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

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ought to bea● the infirmities of the weak and not to please our selves Let every one of us please his neighbour Gal. 6. 2. for his good to edification saith the Apostle 5. That we make not too bold with our liberty through indiscretion immoderateness Caut. 5 or unseasonableness in the use of it This caution ye have 1 Cor. 8. 9 10. Take heed least by any meanes this liberty of yours become a stumbling block to them that are weake for if any man see thee which hast knowledge sit at meat in the Idols Temple shall not the conscience of him which is weake be imboldened to eat those things which are offered unto Idols Consider we must who looke on and what interpretation may be made of our actions and what hurt may be done by our example least as Tertullian said we do aedificare in Exitium or as others say aedificare in Gehennam If Peter lead not right Barnabas may unawares follow into a dangerous way of dissimulation Gal. 2. 13. 6. Take heed of being regardlesse of other mens Censures and Opinions of us and Offence-taking Caut. 6 at us say not If they be offended let them be offended This is to be cruell to our selves to our Brethren yea to Christ 1 Cor. 8. 12. When you sin against your Brethren and wound their weak conscience you sin against Christ Rather say with the Apostle Who is weake 2 Cor. 11. 29 and I am not weake or sick and say Who is offended through my default and I burne not as with griefe and horrour It is not a slight or single but a great and double yea treble sinne saith Pareus 1 Cor. 8. 12. when wee so slight and grieve our Brother Tria mala cumulat saith he And Chrysostom shewes how such sin against Christ in a threefold respect Vno modo quod quae servis fiunt Christus pro in se factis imput at qui v●s spernit me spernit Altero quod in Corpus ejus saeviunt qui membra percutiunt Saule Saule quid me persequeris Tertio quod opus Christi quod propriâ morte absolvit ij propria ambitione destruunt unde ne cibi causâ destrue opus Christi inquit Apostolus 1. They sin against Christ saith he because Christ doth reckon as done to himselfe whatsoever is done to any servant of his according to that He which despiseth you despiseth me 2. Because they offer violence to his body who hurt any of his members according to that Saul Saul why persecutest thou me And 3. Because those destroy that for which Christ died according to that For meat destroy not the worke of God Rom. 14 20. 2. To prevent giving of offence certaine Rules are to be given as first 1. Consider ever what is expedient as well as know what once is lawfull 1 Cor. 6. 12. 10. 23. All things are lawfull but all things are not expedient 2. Consider not onely what is lawfull 2 Rules to be observed but what may edifie or offend that which is good and lawfull in its owne nature being inconsiderably done may be offensive All things are lawfull but all edifie not 1 Cor. 10. 23. Let all things be done to edification 1 Cor. 14. 26. 3. The Apostle gives a third Rule to avoyd offence-giving 1 Cor. 10. 24. Let no man seek his owne but every one anothers wealth This golden Rule well observed would make us happy and our times happy at once freeing the Church from many calamities and our selves from much guilt in matter of offences 4. A fourth Rulo is laid down in the same Chapter 1 Cor. 10. 32. Give none offence neither to the Jew nor to the Gentile nor to the Church of God q. d. With whomsoever you have to do labour to be inoffensive That your Conversation may please whom your Profession doth displease Call no man common or uncleane lose no man harden no man Give none offence to the Jew There was an old partition-wall up between the Jew and the Gospell some hot spirit of our time would have said Let them go they are legall superstitious stubborne hereticall no hope of them why should I regard them But the Apostle would give no offence to the worst Jew Nor to the Gentile There seemed to be a Gulfe fixed no hope of their coming over from their dumb Idols The Gentiles they are Idolatrous Profane Dogs c. Why should I seek them But give no offence to the Gentiles Nor to the Church of God Whom thou thinkest wise meeke strong able to passe by an offence make not too bold with them neither 5. Study how far thou art to go to please thy brother which is a great duty The Apostle Col. 1. 10. prayes for the Colossians That they might walke worthy of the Lord in all pleasing as if no carriage were worthy of the Gospel but of the plancid and yeelding Spirit And he exhottes Rom. 15. 2. Let every man please his neighbour for his good to edification And to perswade to the practise of a point to which we are naturally so opposite as thinking it below a Christian and zealous spirit an argument rather of an abject and servile spirit He makes this duty more commendable by Isa 42. 1. 2 Mat. 12. 18 setting downe some examples 1. The Example of Christ Rom. 15. 3. For even Christ Jesus pleased not himself He did not strive nor cry nor dissent nor divide It is therefore no disparagement to you whosoever you are 2. He propounds his owne example 1 Cor. 10. 33. and shewes his compliance so far as we would be apt to mis-interpret the like in another Even as I please all men in all things Here are two all 's both of which go very far strive to imitate him Yet with these two reservations That thou be not such a man-pleaser as ceaseth to be the servant of Christ Gal. 1. 10. viz. 1. The one negative I please all men in all things not seeking my owne profit As if some should say Paul you are a Polititian and you know how to insinuate into mens good opinions you lose nothing by that Nay saith Paul I have no designe in the earth in it I looke not after outward profit and commodity I looke higher Therefore he adds the second Positive Reserve That they may be saved q. d. I please no man by soothing him in his evill way I comply not with men so as that they be strengthened in their sinnes But my course is with all so to seek to save them as that also I may please them and so to seeke to please them as that also I may save them but if I cannot both please and save them I shall then study rather to save them though I do not please them then to please them if I may not save them Oh that we had many such examples in these times So 1 Cor. 9. 19 20 21 22 23. the same Apostle tels us how much he studied to be made
first begins to li●e and the man ceaseth to live when once he ceaseth to feel So it is in the Soul the life of grace appears sooner in the sensibleness of Conscience spiritual Compunctions Heart-smitings and Heart-prickings for sin and guilt spirituall fears of his danger sorrow for his sin and miscrie then by any other tokens whatsoever 2. Tactus as Origine primus so it is Necessitate maximus usu summus of greatest use and absolute Necessitie It is first in the Original of life appearing and the most necessarie above all the other senses in the continual course of life A man may want his sight yet be a healthful and understanding man he may want his hearing yet bee a very active and apprehensive man he may want smell and taste yet be a strong man but if he want his feeling he is a dead man These serve more to the bene esse of natural life then to the simple being So is Conscience absolutely necessarie to the very being of a Christian a man may be short in parts defective in knowledge weak in duties have lost his comforts never had the Ornaments of Abilities Expressions Experiences that some others have yet a very good Christian But if he have lost his Conscience he is a dead Christian altogether 3. Tactus they say is Hominis Optimus The other senses other creatures excel man in Vultur odaratu the Dog and Vulture in smelling in sight the Eagle in hearing the mastiff c. But in feeling man which is the most noble and excellent Creature excelleth most he hath the most quick and tender Touch which considered I know no sufficient reason to say of it that Tactus is digniute ultimus when they confess it is Origine primus necessitate maximus So the best Christian excells in the tenderest and quickest Touch of Conscience Others may out-go him in Excellencie of speech and wisdom of words worldly men may have stronger brains to out-wit and over-reach the childe of God who is not so wise in his generations as the children of this world they have Luk. 16. 8. the finer wits stronger memories sharper inventions the better expressions he hath still the better part and is the better man because he hath the better Conscience 4. Whereas other Senses have a particular Organ of their own and lie confined to a narrow roome Hearing lies in the Ear only Seeing in the Eie Taste in the Tongue or Palate Smell in the Nostrils Feeling hath no such narrow confinement but is extended all the bodie over within and without So is Conscience of vast and universall extent over the whole man over all our actions intentions words motions from first to last Faith looks to Promises Fear to Threats Hope to futures Obedience looks to duties Repentance to sins Conscience looks to all This is the great Superintendent and oversees all all Graces duties all sins and snares Therefore saith one well Conscience is not confined to any one part of the Soul it is not in the understanding alone not in the memorie will affections alone but it Dyke hath place in all the parts of the Soul Conscience is the great Mistress of the hous she as soon as she is up calls up all her maids sets them all about their work and calls Pro. 31. 15 27. them to their account 3. The virtue and worth of a good Conscience is most excellent above all other things because it most fortifies the soul with strength against and gives victorie over all Adversities it carries the soul unwounded through the greatest afflictions It 's like Oile that alwaies swims aloft whatsoever waters of distress are below It is as the Ark which hath a window open in the Top to let in the light of Heaven This like Elias Mantle hath divided the waters and earried godly souls through a floud of miseries as on drie land This hath encouraged them in the midst of fire and faggots hath accompanied them in Dens and Caves and made Martyrs sing in midst of Prisons and flames It overcomes all his tormenting Persecutors It 's like the Anvile which breaks all that is beat upon it but is it self by all strokes made more firm It makes a man like a brazen wall Jer. 1. 18. All may fight none can prevail against it at sight of fear it saith Aha At destruction and famine it doth laugh and fears not the beasts of prey Job 5. 22. This like Noahs Ark to which it is compared 1 Pet. 3. 21. is pitcht within and without Ideo bituminata intrinsecus ne aquam emitteret suam extrinsecus ne admitteret alienam Aug. It is pitcht within that it may not let out any of his own water of comfort laid in for his own necessities and relief And pitcht without that it may not let in any thing from without that may endanger the safetie of the ship It keeps in all that may do Good it keeps out all that may do hurt It is the Christians Armourie or Magazine like the Tower of David furnished with a thousand Bucklers Cant. 4. 4. or like the house of the forest of Lebanon wherein Solomon put three hundred shields of beaten gold 1 King 10. 17. This will inable a man with undaunted courage to hold up his head before any Judgement seat Act. 23. 1. yea before God's Tribunal 1 Joh. 3. 21. Keep but Conscience safe it will keep thee safe Keep it in puritie and it will keep thee in peace It will make Tranquilla Conscientia tranquillat omnia thy face to shine as Stevens did The chearful Conscience maketh the chearful Countenance Prov. 15. 13. This will bee a drie house to thee in a wet daie it will make alwaies fair weather within doores what ever weather it is abroad Thou shalt sub tecto imbrem exaudire and thou shalt ever finde it fair above head what ever it is under foot This makes nothing of the Viper of Detraction Envie and Malignitie at which another man would have swoln or sworn but without any more ado shakes it off into the fire whence it came Premat corpus fremat Diabolus trahat mundus illa semper erit secura Let men world and divels do their worst Bernard de Consc ca. 8. they cannot hurt Conscience This is the whole skin which it is good sleeping in for a torn Conscience is the worst rent The wounded spirit who can bear If Prov. 18. 14. thou suffer Conscience to be torn to keep thy skin whole the rent is made worse if thou lose thy Conscience to save thy life thou art a Loser not a Saver and if thou lose thy l●fe to save thy Conscience thou art the greatest gainer by that which the world calls greatest loss Skin for skin and all that I have to save my life saith the world in Satans Language Job 2. 4. Skin for skin and life for life to save my Conscience saith the godly man 4. Good
faithful Ministers for delivering Gods minde and rebuking the sins of their wicked hearers sometimes Take heed thou tread not in their steps to interdict and silence thy own conscience this is more to be hearkened to in many cases then any Divine or Minister whatsoever this is the mouth of the Lord the Candle of the Lord searching and discovering Pro. 20. 27. the secrets and inward things of the belly We say conscience in some cases is above all witnesses a thousand witnesses it is a thousand Preachers too God saith to conscience as he Conscientia mille Ministri did to Moses once Exod. 7. 1. See I have made thee a God to Pharaoh and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet Conscience shall be to me in stead of a mouth saith God and to thee in stead of God as Moses was to Aaron Exo. 4. 16. Consciences second office is Regall or Magistratuall 2. Consciences Regall office a higher office then the former Conscience hath a commanding and legislative power to binde even kings in chains and nobles with fetters of iron He is thy Perpetuus Dictator whose dictares are Laws They were a law to themselves Rom. 2. 14. This king may neither be deposed nor resisted but ever informed counselled and treated with and then ever obeyed as Gods vicegerent Whosoever cast off the imperiall commands of conscience God saith to them as he did to Samuel concerning Israel 1 Sam. 8. 7. They have not rejected thee but they have rejected me that I should not reigne over them God giveth to conscience a large Commission and saith to it as to Eliakim in the day of his investiture in his office I will clothe thee with a new robe and commit the government into thy hand The key of the house of David will I lay on thy shoulders Thou shalt shut and none shall open thou shalt open and none shall shut Isay 22. 21 22. What conscience peremptorily commands or forbids is more to a godly man then what Kings or States command And the religious man resolveth Conscientia mille Reges mille Leges rather to disobey any unjust commands of Kings or States and fall under any displeasure of men then to go against the dictates of his own rightly informed conscience We are not carefull O King to answer thee in this Dan. 3. 16. matter said they to Nebuchadnezzar although they heard his expresse commands and saw the fiery furnace before them Julian the Apostate forbad the Christians to sing Psalms Risui ei catui furias suas esse intellexit Magd. cent 4. cap. 3. the very women and virgins did purposely sing the louder when the Emperour was to go by their doors that he saw his wrath was by them derided And those Psalms they picked out that condemned his Idols as that Psalm 135 ver 15. 16 18. Conscience rides in the second Charet and is Gen. 41. 40 43. 44. solo Deo minor soli Deo secunda Without thee saith God to conscience as Pharaoh once to Joseph shall no man lift up his hand or foot Onely in the Throne will I be greater then thou Conscience hath a kingly or magistratuall power but must not exercise an Arbitrary power It must be it self at his beck who is in the Throne Of whose subordination to God and his written Word and Law we shall speak afterwards in his proper place His third office is Testimoniall or to bear Consciences Testimoniall Office witnesse Rom. 2. 14 15. The Gentiles who had not the Law in Tables of stone as had the Jews had the Law written in their hearts which did shew it self in this work of Conscience Their consciences also bearing witnesse Rom. 2. 14. 15. c. This is the witnesse in a mans self a greater testimony then that of John This is the Epistle of Christ written in the heart Our rejoycing is this The testimony of our conscience 2 Cor. 1. 12. A testimony and certificate which Gods Spirit doth attest to and consent with Rom. 9. 1. My conscience bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost In the mouth of these two great witnesses the state of a Christian is established For the Spirit it self witnesseth with our spirit that we are the Rom. 8. 16 sons of God Rom. 8. 16. This testimony of conscience is above a thousand witnesses be it Conscientia mille testes for thee or against thee 1 Job 3. 19 20 21. Turpe quid acturus te sine teste time Take heed wheresoever thou art what thou dost Conscience will out with all the secret passages it hath observed It is like Joseph among his brethren who carried home their ill report to their father and made them much anger Thou never sinnest without a spie or Gen. 37. 2. an observer and informer Do therefore as was said of Mr. Latimer who being examined in private spake more freely till he over-heard one behinde the Hangings whom he saw not present to take in writing what he said then he spake more warily Take heed what thou dost remotis arbitris Curse not the King no not in thy thought conscience the margin reads it scientia Arias Mont. conscientia Junius Nor the rich in thy bed-chamber for a bird of the air shall carry the voyce and tha● which hath wings shall tell the matter Eccles 10 20. Thine own conscience may be that bird Elisha did relate what was in agitation at the 2 Kin. 6. 12 King of Syrias Councell-table yea what passed in his Bed-chamber Such an observing witnesse hath every one continually with him do he good or evil Conscience is a witness and is like one of those two famous witnesses spoken of Revel 11. 3. who prophesied in sackcloth despised and opposed by the men of the world as the great Rev. 11 3. 5. 6 c. heart troubler and worlds tormenter they rejoyced made merry and sent gifts when they were slain these brought all plagues from heaven among men and could shut up Heaven it self fire came out of their mouth yet kill this if thou darest and keep it down if thou canst it will rise again after a few days stand upon his feet the sight thereof will terrifie and dismay thee but thou shalt know it will go up to Heaven there to accuse and condemn thee 4. The fourth Office of conscience is Judiciall Conscienecs judicial Office and Judge-like It doth passe sentence on thee and read thy doom Hence men are said to be convicted of their own Consciences Joh. 8. 9. Some are said to be self condemned Tit. 3. 11. Happy is he that condemneth not himself Rom. 14. 22. If our heart that is our conscience condemn us God is greater then our hearts to condemn us further But if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. Consciences sentence is the fore-runner of the last judgement Praejudicium Divini judicii as Joseph interpreted
for be weakeneth the hands of the people and he seeketh not the welfare of this people but the hurt Hee is no waies well affected to the State but a malignant So they Act. 5. 33. 7. 54. were cut to the heart and gnashed at Steven with their teeth as if they could have eaten him up Thus tender was the High Priest who rent his clothes at Mat. 26. 65 Christs supposed blasphemy when he should have rent his heart for his owne treason cruelty and hypocrisy All this is not tenderness but effeminate softness outwardly and inwardly the greatest hardness There may be mollities animi where is maxima durities cordis as in the godly there may be summa durities or is vultus when maxima mollitudo cordis Ezek. 3. 9. Christs face was harder then flint Isa 50. 7. Ezekiels then Adamant when the heart was most tender So è contra wicked men have tender skin and flesh hard heart and spirit Their Passions are soft and touchy Their dispositions hard and unruly Their love to their sinne is tender to their soules as cruell as the Ostriches of the wilderness Lam. 4. 3. This is a corrupt softness like that in a rotten Plum which if you touch you breake But it hath a hard stone in the midst that will not breake So have these a hard stone in the heart when so much outward tendernesse But the right tenderness is that which was Act. 2. 37. Their hearts were peirced and being pricked in heart they cryed out Men and brethren what shall we doe They fall not out with Peter but with themselves As Austin looked upon it as a marke of grace in Alipius when he had reproved his sinne viz. Stage playes Quod ilius acciperet ad succensendum mihi accepit honestus Adolescens ad succensendum sibi ad me ardentius diligendum When another would have been angrie with me the honest youth saith he was onely angrie with himself and loved me the better Right tenderness is to be very sensible of the evil of sin and the danger thereof thereupon impatient of the sin but easily patient of any Reproof Let the righteous smite me Psal 141. 5. that my heart may not stab me another day and let him reprove that my own heart may not reproach me you see the sound hand will endure touching and shaking when the sore hand must not bee so much as touched 2. Scrupulousness As when one hath got some stone or gravell in his shooe he cannot set his foot on the ground without complaint he cries out Tender when his foot is plainly Galled This is no good tenderness neither Take out this Gravel and hee may walk without any more ado The Apostles rule will help him Rom. 14. 5. Let every man bee fully persuaded in his own minde His meaning is not that he would have us at adventures lay aside all Enquiries but onely rid our selves of unnecessarie and unprofitable scruples Unnecessarie scrupulousness is when a man makes a stir about that in which God's Word is silent and makes a sin where the Scripture makes none The priests made one while a great scruple of going into the Praetorium the house of a heathen Joh. 18. 28. man least they should bee ceremonially defiled and so held from the Passeover but made no matter of defiling themselves morally with the guilt of Innocent bloud Another while they made a great scruple of putting the money into their holy Corban because the price of blood but questioned not the giving the money unto the same end and taking the blood it self upon themselves and their children Matt. 27. 25. These tithe mint Mat. 23. 23 and Cummin and yet neglect the grand and weightie matters of the Law which God gives especially in charge Mercy truth and Judgement keep a stir about washing of pots Mar. 7. 11. and hands make nothing of filiall disobedience to parents strain at a Gnat swallow a Camell cannot walk upon even ground yet can dance bare-foot among thorns and kick against the Pricks Herod had a great deal of this Conscience he had passed his word and given his Oath to go back were perjurie but to go forward by virtue of his rash oath to commit murder is Pietie when the rule is injusta vincula rumpit Justitia Unnecessarie and vain scruples the Apostle would have us lay aside 1 Cor. 10. 25. asking no question in such cases for Conscience sake 3. A third faultie tenderness is that too much facilness and flexibleness of spirit to every Counsellor and Enticer whereby the blinde often followes the blinde or at least the blinde followes the lame for which Ephraim was broken in Judgement because he was so readie and obsequious at every commandement Hos 5. 11. of this man you may say he is Gereus in vitium flecti monitoribus asper As wax for softness prone to every vice As thorns for sharpness stern to best advice Young and tender-hearted Mollis animo Jun. Thus tender-hearted was Rehoboam 2 Chro. 13. 7. Tener corde But to whom was he so tender-hearted It was onely to the young mens Counsel The wiser Old men found him not so tender to better counsell but pertinaciously stiffe to them and immoveably resolved not to yeeld in the least to any submissive Petitions for the ease of his aggrieved Subjects Zedekiah who rebelled most against the word of the Lord of any other was as easie and flexible to the Princes as could be imagined Jer. 38. 5. The king is not he who can do any thing against you saith he to the Princes but as inexorable and refractorie to Jeremy as was possible These the world calls your Good Natures you may work them as you will and lead them whither you will but who is it that may lead them Not God not the godly Minister not his religious Parents but his vain Companions But he onely can be said truly to be of a Good nature who is partaker of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. I am sure Christ sets us another Example He was as immoveable as a Rock as hard as Adamant he set his face as flint Isai 50. 7. When he heard any evil motioned Get thee behinde me Satan Matt. 16. 23. said he to Peter So to Satan tempting Matth. 4. 10. Get thee hence Satan But to God It is my desire to do Psal 40. 8. Joh. 6. 38. thy will O my God I came not to do my own will but his that sent mee And to John It becomes Mat. 3. 15. Eze. 3. 8. 9. us to fulfill all righteousness This is the right good Nature to have a face of flint a fore-head of Adamant harder then flint as Ezekiels was to any evil motion but as soft as wax to any good Bray him in a mortar among wheat yet is he stedfast and unmoveable This hardness is better then all that former tenderness 4. The fourth ill tenderness is of that Conscience which is weak
and sickly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Apostle calls it 1 Cor. 8. 12. and which is easily cast down and discouraged This was the disease of the stony ground it was so Mat. 13. 21. tender that it was offended at the Cross Outward tenderness is a disease inward is a virtue The stony ground was outwardly tender but inwardly hard therefore could not endure any outward scorching The good ground on the other side was inwardly soft and tender to give Root to the seed received but it was outwardly hardy able to endure all weathers This kinde of Conscience cries A lion in the way I shall be torn in the streets This picks a quarrell at the Gospel for some Circumstances Prov. 26. 13 Why do thy disciples eat with unwashen hands and walk contrarie to the old Ceremonies of the fathers Mark 7. 2. This bird-eyed conscience as I may call it starts as the bird-eyed horse at every leafe shaking or bird flying and layes his Rider on his back or flings him into the dirt haply this is a pittifull weake conscience This was the conscience of the mixt multitude and of the ten spies they started at sight Num. 11. 4. of an Anakim and would not by any means Nu. 13. 31. advise the people to endanger themselves by adventuring forward This conscience is known by these ill Properties 1. It is apt to scruple things lawfull it eateth nothing but herbs Rom. 14. 2. 2. It puzzleth and perplexeth it self about businesses of no great moment about dayes meats c. Touch not taste not handle not Col. 2. 21. 3. It is apt to judge him that upon better grounds is not of his minde and practice Rom. 14. 3. Let not him which eateth not judge him which eateth which he is very apt to do 4. He is apt to stumble Rom. 14. 21. 5. Or to bee grieved and distasted Rom. 14. 21. Occasions whereof as it is the dutie of the strong and wise Christian to avoid so it is the propertie of the weak to bee subject unto 5. And a fift ill tenderness there is of the Conscience all awakened but such as cannot take any rest more Psal 77. 2 3 4. My sore ran all night and ceased not my soul refused comfort I complained and my spirit was overwhelmed Thou holdest mine eyes waking I am so troubled that I cannot speak So the like Psal 51. 3. My sin is ever before me Psal 38. 17. I am ready to halt and my sorrow is continually before me This is a sad and painful if not sometimes also a sinful tenderness when the soul sees nothing but sin guilt and miserie in it self nothing but anger wrath and frownes in God and no hopes of Redemption by Christ or of recoverie by the Spirit of Grace This is a sad Tenderness or Soreness or Bruisedness or woundedness of Spirit through too much sensibleness of sin tending apace towards fearfull distrust of God and despair of mercy This poor soul is as a man who hath all his bones broken and all his members dislocated and out of Order his heart melting like wax in his belly Psal 22. 14. his spirit even failing nor can he turn himself in his bed without pain A tendernesse this is but from disease not soundnesse Or as you see another man who hath a sore raw eye or an eye that hath been scalded or scorched in the fire it is very tender it cannot look upon the Sun or a Candle without offence it alwaies runs drops trickles and requires some soft silk or fine Linnen to bee before it So the conscience scorched with sin that hath not the fire taken out by the Eye-salve made of Christ his blood Rev. 3. 18. and hath not the fine silk and Linnen you read of Rev. 19. 8. is a sad Conscience though tender it is raw and running and sore and fierie Such a Conscience is tender indeed till it bee the worse again Thus Leahs eyes were said to bee tender it was small Commendation to her they were debiles weak as Junius renders it Rachel was more fair and more beloved her eyes were not so tender Gen. 29. 17. But the Right tendernesse of Conscience is that due Proportion of sense in an awakened ● Right tenderness and self-observing spirit which labours to keep the soul guarded and unmolested He takes up the resolution of Job My heart shall not reproach me so long as I live Job 27. 6. q. d. I can endure reproaches enough from any other hand I am so outwardly hardy but from my self and my own Conscience I love not to be upbraided with inward heart-burning and risings in my stomack I am inwardly so sensible This tenderness shews it self in respect of God Others Self 1. Of God in every thing to which God is In respect of God Ex. 10. 26. entitled and hath interest in Moses stands for a Hoof. Our Saviour tender of the least Jod or Title of the Law of God He was all in Mat. 5. 18. Joh. 2. 17. a flame with the zeal of God's house when he saw it perverted to uses of merchandize This is not to be called Strictnesse Scrupulousnesse or Rigidnesse but right Tendernesse and true Zeal The command of God to his People is Exod. 23. 13. In all things whatsoever I have spoken unto you be circumspect 1. Particularly and principally he is tender of those things wherein God's Glory and And Particularly 1. Of Gods Honor. Honour is concerned Our Saviour layeth down this for a Maxime Joh. 7. 18. He that speaketh of himself and acteth for himself seeketh his own glorie but he that seeketh his glorie that sent him the same is true and no unrighteousnesse is in him And he therein did vindicate himself against his calumnious Opposers Joh. 8. 49. 50. I honour my Father and ye dishonor me I seek not mine own glorie There is one that seeketh and judgeth This tenderness makes a man altogether regardless of self in respect of Name Credit Family Commoditie yea of Life I count nothing dear to my self so that God may be Act. 20. 24. magnified be it by my loss or life or death The Holy Martyrs counted nothing great or precious or base or hard in relation to God's Honour When the Christian women in Julians time were forbidden to sing their Psalms in their houses they sang out the louder especially when the Emperour was to pass by And they sang out those verses of the Psal 115. 4. 8. The Idols of the heathen are silver and gold the work of mens hands They that make them are like unto them and so are all they that trust in them Yea they added by the appointment of Publia the head and forwardest of the Company to their former wonted Psalms that vers of the 68. Psalm Let God arise let his enemies he scattered And Theodoret. lib. 5. c. 19. when the Emperour in a rage sent for her into his palace and commanded her
to be beaten She accounted her self honoured saith the Historie and went home and sang nevertheless as she was wont to do Yea the Ecclesiasticall writers of that Age tell us that when that Apostate Julian had thrown down Christian Religion and set up all kindes of Religions and Idol-worship the Christians would sing publikely and at their burials c. Confundantur omnes qui Magd. Cent. 4. c. 3. adorant sculptilia c. Confounded be all they that worship graven images No Restraint could hinder them from professing their Religion and reproving his impietie This is right tenderness when in a clear cause of God it makes one like a Brazen wall Jer. 1. 18. or like Adamant harder then flint or like fire invincibly resolute against all discouragements to break through whatsoever difficulties to declare for the Honor and Worship of God Josiah was a man tender-hearted no man more yet in the Cause of God and in promoting Reformation in Religion how beyond measure was he passionately zealous that he could not possibly escape the worlds Censure of immoderate Rigour Crueltie and too much Severitie yet he hath this honourable Testimonie from the Spirit of God 2 King 22. 25. Like to him there was no king before him that turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soul according to all the Law of Moses neither after him arose any like unto him Yet this tender-hearted Josiah burnt idolatrous Priests alive and sacrificed them upon the altars and burnt the bones of the dead He threw down Altars and would not leave standing any of the old high Places that some worse Kings had set up and some better Kings had in their daies tolerated he would allow no longer diversitie of worships and pluralitie of Religions upon any such pretence as giving Libertie of Conscience This had been a foolish tendernesse had hee done so and had fitter for a weak Rehoboam been the greatest impietie that could have been shewed to God and the greatest crueltie to mens souls Jeroboam and Jehu in their own things zealous in matter of the subjects libertie seemingly and Politickly tender stout Champions against and bold Opposers of the Exorbitancies of Princes but all was to builde their own houses in the things of God as cold as Coleworts Jeroboam frameth a Politick Religion sutable to the Temper of the People and hee would have Priests of the Temper of his Religion no Scripture Canon to settle his Religion by or any bred up in the Schools of the Prophets their then Universities for his Priests but any gifted or rather giving brother though of the lowest of the people fit to Officiate in that Emploiment which they atheistically look upon as a humane but politick Invention to keep men in awe and Order Here was State-tenderness indeed but too much but no Church-Tenderness at all great and tender respect had to their own glorie none to God's and accordingly it prospered On the other side you finde Nehemiah earnest and tender in God's Honour and Interest carefull he was and strict order he gives that the Sabbath be more religiously Neh. 13. 15 18. 19. observed how enraged was he to see the Temple or any lodging thereunto belonging to bee perverted from that use which it was first intended for he threw out Tobiahs ver 8. housholdstuff he required the Priests and Levites Portions and Tithes should be restored ver 10. 11. contended with the Nobles and took on passionately because the House of God was forsaken yet in his own particular concernments he was the most remiss man in the world to the loss of many a fair hundred of pounds that he might have made of his Publike Offices as well as others before him But thus did not he because of the fear of his God Neh. 5. 15. 2. This tenderness must shew it self again 2. Of God's truth in respect of Gods Truth which must be bought not sold How tender or jealous do you finde Paul Gal. 2. 11. when the truth of the Gospel was in danger He that could in other things be made all things to all men when truth and holiness might not bee prejudiced would not admit of any halting in Peter but fell out with him Resisted him to the face and sharply expostulated with him The least Jod and Tittle of Divine Truth is very precious and not to be thrown away As the least pieces of Jewels or filings of Gold are very precious and to be made much of He that breaks one of these least commandements and teacheth men so shall bee called least in the Kingdom of Heaven Matt. 5. 19. In the second of the Revelation the Church of Ephesus is commended by our Saviour for Rev. 2. 2. two things seeming contrarie her bearing and not bearing her Patience and Impatience I know thy works and labour and patience and how thou canst not bear them which are evil but hast tried them that say they are Apostles and are not and hast found them liars and hast born and hast patience and for my Names sake hast laboured and hast not fainted Here is bearing and not bearing patience and not suffring commended which seem to imply contradictions But it is easily reconciled Any thing that touched self they could bear the least diminution of Divine Truth they could not bear There is a Patience that is a virtue sometimes and sometimes a sin There is an Impatience that may sometime be a virtue as oftener it is sinful In thy own cause shew Patience in God's cause take heed of too much Patience Suffer thou that truth may not suffer Shew Patience in suffering evil but in doing ill and approving evil Shew thy self impatient it is then the better virtue And as the good man must shew his tenderness in retaining of and contending for old Truths so must he take heed of venting any new doctrines Be not too busie in doubtful disputations Take heed of stamping God's Image on our Coin and writing his superscription about our new and uncertain Conjectures and obtruding our own conceived new lights upon the worlds credulitie Thus may the false prophets do of whom we are foretold who shall for filthy lucre or airy honour make merchandize of Gods truth others souls and their own Consciences 2 Pet. 2. 3. whose Judgment slumbereth not and whose damnation sleepeth not How happie is that Minister that can say I have done nothing against the truth but for the truth I have not followed cunning devised 2 Cor. 13. 8 2 Pet. 1. 16. fables in setting forth the Gospel of Christ nor are we as many who corrupt the word of God but as of sinceritie and as of God in the sight of God 2 Cor. 2. 17 speak we in Christ How sad is it Our Church should be troubled every day and weak unstable souls tossed to and fro with that which was the haunt of the fals prophets of old I have dreamed and I have dreamed Jer. 23.
this first part of Tenderness in respect of God Secondly Tenderness of Conscience must 2. In respect of others shew it self in reference to Men as well as to God and so both to all in generall and to each man particularly to godly to wicked to strong to weak 1. To the godly and that 1. Forbearing to 1. The Godly 1. By not grieving them offend one of them one of the least of them by any just scandal or grievance on our part Who is offended at least through my default and I burn not saith tender Conscience He is ever tender of the Peace and studious of the satisfaction of every honest man If my meat or my wine or my apparell or my hair or my Companie make my brother to offend I will eat no meat drink no wine put on no such apparel keep on no such hair frequent no such companie while the world standeth least I make my brother to offend This is the voice of Tender or True Conscience like that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 8. 13. 2. We must bee as tender of their Reputation 2. Not disparaging or discrediting them that we expose not them or rather Religion in them to reproch What an excellent Instance have we in Joseph who is called a just man for his labour He had looked upon Mary formerly as a godly and gracious woman and she being now with childe he knew not what to think on it but having a purpose to leave her being formerly contracted to her that he might not bring reproach upon himself he purposed to leave her privately that the world might not take notice of any such thing that so he might not bring reproach upon her Joseph her Matt. 1. 19. husband saith the Text being a just man and not willing to make her a publike example was minded to put her away privately This was his Care his Honestie his Tenderness and his Righteousness But where shall wee finde the like Tenderness or Righteousness now adayes to salve the Credit and conceal the failings of our brethren we are glad if we have any thing to Paradeigmatize them for and say Report and we will report it Jer. 20. 10. As if we were of the minde of him of whom Jerom spake whom he calls passionately Scriptorem illiteratum qui Procacitatem Ruffinus maledicentium in omnes signum estimet bonae Conscientiae that is to think there is no other token of a good Conscience then to speak ill of other men and traduce their persons and laie open their nakedness to their disgrace That godly Emperour Constantine was quite of another minde who was wont to saie if he should finde a Christian Bishop or Pastor overtaken in any infamous Act he would rather pull off his purple Robe to throw upon him to cover him then that any should come by his means to hear of it to the scandal of Religion I am sure this is more like to the Example of Christ who casts his Purple Robe upon us that our sins should not be taken notice of 3. This good Conscience will make us tender of disagreeing with or dividing from 3. Not dissenting or dividing from them any who are godly upon unnecessarie and frivolous grounds Enter not upon doubtful disputations fall not upon questions that nourish jangling but destroy Edification This is the common sin or miserie shall I say of these times Or shall I say both There is much of misery in this sin and much of sin in this misery How much good is ill spoken of ordinarily because it is the good of such persons against whom we have taken up a prejudice and how much ill is gladly spoken of with the Joy of all the heart when it is of some persons of whom we had rather hear ill then well when we should studie to make and represent one another as good as we could that we might congregate and unite we strive to make at least to represent one another as bad as we can that we may disgregate and divide This is a lamentation and cannot but be for a lamentation to all godly and peaceable spirits to see such unkinde Heats and Animosities raised and cherished among men otherwise godly judicious and learned differing about matters of no great moment yet filling the world with bitter invectives one against the other Jerom is fallen out with Ruffinus and writes bitterly against him Ruffinus thinks as much scorn of Jerom as he could possibly of him he resolves not to die in his debt he writes as bitterly against him The truth is though both good men they were both to blame There was too much of passion in them both Must they needs be condemned and abandoned by all men whom some learned men have once condemned and that haply out of inconsiderate prejudice must a godly man be presently expunged out of the Calendar of Saints and enrolled in the black Bill of Hereticks because it pleaseth some to reckon him such Must Jerom's onely Censure and sharper writings against Helvidius Jovinian Vigilantius Aerius or some others make them ipso facto execrable Hereticks When upon through disquisition and calmer consideration their reputed errors were but the prejudices of those present times Oh how were it to bee wished that this were more thought of upon all hands So that Christians might not be to Christians as the Jewes were to the Samaritans Joh. 4. 9. The Jewes have no dealing with Samaritans And that one godly man might not be to other godly men as a Shepherd to the Egyptian Gen. 46. 34. and that our publique meetings and our religions exercises there might not be as the Israelites Sacrifice in the sight of the Egyptians both of them an abomination Ex. 8. 26. How happy were we if we had so learned Christ as to put off with the old man according to the Apostles counsell Eph 4. 31 32. All bitternesse and wrath and clamour and evill speaking with all malice and to be kinde one to another tender-hearted forgiving one another as God for Christs sake hath forgiven us 2. As we must be thus tender to all godly 2 Weaker ones ones in generall so especially to the weaker ones among them no ways to discourage them despise them or impose any burdens upon much lesse lay any stumbling-block before them but to beare their infirmities Ro. 15. 1. condescend to their terms Rom. 12. 16. And not to please our selves but them rather This is to be like-minded to Jesus Christ who is tender of all his little ones that believe in him He himself beares their infirmities and feeles their sicknesses Mat. 8. 17. He saith the Prophet gathereth up the Lambs with his arm and carrieth them in his bosome and gently leadeth them that are with young Esay 40. 11. He doth not strive nor cry nor is his voyce heard in the streets The bruised Reed he breaketh not and the smoaking Mat. 12. 18 19. flax he quencheth not But
to suffer for Conscience onely one thing they could not endure viz. to suffer in and from Conscience And here might I write a whole Volume of the sufferings of Primitive and later times or transcribe many large Volumes of Ecclesiastical Histories treating of this subject in their Martyrologies They were deprived of States degraded of Offices yet did bear it they were imprisoned they were exiled yet did endure it they were slain racked tortured yet did they suffer it Some were hanged some headed some were burned some drowned some devoured of wilde beasts some pull'd in pieces by men more savage then beasts yet they did all bear it and rejoyced they suffered for Conscience and for God Attalus and Alexander were twice bayted with wilde beasts to be torn in pieces Eccl. Hist l. 5. cap. 1. by them as Eusebius reports Attalus escaping the beasts was reserved to other torments to be burnt to death in an iron chair heated red-fire-hot yet did hee bear all Macedonius Theodulus and Tatianus laid Socrat. hist l. 3. cap. 13. upon a Gredyron and broiled to death yet did they bear it Marcus Arethusius was stripped naked then had his bodie all over daubed with Broth Butter and Honey then hung up in a Cage in the hot scorching Sun to be eaten up with flies and stung to death with wasps yet did he suffer all rather then give one half-peny to re-edifie that Idol Temple in his diocess which he had formerly plucked down To be eaten up with flies and stung with wasps he did account farre more desirable that he might preserve his Theodoret. Lib. 3. cap. 6. Conscience in Puritie and Peace then to bee eaten up of horrour and stung with Hornets if to preserve his life he had delivered up his Conscience There were many Christians together stopt up in Lakes or Caves artificially made close which Lakes or Ditches were filled with a companie of Dormise kept hungrie to gnaw and feed upon the poor Christians they all the while bound hand and foot that they could not keep off those hunger-starved creatures which were kept Mag. Cent. 4. cap. 3. Ex Theodoreto without meat also purposely that they might fasten upon the bodies of those godly men which lingring and miserable death they under-went yet was not their faith and patience at all born down saith the Historian They chose much rather to lie in such a Lake artificially stopt and to be eaten up alive with those Vermin their Conscience being preserved then to yeeld up this Fort of Conscience for fear of any earthly torments to be eaten up while alive with guilt and horrour of Conscience And when dead to be bound hand and foot and cast into an infernal Lake of fire and brimstone eternally stopt up there to be conversant with filthy spirits and to be eaten up with those hellish furies Yea to make an end for it is impossible to mention all Lactantius saith not onely the men among the Cbristians and those of stronger years and hearts but even our women and little children saith he have Latrones robusti corporis viri ejusmodi lacerationes perferre nequeunt exclamant gemitus edunt Nostri autem ut de viris taceam pueri mulierculae tortores suos taciti vincunt expromere illis gemitum necignis potest Lact. 1. 5. cap. 13. endured all torments and been too hard for their Tormentors no rack no fire could fetch so much as a groan from them which the stoutest Theeves and Malefactors among their Persecutors could not undergo but they would roare and crie out through impatience and disabilitie to endure them But how little of this good Conscience is to be found now adaies when Christ saith Who is on my side who Our times have brought forth many a degenerate Christian silken and satten Christians Christians for the right hand and the left if Christ have any Kingdoms Mannours or Honours to bestow But if a Cross they all forsake him and fly and shift for themselves as the terrified Disciples did the night of his Passion Luther call's some of the Divines of his Time Theologos Gloriae they would not suffer Some faithfull Ones were called Theologi Crucis so have we many Saints now adaies who are rather Triumphant Saints then Saints militant Well we know who hath said He that is ashamed of me I shall one day be ashamed of him he that loveth his life shall lose Mar. 8. 38. it but he that loseth his life for my sake shall finde it Joh. 12. 25. There is no condition or sort of men have in Scripture more abundant and more excellent Promises then these that suffer And none in Scripture have more Cautions and Rules given then those set down to regulate and circumscribe our sufferings for all that suffer cannot say they suffer for Conscience and for God and then what thank can they exspect from God if they suffer for their own default they must as we say thank themselves There be four kindes of sufferings which a Four ill kindes of sufferings good Conscience can have no comfort in therefore must seek to avoid 1. That we put not our selves upon Voluntarie and Arbitrarie suffrings and place Religion and Conscience in it when we have done thus did the Baalists of old who did cur and lance themselves that the bloud followed 1 Ki. 18. 28. Thus do the blinde Papists at this day Pennance and Discipline themselves out of a superstitious opinion of merit or satisfaction but they have no thank of God because though it may proceed from some kinde of Conscience yet it is a blinded and deluded Conscience not that Conscience towards God which Peter spake of Therefore 2 Pet. 2. 19. God will say to them Who required this at your hands Isai 1. 12. And as to them who offered their sons and daughters to Moloch It never came into my heart neither did I command them saith the Lord Jer. 7. 31. These things have indeed a shew of wisdom in will-worship and humilitie and neglecting of the Col. 2. ult bodie not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh But these are not the sufferings of Christians nor can these say They bear these as the marks of the Lord Jesus in their bodies Gal. 6. 17. 2. That we pull not upon our selves Vnnecessarie and unwarrantable sufferings by a preposterous and precipitate intermedling in businesses out of our way and calling This is to suffer as busie-bodies in other mens matters But that in the Apostles Language is clean another thing then to suffer as a Christian therefore he doth oppose them and is all one as to suffer as an evil doer therefore they are joyned together 1 Pet. 4. 15 16. 3. That we pull not upon our selves Necessarie but deserved evil sufferings from the hand of Justice for our evil doings These may say with the Thief suffering with Christ we have the same Crosses that he
Consciences witnessing with them saith the Apostle of the naturall Heathens and their thoughts as well excusing as accusing them They may have tranquillam but not securam conscientiam as Bernard distinguisheth And thus it is said of Socrates who living according to the rules of his naturall enlightened understanding when he came to die and was put to death he took his death with much Resolution and Tranquillitie of minde He said of his enemies They could but kill him they could not hurt him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet for all this no naturall Conscience can be a good Conscience 1. Because though it may cum seipso cum aliis scire yet it doth not cum Deo scire At the best it is liable to that rebuke given unto Peter Matth. 16. 23. Get thee behinde me Satan thou art an offence unto me for thou savourest not the things that Mat. 16. 23 be of God but those which are of men onely 2. Because it is not purged by the bloud of sprinkling It is without Christ therefore without God and Covenant and Promise and Eph. 2. 12. Hope and Mercie 3. Because as it hath not the purifying bloud of the Lamb so nor the purifying water Ezek. 36. 25. of the spirit sprinkled on it whereby it should be cleansed now whatsoever is born of the flesh is still but flesh and onely that which is born of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3. 6. 4. Because it hath not Faith which is that whereby the heart is further purified Act. 15. 9. And the Apostle when he bids Timothy hold faith and a good Conscience tells us as much that first faith must be had and then good Conscience Good Conscience is never without Faith never before Faith This Conscience how ever many may lull themselves asleep on it yet is it a bed shorter then that a man should stretch himself on it and a Isai 28. 20. covering narrower then that a man should wrap himself in it No sure Refuge is it and a strong fort it is not to endure a storming It is not the Ark of Noah of Moses it may be not an Ark of Gopher wood but made of Paper Rushes not pitched with Pitch but daubed with slime not furnisht with all manner of Provision as Noahs was to hold out to the utmost for a whole year and longer Gen. 7. 11. with Gen. 8. 14. but utterly unfurnisht for a day that unless he be taken out of it as Moses was he may there lie and crie and famish and perish This fort is no better then that hold of the idol Berith to which when the men of Shechem fled for Refuge it was fired over their Judg. 9. 46. 49. heads and they perished miserably in it A poor man and this naturall Conscience may perish and burn together Oportet Conscientiam non solum bonam esse tranquillam sed securam Bern. Par. Ser. 4. The fourth use discovers another mistake of theirs who judge their Conscience good when it is nothing so With many that is held for the best Conscience that is most still quiet and sleepie as ignorant people think of a Minister he is the best Minister who is the good neighbour the quiet man who troubles none even he in whose mouth is no reproofs Whereas the Prophet saith They who bless the people cause them to erre and they who are called blessed of them are destroyed Isai 9. 16. and 3. 12. The blinde lead the blinde into the ditch But a man may have so much of this Peace till he be the worse again He may have this Peace too soon he may have it too long There is a Peace of Satans giving Luk. 11. 21. As there is a sword and variance of Christs sending Luk. 12. 51. The kingdom of God is righteousness Peace and Joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. The kingdom of Satan is ignorance and peace and joy in unholy courses yet this is the Conscience which most men call good if it be Pacatè bona they care not though it be malè Pacata Cain desires his Conscience would be quiet therefore he sets upon business of building and travells to go from his discontents Saul makes use 1 Sam. 16. 16 17 23. Act. 24. 25. of musick Felix would stop his present trembling by an abrupt diversion I will take another more convenient season purposely for this Meditation Judas would fill up the mouth of hell and clamours of Matt. 27. 3 4 5. Conscience with loud and bitter Confessions fearfull Exclamations and plenarie Restitution Some call for wine and Mirth to cheer themselves against a day of slaughter All James 5. 5. which is like the drinking cold water to one who is in a feaver who for the present findes relief but his feaver is increased thereby There are four Quiet Consciences and never Four ill quiet Consciences 1. The ignorant mans conscience Luk. 11. 44. an one of them good 1. The ignorant mans Conscience is quiet and still and as the blinde man eates many a hair and drinks many a flie so these know not that they do evil no more then the graves are aware who goeth over them Blindeness of minde makes men past feeling when they commit all uncleanness with greediness Ephes 4. 18 19. Abimelech talks much of his Integritie and Gen. 20. 4 5. Vprightness and stands much upon his Conscience when all was but moralitie or ignorance Without knowledge the Conscience cannot as without Conscience knowledge is not good The Scripture somewhere cals Knowledge the Key but if Knowledge be the Luk. 11. 52. Key Conscience must be the Lock The one must be made fit to the other therefore Paul cals Good Knowledge the Knowledge according to Godliness Now what is a Lock Titus 1. 1. good for without a Key what Conscience good for without Knowledge to open and shut to lock and unlock it and what is the Key good for without the Lock Get both Science and Conscience Glorie not that thou hast got a quiet that is a blinde deaf silent and speechless Conscience The dumb and deaf spirit was the worst spirit to cast out of all the evil spirits wee read of in the Gospel Mar. 9. 25 26 29. The other roaring devils were more easily ejected Better a roaring raging and racking Conscience then a dumb Conscience Mar. 1. 23 26. The second Conscience that is quiet yet 2. The unawakened conscience not good is that Conscience that was yet never well awakened But sin lies at the door like a Mastiff asleep and makes no noise Here is quiet indeed but a dangerous quiet This Conscience either is given over to sleep a perpetuall sleep as God threatens Jer. 51. 39 40. In their heat I will make their feasts and I will make them drunken that they may rejoyce and sleep a perpetuall sleep and not awake saith the Lord. Then will I bring them like lambs to the
They ever who take more care to get great States then good Consciences do but consult shame to their Honours and ruine to their Houses They are like the foolish woman who puls down her house with her own hands Wo to him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness and his chambers by wrong That v●eth his neighbours work without wages That saith I will build me a wide house and large chambers and cutteth him out windows and Jer. 22. 13 14 15 16. it is ceiled with Cedar and painted with Vermilion Shalt thou reign because thou closest thy self in Cedar Did not thy father eat and drink and do Judgement and Justice and then it was well with him Was not this to know me saith the Lord How many Examples do we see continually before our eyes of them who gather riches and not by right who are taken from them in the midst of their dayes and in the end die like fooles Jer. 17. 11. Jeroboam would never be beholden to Conscience or Pietie to secure his State and Crown Policie should do it but did not his State-designes become a sin and a curse to the whole house of Jeroboam to root them out of the Land Ahab must not scruple the way of getting Naboths Vineyard to get it was the thing but did he joy it The Prophet meets him with a cold Gratulation Hast thou killd and also taken possession where the dogs licked the bloud of Naboth the dogs shall lick thy bloud also Did Achan thrive any better with his stolne wedge of gold Or Gehazi with his two bags of silver of two Talents The Consumption in Conscience breeds ordinarily a consumption in the state This maketh the furrowes in the field cry out and the stone in the wall and the beam out of the timber answer Wo to him who addeth house to house field to field and pound to pound till they are alone Doth not this leave great houses without inhabitant and fair houses without any to dwell in them This makes all fly at last the beam from the timber the timber from the wall the wall from the house the house from the name and the name it self from the face of the earth His sentence is Write this man childless a man that shall not prosper all his dayes for his heart and Jer. 22. 30. his eyes are onely for covetousness and oppression and violence to do it Who●e Grand-childe doth the third Generation call happie in that Patrimonie dearly purchased by the expense of his Ancestors good Conscience what house stands long that is founded on the ruines of integritie and righteousness whoso gathereth by labour increaseth whoso by indirect courses undoeth himself It is godliness which is the great gain it is the name and memoriall of the godly which shall be blessed it is the posteritie of the righteous which alone is happie Godliness hath the Promise of this life also as well as of that to come Noahs Ark we know was not onely the Preserver of the Church but of the whole Universe So shall we finde good Conscience not onely the best Keeper of the Soul but of the State Trust this thou maist with all that thou ●rt worth 4. This discovers yet a worse decaie then that of temporall States the Ground of that Decaie in Grace whence it is that there are so many broken Professours bankrupts in Religion and decaied Apostates in the Church Hymeneus and Alexander this broke their backs They were men sometimes of as good account and great esteem as any other men in all that rich and mightie Citie Ephesus forward men very likely to make eminent Ones in time They let fall puritie and strictness of Conscience then were corrupted then corrupt others then denie Fundamentals then broach blasphemies then turn Persecutors then were as a Pest and Gangrene to the Church then out of Communion thereof they are cast and at last miserably they ended When good Conscience once departs the unclean spirit comes in and takes possession brings in seven unclean spirits into a house formerly emptie swept and garnished they dwell and stay there till the last state of that man is worse then the first Break once these Old Bottles of good Conscience and all the wine of Grace and Comfort runs out all is marred the man is a lost man From prophane and vain babbling men proceed at last to Highest ungodliness as the Apostles Advertisement is u●on the lapse and downfall of these miserable seducers 2 Tim. 2 16 17. 5. This doth also clearly demonstrate That by Apostolical Rules and the Primitive Discipline Toleration is not to be granted nor Church-Fellowship allowed to men who are of loose and profligate Consciences and corrupt opinions they who cease to be members of Christ and act for Satan are to have no longer Com-membership with the Church but are to be delivered up to Satan as we see in the Text. Notice is to be given of them and of their Errors to the Church their mouthes to be stopped their Companie to be avoided and the godly warned to beware of them 2 Tim. 4. 15. 6. This resolves us how the world comes to swarm with foul and pestilent opinions this chief stone is laid aside by the most of unskilfull builders Wood hay and stubble is brought in to litter the Church in stead of gold silver and precious stones 1 Cor. 3. The first decaie is commonly here still Hymeneus and Alexander laying aside Conscience as legal and servile and Old-Testament ware become soon tainted with noisom opinions at last come up to open blasphemies and professed detestation of Paul God doth expose unconscionable Christians to errors in Faith Dr Twisse Zech. 11. 10 14 15. and all such like sound Teachers God in his just judgement smites such Teachers in their right eye and in their right hand they are corrupt both in judgement and practice and become no better then idol-Teachers coming before God with the idols of their hearts and laying stumbling blocks of iniquitie before the peoples face And indeed whensoever the Teacher layes by the Staffe of Beautie Faith and breaketh the Staffe of Bands Good Conscience what hath he left to take but the instruments of a foolish shepherd some absurd and dangerous opinions which drown men in perdition and errour while they speak high sounding swelling words of vanitie 2 Pet. 2. 18 19. and promise others Libertie themselves are the captive servants of all corruption 7. This informs us whence it ordinarily ariseth that many have lost that former Peace and those sweet Soul-Comforts they have sometimes had they have lost or wounded their Conscience The Lamp being broken the Oile is lost and the light goes out of it self Men little minde this but here is the common bane of all They are excellent Observations of Learned Ames Med. Theol. lib. 1. cap. 30. Prou● fides Conscientia vigent aut languent in hominibus si● 〈◊〉 certitu●o aug●tu● aut dimi●●●●ur
his head this is the day it hath longed for and the place where it desires to be heard 1 Joh. 3. 20 21. Hereby we know saith the Apostle that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him for if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence or boldnesse before God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Libertatem aut audaciam quid vis dicendi This will make the Godly man in that great Audit to give up his account with joy and not with grief 4. To all Eternity Conscientia bona perfectè tranquilla et lae●a est formalis essentialis beatitudo sanctorum in vita futura Ames de Cons l. 1. c. 15. Lastly which is above all it leads him the way ad Gloriosè Regnandum aeternùmque Triumphandum It is the step to the highest glory and is the state of highest Beatitude To be feasted with the fruits of a good Conscience this is Angels food and one of the sweet-meats of Heaven As the evil accusing and tormenting Conscience is one of the greatest miseries in Hell causing the fire never to be quenched because their worm never dieth So the good Conscience is one principal Delicate in Heaven Therefore in that day Christ will not onely tell the Godly how much he hath done and suffered for them but he will tell his Father what they have done and suffered for him I was hungry these have fed me thirsty these gave me drink These have kept the word of my Patience These were not ashamed of my Name where Satan had his Throne These have kept their Garments unspotted therefore they shall walk with me in white Hence it is that the Crown of Glory is not onely called a Crown of Grace because the gift of God But the Crown of Righteousnesse because the Reward of this warfare for faith and good Conscience Then shall the Godly be satisfied from himself and the fruit of his hands shall be given him Then shall flow Pro. 12. 14 forth from the belly of each Beleever River● of living water rivers of Peace Joy Comfort to all Eternity where Repentance and Faith and Hope and Patience and Knowledge and Tongues and Prophecying shall cease there shall good Conscience continue and in it Life and Joy and Glory Consider on the other side the miseries of an ill Conscience in every condition both in Mot. 4 life death and after both First in life In midst of prosperity he can have no security Job 20. per totum read especially ver 16 17 22 23 24. He shall suck the poyson of Asps the Vipers tongue shall slay him He shall not see the Rivers the Flouds the Brooks of Honey and Butter In the fulnesse of his sufficiency he shall be in straights Every hand of the wicked shall come upon him when he is about to fill his belly God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him and shall rain it upon him while he is yet eating c. and so Job 15. 21. A dreadful sound is in his ears in prosperity the destroyer shall come upon him As Adonijah in the day of his Coronation riseth from the table he and all his Guests fly and shift for themselves a short Reign a mourning Feast Or as Belshazzar in his Banquet when he sees the Hand-writing dread and horrour seizeth on him And as the Syrians upon a secret noise God caused 2 Kin. 7. 6. them to hear fled disorderly from their Tents leaving all their wealth and good chear a booty to the hunger-famished Israelites What torment like that of an ill Conscience of which that forenamed Authour Dr. Stoughton ubi supra excellently speaks All outward blessings saith he cannot make that man happy that hath an ill Conscience no more than warm cloathes can produce heat in a dead carkasse if you would heap never so many upon it There is no peace to the wicked Aut si pax bello pax ea deterior For this man in his greatest fortunes is but like him who is worshipt in the street with cap and knee but as soon as he is stept within doors is cursed and rated by a scolding wife Like him that is lodged in a Bed of Ivory covered with cloth of Gold but all his bones within are broken Like a book of Tragedies bound up in Velvet all fair without but black within the leaves are Gold but the lines are bloud O the rack O the torment O the horrour of a guilty mind There is no hell so dark as an evill conscience Secondly but much more in adversity ill Conscience that hath long lien silent and quiet is apt to cry out and fly in the face as Josephs Brethren in their distresse were forced to cry out Gods hand was just upon them Their sin which was before Peccatum susurrans is now Peccatum clamans such cry out as Saul in his distresse I am sore distressed the Philistims make war upon 1 Sam. 28. 15. me and the Lord hath forsaken me and answers me no more then poor soul he goes to hell for comfort and accordingly he sped Such have neither Joy in Life nor Hope in death Vtrinque timidi as Eusebius Euseb l 6. cap. 42. speaks of some in the time of the Persecution under Decius Cowardly and unsound Christians who were timidi cum ad moriendum ●um ad sacrifi●andum A lamentable case neither would their Conscience serve to let them Sacrifice to the Heathen Idols nor would their heart serve them to die for refusing So were they in a miserable strait between two dangers of losing Life and wounding Conscience and could no way satisfy themselves whereas good Conscience had seen in such a case what was presently to be chosen Ill Conscience never made good Martyr yet But there are three times especially wherein ill Conscience proclaimeth Terror and Rev. 8. 13. as the Angell in the Revelation flies over the head of a sinner crying Woe Woe Woe First One Woe in life Secondly Two Woes at death Thirdly But Three Woes at the day of Judgement 1 Woe in this life The first woe is in this life But this how dreadfull soever is the least because the shortest and hath an end in a little space of a few dayes or years therefore it is said the first woe is passed but behold two worse woes come shortly upon it Rev. 9. 12. The Second woe is at death This is a great 2. Woe at death woe double to the former the furnace is heated seven times hotter than it could be in this Life And as the Apostle saith of the Godlies afflictions all the sufferings of this present time are not to be compared to that Glory that is to follow so may we say all the sufferings of this life to the wicked whether in Body or in Spirit are nothing to be compared to those that follow This is a long lasting woe But yet of the second woe it is also said
his Wine to wash cleanse and search it if defiled his Oyl to mollifie supple and heal it if bruised festered This is the first and great Experiment to be used The second is like unto it namely this 2. The Spirit of Christ to get and seek the Spirit of Christ which is the next principal ingredient in or efficient of a good Conscience It is the Spirit of God with our Spirit that makes the good Conscience In this sense we may allow that of Origen That Conscience is another Spirit in the soul therefore the Apostle saith of his Conscience that it did bear him Rom. 9. 1. witnesse in the Holy Ghost The single Testimonie of natural Conscience is not much to be regarded in many cases but when Conscience is cleared by the Spirit and seconded with the Spirit the Testimony of these two is great and weighty the Spirit of God witnessing thus to our spirit is the clearest Testimony of Rom. 8. 16. of our Adoption and Salvation which thy Conscience alone is not to be credited in for what could the light of our body the eye see and discern if it were not for the light of the Heaven the Sun we should have a continuall Night So without the Spirit the light of God what can Conscience our light see and discern of the things of God Therefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. that God doth reveal unto his servants the deep mysteries of the Gospel by his spirit for the spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God For what man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him So the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we may know the things which are freely given to us of Cod c. So that wheresoever the spirit of God is there is the good Conscience where it is wanting Conscience cannot be good Where the naturall enlivening Spirit is absent or departed there is no life or vegetation or sense or reason or motion but all death darkness coldnesse c. So where the enlivening Spirit of Grace is wanting to the soul there is no life sense motion comfort but all is dead within and all the works are but dead works But where the Spirit is there is life there is light there is liberty and there is purity there is peace and there is grace there is comfort and there is Conscience there is indeed all 2 Subservient means The subservient means are thirteen whereof the first six direct us what to do the other seven what to avoid First of all those subservient means next to Christ Jesus himself and his Spirit which are the principal Faith is to be sought to 1. Faith make thee a good Conscience Thefore how often do we find faith and good Conscience joyned This next to the bloud of Christ and the purifying water of the Spirit hath the greatest cleansing virtue Act. 15. 9. Christ hath given faith for this end to purifie the heart Where faith is pure the Conscience is pure this makes the good and mends the bad Conscience Faith and good Conscience are made one for the other as the woman and the man to be fellow-helpers each to other Faith is Consciences Keeper Conscience again is Faiths These two like Jonathan and his Armour-bearer may discomfit a whole Hoste 1 Sam. 14. of Philistins when they keep together nothing is hard for them to undertake or like Saul and Jonathan lovely in life and undivided in death Faith and good Conscience do many a good office each for other and are forced to unite in a league offensive and defensive In an offensive league as Simeon and Judah Jud. 1. 3. the one must help the other to expell the Canaanites out of his Coast first and then proceed to expell them out of the others Coasts after Good Conscience helps to expel the Canaanites of fear distrust and despair out of Faiths coasts and to slay Sheshai Ahiman and Talmai these Jud. 1. 10 three sons of Anak and faith again layes to his helping hand to expel the Canaanites of fear guilt deadnesse dulnesse erroneousnesse and Scrupulousnesse out of Consciences coasts And in a defensive league they are joyned as David said to Abiathar Abide with me fear not so saith Faith to Conscience Abide with me Conscience for he that seeketh my life seeketh thy life but with me thou shalt be in safety 1 Sam. 22. 23. Faith is the white Alabaster-box in which Consciences pretious Oyntment is put Faith is the bottle into which the wine of good Conscience is poured So again Conscience doth as much for Faith Faith is the light good Conscience is Faiths lanthorn the lanthorn shews forth the light within the lanthorn defends the light from winds and weather without that it be not blown out Conscience holds forth the light of Faith to be seen of men Conscience defends faith that it be not put out Faith is the Apple or sight of the eye Conscience is the eye-lid no eye-lid can see or doth it profit the body at all without the sight within nor can the eye see long if it have not the eye-lids to defend it from Sun dust smoak and the like annoyances and to keep the sight clear So what is Conscience without Faith but a blind and blundering Conscience And what is Faith without Conscience but as a naked weak raw sore eye A three-fold faith necessary to good conscience 1 Justifiing Faith Now this Faith that makes and keeps a good Conscience is three-fold First Justifying Faith there must be apprehending and applying the bloud of Christ Act. 15. 9. This is principally necessary to be sought this fides quâ creditur is the fides qua vivitur the fides quae creditur is not sufficient without this Secondly Doctrinal faith this is the faith 2 Doctrinal Faith here spoken of Hold faith and a good Conscience that is the sound Orthodox faith contend for it continue in it From this Hymenaeus and Alexander swerved and then left the plain path of good Conscience Say not any man is sound in faith and of a good Quam tu secretus es Deus solits magnus lege infatigabili spargens paenale ●caecitates super illicitas cupidita●e● Aug. Conf. l. 1. Conscience who is unsound in Judgement and opinions Corrupt opinions breed corrupt Consciences and corruption in morals usually follows the corruption in intellectuals Here begins commonly the first step backward to all Apostacy and the first step forward to all impiety It is a sad story of the Emperour Valens who while he was among the Orthodox had gained much Glory in the Church he had stood firme in the time of Julian the Apostate together with his Brother Valentinian chusing rather to lay down all his Military Honours and imployments than
to him Be sure to carry it fair with thy self and keep peace at home that thy house be not divided against it self and so end in ruine Miserable it is if man and wife live at discord God is not there What is it when a man disagrees with himself Or be sure if there be any discontent here to get all composed Deliver thy self as the Roe see whether thou be in fault or thy Conscience Austin tels us how he had many Quae non ad me dixi quibus verberibus flagellavi animam meam a round bout with himself after that God had shewed him his sin He went aside and chode himself Then into a private Garden he got where none might interrupt him and there his Conscience and he were wrangling till God agreed them and made them friends These fallings out breed the strongest friendship both with God and thy self In hortum abiit tum in illa grandi rixa domus interioris quam fortiter excitâram animam meam in cubiculo nostro corde me● in hortulum abstulerat me tumultus pectoris mei ubi nemo impediret ardentem litem quam mecum aggressus eram Aug. Conf. l. 8. c. 7. 8. Fifthly yet so we must hearken to and The fifth Means Vnicuique suus liber est Conscientia c. Et ideo scribi debent libri nostri ad exemplar libri vitae si sic scripti non sint saltem corrigantur confer amus itaque libros nostros cum libro vitae ●● forte in illa ultima discussione abiiciantur si non fuerint emendati de Consc lib. 1. cap. 9. confer with Conscience as also to confer Conscience with the Scripture That is the Book of life as Bernard saith and according to that our Conscience must be copied or corrected Let us therefore saith he compare and confer our books with Gods book lest in that day our books be rejected as false and faulty when they come to be examined See therefore if thy Copy be according to the Original The Christian grows judicious when he reads not Scripture cursorily but when he diligently conferreth place with place and Scripture with Scripture Conscience is to be compared with the Bible and examined by it The able and expert Divine rests not in perusing a Translation be it never so good bur confers the Traslation with the Original Conscience is but a Translation at the best and in most the most corrupt Translation this vulgar Translation had not need be made authentick and Canonical But thou must search the Scriptures and not trust thy own judgement too far Keep thy Watch still going as I said before but see thou that it be right set not by thy neighbours clock or thy own guesse but by the Sun-dial Conscience is indeed unto a man a kind Solis Canonicis libris debetur fides caeter is omnibus judicium Luther of Scripture yet at most but Apocryphal not Canonical Apocryphal it is therefore not to be denied reading Canonical it is not therefore not infallible Nothing is to be taken Dogmatically from the Apocrypha say we unlesse it be contained in the Scripture So far we receive them as they consent with Scripture no further So far receive thy Conscience A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not so as it should be heard for it self but it is secundariae authoritatis lectionis allowed it may be when it holds a consonancy with the written word The grossest Idolatry in the world saith a learned Divine is to make thy self the Idol and as bad a Rutherford Papacy as that at Rome to make a Pope of thy own Conscience Thy Conscience is indeed thy Rule but it must then be Regula Regulata it may not be Regula Regulans et primaria that is it is a Rule ruled by another not giving Rules but when from that other Rule Conscience is to every man his Law to himself Rom. 2. 15. but this law is to be written out as the King was commanded Deut. 17. 18. 19. to write his Copy out of Gods law and then to read therein all the dayes of his life Conscience may be to thee thy Aaron in stead of a Prophet but it must then have his Moses with it to be to it in stead of God This consideration alone well weighed would resolve what is to be done in many cases and may direct in many passages Nothing is more ordinarily pleaded than Conscience Conscience It is my Conscience say most what ever is their practise or opinion and if Joab take Sanctuary here he thinks himself safe secure that none may remove 1 Kin. 2. 28 31. or trouble him but a Solomon will fetch him thence or he may die there It is my Conscience saith the Papist the same saith the Jew the same a Mahometan and I will die for my Conscience The same may an Antinomian an Arminian or Anabaptist say and I will not goe against my Conscience c. I but is it a good Conscience a well informed and enlightned Conscience My Conscience bids me do thus say men often I but what doth God bid Conscience do Had not Adam fallen we should have needed no other Rule but our own Conscience Now we have a Law written and Proclaimed we must not make Conscience the Supream Law but the subordinate In the integrity of my heart may Abimelech say when it was but Gen. 20. 3. a blind integrity And Jonah being challenged for his frowardnesse Doest thou well Jonah to be angry he replies yea so well as Jonah 4. my Conscience is satisfied that I could die in this mind and thus I would do if it were the last thing I should say or do Chrysostome blamed those that are curious and choise what money they take who will refuse to take that which they know not Nisi ipsi videant numeros calculos constare they wil look for the figures and for the right Stamp But in matters of Conscience and in points and practises of Religion ●re easily over-reached Simpliciter se huc illuc ferri patiuntur Cum sint ab autore spiritu sancto dicuntur autoritatis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 veritatisque 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chamier de canon fid l 4. c. 1. Cui subjic ī oportet omnem pium intellectum Aug. 6. Means Vel Deum interpellet inquirat aut consulat nam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is the highest honour and perfection of the holy Scriptures that they coming from an infallible hand and written by the divine inspiration of an un-erring Spirit have this Prerogative above all other persons writings and opinions that they are of undubitate and unquestionable Authority and of infallible certainty to which every thought and reasoning of man must be brought into subjection Conscience is indeed to have a negative voice so that nothing is to be done without his assent and good liking
upon the soul A man well bred at first looks upon sin as importable once overtaken sin is not now importable but onely Primo importabile processu temporis grave paulo post leve postea placet dulce est Ad extremum quod erat impossibile ad faciendum est impossibile ad continendum Bern. de cons c. 3. Ex voluntate perversa facta est consuetudo dum consuetudini non resistitur facta est necessitas Aug. Conf. l. 8. heavy next time sin is not heavy at all but easie a while after not easie onely but light next time sweet and pleasant afterwards custome becomes another nature and what was importable at first to be committed is impossible at last to be avoided And Austin tels us a story of his mother who by sipping a little wine at first when she filled the cup came by degrees to be a tipling Gossip and to take her whole cups at last Qui modica spernit paulatim decidit he saith upon it Despise small sins and thou art gone Ad illum modicum quotidiana modica addendo in eam consuetudinem lapsa erat ut propè iam plenos mero caliculos inhianter hauriret Conf. lib. 9. 2. Take heed again of adventuring upon one greater sinfull act I say any one sinfull act deliberately presuming upon Gods Remission and thy own Repentance saying I shall have peace though I do this Such one act may for ever shut Conscience out of doors taking away the life and sense of it and ever after shut thee out of Consciences doors taking from thee its former peace It was but one deliberate act of sin that threw the Angels to all Eternity out of Heaven and chained them up in everlasting chains of darknesse That one sin deliberately committed by our first Parents against an expresse Precept cast them out of Paradise and caused the Cherubim and flaming sword to be set at the gate for ever denying any recovery re-entry See what became of Judas when he had once projected in his heart that prodigious act of murder and treason and was resolved to make good his bloudy engagement to the Priests He is now at present with Christ and his Disciples yet intendeth anon to be with the High-Priests He takes the Sop from Christ now and resolves the same hand shall take the High-Priests money too He hath a bag that can hold all that Christ can give and Satan offer Oh Lucifer how art thou fallen Oh Judas how art thou running headlong to destruction Judas what if Christ should disclaim thee for ever as he did for a son of perdition All those which thou gavest me have Joh. 17. I kept hut that one which is lost Judas what if thou shouldest be given over to Satan that thou shalt never repent Judas what if God should give thee over that though thou repent thou shalt not be received to mercy that thou and thy money and thy repentance perish together and God swear in his wrath that thou shalt never enter into his Rest The like you may see in Ananias and Sapphira who having deliberately concluded to try the Spirit of God in the Apostles never were called to Repentance after But when Peter had rebuked them with their sin Why hath Satan filled your heart they died in their sin 3. Take heed of living under or following after a loose and cold man-pleasing Ministery which preacheth liberty not strictnesse of Conscience which soweth pillows under thine Arm-holes and layeth feather-beds under thy feet to tread upon cries Peace Peace so that none departeth from his sinfull way The voice of a faithfull Preacher Esa 40. 3. Esa 58. 1. Ecc. 12. 11. is the voice of a Cryer His sound the sound of a Trumpet his words like sharp nails and piercing Goads his preaching is heart-pricking his dividing the Text and Doctrine the Heb. 4. 12 13. dividing of the Spirit and Marrow and cutting down the Back-bone and he layes all open This is the best Ministery that which is sharper than the two-edged sword and discovers the thoughts of the heart and makes the man quake and tremble and fall down before the word and cry out God is here of a truth Our blessed Saviour who had the Tongue of the learned to speak the word Esay 50. 4. Esa 49. 2. Psal 45. 2. Rev. 1. 14. Mal. 3. 2. Es 11. 4. in season to him that was weary was also as a polished shaft and his mouth as a sharp sword He who had grace poured into his lips and spake so as never man did his eyes were as a flame of fire and his comming into his Temple none was able to abide He was as a Refiners fire and the Fullers soap and with the breath of his lips he did slay the wicked The Prophets of old the Apostles in their time and all Godly Ministers since have been sons of Thunder their work hath been to fall roundly upon Conscience They have applyed all their engines to batter downe or take in this strong hold for Christ They have laid siege to the disobedient and refractory Conscience sought to Block it up to take away all provisions from it to force it to yeeld and call out for mercy They have surrounded Jericho's high walls day after day sounding with their Trumpets till they have fallen downe flat to the ground that Joshuah might enter as a Conqueror They still sought by loud and uncessant Alarums to startle the secure Conscience to awaken the sleepy to burne the seared to terrifie the obdurate And the only care they had was to comfort the afflicted to Josh 6 22. Heb. 11 31 quiet the troubled to strengthen the weake Conscience And to rescue one beleeving Rahab from perishing among thousands of them that beleeved not These were the weapons of the old ministeriall Warfare These the Stratagemes of Christ and his servants to undermine and blow up Satans Kingdom and to pressemen into the Kingdome of Heaven But this Age will not endure this kinde of preaching no more then the Israelites could indure the shrill sound of the Trumpet sounding loudder and louder and that terrible fire and Heb. 12. 19 20 that voice of words which they desired they might heare no more off We must have no legall teaching we Soft and Effaeminate Rehoboam must have young and complying Counsellors of his owne humour The Samaritan must not come with his Wine to search and cleanse and wash but onely with his gentle Oyle to heale and comfort Physitians of no value Say not this is to preach Christ Jesus free Grace the Kingdome of Heaven Gospell Promises Priviledges Is the Son of peace there Are thy hearers Loaden Weary Luk. 4. 18 Pricked Wounded Bruised Sick When the Gospell Commission was first opened the instructions were to preach the Gospel Es 61. 1. 2. to the poore to heale the broken-hearted to preach deliverance to the Captives recovering of sight to the blind to