) Robertus Brusius Vir genere virtute nobilis Majestate vultûs vener abilis qui plura animarum millia Christo lucrifecit cujus anima si ullius mortalium absit verbo invidia sedet in coelestibus gained many thousands of Souls to Christ was wont to say I think it a great matter to believe that there is a God And not only believe that God is but that he is so Glorious as his word proclaims him this may make thee tremble Now no sin in the World can be committed wherein this God is not concerned Those sins against Man are more against God than against man therefore David after he had murthered Vriah and defiled Bathsheba looks beyond these as high as God himself and cryes out against thee thee only have I sinned and done this Evil in thy sight Psal 51. 4. He takes notice how God was struck at in that injury he had done to his Neighbour and is wholly swallowed up in that consideration and this helped very much his awakening and contrition To how many thousands of Millions do all thy sins amount and there is not one of them but has been an act of Rebellion against the † Altare Damascenum Lord of Heaven if this were pondered it might cool thy Courage and trouble thy Conscience 2. Think how dreadful the Power of this God and his wrath being joyned together must needs prove in Scripture these two are joyned and both together are engaged against the ungodly Ezra 8. 22. The hand of our God is upon all them for good that seek him but his Power and his Wrath is against all them that forsake him If wrath be without Power 't is contemptible if Power be without wrath it may not be at all hurtful but when Wrath and Power meet they may well be trembled at The Wrath of a King is as the Roaring of a Lyon as the messengers of Death What then is the Anger of God this wrath to shew the heat and greatness of it is likened unto Fire and it burns worse than any other Fire for it burns to Hell it self Deut. 52. 32. A Fire is kindled in mine Anger and it shall burn to the lowest Hell And if you would understand the Power of this Anger know that there is no withstanding it and Oh how dismall are the effects of it in both Worlds This Anger of God has brought upon sinners Cursing and Vexation and Rebuke and has made them quickly to perish because of the Wickedness of their doings it has smitten them with a Consumption and a Fever and an Inflammation and Extreme Burning with the Pestilence and Sword and Blasting and Mildew and has made the Heaven over Sinners Heads like Brass and the Earth under their Feet like Iron It has made them when they went out one way against their Enemies to be smitten and to flee seven wayes before them and their carcasses to become meat to the Fowls of the Air and the Beasts of the Earth This Anger of God has stricken the ungodly with madness and blindness and astonishment of Heart So that life has been a burthen no rest or ease at all could be found so that in the morning they have said would God it were Evening and in the Evening would God it were morning because of the fear and trembling of their Hearts the failing of their Eyes and the sorrow of their Minds All this is spoken of at large Deut. 28. But these are not all nor the most heavy effects of Divine displeasure Indeed we are safe from mans Anger after Death we cannot feel or be concerned at what Man can do when we are in the Grave There the Wicked cease from troubling there the weary be at rest there the Prisoners rest together they hear not the voice of the oppressor Job 3. 17. 18. But Gods Anger will follow after us into the other World and then will be found most heavy That Wrath to come is most of all amazing for then as it will be intollerable to be born so 't wil be impossible to be appeased Consider all this and be affrighted and say with the Psalmist At
thy Rebuke O God of Jacob the stout Hearted are spoyled none of the men of Might have found their Hands Thou even thou art to be feared who may stand in thy sight when once thou art Angry 3. That Conscience may be awakened consider seriously that you are alwayes under the Eye and Power of God so that he can do with you what he pleases You cannot hide your selves from him nor defend your selves against him Though you dig into Hell thence can his hand take you though you could climb up to Heaven and make your nest among the Starrs yet thence he can bring you down Amos 9. 2. Your breath is in His hand dare you to provoke him and he can take it out of your Nostrils without asking you leave or giving you the least warning You have no Lease of your Lives but are Tenants at will in these Cottages of Clay the Lord can turn you out and require your Souls at your hands at his own pleasure God has most Sovereign Power he is the onely absolute Monarch because all others are subject to himself VVhom he will he Kills whom he will he keeps alive whom he will he sets up whom he will he puts down whom he will he saves and whom and when he will he can destroy for ever He does according to his pleasure in the Army of Heaven and among the Inhabitants of the Earth and none can stay his hand or say to him What dost thou Dan. 4. 35. Surely 't is not safe by thy stupidness of Conscience any longer to engage this God against thee 4. Firmly Believe that 't is not more certain thou art a sinner than 't is certain that the Lord of Heaven is displeased with Thee Thee in particular Thou that hast an hard Heart and a senseless Conscience I am to tell thee heavy Tidings Gods Soul does hate Thee and he is Angry with thee every day If God should permit one of thy Old Companions in Wickedness to rise from the Dead to tell thee that his wrath abides upon thee and that thou art making haste unto the place of Torment would not this startle thee Or if an Angel from Heaven should meet thee with a Flaming Sword in his Hand and tell thee the way that thou takest is perverse before God and naming thy Name John Thomas Richard should say plainly that the Lord is thine Enemy how would this affect thee VVhy the Word tells thee this and that is a more sure word of Prophecy How expresly is it said Wo to the wicked it shall be ill with him Upon the wicked God shall rain Snares Fire and Brimstone and an horrible Tempest this shall be the Portion of their Cup Psal 11. 6. 5. Look upon God as the Lord of Hosts that thy Conscience may shrink and be afraid Many Legions of Angels are at his Service his beck commands them they are his Ministers to do his pleasure Psal 103. 21. And these Angels do so excell in strength that one of them was able to destroy in one Night an hundred fourscore and five thousand of the Assyrian Army Isa 37. 36. All the Devils in Hell God can Employ and they are very forward to be the Instruments of his Wrath and Revenge upon the workers of Iniquity The Men of the Earth are at his Command and he can stir up their Spirits and bring whole Armies of them against the People of his Indignation The Beasts of the Field the Fowls of the Air nay the most inconsiderable Creatures he can make terrible so as to tame the proudest of his Adversaries Those Locusts spoken of by Joel when God does Marshal them into an Army how terrible are they Like the noise of Chariots on the tops of Mountains shall they leap like the noise of a Flame of Fire that devoureth the stubble as a strong People set in Battel array before their face the People shall be much pained all Faces shall gather blackness Joel 2. 5 6. The Fire and Hail Snow and Vapour and Stormy Winds fulfill Gods Word The Thunder and the Lightnings say unto him Here we are being ready to consume the Rebellious against him The Lord is very terrible in himself oh dreadful to have an Omnipotent Enemy But when besides his own Power he has so great an Host at Command how should sinners tremble before him 6. Look back and see what Security has brought upon others Stupidness of Conscience has been the fore-runner of the most astonishing Judgments that ever were inflicted Read the Story of the old World and the Drowning of it Was it not terrible when all the Fountains of the great Deep were broken up and the Windows of Heaven were opened and the Rain was upon the Earth for forty Days and forty Nights together Gen. 7. 11 12 Oh what crying and what climbing was there to avoid that Deluge but all in vain the VVaters prevailed exceedingly fifteen Cubits above the highest Mountains and all flesh dyed that moved upon the Earth Fowl Cattel Beast Creeping thing and every Man But Security went before this Flood that swept all away They Eat they Drank they Planted they Builded they Married and were given in Marriage even to the Day that Noah entred into the Ark. The like sottishness and unsensibleness was in Sodom and Gomorrah before the Lord Rained Fire and Brimstone bringing Hell out of Heaven for their signal overthrow who had been sinners before the Lord exceedingly Like sins will have like ends and if thy Conscience is stupid as the Sodomites were thou mayst be destroyed suddenly and signally as they were 7. That Conscience may be awakened consider how unlikely 't is that Divine Patience should last much longer towards you Do not think that his patience towards his Enemies will be like his Mercy towards his Children and endure for ever You have found him long-suffering 't is Foolish presumption to think he will be ever suffering Laesa Patientia fit furor Abused Patience may quickly become Fury Hippolytus (b) Magne regnator Deûm Tam lentus audis scelera tàm lentus vide● Ec quando saevâ fulmina emittes manu Si nunc serenum est Seneca in the Tragedy when his Mother-in-Law made an Incestuous motion to him wondred at the patience of Heaven and that she was not presently struck dead with a Thunder-bolt It may be Matter of great Admiration that stupid sinners have been spared all this while Oh let them not reckon that they shall be still spared though they continue in their provocations Sottish and Senseless sinner the Devil who temps thee to sin would fain drag thee to Hell immediately but 't is that God whom thou offendest that hinders him and exercises forbearance to see if at length thou wilt be led to Repentance But if thou art stupid still God may quickly suffer Satan to have his will upon thee and which is worse cause his own wrathful Vengeance to take hold on thee Dost thou think that the Spirit
of this Judge at that day be Every mouth shall be stopt and every sinner speechlesse Oh then the Evil of sin will be made Manifest and how Righteous 't is for the Lord to Sentence the Wicked unto Everlasting Fire Whom He Condemns every one will Condemn and they shall not choose but Condemn themselves 4. After the Judge has past Sentence he will be inexorable no Cryes no Tears will prevail with him to Repeal it Those that then are Condemned can never be Justified can never be saved Oh what is that Misery which is Extream as to the Measure and as to the Duration of it Everlasting 5. Thou in Particular must give Account of thy self unto this Judge All must appear before the Judgement seat of Christ and that All includes thee Every one of us must give account of himself to God Rom. 14. 12. And Oh secure sinner if all must be judged according to their Works begin now to tremble that thy works have been all so bad what kind of Sentence is likely to be past upon thee Is thy Worldliness and Uncleanness and neglect of God and Christ and Duty and thy stupidness of Conscience notwithstanding all this likely to be rewarded with Heaven No no that which is thy due and thy due shall be given thee is everlasting Destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his Power 10. Take some encouragement that 't is not too late to awake as yet though Conscience hitherto has slept securely Thy Glasse is not yet run thy Sun is not yet set thy Day is not yet ended there may be possibly an Inch of thy Span of time remaining Oh sleep no longer but up and be doing thy main business When the ship was drowning the Marriners come to Jonah with a just rebuke What meanest thou O sleeper Jon. 1. 6. When Souls are sinking and when sinners are damning there is much more reason to say to Conscience what meanest Oh Sleeper Awake before it be quite too late Call upon God to awaken you throughly he can make the sleepy nay the dead to hear his voice Joh. 5. 25. Verily verily I say unto you the hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the Voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live So much be spoken and Lord make what has been spoken Effectual to awaken secure Consciences In the second place I am to shew how wounded and awakened Consciences may be Cured and Comforted And here it will be needfull first to shew you some mistakes about trouble of Conscience which are very common Secondly to discover when Conscience is troubled after a right manner Thirdly how Comfort is to be applied in that trouble For the first of these namely the mistakes about trouble of Conscience they are these following 1. That is not right trouble of Conscience which is onely the product of and lasts no longer than Affliction When Pharoah was under the smart of the Rod he cryed out I have sinned but this was not real trouble for sin for as soon as ever the Rod is taken off Pharoah is as resolved to sin as ever The mettal while the Fire burns is Liquid and you may cast it into any form but take away the Fire and it becomes hard as ever Such kind of mettall are many hearts while in the Furnace of Affliction how melted and tender do they seem but when taken out of that Furnace then they quickly cool and become perhaps more obdurate than before Who would have thought though so indeed it was that the Israelites who when God slew them did seek him and returned and enquired early after him and remembred that he was their Redeemer and their Rock should all this while onely flatter him with their Lips and that their Hearts should not be right with him nor stedfast in his Covenant 2. That is not right trouble of Conscience which is onely sorrow after the world (*) Tristitia mundi est quum propter terrenas afflictiones animos despondent luctu opprimuntur tristitia autem secundum Deum quae Deum respicit dum unicam miseriam ducunt excidisse à Dei gratiâ ac timore judicii ejus perculsi peccata sua lugent Calvin this kind of sorrow is so far from having a promise of life made to it that the Apostle affirms it works death 2 Cor. 7. 10. There is a great sorrow in thy Heart and it appears in thy very looks but what is the cause of it If hard times trouble thee but an hard Heart is no affliction if crosses and losses in the World perplex thee but the losse of thy Soul is not at all feared neither is there any care taken to prevent it if thy poverty in the World do grieve thee but thou dost not sorrow at all because destitute of the true Riches how canst thou call any of this a right trouble The Israelites did weep and Howl but the cause was they wanted Corn and Wine and so they had but these things in Plenty they could be well contented to live without God Hos 7. 13 14. Every pensive sinner is not penitent nor fit to be comforted their very pensiveness is a very great sin as long as sin is not but only worldly crosses the cause of it 3. That is not right trouble of Conscience where there is onely a slavish fear of punishment but love to sin does still remain in strength Where there is slavish fear and no more there is an hatred of God and a secret wish to get from under his Power the slave you know hates his Master and wishes he might be at liberty and never see or serve him more there is also an hatred of the Commands of God and a repining and murmuring at the strictness of them Sin is dear as ever a grief there is because of those threats which terrifie and hinder the free commission of it If such a Soul might have its wish It should not be Oh that I might be turned to God and that my wayes were directed to keep his Statutes but it should be Oh that I might have liberty to do as I list and that there were no such thing as the Word and Will of God to be observed where such a Spirit is which the Heart-searching God perfectly understands abstaining from the outward act of sin signifies not much The Merchant in a Storm cannot be said to hate his goods because he flings them overboard he is sorry because driven to such a strait and when he comes ashore wishes as much for his goods as ever 4. That is not right trouble of Conscience which Sinners being impatient under do fly for Comfort to the Creatures If thou art indeed wounded the same hand that gave the wound must bind it up I wound and I heal says God Deut. 32. 39. If sensual delights if Sports and Pastimes if carnal Company if immersing thy self in worldly business can divert
and by degrees chase away thy trouble 't is a sign 't was never true Right sorrow is not asswaged but by Spiritual means 'T was a wise course and resolution of those Hos 6. 1. Come let us return unto the Lord for he hath torn and he will heal us he hath smitten and he will bind us up 5. That is not right trouble of Conscience where there is an utter despair of Mercy Cain was troubled and so was Judas and the trouble of both especially of the latter was unconceivably great but despair spoyl'd it I grant indeed that souls truly penitent may have Temptations and very strong ones to despair but there is an unseen hand in their greatest Terrors and Dejections which keeps them from being swallowed up in that gulph quite though sometimes they are upon the brink of it Cranmer in his last Prayer cryes out I have sinned more than Tongue is able to express but shall I despair God forbid Thou art a Gracious Lord and thy Mercy does thrust away none who ask for a Remedy of sin and comfort in their misery Despair does thwart the design of the Gospel which is to extoll the Riches of Divine Grace as super abounding where sin has most abounded and to set forth Christ as a Saviour to the uttermost When the Spirit does give a sight of sin he opens a door of hope and lets in a beam of Light whereby e In Coelum terramque plusquam fando exprimi possit offendi Desperabo igitur Absit Tu ●lemen● naturâ Deus cujus neminem aversatur misericordia qui abs te peccati remedium ac solatium miseriae aerumnarum petit Mel. Adamus in vitâ Cranmeri the possibility of Mercy is discovered The trembling Gaoler did not say I am sure I shall be damned but what shall I do that I may be saved Act. 16. 30. this very inquiry shews that some possibility of Salvation was conceived Satan indeed endeavours to shut the door of hope and to overwhelm the Soul but he is not to be harkned to Satan put it into the Heart of Judas to betray Christ and afterwards he put it into his Heart to despair and how effectual was his despair to his destruction By no means therefore entertain despairing thoughts for they come from Hell and lead thither 6. That is not right trouble of Conscience which is onely the effect of prevailing Melancholy This humour prevails exceedingly at this day and those who never had experience of it cannot imagine the torment that is in it Burton speaks feelingly No torture of Body like unto it strappadoes hot Irons Phalaris Bulls are not comparable All Fears Griefs Suspitions Discontents as so many small brooks are swallowed up and drown'd in this Euripus this Irish Sea this Ocean of misery This is the Quintessence of humane Adversity all other Diseases whatsoever are but flea-bitings to Melancholy in extent 't is the pith of them all A Melancholy man is that true Prometheus which is bound to Caucasus the true Tityus whose Bowells are still devoured by a Vulture for he is fed upon by Anxieties and Griping cares continually But though Melancholy be so tormenting it very much differs from trouble of Conscience and is not so intollerable You will ask me how Melancholy and Spiritual trouble differ before I tell you how I would lay down two things 1. 'T is an Argument of an Ignorant and Profane Spirit to say that all trouble of Conscience is nothing else but Melancholy Such who are of this mind do make a mock of sin and of the Convictions of the Spirit and of the terrors of the Lord and slight the great Physitian of Souls for if all trouble be from Humours in the Body other Physitians may serve the turn 2. Melancholy and trouble of Conscience are sometimes joyned together and they may be mutually the Occasion of each others increase If the Conscience be wounded and the Body Distempered with this black Humour at the same time Satan has the greater Advantage The soul will not easily admit of Comfort but is more inclined to meditate terror and the wounds of Conscience will be the more smarting and longer before Cured I shall now shew the difference between trouble of Conscience and Melancholy in these particulars 1. In Melancholy the Body may plainly be perceived to be out of Order either no sleep at all or a perpetual drousiness the Spleen swelled or pained a sourness in the stomach and a Cloud seems to dwell in the Brain But trouble of Conscience may be and is found in those who are of the most excellent Constitution and even in the time of the firmest Health The Goalor 't is very likely had a strong Body and no Distemper that we read of upon him yet his Conscience is wounded and how sollicitous is he to escape Hell 2. In Melancholy there is great Confusion no rational account can be given of trouble The Soul is like one in the dark or that is blind-fold and is exceedingly buffeted but knows neither the Hand nor the Instrument from whence his smart comes But a troubled Conscience can easily assign a cause of its trouble Ask the Apostle Paul the reason of his trouble he will Answer I was a Blasphemer and a Persecutor and Injurious Demand of the Corinthians what Afflicted them They will Answer they had been Fornicators Idolaters Adulterers Effeminate Abusers of themselves with Mankind c. 1 Cor. 6. 9. Troubled souls do understand their Guilt and Plagues 3. In Melancholy the great thing desired is ease and quiet that the horrible darkness may be dispelled and the former serenity may return But in right trouble of Conscience not onely Peace but Peace upon a good ground is longed for the present trouble is preferred before security in wickedness that was formerly Ay and Grace as well as Peace is begged Troubled David does not onely cry out Restore unto me the Joy of thy Salvation and make me to hear Joy and Gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may Rejoyce but also Create in me a clean Heart O God and renew aright Spirit within me Ps 51. 8 10 12. 4. In Melancholy Trouble does often come by Fits when Fumes ascend unto the Head which by the heat of them may sometimes be perceived and do disorder the Fancy and Imagination (f) Melancholia est imaginationis depravatio à phantasmate-melancholico exorta quo detentus uni cogitationi absque surore sebre cum tristitiâ metu inhaeret Ejus origo dependet à certâ quidam Spirituum animalium dispositione ex humoris melancholici permissione producta ad quam sequitur phantasma tenebricosum dictum quod intellectus postea objecta obversans hoc delirium animi angorem excitat then there is some stinging and perplexing thought which renders Life and all the enjoyments of it bitter and uncomfortable But trouble of Conscience is more without intermission it does not depend upon the
ebbing or flowing of any Humour in the Body Load is laid on by the Spirit of God and the burthen presses continually untill the Comforter take it off The Psalmist says that his sore ran in the Night and ceased not Psal 77. 2. So Psal 38. 6. I am troubled I am bowed down greatly I go mourning all the day long 5. Melancholy makes a Man to fear every thing almost though there be no just ground of fear VVhen he goes to Bed he fears he shall die in his sleep and not Live till Morning Though in never so good a Trade he fears that God will blast him in his Estate and that he shall fall into extream poverty Melancholy persons are tortured with a fear of being Distracted and running stark Mad many times and then they think what a sad spectacle they shall be when they are in Bedlam and if Professors how much Religion will be Reproached upon their Account Many times they fear the appearing of the Devil in some terrible shape and that thereby they shall be frighted out of their wits 'T is ordinary for them to have sad fore-boding thoughts of ill to themselves as that some grievous Calamity is not far off from them or theirs and that their lives will be very short and within a little while they shall be in another VVorld They can hardly hear of any that have Hang'd or Drown'd themselves but they fear (g) Quos malè habet hic morbus tristes sunt solitarii formidulosi pertinaces phantasias quasdam sibi faciunt quae nec sunt nec esse possunt falsa multa imaginantur timent non metuenda sine causâ moerent animumque macerant they shall do the like one time or other I might spend a whole day in naming the fears of these sorrowful souls And if Fear have Torment as the Apostle speaks 1 John 4. 18. How tormenting is Melancholy that is so full of Fear But a troubled Conscience eyes and fears the Wrath of an Almighty God and that principally Psal 88. 7. Thy wrath lieth hard upon me and thou hast afflicted me with all thy waves Selah And v. 16 17. Thy fierce wrath goeth over me thy terrors have cut me off they came round about me daily like water they compassed me about together 'T is not Poverty Disgrace Death that is so much dreaded but a Jealous and highly provoked God is terrible and therefore when the Lord promises to revive such Consciences he says he will cease to be Angry and to contend Isa 57. 16. For I will not contend for ever neither will I be always wrath lest the Spirit fail before me and the Souls which I have made 6. In Melancholy there are strange hurryings in the Heart 't is snatched and carried away and some amazing thoughts are upon a sudden injected about Spiritual things but there is no Scripture-ground alledged for them Some under this Distemper will cry out they are meer Hypocrites and as if they had look'd into the black Book of Gods Reprobation will peremptorily say their Names have been written there from everlasting Others will cry out that the day of Grace is past and gone and that God has sworn concerning them in his wrath that they shall never enter into his Rest Now as the God of Heaven does walk upon the Wings of the Wind so Satan the God of this World does walk upon these Melancholick winds mixes himself with them and terrifies the Soul with the fear of Damnation And oh with what astonishment does a poor Melancholick Creature think of being damned everlastingly Many times Satan tells them that the longer they Live they will but fill the Vial fuller of wrath and but add more fewel to that Fire which must be their Portion for ever and hereupon follow temptations to self-murther and upon all convenient Occasions when they are alone by Water or see a Rope or a Knife Do it Do it is violently urged in upon them But if you ask these Melancholy souls why they conclude themselves Hypocrites and Reprobates not one Scripture can they produce to prove it VVhereas on the other side in trouble of Conscience the Conviction is plainly grounded on the word of God The awakened VVorldling hears his Covetousness called Idolatry the awakened VVhore-monger perceives evidently that no unclean Person shall inherit the Kingdom of God The awakened Swearer reads that his Oaths will make him fall into condemnation They believe those threats and know that they are guilty therefore they are Afflicted and look out after a Remedy and cry to be turned from their Iniquities and Reconciled unto God 7. In Melancholy Druggs are profitable gentle Remedies for violent are by no means to be used (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hippocrates Aphor. may be blessed to give ease But as for trouble of Conscience Hei mihi quod nullis dolor est Medicabilis Herbis Alas no Herbs can here at all avail The whole Colledge of Physitians would be here at a loss VVhen the Italian Doctors came to Visit Spira in his distress He spake these words Alas poor Men how far wide are you Do you think that this Disease is to be Cured by Potions Believe me there must be another manner of Medicine It is neither Plaisters nor Drugs that can help a fainting Soul cast down with the sense of sin and the wrath of God 'T is onely Christ that must be the Physitian and the Gospel the Soul-Antidote But here I must add that where the trouble is mixt partly from Melancholy and partly from a wounded Conscience proper Physick and especially a well-ordered Diet and Exercise must be used for the one as the blood of Christ is the alone sutable Remedy for the other 8. Melancholy alone never alienates the Heart from sin Several that Labour under this distemper in their lucid intervals will be as vain as any nay sometimes they have strange and strong inclinations to Uncleanness and too much yield unto them they will most Prodigally mispend their time which is much more precious than Gold that perishes and exceedingly give way to sensuality and the pretence is their Melancholy VVhen in their doleful fits they have been afraid of Hell and have concluded they should be damned as certainly as either Cain or Judas yet when that fit of Melancholy is over how will they yield unto Temptation they are as proud as before as passionate and worldly as ever and none of this troubles them This Malady also does mightily indispose them to Duty it makes the Heart like a stock or stone Indeed this blockishness where there is Grace is a burthen but in others not so Duty onely is a Burthen not their indisposition to it But now trouble of Conscience if right helps much to break that League between the Soul and Corruptions it causes great tenderness and fear of sin and very much incites to Prayer and other Holy Duties which God has Commanded and wherein Communion with
him is to be enjoyed 'T was said of Persecuting Saul as soon as the Lord had struck him to the ground and he was prickt in his heart Behold he Prayeth Acts 9. 11. When the Waters that is troubles came into David's Soul when he was sinking in the deep Mire where there was no standing how earnestly does he cry out Save me O God! Nay he did cry till his Throat was dryed and though his eyes failed yet he waited for the Lord Psal 69. 1 2 3. Having thus spoken of the mistakes about trouble of Conscience I am in the Second place to discover when Conscience is troubled after a right manner so as that it may be proper to apply Comfort from the Gospel This right trouble I shall set forth in these particulars 1. Some special sin perhaps more hainous than Ordinary is usually at first Discovered and charged home by the Spirit upon the Conscience The Apostle Paul before his Conversion was Riding to Damascus but the Lord met him in the way and the first sin he was charged with was that of Persecuting the Church of Christ Acts 9. 3 4. As he journied and came near Damascus suddenly their shined round about him a Light from Heaven and he fell to the Earth and heard a Voice saying unto him Saul Saul why Persecutest thou me Those Jews that were awakened by Peter's Sermon were charged with taking Christ and Crucifying and slaying him with wicked hands Acts 2. 23. Thus the Woman of Samaria who had had five Husbands is told of her Living in Whoredome with a man that was not her Husband John 4. 18. Thus commonly the work begins some more grosse sin as lying swearing drunkenness self-pollution or the like is discovered and that is like a dart shot in the Conscience causing a great deal of trouble and cannot easily be shaken off (i) Haeret lateri lethalis arundo Virgil. Ae●ead 4. 2. After one sin is discovered and Conscience begins to be perplexed innumerable other transgressions are brought to remembrance Just as when a debtor is arrested by one Creditor all the others are ready to come upon him The Eye of Conscience being truly opened to see one sin presently is able to discern thousands David after his being awakened by the Prophet Nathan looks first upon his filthiness and blood guiltiness but a great many other sins also stared him in the Face Therefore as a man beset by all together he cryes out for the pardon of all Psal 51. 9. Hide thy face from my sins blot out all my Transgressions Oh how did his iniquities swarm about him and sting him when he said Psal 40. 12. Innumerable evils have compassed me about my iniquities have taken hold upon me that I am not able to look up they are more than the hairs of my Head therefore my Heart faileth me 3. Where right trouble of Conscience is the impure streams are traced up to the fountain and the Corruption of Nature is acknowledged and bewailed Contrite David lookt thus farr Psal 51. 5. Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my Mother conceive me And the Apostle Paul took notice of that evil which was present with him which was so great an impediment unto his doing of good Rom. 7. How can we be rightly humbled till this Corruption of Nature be seen but when we perceive that Satan is not principally to be blamed for our wickednesses but our own selves and that what does defile us does not come from below but from within this will make us to be filled with the greater self abhorrency Every man is Tempted says the Apostle James when he is drawn away of his own Lust and inticed chap. 1. 14. Evil Thoughts Adulteries Murthers and such like Abominations Christ tells us proceed out of our own Hearts Math. 15. 19. Oh this does exceedingly afflict the Soul which is rightly troubled that all those thousands of sins which have been committed are but the offspring of a corrupted Heart and Nature and not one is to be laid at any other door 4. The Conscience when rightly troubled is convinced of that sin of Vnbelief and the great Evil that is in it 'T is the work of the Spirit to convince the World of Sin and Unbelief is especially discovered John 16. 8 9. When the Comforter is come he will reprove the World of Sin of Righteousness and of Judgment of Sin because they Believe not on Me. Not believing in Christ is a great sin in it self and it binds all the sinners other iniquities fast upon him (k) Hoc peccatum non crediderunt in me quasi solum sit praecaeteris posuit quia hoc manente caetera detinentur hoc discedente caetera remittuntur Augustin Tract 95. in Johan pag. mihi 474. Tom. 9. for there is no other way to receive Remission of sins but by Believing in the Lord Jesus Him only hath God set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3. 25. 'T is a damning thing to transgresse the Law but to be deaf to the Gospel and to reject Christ is a great deal worse for this is to sin against a Remedy and to slight an offer of Life and Peace How Glorious is God in his dear Son how does his Wisdome and Power and Grace and Love and Righteousness and Truth shine forth in him now notwithstanding all this to be offended at Christ not to Reverence the Son not to receive him though he offers benefits of inestimable value this must needs encrease guilt and heighten wrath exceedingly If a Prince should after his subjects had played the Rebels and he had them at his Mercy offer a pardon to them and they should refuse it and chuse rather to continue rebels still their not accepting the Princes Clemency would incense him more to their destruction than their forgoing Rebellion We are ready to pity Tantalus l who as Homer sayes was thus punished he stood in a lake with Water up to his chin but when ever he stoopt to quench his thirst with the water it presently sunk away from him Brave Fruit also is said to grow just over his Head but when he stretched out his hand to take it the Wind did carry it away from him But now let us suppose that the water might have been drunk and Tantalus would not have stoopt a little for it and that Fruit might have been eaten but though it grew within his reach he would not have been at the pains to have stretched forth his hand to pluckt it Who would have pitied i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer Odys 11. pag. mihi 321. Tantalus then every one would have blamed his folly in not taking what was brought so neer to him This is the case of the Unbeliever the Word is nigh him Rom. 10. 8. Christ is
nigh him the Bread and Water of life is brought to his very mouth but he will taste of neither though he so much needs both and may have both freely The Conscience therefore is troubled for unbelief for the sinners rejecting Christ in times past that when such great Salvation was offered it should be neglected and that the Lord Jesus should stand so long and knock so often at the door but it was kept shut and barr'd against him Oh 't were just sayes the sinner for Christ to go away and never to give so much as one knock at my Heart again and now I see my Need of his Salvation utterly to deny that Salvation to me 5. When the Conscience is rightly troubled The Anger of the Lord and the Curse of his Law are a very great burthen Sin has been committed Commands Holy Just and Good have been transgressed and Christ who alone can appease Divine Anger satifie for transgression and Mediate a Peace has been contemned well therefore may the Sinner be afraid How great and how fierce is this wrath of the Almighty there is never a single sin but makes the sinner liable to the Curse of the Law and how Cursed a wretch do iniquities ten thousand times ten thousand many times told render him every transgression makes the Lord Angry to how great an height then is that anger by Millions of transgressions raised The awakened sinner sees the Lord whetting his glittering Sword and his hand taking hold of vengeance hereupon fear does come upon him and pain as of a Woman in travel How scalding are the Drops of the Lords wrath what then are the full showers If God run upon any like a Gyant they must needs be broken with breach upon breach I dare not say that the anger of the Lord does lye alike heavy upon all awakened Consciences and truly humbled Souls nor that these terrors of Soul are equal in all that are brought home to Christ Though all humbled sinners are made with Ephraim to bemoan themselves yet some are made to bemoan themselves much longer and much louder than others Levi taken from the Receipt of Custom and Lydia felt not that we read of such Agonies and Terrors of Conscience as Persecuting Saul and the trembling Gaoler All the vessels of Mercy are not of the same temper and that which cannot abide the Fire 't is sufficient that as under the Old Law it passe through the Water Numb 31 23. As to these Legal terrors I would say these five things 1. These terrors in themselves are a punishment and therefore not to be desired in so great a degree we are not to be fond of them though when they are upon us we must desire support under them and that they may prosper unto the end whereunto they are appointed namely to wean us from our lusts and drive us out of our selves unto the Lord Jesus 2. These Terrors being a Punishment surely are not saving Grace Reprobates have had them in a great measure O Judas thou hadst an Hell upon Earth by Reason of legal Horror before thou wentest to thy appointed place and 't is possible to exceed in regard of these Therefore the Apostle takes care in reference to the incestuous Corinthian that he should not be swallowed up with over much sorrow 2 Cor. 2. 7. 3. Barely from these Terrors of the Law none can conclude that they shall certainly be joined to the Lord Jesus They are not alwayes fore-runners of Faith but sometimes they issue in despair and sometimes they wear off and sinners become more hardened and confirmed in their wickedness Thus it was with Pharaoh notwithstanding all his trouble and fear at some times of the Lords anger 4. Those that complain for want of these legal Terrors are really under them in a more remisse degree for those who are perplexed with doubts and fears about their Eternal state and think because they never were sufficiently troubled that they never yet closed with Christ what are these afraid of but Gods anger and his Curse which by sin has been deserved 5. Do not go about to direct or Counsell the Spirit of the Lord. If he bring thee home by a more gentle way give thee a sight of thy Remedy as soon almost as of thy sin misery thou hast the more cause to be thankful but withal to be the more vigilant and watchful for if wrath has not lain so hard upon thee thou wilt be the more subject to make bold with sin afterward and art not likely to be so fearful to incurre Divine displeasure for the future 6. Where the Conscience is rightly troubled the sinner is filled with grief and shame because of ' its iniquities God complains of the Children of Israel that they were Impudent and hard hearted Ezek. 3. 7. But the troubled Soul is confounded before God the humbled sinner thinks thus that if the World did know all the sins which he has been guilty of he should be ready to wish himself out of the World but Gods knowledge signifies more than if All Creatures were acquainted with his abominations I do not wonder at that expression Jer. 3. ult We lye down in our own shame and our confusion covereth us How foul does sin make us how unlike to God! how monstrously to resemble the unclean Spirit what high and horrible ingratitude is there in sin is this the requital for all the Lords goodness is this the return for millions of mercies shame upon this grows great and sorrow goes hand in hand with it We read that a voice was heard upon the high places weeping and supplication of the Children of Israel for they have perverted their way and they have forgotten the Lord their God Jer. 3. 21. Behold O Lord sayes the Church for I am in distresse my bowels are troubled my heart is turned within me why what ails her I have grievously rebelled this made her sighes many and her Heart faint Lam. 2. 20 22. Sin does best deserve sorrow because 't is so great an evil and there is such encouragement in Scripture here to spend our grief And the troubled Soul gives sin the greatest share and is sorry after all that 't is so little sorry Heark to one of our English Poets † Herbert pag. 158. Grief O who will give me tears Come all you springs Dwell in my head and eyes come Clouds and rain My grief hath need of all the watry things That Nature hath produc'd Let every vein Suck up a River to supply mine eyes My weary weeping eyes too dry for me Vnless they get new conduits new supplies To bear them out and with my state agree What are two shallow fords two little spouts Of a less World The greater is but small A narrow Cupboard for my griefs and doubts Which want provision in the midst of all Verses ye are too fine a thing too wise For my rough sorrows cease be dumb and mute Give up your
it no robbery to be equal with God yet humbled himself in the form of a Servant and became obedient to Death even the Death of Crosse Phil. 2. 6 7 8. And since he that was the Mighty God did thus humble and abase himself there is no sin so great but his humiliation may make satisfaction for it I do not wonder that the Apostle speaks so highly concerning the knowledge of Christ Crucified Here is the ground of mans Comfort and Salvation When I behold the Son of God who has the same Essence Power Glory and Eternity with the Father stooping so low as to become Man when I behold him not only a Man but a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with grief all his days and read that at last he was wounded and bruised and slain for sin I may be satisfied that here is enough suffered to satisfie the justice of God to the full Sin indeed did rise high because committed against God and it has been heightned by many agrravations but the Son of God did stoop low when he became Man and still was more and more abased till he came to the lowest degree of his humiliation besides his sufferings were aggravated for he knew before hand all that was to come upon him John 18. 4. He knew all the bitter ingredients and dregs of wrath that were in that Cup which he was to drink off to the very bottom and in the midst of his sufferings his Father hides his face which made them so much the greater Oh who can conceive the weight that lay upon our Lord when all the iniquities of his whole Church lay upon him at once and being under all deserted did roar out My God My God why hast thou forsaken me Now if it be inquired what the end of Christ was in his suffering of Death the answer must be 't was that he might put away sin his Blood was shed for the remission of sin and to deliver us from that wrath which by sin was merited Oh sweet Scripture Rom. 5. 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in that whilst we were yet sinners Christ died for us much more then being now justified by his Blood we shall be saved from wrath through him Our Lord was delivered for our offences he was stricken for our iniquities and 't is evident that he did undergo to the full whatever was required and paid the uttermost farthing of our debt for he cryed out upon the crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is finished and then gave up the Ghost Joh. 19. 30. 2. The troubled Conscience should not only take notice of Christs suffering Death but also of his overcoming Death in his Resurrection The Apostle in his triumph of Faith speaks of the Elect being secured from the charge of sin by the Death of Christ but rather by his Resurrection Rom. 8. 33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again If he had been still in the grave all our hopes would have been buried with him If Christ be not rais'd your Faith is vain ye are yet in your sins 1 Cor. 15. 17. He was for our debt arrested as it were and thrown into the grave and being come out again we may conclude that justice has no more to demand and as our Surety he has no more to pay Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Rom. 6. 9. His Resurrection shews that his dying once was sufficient 3. Christ seconds his sufferings with continual intercession (p) Porrò hanc intercessionem carnali sensu ne metiamur non enim cogitandus est supplex flexis genibus manibus expansis Patrem deprecari sed quia apparet ipse assiduè cum morte resurrectione suâ quae vice sunt aeternae intercessionis vivae orationis efficaciam habent ut Patrem nobis concilient atque exorabilem reddant merito dicitur intercedere Calvin in Epist ad Rom. c. 8. When he had by himself purged our sins he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High and he ever lives to make intercession for us 'T is lookt upon as a great matter to have a friend in Court that may speak a good word for us to an earthly King but how much more a priviledge is it to have such a friend as the Lord Jesus is in the Court of Heaven ready to back our Prayers with his own intercession which is ever prevalent but troubled Souls may fear that Christ prays not for them since he says I pray for these I pray not for the World but for those which thou hast given me for they are thine John 17. 9. To this I reply that Christ prays for all that believe in him Neither pray I for these alone but for all them that shall believe on me through their word Now those troubled Souls that have no confidence in the Flesh but are willing to receive Christ as he is offered in the Gospel these are to be counted among Beleivers in him and therefore may be encouraged by his intercession Nay the Scripture speaks expresly that He made intercession for the Transgressours Isa 53. 12. That was one of his petitions upon the Crosse Father forgive them for they know not what they do Luk. 23 34. and these Transgressours for whom Christ interceded 't is very likely were those who were charged with murthering of Christ and were prickt in their Hearts Act. 2. and brought unto true Repentance 5. For the comforting of an afflicted and troubled Conscience observe how plainly the Gospel does affirm that Christ is both able and willing to save 1. 'T is very evident that Christ is able to save no guilt so great as to exceed the merit of his Blood his Blood cleanseth from all sin 1 John 1. 7. and that though it be of never so deep a dye Isa 1. 18. Though your sins be as scarlet they shall be white as Snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wool No spiritual malady is hujus medici opprobrium the reproach of this Physician What cures has he wrought what sins has he pardon'd How many that were once heinous transgressors on Earth before their Conversion yet notwithstanding were reconciled and regenerated by his Blood and Spirit and are now triumphing with him in his Kingdom Oh you troubled Souls be encouraged that help is laid upon one that is Mighty that is able to save unto the uttermost those that come unto God by him Heb. 7. 25. The belief that Christ can help will you have an influence upon you The Leper came to Christ upon a perswasion that Christ could make him clean though he had no assurance that Christ would do it Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean says the Leper Christ presently answers I will be thou clean and
enim inde cùm inde pellitur à seipso pellitur ecce hostem suum invenit quo confugeret Seipsum quo fugiturus est Quocunque suger it se talem trahit post se quocunque talem traxerit se cruciat se A seipso sunt tribulationes quae inveniunt hominem nimis acerbiores enim non sunt at tanto sunt acerbiores quanto sunt interiores Augustin Enarrat in Psal 45. Tom. 8. pag. mihi 419. Observes and more inward they are they are the more bitter But now he whose Conscience is good as Solomon speaks is satisfied from himself (*) Fragilibus innititur qui adventio laesus est exibit gaudium quod intravit at illud ex se ortum fidele firmumque est cascit ad extremum ●sque prosequitur Seneca Epist 98. He has Meat to eat which the World knows not of his sincere endeavour to do the will of God satisfies him better than the choicest Fare and Delicates Luther whose Conscience was clear who Preached Christ purely and Loved Christ sincerely has one strange Expression Miser sit qui possit ego nonpossum Let him be miserable that can be miserable I for my part cannot be miserable His God and his Conscience were such a Feast and Joy and Satisfaction to him that he knew 't was not in the Power of Earth or Hell to daunt or hurt him Oh what unutterable contentation is there in the Heart that upon reflection and search finds it self the Temple of the Spirit the Habitation where the Father and the Son do make their abode That finds it self Clothed with white Rayment Christ's Righteousness Enriched with that Gold tried in the Fire Rev. 3. 18. made partaker of the Divine Nature Adorned with the Image of God filled with the Graces of the Spirit and thereby sees it fitting for the Inheritance of the Saints in Light 3. He that has a good Conscience can look downward and see himself secured Never any one with a good Conscience went to the place of Torment but onely those who refused to have a good Conscience or made ship-wrack of it Though Hell be prepared for the Devil yet he has not the Keys of that place but they hang at Christ's Girdle Rev. 1 18. I am he that Liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and have the Keys of Hell and of Death And certainly since Christ has the Keys of Hell no Believers whose Consciences are truly good shall be flung in thither for these are the Members of his Body and the Head loves his Members too well to suffer them to be thrown into Everlasting fire A good Conscience by the eye of Faith looks down and takes Notice of the Damned in their Misery sees them groaning under the fierceness of the Almighty's wrath sees them fed upon by the VVorm that dies not and tormented in that flame which shall never be extinguished and bound fast in those Chains of Darkness which shall never be unloosed and then rejoyces to see it self safe under the wing of the Lord Jesus rejoyces in that Deliverance and Salvation from future wrath whereof Christ is the Author 4. He that has a good Conscience can look upon his outward comforts and take comfort in them What he has is not a Snare to him but attended with a blessing upon this score the Psalmist sayes a little that a Righteous man has is better than the Riches of many wicked Psal 37. 16. A good Conscience does in a great measure cure that vanity and vexation of Spirit that is in the Creature for when these outward enjoyments are given with the Divine Blessing then as Solomon speaks no sorrow is added with them The upright man does taste the love of God in the Food he eats and though it be but a dinner of Herbs yet this love makes it better than a stalled Ox with the Lords Curse and Hatred He feels the love of God in the Clothes he wears and though of coarser cloth yet they are better than the Purple and fine Linnen and costly array of that rich man that received all his good things in this present world and after was turned into Hell poor and naked All the gifts he receive are indeed blessings to one that 's Righteous for he has the Giver with them and is brought still nearer unto the Giver by them 5. He that has a good Conscience can look upon adversity without dread When the Apostle was pressed out of measure even above strength yet a good Conscience was his rejoycing Bias the Philosopher being asked what was difficult answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (y) Diogen Laert. in vitâ Biantis p. mihi 60. To bear with fortitude a change in our condition for the worse Now a clear Conscience will be very helpful unto such Fortitude and Patience Job is of a sudden stript of his glory rob'd of his vast estate and though a Prince before made poor to a Proverb and yet Conscience bears him up and makes him able to say The Lord has given and the Lord has taken blessed be the name of the Lord Job 1. 21. Sir Henry Wotton has a very good description of an happy life wherein he shews that a good Conscience is the best armour and the safest retreat whatever happens How happy is he born and Taught That serveth not anothers will Whose armour is his honest Thought And simple Truth his utmost skill Whose passions not his masters are Whose Soul is still prepar'd for death Untied unto the World by care Of publick fame or private breath Who envies none that chance does raise Nor Vice hath ever understood How deepest wounds are given by praise Nor rules of State but rules of Good Who hath his Life from rumors freed Whose Conscience is his strong retreat Whose state can neither flatt'rers feed Nor ruine make oppressors great Who God doth late and early pray More of his Grace than Gifts to lend And entertains the harmless day With a Religious book or Friend This man is freed from servile bands Of hope to rise or fear to fall Lord of himself though not of Lands And having nothing yet hath all A good Conscience will tend very much to fix the Heart so as that evil tidings shall not be so terrifying and dismaying Hark what the Psalmist sayes Vnto the upright there ariseth light in obscurity surely he shall not be moved for ever he shall not be afraid (†) Justum tenacem propositi virum Si fractis illabatur orbis Impavidum ferient ruinae of evil tidings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord Psal 112. 467. 6. He that hath a good Conscience can look upon all the baits of the Tempter and despise them Satan is not able to compell and force us to sin neither has he power to determine the will of man to that which is evil as the Lord has to determine it unto that which is good for then sin
which he thought so good had such bad success and he found himself vanquished by Antonius he Repented of his Vertue and cryed out O Vertue I Served thee as a real thing but thou art onely an empty Name c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Te colui Virtus ut rem ast tu nomen it ane ●s But be you more fixed and better settled and whatever you lose keep a good Conscience And that you may do thus follow these Directions 1. Vigorously maintain the Combat against Corruption Onely sin can harm the Conscience and therefore strive against it Abstain from Fleshly Lusts for these War against your Souls 1 Pet. 2. 11. Have a special Eye to in dwelling sin for that 's a worse Enemy by far than Satan set upon the work of Mortification in good earnest hide the Word in your hearts that it may Antidote you against sin Derive Vertue from Christ Crucified to Crucifie the Flesh with the Affections and Lusts of it and call in the aid of the Spirit against the deeds of the Body Conscience will be kept in greater purity and Peace the weaker sin is and the more it is an underling 2. Sit loose from the World If Galeacius Caracciolus had loved his Honour and great Estate in Italy he would not have kept his Conscience undefiled from Rome's pollutions The Apostle Paul whose Conscience was good professes that he Gloried in the Cross of Jesus Christ by whom the World was Crucified to him and he unto the World Gal. 6. 14. He looked upon the VVorld as a grand Imposter he saw no Form nor Comeliness in it that he should desire it nay he perceived how sin had brought a Curse upon it no wonder if he slighted it You cannot Serve God and Mammon You must cast the VVorld out of your Affections presently and consent to let it go out of your Possession too when called to part withit if you would keep a good Conscience 3. Study the Vanity of Men and be not afraid of them The fear of Man bringeth a Snare says Solomon Fear of the Papists made Spira wound his Conscience and brought him into a fearful Case Cease ye therefore from Man whose breath is in his Nostrils for wherein is he to be accounted of Isa 2. ult Be not afraid of the terror of your adversaries neither be troubled but Sanctifie the Lord of Hosts in your hearts let him be your fear and let him be your dread if you would secure your Consciences 4. Pray much to be upheld Commit the keeping of your Souls unto God in well doing for he is Faithful Beg that he would never leave you nor forsake you but keep you by his Mighty Power unto Salvation It is not in vain to seek unto him for he is of Power to establish you Rom. 16. 25. He is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the Presence of his Glory with exceeding Joy Jude 24. 5. Hold fast Faith that you may keep a good Conscience firmly believe that Life and Immortality which is brought to light by the Gospel and then by patient continuance in well doing you will seek for it The Lord grant unto you the Spirit of wisdom and Revelation the eyes of your Understanding being enlightned that you may more thorowly and certainly know what is the hope of your Calling and what the Riches of the Glory of that Inheritance which is above this will be a strong inducement to keep Conscience and heart and Conversation and all clean that you may grow more and more meet for that Inheritance You see the way to keep a good Conscience which was the fourth word of Advice 5. You that have a good Conscience be not Acted onely by Conscience but let Love d constrain you also to Obedience 'T is said of Titus That he accepted the Exhortation but was more forward of his own accord 2 Cor. 8. 17. Heed your Consciences telling you of your Duty but let your hearts be forward b Qui legem dat amantib●s Major lex a mor est sibi Boetius of their own accord to perform your Duty The high mettal'd courser does not stand in need of whip or spur loosen the reins he will run swiftly because he does delight in running Oh let your hearts be enlarged by love to the Lord and delight in your duty and then you will run the wayes of his Commands and so running you will at length obtain the prize Thus have I handled at large the second Doctrine To have a good Conscience should be every one 's greatest care This is the point I principally intended to prosecute I shall be very brief in those which do remain Doct. 3. The third Doctrine is this A good Conscience will make men set themselves as before God continually I have lived says the Apostle in good Conscience before God Hark unto David Psal 119. 168. All my wayes are before thee and Psal 16. 8. I have the Lord alwayes before me Job speaks after the same manner chap. 31. 4. Doth not God see my wayes and count all my steps And Elijah speaking of the Lord of hosts adds before whom I stand 1 King 18. 15. These men had a great sense of God upon their Spirits so should we and a good Conscience will still be putting us in mind in whose presence we continually are In the handling of this Doctrine I shall first prove that we are alwaies before God Secondly how we are to look upon God when we set our selves before him Thirdly what it is thus to set our selves before God Fourthly why a good Conscience will make us to do thus And fifthly Apply In the first place I am to prove that we are alwaies before God There are several degrees of the presence of God the highest degree of all is his presence with Christs humane Nature a second degree is his presence with the Angels and triumphant Saints in his Kingdom and Glory by whom he is seen face to face a third degree is his presence vouchsafed unto his Saints Militant on Earth whereby they are quickned strengthned and abundantly incouraged But besides all this there is a general presence of God whereby he fills both Heaven and Earth so that nothing can be hid from him Jer. 23. 24. Can any bide himself in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Lord do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord Three things are here to be remarked 1. God is so every where present as that he perfectly knows what is in us and done by us He does possesse our very Reins searches our very hearts all the hidden things of darkness will one day be brought to light and the Counsels of mens hearts be made manifest 1 Cor. 4. 5. Though good works are done never so secretly God sees and will reward them openly though wicked works are done never so closely he sees and they shall be openly punished 2. God is so
things willing to live honestly Such a Conscience is well instructed in that lesson Tit. 2. 11. 12. For the Grace of God which bringeth Salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly and Righteously and Godly in this present world In the handling of this Doctrine I shall first shew how a good Conscience is concerned in the Life and Conversation Secondly Instance in several kinds of Actions that a good Conscience has an influence upon Lastly Conclude with the Application In the first place I am to shew how a good Conscience is concerned in the Life and Conversation This will appear in these following particulars 1. There is no action but Conscience is to examine Every action is a step one way or other and Conscience is to see which way every step has a tendency whether upward towards the Hill of the Lord or downward towards the lake of Fire There is no action but Conscience will be wounded with it if it be a work of darkness and Conscience may reap satisfaction from it if it be a work of Righteousness 2. Conscience if good will not admit of loose principles It will not argue licentiously from the Righteousness of Christ which alone is imputed to us for our justification that therefore there is no necessity of inherent Holyness It will not argue from the superabundant Grace of God that therefore we may safely continue in sin Rom. 6. 15 16. What then shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace God forbid Know ye not that to whom ye yeild your selves Servants to obey his Servants ye are to whom you obey whether of sin unto Death or obedience unto Righteousness A good Conscience will not argue from the falls of Saints recorded in Scripture that we may venture to fall as they did but contrarily concludes since such eminent Saints have fallen it does concern us to look to our standing and not to be high minded but fear Finally it does not argue because Gods Covenant is Everlasting and his love unchangeable that therefore we may live as we list but on the contrary it tells us that because the Lords love is so great and unchangeable he is to be loved the more by us and followed more fully and more willingly obeyed 3. Conscience if good will not abuse Christian liberty The nature of this is not to be mistaken 't is not a liberty to make provision for the Flesh nor to walk after the course of the World nor to mispend your precious time nor to omit or do the work of the Lord negligently They that take such a liberty take that which God never gave them and by this liberty they become slaves and vassals to the Devil who employes and leads them captive at his pleasure But Christian liberty lies in being free from the bondage of Corruption from the Curse of the Law and the Power of Darkness and in having freedom of accesse to God through Christ and in being enlarged by the Spirit to run the wayes of his Commandements Christian liberty is an holy thing A good Conscience therefore is the more watchful lest we go beyond the bounds of Christian liberty and venture upon what is unlawful or use lawful things unlawfully for so 't is possible nay usual licitis perire even in these things to perish To Eat to Drink to Buy to Sell to Plant to Build to Marry and to be given in Marriage were none of them in themselves unlawful yet when the old world and Sodom were thus employed and these things were only minded and spiritual things neglected a Flood came and swept away the one and Fire and Brimstone did destroy the other Luk. 17. 26 27 28 29. 4. A good Conscience looks well to the Principles of our Obedience That it springs from a renewed nature for unless we are made good Trees how can we bring forth good Fruit that it proceeds from Faith for by Faith we must believe what we do to be according to the will of God and by Faith we must desire strength from our Lord Jesus to do that will which is discovered to us Our Obedience also must flow from love 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. The love of Christ constraineth us to love not unto our selves but unto him that died for us Love is the first and great Command and that which makes us to yeild obedience to all the rest And we must be acted by Fear as well as Love a childlike reverence and awe of God how circumspectly will it make us walk Job feared God and eschewed evil Finally our Obedience must spring from gratitude and a sense of our obligation to serve the Lord who hath so loaded us with innumerable benefits All the mercies and deliverances which God did work for and extend to Israel were to induce them to observe his Statutes and to keep his Laws Psal 105. 45. 5. A good Conscience has a regard unto the matter of our actions That this be agreeable unto the Word of God This word is the rule we are to walk by that peace and mercy may be upon us There is a word which God will do his word of Promise he will accomplish his word of Threatning he will execute and his word of Prophecy he will fulfill There is a word which he will have us to do and that 's the word of Precept A good Conscience respects the precepts of the Law the sum of which is to Love the Lord with all our Heart and Soul and Mind and Strength and our Neighbour as our Selves Mat. 22. 37. 39. This Law is not made void but establish'd by Faith even in the Covenant of Grace the Lord promises to write this Law in our Hearts and sayes he will put his spirit within us to cause us to walk in his Statutes and to observe his Judgements and do them The Gospel has precepts also as well as the Law which a good Conscience knowes are to be obeyed And if we will indeed obey the Gospel we must believe on Jesus we must repent from dead works we must live by Faith we must give all diligence to make our Calling and Election sure we must love our Brethren as love is a new command and enjoyned upon a new motive namely the great love of Christ We must engage in all the Ordinances and Institutions of our Lord Jesus finally we must hold fast our profession without wavering whatever troubles upon that score do overtake us 6. A good Conscience Eyes the Manner of our Obedience That it be out of choice David did chuse the way of the Lords Precepts he considered these precepts esteemed them concerning all things to be right and preferred them before all the False and destructive wayes of sin Obedience must not only be out of choice but it must be universal in regard of the object all the commands be respected and in regard of the Subject the whole man must
be under obedience and as this obedience must be yeilded to God without delay so we must be sure to stick unto his testimonies and persevere unto the end If ye continue in my word says Christ then are ye my Disciples indeed John 8. 31. But after we have done our best and most we must humbly and believingly look unto Jesus for the covering of our imperfections and that we and our performances may be accepted 7. A good Conscience looks to the End of our obedience and that the design of our actions be as it ought And our end should be not onely the obtaining of a reward but the Glory of God John 15. 8. Herein is my Father glorified that ye bring forth much Fruit so shall ye be my Disciples we should aim also at the credit and adorning of the Gospel and the good of men Good living is for the benefit of others in more regards than one Men are benefited by our good works of Justice and Mercy and such like and our doing of these works may help to convince them that there is an excellency and efficacy in the Gospel which brings forth Fruits that be so excellent You see how a good Conscience is concerned in the Conversation In the second place I am to instance in several kinds of actions which a good Conscience has an influence upon 1. A good Conscience has an influence upon our holy duties It is not satisfied unless we begin the day with these God should have our first thoughts and our affections and praises should be our morning sacrifice In the morning we should direct our prayer unto him and look up Ps 5. 1 2 3. The Scriptures are to be searched that our Hearts may be instructed quickened purified strengthned and revived by this word of Grace A good Conscience will not suffer holy duties to be done negligently it knows how treacherous the heart is and therefore watches over it that it may engage in the Lords service and not start aside like a deceitful bow (f) Non venitur ad bonam conscientiam nisi per cordis custodiam Cor ad vitam se vertit aut ad mortem velle peccare malum peccare pejus in peccato persever are pessimum nolle poenitere mortale Bernard de Interior dom cap. 24. Conscience will not be put off with words that are good or with a bended knee or a lifted up Eye or a sigh now and then but looks that Holy desires be strong and stirring that Faith be acted upon the promises of God who is so ready to be found of them that seek him with their whole Heart Deut. 4. 29. A good Conscience looks upon holy duties as things of grand concernment if these are well done it will be well with us if ill done it will be ill with us for ever In your Trades you are getting a livelihood but in your duties you are or should be minding a better and enduring substance What does deserve your pains and time and serious endeavours if the favour of God and the fulness of Christ and an Heavenly Kingdom do not what manner of duties should ours be since we aim at such things in the doing of them 2. A good Conscience has an influence upon the works of our Callings It will not allow of an unlawful Calling and that is to be styled an unlawful Calling in which a livelihood is gotten by serving and gratifying the lusts of men The Harlots way is unlawful and Stage-players is little better 'T is a wicked thing to live by the sins of others and by helping to undo and ruine them for ever And as the Calling must be Lawful so it must be Lawfully managed A good Conscience will take care that there be not an over eagerness after wealth which is of a perishing Nature for the time is short and therefore they that Buy must be as though they possessed not and they that use this World as not abusing of it for the Fashion of this World passeth away 1 Cor. 7. 29 30 31. And as for unjust and dishonest gain a good Conscience can by no means allow it Do Justly is a Law so deeply engraven in the heart of Men by Nature and so often required in the Scripture that where injustice is we may conclude there is no goodness or tenderness in the Conscience (f) Bona conscientia est si habet in corde puritatem in ore veritatem in actione rectitudinem Bernard De Conscien cap. 4. pag. mihi 1099. VVhen this is indeed awakened though other sins do flie in the sinners face yet if any thing has been gotten wrongfully this in a special manner is a burthen neither is there any rest till Restitution be made either to the Person wronged or if he cannot be found unto the poor That Scripture should ever be Ringing in our ears in all Trading and Business 1 Thes 4. 6. That no Man go beyond or defraud his Brother in any matter because the Lord is the avenger of all such And not onely Injustice but Idleness in the Calling is to be shunned for this Idleness is the way to cloath a Man with Rags and exposes to innumerable temptations (g) T is a good answer to the tempter Non licet non vacat 'T is not lawfull neither am I at leisure to do what thou wouldst have me 3. A good Conscience has an Influence upon our Words and Discourses for a great part of Pure and Vndefiled Religion does lie in brideling of the Tongue James 1. 26. Our Communication should be such as may administer Grace unto the Hearers A good Conscience will not admit of Impiety in our Discourse and certainly Oaths and Curses are very impious Lesser Oaths are not to be sworn but greater as by the God of Heaven the Blood and wounds of the Lord Jesus argue sinners to be daring and how fearful is it to hear them calling upon God to damn them Such things Argue that there is no good Conscience Neither will this admit of Impurity in our Communication for filthy and foolish talking is condemned Eph. 5. and is a sign of a corrupt and unrenewed heart out of the abundance of which the mouth speaketh Finally a good Conscience will not suffer us to be Injurious to any in our Discourses by Defaming by Back-biting by Slandering of them Those that take up Reproaches against their Neighbours and spread them their own mouths condemn them and plainly prove that they are not Citizens of Zion Psal 15. 1 2 3. 4. A good Conscience has an Influence upon our Time that it may be well and wisely Husbanded This is more precious than Gold that perishes and if the Goldsmith does look upon all gold as worth saving surely every moment of Time is worth Redeeming That which makes other things of less value namely the shortness of their continuance makes Time of greater value 'T is the more to be prized because 't will so quickly be at an
then Learn if the Conversation be bad Conscience must needs be bad also If wickedness be Ordinarily practised in the Life 't is a sign either that Conscience is stupid and takes little notice of what is done or if it does observe yet 't is without power to restrain and hinder it 2. Learn what an Happiness 't is to a Nation to have much of a Good Conscience among them This will hinder Warres and Fightings and Confusion this will hinder Injustice and Oppression and Uncleanness This would cause Unity and Peace turning our Swords into Plough-shares and our Spears into Pruning-hooks and prevent our hurting and destroying one another any more Isa 11. 6 7 8 9. Those are Enemies to the common Good who endeavour to debauch the Consciences of men for they go the ready way to fill the places where they live with all Impiety and Unrighteousness VSE II. Of Advice which shall be in the words of the Psalmist Shew that you have indeed a good Conscience by departing from Evil and by doing Good Psal 37. 27. 1. Depart from Evil. There cannot possibly be a greater Evil than Sin this is the procuring Cause of all other evils there had never been any such thing as Sickness Pain Death Hell if Sin had never been Sin dos alienate from God Col. 1. 21. 'T is a most base Employment we cannot be engaged in fouler and filthier work than in working of Iniquity and is there any good that comes of it No no the works of Darkness are Unfruitfull Rom. 6. 21. What fruit had ye then in those works whereof ye are now ashamed All will repent of these evil works sooner or later the sooner the better for to repent in Hell will be too late Mind therefore your Consciences bidding you cease to do Evil else Evil will be extremely aggravated But if Evil be forsaken the great Bar to Mercy is removed and God is ready to pardon and be at peace with you Isa 55. 7. 2. Learn to do well Conscience will be pleased if God be pleased God is a Gracious Lord compare Him and Sin together Him and Satan together His Commands are not grievous he is ready to help you to do whatever he requires and to work all your works in you and for you Isa 26. 12. Your work if truely good will be wages because of that Peace and Joy at present to be found in the way of Righteousness for by good works it appears that Faith is of the right kind is the Faith of Gods Elect. Finally you must be judged according to your VVorks Rev. 22. 12. Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me to give to every man according as his work shall be As you would stand at that day up and be doing the work of the Lord now I have done with that fourth Doctrine A good Conscience has a great and lasting Influence upon the Life and all the Actions Doct. 5. The fifth Doctrine is this A good Conscience steels a mans Heart with courage and makes him fearless before his Enemies Paul earnestly beheld the Councel He was not afraid to face them because his Conscience was clear Nay we read that Foelix the Judge trembled while Paul the Prisoner was confident the reason was because the Judge had a bad Conscience which flew in his face when he heard of Righteousness Temperance and Judgement to come Act. 24. 25. but the Prisoner being acquitted by a good Conscience did not tremble but rejoyce at the thoughts of Judgement to come VVhen Bradford was brought before the Chancellour he thought to brow-beat him but could not Bradford look'd him steadfastly in the Face and out-look'd him and then look'd up to Heaven I do not wonder that he did not fear the the Look of a Popish Bishop who was not afraid as it appeared afterwards of a fiery Faggot Now the grounds why those that have a good Conscience are Fearless be these 1. The Strength of God who is engaged for them is everlasting Isa 26. 4. In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength 2. As his Strength so his Covenant and Kindness are also everlasting Isa 54. 10. For the Mountains shall depart and the Hills be removed but my Kindness shall not depart from thee nor the Covenant of my Peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy upon thee Nothing shall be able to separate Believers from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Rom. 8. ult 3. Let the weakness of Enemies be considered Why should he that has a good Conscience be afraid of a Man that shall die and of the Son of man that shall be made as Grass 4. As Enemies are weak so they are limited they are absolutely under Gods Power they are as a staffe in his hand and cannot move or strike but as he pleases Let not the Axe boast it self against him that heweth therewith Isa 10. 15. Why should a good Conscience be afraid of the Axe since the Lord in whose hand the Axe is is so sure and great a Friend 5. There is an excellent Promise That what Men do mean for Evil shall turn to Good Nay all all things shall work together for good to them that love God Rom. 8. 28. God does admirably over-rule the Sins of men and does make these subservient to his own Glory and the Good of his people (i) Bonum est ut mala sint aliter non sineret Deus ut mala essent non sinit autem nolens utique sed volens Augustin The Selling of Joseph was the Preservation of Israel the Persecuting of the Christians the Enlargement of the Church the Killing and Death of Christ the Redemption and Salvation of Mankind VSE I. Of Encouragement to the Saints the Lord takes care to secure them from Fear as well as Harm His Spirit dwells in them to comfort them and Conscience is commanded to speak Peace unto the Sons of Peace in the Lords Name (k) Injustè torqueris quid nunc diceres si juste nullum nempe tormentum conscientia majus est illâ incolumi externâ haec despicito intra te est consolatur tuus Quosdam career ad insignem gloriam alios ad eximiam fortunam multos ad coelum misit ad sepulchrum omnes nullum cepit quem non redderet Petrarch VSE II. Of Caution Take heed of wounding Conscience for that will make you exceeding timerous If you comply a little in a sinfull way and use any unlawfull Means for securing of your selves this will spoyl your Peace and your Confidence and you must expect greater straits to make you see the folly of the Course you have taken And 't will be very sad to have a Storm without and a Tempest within at the same time VSE III. Of Terrour to Believers Adversaries There is very good reason why Fear should seize upon them they are engaged in bad work they have a bad Conscience and their End if they go on in this way
they are in will be a bad End God made known his Power and got himself a Name in the destruction of Pharaoh who was a bitter Enemy unto Israel Doct. 6. Those that are truely Conscientious love their Enemies and wish them no worse than if they were their Brethren This is the sixth and last Doctrine Paul said Men and Brethren The Reasons of this Doctrine are these 1. The Command is express and plain to love Enemies Mat. 5. 44. But I say to you love your Enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute you 2. Those who now have a good Conscience were once Enemies and yet they were loved though now the Children of God yet there was a time that they were the Children of wrath even as others Eph. 2. 3. Though now they have obtained Mercy yet there was a time wherein they had not obtained mercy They should compassionate Enemies since Divine Compassion was shewed to them even when they were Enemies 3. Enemies may be converted and become Friends to God and to his People Stephen had a Love to his Enemies when Stoning him to death and prayes for them his Prayer was heard and Saul that was consenting to his death was afterwards converted and became an Apostle and laboured more abundantly than all the Apostles to spread the Gospel of Christ Jesus 4. When Enemies are loved there is great Peace and Sweetness in such a temper this is a great Evidence of Sincerity and the Heart is emptied of that Malice Envy Revenge which are greatly torturing as well as very sinfull 5. To Love Enemies makes us very like unto our Heavenly Father for he is kind unto the unthankfull and to the evil he makes his Sun to shine upon the evil and upon the good and sends Rain upon the just and upon the unjust Mat. 5. 45. The Use that I shall make of this Doctrine shall be in these three particulars 1. If the Conscientious love their Enemies surely they will much more love their Brethren How much is Love called for in the Gospel what Motives are used to perswade to it 'T is the Mark upon the Sheep of Christ that they love one another and He that dwells in love dwells in God and God in him 1 Joh. 4. 16. 2. Because so little love we may conclude there is but little Conscience (†) Pigri mortui miseri eritis si nihil a metis Amate sed quid amatis indete Amor Dei amor proximi Charitas dicitur amor mundi amor hujus saeculi Cupiditas dicitur cupiditas refraenetur charitas exicetur charitas bene oper antis dat ei spem bonae conscientiae Augustin Tom. 8. Enarrat in Psal 31. pag. mihi 188. 186. Love is grown cold and therefore surely Iniquity does abound and Conscience is grown dead 3. To revive Conscience is the way to Vnity and Peace 'T is sad to see the Members of Christ at variance among themselves While one cryes out I am of Paul and another I of Apollo and another I of Cephas 't is a sign they are all carnal and walk as men 1 Cor. 3. 3 4. 't is a sign there is little of Conscience Conscience if good is an Enemy to Strife and Division 't is against perverse Disputing and that Pride and Passion and Selfishness with which those Disputes are managed A good Conscience charges them in whom it is as they will approve themselves Subjects of the Prince of Peace and Children of the God of Peace and make it evident that they understand the Gospel of Peace that they take care to keep the Vnity of the Spirit in the Bond of Peace Eph. 4. 3. The Conclusion THus have I finished all the Doctrines which I raised from the words of my Text. I hope I have not been all this while beating the Air or Plowing upon a Rock and losing my Labour My Hearts desire and Prayer to God for this whole Congregation is that they may be Awakened Converted Built up and Saved I have spoken many words to you Now I shall address my self unto Conscience within you and desire it to speak all my words over again Satan be dumb and tempt no more Or if he will not be dumb be you deaf to his Temptations Be silent O thou Flesh and perswade no more unto that which is unto the Souls Ruine But let Conscience be heard in what it speaks in the Name and from the Word of God O Conscience rouze up thy self understand thy Power know thy Office lift up thy Voyce and do thy Duty Tell this Congregation thou hast something to say to every Mothers Child of them and command them to hear thee or else threaten to Reproach them in Hell for ever for their refusing to hearken 1. Then speak unto the Ignorant Cause a dreadful sound in their Ears (l) Hic consentiamus mala facinora conscientia flagellari multos fortuna liberat poenâ metu neminem quia infixa nobis ejus rei aversatio est quam natura damnavit ideo nanquam fides latendi fit etiam latentibus quia coarguit illos conscientia ipsos sibi ostendit Seneca Epist 97. Tell them that their danger is greater because they do not apprehend their danger and that if they are Ignorant of God and Christ they have none of that Knowledge which is Life Eternal John 17. 3. Say How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity and Fools hate Wisdom Turn you at my Reproof and use the means to obtain Understanding and especially ask it of God that he may pour out his Spirit unto you and make known his Words unto you Prov. 1. 22 23. Tell the Ignorant that the Devil is the Ruler of the darkness of this World and therefore those that are in darkness are under the Devils power bid them look unto Christ Jesus for Light and for Redemption that they may be rescued out of Satans hand and made free indeed 2. Speak O Conscience to the Profane tell them that 't is not more certain that God is Holy than that he is their Enemy they Declare themselves open Rebels against the great and glorious Majesty of Heaven and Earth And he has threatned to break such with a Rod of Iron and to dash them in pieces like a Potters Vessel Psal 2. 9. Tell the Notorious Drunkards and Swearers and Whore-mongers and Sabbath-breakers that their sins at last will find them out that wickedness will be found and felt to burn as the fire and that God must needs be infinitely too hard for all that harden themselves against him Oh call unto these Frantick self-destroying sinners to stop presently lest the very next step be into the bottomless Pit of woe out of which there can be no Recovery Roar in the Ears of those Ranting Roaring Fellows and let them not Eat or Drink or Sleep much less sin in quiet for thee tell them
that there is but an hairs breadth between them and Death between them and Hell and inform them that 't is possible even for the most Profane to be saved if they come and submit to the Lord Jesus and break off their sins by Righteousness 3. O Conscience speak unto the Civilized sinners that trust in their own Righteousness Tell them that the Prophet counted his Righteousnesses as filthy Rags Isa 64. 6. And ask them how they dare to trust in theirs Convince them that 't is not enough to escape the more scandalous wickednesses for the Pharisee was not an Extortioner nor Vnjust nor an Adulterer he Fasted and Prayed and gave Tithes of all that he Possessed and yet all this could not Justifie him Tell them that they are not so whole but they need Christ the Physitian and must needs die without him as well as others Tell them that their very Hearts must be renewed and taken off from sin and the Creature and turned unto God else they must of Necessity perish 4. Speak O Conscience unto Hypocritical Professors tell them that that which is highly esteemed among Men is abomination many times in the sight of God Say to them in the words of the Apostle and be sure to speak home Gal. 6. 7 8. Be not deceived God is not mocked for whatsoever a Man Soweth that shall he also Reap He that soweth unto the Flesh shall of the Flesh Reap Corruption Tell them that their Secret sins their secret Intemperance and Uncleanness and Dishonest dealing is set in the Light of Gods Countenance and though they may shut their own Eyes and not see God yet they cannot shut Gods Eyes nor hinder him from seeing them Tell them that Hypocrisie is most hateful and that as Hell is prepared for the Devil and his Angels so in a special manner for the Hypocrite and the Unbeliever 5. O Conscience speak unto the Rich in this world and tell them how hard 't is for them to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven and as long as they love the World and desire it more than Communion with God 't is utterly impossible Bid them to think of the Rich Man in the Gospel that went from a great Estate and from a full Table and a brave House and sumptuous Fare unto a place of Torment Put them in mind that the Love of Money is the root of all evil and that wealth has proved unto Millions onely like a weight to sink them into Destruction and perdition Bid them mind a Treasure in Heaven which is infinitely better than Gold and Silver which are Corruptible 6. Speak O Conscience to the Poor and tell them 't will be sad for them to be miserable in both Worlds 't will be sad to receive evil things here and ten thousand times worse hereafter Bid them take heed of Lying and Stealing and trusting in any sinful course for a Livelihood but perswade them to seek first the Kingdom of God and his Righteousness that all other things which are needful may be added to them Mat. 6. 33. Charge them to be Poor in Spirit to be contented with their Condition without murmuring against God or envying at those who have more than themselves and above all things to endeovour that they may be rich towards God Rich in Faith and then they will be Heirs of the Kingdom which the Lord has promised to them that Love him James 2. 5. 7. O Conscience speak unto Traders of all sorts tell them that false Weights and Measures and Balances are an abomination in the sight of God When they are about to Cheat give them a check and assure them that an Estate gotten by fraud is attended with a Curse Be with them in their Shops and at the Exchange observe how they Buy and Sell and examine all their gains bid them to mete the same measure unto others that they would have mete unto themselves and to do as they would be done unto Mat. 7. 12. Tell them that 't is the height of Madness to venture the losing of their Souls for a pound or for a shilling or for Six-pence unjustly gained since Christ who knew the value of Souls says that a Soul is more worth than the World and all the Wealth of it put together 8. Speak O Conscience unto Back-sliders tell them that it had been better for them never to have known the way of Truth and Righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the Holy Commandment delivered to them 2 Pet. 2. 21. Call them Dogs for returning to their Vomit and Swine for wallowing again in their former Mire Tell them that where there was but one unclean Spirit before they are likely to be possessed with seven now and the latter end will be worse with them than the beginning 9. O Conscience speak unto them that are truly humbled for sin and are willing to have Christ upon any terms and tell them that God is rich in Mercy ready to forgive freely the Debt of many thousand Talents These are the Sons of Peace and therefore let thy Peace and thy Lords Peace come and abide upon them (m) Futurae beatudinis non est certius testimonium quam bona conscientia mundus enim volubilitate circumvoletur ploret ridea pereat transeat nunquam conscientia mercessit Bernard lib. de Conscen c. 4. Those that mourn for their Iniquities and hate every false way and are desirous to be washed and Sanctified by the Spirit of Christ as well as Justified and reconciled by his Blood oh be sure to comfort them tell them that the Lord will not break the bruised Reed nor quench the smoaking Flax untill he send forth Judgment unto Victory Mat. 12. 20. Bid them not to be cast down not to be disquieted but to hope in the Lord and praise him who is so nigh to them that are of broken Heart and saveth such as be of a contrite Spirit 10. Lastly O Conscience speak one word to the Preacher himself and speak effectually Thou that Teachest others be sure to Teach and Learn thy self Practice not the sins thou cryest out against neglect not the Duties thou urgest others to perform Be not like those who dig in Mines and enrich others but are poor themselves Or like that Statue in Greece which shewed the way to Thebes and Athens but it self stirred not Oh take heed lest after thou hast Preached Christ and Conscience unto others thou thy self be found a cast-away FINIS A Poem out of Mr. George Herbert Called Longing pag. 142 143 144 145. WIth sick and Famisht Eyes With doubling Knees and weary Bones To thee my cries To thee my groans To thee my sighs my Tears ascend No end My Throat my Soul is hoarse My heart is wither'd like a ground Which thou dost curse My thoughts turn round And make me giddy Lord I fall Yet call From thee all pity flows Mothers are kind because thou art And dost dispose To them apart Their Infants them and they suck thee More free Bowels of pity hear Lord of my Soul love of my mind Bow down thine ear Let not the wind Scatter my words and in the same Thy Name Look on my sorrows round Mark well my Furnace O what flames What heats abound What griefs what shames Consider Lord Lord bow thine ear And hear Lord Jesu thou didst bow Thy dying head upon the Tree O be not now More dead to me Lord hear Shall he that made the ear Not hear Behold thy dust doth stir It moves it creeps it aims at thee Wilt thou deferr To succour me Thy pile of dust wherein each crumb Says Come To thee help appertains Hast thou left all things to their course And laid the reins Upon the horse Is all lockt hath a sinners plea No key Indeed the World 's thy book Where all things have their leaf assign'd Yet a meek look Hath interlin'd Thy board is full yet humble guests Find nests Thou tarriest while I die And fall to nothing thou dost reign And rule on high While I remain In bitter grief yet I am I stil'd Thy child Lord didst thou leave thy throne Not to relieve how can it be That thou art grown Thus hard to me Were sin alive good cause there were To bear But now both sin is dead And all thy promises live and bide That wants his head These speak and chide And in thy bosome pour my tears As theirs Lord JESU heal my heart Which hath been broken now so long That ev'ry part Hath got a tongue Thy beggers grow rid them away To day My love my sweetness hear By these thy feet at which my heart Lies all the year Pluck out thy dart And heal my troubled brest which cries Which dyes