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A65629 A golden topaze, or, Heart-jewell namely, a conscience purified and pacified by the blood and spirit of Christ / written by Francis Whiddon ... Whiddon, Francis, d. 1656 or 7. 1656 (1656) Wing W1644; ESTC R10315 60,273 170

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It is in every part or faculty of the soule 1. It hath the understanding for its Throne and Pallace where it is cheifly resident and keepeth a compleate Court in the whole soule commonly called forum conscientiae and there as a Judge sits determining and prescribing absolving and condemning de jure 2. It s in the memory and there it acteth as Register or Recorder readily minding and recording witnessing and testifying de facto 3. It s in the will and affections and there Conscience carries it selfe like a Jaylour or Executioner rendring rewarding plaguing and punishing every one sine respectu without partiality The 4 th thing in the definition of conscience is determination Conscience determineth what is good what evill what is to be done what not to be done and so excites or diswades accordingly If conscience say this must be done then must we do it for conscience sake If conscience tells us it is evill Rom. 13.5 then must we forbeare for conscience sake i.e. out of an holy feare of God whereby our conscience may be preserved pure before him 5. The rule by which conscience acteth namely the light of Gods law I do not say by the light of the word Gospell or written Law but more largely by the light of Gods law I meane the law of Nature written in mans heart before the word was written or Gospell revealed For as man had a conscience from the beginning so he had light from the beginning to regulate conscience which was the law of Nature written in his heart Rom. 2.15 6. The last thing in the desinition of conscience is her acting or working upon the light received which is twofold either acquitting or condemning when by her light she determines what is done that it is good or evill she accordingly doth excuse or accuse Rom. 2.15 And thus have you conscience in generall defined and explained Having shewed you what conscience is and in whom namely in the reasonable Creature now in so much as every man hath reason I may safely conclude that every man hath conscience The point of Doctrine is clearly this Doct. There is in every man a power or faculty called Conscience 1. That there is in man a conscience let our Apostle cleare up this truth in himselfe how often doth he call and appeale unto conscience upon all occasions when he was convented before the Coūsell greiveous things charged upō him he appeals to conscience Men and Brethren I have lived saith he in all good Conscience before God untill this day Againe when Ananias commanded them that stood by to smite Paul on the mouth Act. 23.1.2 and Tertullus with all his Rhetoricke before Foelix besmeares him calling him a pestilent fellow a mover of sedition a maintainer of the sect of the Pharisees a polluter of the Temple and what not He hath no way to cast off all this filth but by flying unto conscience shewing his enimies how far and free he was from these base aspersions that it was his constant practice to keep a Conscience void of offence toward God and toward men Act. 24.16 And that you may not think it to be Pauls peculiar but common to others with him we approve our selves to every mans Conscience in the sight of God 2 Cor. 4.2 Ob. Though good men have a conscience yet wicked men have not A. It is an usuall saying indeed amongst men here when they meet with such as are very hard in their dealings or very vitious in living to say this man hath no Conscience But you must understand their meaning when they say he hath no conscience they meane no good conscience or no working conscience Be you therefore assured that there is a Conscience in every man and woman be they good or bad not only in Paul but also in Pilate not only in John but likewise in Judas John 8.9 Rom. 2.15 The accursed Jewes wicked Pharisees and Heathenish Idolaters will all acknowledge the being and working of Conscience in them To hold therefore that some men have no Conscience is both dishonourable to God and injurious to man 1. A dishonour to God as if he had given man not a perfect but imperfect soule defective in its principall power or faculty we confesse that the body of man being generated may be maimed wanting a part or member Gen. 2.7 as an eye an eare a hand or foot Anima infundendo creatur creando infunditur Tho Aqu. 2. d. 3. q. 1.4.1 because it comes mediately from man but as for the foule being created and infused by God this cannot be defective but compleat in all this powers and faculties and therefore a great dishonour to God to question his workmanship as men do if they deny man to have a conscience Anima humana non eseminis traduce propagatur sed immediatè à Deo creatur which is a speciall power or faculty in the soule 2. An injury to man 1. Deny man conscience you deny him reason and so confound him with a beast but grant him a conscience and you grant him reason and set him in his proper place as a Lord or master over beasts Ps 8.7 2. Againe deny him Conscience you deny him a Soule one of his Essentials and so confound his manhood which were a great injury to him We acknowledge sin hath brought us to a great losse but not to such a losse as to loose our being we have by Adams sin lost our innocency but not our essence our Excellency but not our existence our soule is defiled not annìhilated our powers depraved not destroyed man is man still hath body and soule partes members powers and faculties all good quoad bonum naturale all naught quoad bonum morale The truth then still stands cleare that there is in every man a power or faculty called Conscience 2. The Reasons why God hath planted this power of conscience in man are two 1. R. To shew his Justice that he will judge righteously God commands judges here on earth to execute righteous judgment Deut. 1.16 to proceed secundum allegata probata to do nothing but upon good evidence and witnesse Now shall not the Judge of all the world do right God hath therefore set this power in man that when God comes to judge him he may have sufficient evidence in himselfe his owne Conscience witnessing for him or against him before Gods Tribunall For God will not condemne without a witnesse 2. R. Is to shew his mercy unto man He knowes man is very fraile labilis memoriae apt to forget his God and to forget himselfe Sometimes he goes forth and forgets to pray unto God for protection and direction sometimes he returnes home and neglects his duty of praise to God for his preservation therefore God hath placed in him this power of conscience as a remembrancer unto him Againe sometimes mens Passions are very high as in Jonah Jonah 4.9 who is
in battell-array to fight with those strong subtile sedulous Goliahs which come out to upbraid Gods little Champion They I meane the Divell and his Agents viz the world and the flesh will not only rage but raigne not only assault but take your soules captive at their will Therefore as you love your owne soules and the welfare of them unto all eternity Get unto you the whole armour of God Eph. 6. 13. Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might Give no faire Quarter unto foule tempations make up speedily every Breach between God and your owne consciences and let not conscience loose its Tendernesse but shun every evill and the appearance of it 6. Let thy life be the life of faith Saith Paul the life that we now live in the flesh we live by the faith of the Son of God who loved us and gave himselfe for us Keep fresh the sense of his love and alwaies acknowledge a continuall need of his Bloud Spirit and Intercession and how much you are beholding and ingaged unto him Labour to draw and derive from Christ by the powerfull attractive force of faith spirituall ability sufficient for every dayes worke Act your faith dayly in the promises of grace and strength Go unto Christ still for his wisdome to counsell you for his righteoussness to cover you for strength to resist temptations for the shoulder that must beare our Crosses for ability to performe all duties as duties 7. Resolve with david Ps 101. that you will not know a wicked person i.e. approve of him If out of your families have not fellowship with them but reprove them if in your families let them not abide within your doores but remove him or her as persons most infectious and dangerous We have sins enough and too too many of our owne therefore let us not encrease them by a base connivency at others mens sins Especially avoid that generation of men whose grand designe it is to undermine the Gospell to ruine the Ministry and to robb them of that maintenance which is due unto them by the law of God and by the Law of Nature and by the law of Nations These croaking frogges have overspread our Aegypt so that they have made it stinke with their damnable Opinions devilish practises They creep into houses and lead aside silly women 2 Tim. 3.11 and by their faire speeches deceive the hearts of the simple Rom. 16.18 And shall if it were possible deceive the very elect Mark 13.22 8. Affect a faithfull and powerfull Minister who doth carefully look both to himselfe and his Doctrine Adscribe neither too much nor too little to your Teachers Neither despise them nor deify them as the manner of some is Esteeme him not as a principle Author but as a subordinate Actor not as a Lord but a Steward not as a Master but a Minister and yet account him more then an ordinary Servant even a man of God A servant of the most high God that sheweth you the way of Salvation Look on him not only as a Seer but Over-seer a Steward of Gods high secrets a messenger of the Lord of Hostes by whose Embassage peace is concluded and reconciliation ministerially made up between God and man He is Gods mouth to you by preaching and your mouth to God by praying On that in speciall place standeth before God and ministreth to him upon earth as the Angels do it in heaven Woodnots Aphorisms 1. Cens. p. 42. The Jewes say that he that dieth in the displeasure of his Rabbi shall never be forgiven in this world nor in the world to come i.e. of his teacher that hath the charge of his soule Therefore take heed you fall not out with your Teacher whome the most wise God hath thought fit to make your Pastor forsake not the Levite as long as thou livest upon the earth Deut. 12.19 Doe not desire such a Teacher as thou mayest rule him but such as may rule you Magistrates are chosen to governe the people not the people to governe them So Ministers you are not to command them but obey them Therefore obey them that have the Rule over you Heb. 13.17 And submit your selves for they watch for your souls as they that must give an account that they may do it with Joy and not with greife I beseech you in the bowels of Christ let Death and Judgement possesse your most serious thoughts waite for the one and provide for the other Dye daiely with Paul and you shall dye well Have thine end ever in thine eye and sweeten the bitter cup of Death by a dayly preparation Get your tackling all in readinesse that you may faile over the Sea of mortall miseries in safety and security to the Port of happinesse You shall all of you ere long lye gasping for death on your dying beds and there lye grappling with the King of feares attended with Terrors Therefore as you love your soules let the whole course of your lives be a conscionable preparative to dye comfortably Look on every day as your last So live that you may say with David Though I walke through the Valley of the shaddow of death I will not feare Oh that you would be wise and consider your latter end before you go downe to the chambers of death whence you shall never returne Would you dye willingly would you dye well Then get a part in Christ a Title to him an Interest in him Worke out your salvation with feare and trembling Give all diligence to make your calling and election sure So live that you may not be ashamed to die So number your dayes that you may apply your hearts to true wisdome So cast up your Accounts that you may give them up with joy and not with greife Judge your selves for your daiely Deviations and you shall not be judged condemne your selves and you shall not be condemned 10 Lastly Let this little Book be in your hands heads and hearts Let a good conscience be written on your soules with Characters indelible never to be razed out so that when death shall appeare thou mayest be able to say I have lived in all good conscience before God untill this day Now whereas dull spirits are more quickned by Examples then Precepts This place hath had a great advantage above other places adjacent Mr. John Southmead who is now a glorious Saint in heaven and his Soule made happy with the Spirits of just men made perfect You know he was an old Disciple and served his Master faithfully in his generation for many yeares zealously striving for the inlargment of the Kingdome of Christ and demolishing the Kingdome of Satan A great Curb he was to prophanesse witnesse his great paines and travell in overthrowing those Heathenish sports and pastimes which were too common even upon the Lords day God made him the Instrument to abolish Wakes Revells Maypoles and May-games with their Apurtenances Fidlers and superfluous Ale-houses not only in
conscience then consider the workings of conscience in others what makes Adam to run into the thicket sarah to stand behind the Tent door Jonah to lurke downe in the side of the ship Cain to feare a mortall blow from every man he meets 1 King 20 1 King 22 25. and Benhadad and Zedekiah to be a terror unto themselves and to run from chamber to chamber to hide themselves It was their conscience and nothing but conscience accusing and testifying unto God against them Againe consider how is it that when God is pleased to give out unto us a notable signe of is power and majesty as in thunder and lightning that the very sound of the one and the very sight of the other though these be but from Naturall causes should make a Barbarian a contemner of God to shake and tremble Againe whence is it that there is a Religions Adoration and propension to the worship of a Deity even in those Heathens themselves who sacrifice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the unknown God There being no nation under heaven that does not do divine worship to some thing or other and in it to God as they conceive So that they worship many of them but stocks and stones and some particular piece of nature as the Sun Moone or Stars knowing that there is somewhat to whom worship belongs Therefore according to the ordinary naturall light that is in all men there is a God Oh therefore blush and bewaile thy damnable Atheisme Consider well these things know and understand see and say verily there is a God that judgeth the earth thus far of conscience in generall Having spoken of the faculty namely conscience we now proceed unto the Qualitie namely a good conscience Had Paul onely said I have or I am assured I have a conscience he had said no more then a Reprobate or Devill might have said But in that he saith he hath a good conscience and that he is fully perswaded of the same in this he goes beyond all reprobates and Devils who neither have nor ever shall have such a bosome friend within them We must now distinguish conscience into two species namely good and evill 1. Honestè bona pacatè bona A good Conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Holding faith and a good Conscience This good Conscience is sometimes quiet sometimes unquiet 2. Vitiosè mala molestè mala Bern Ames An evill Conscience Heb. 10.22 having our hearts sprinkled from an evill Conscience This is likewise peaceable or turbulent Now how these two do differ both in their peace and their trouble I shall hereafter shew you I am now to speak of the first namely a good conscience and more especially of Pauls good Conscience 1. What a good conscience is I answer 1. A good conscience is a Conscience rightly informed and principled by the word so that it can truly judge and determine evill to be evill and good to be good 2. By a good conscience I understand a conscience sanctified by the holy Spirit of God whereby we are incited to good and diswaded from evill and doth readily excuse us for doing well but accuse us for doing evill 3. By Pauls good conscience in the Text I understand a conscience both purified and pacifyed by the blood and spirit of Christ so that upon a true sight and sorrow for sin and a full perswasion of the remission of the same in and for Christ he enjoyed that peace which passeth all understanding Phil 4.7 2 Cor. 1.12 i. e. a true spirituall and incomprehensible rest and quietnesse of mind wrought by Gods spirit in his heart and so preserving him from terror anxiety and trouble But to draw unto some profitable point of Doctrine you heare Paul glorying in a good conscience not as his peculiar as if he only were the man thus blessed of God but doth acknowledge the like mercy to be shewed by God unto others and therefore mentioning those that laboured with him in the Gospell speaketh in the plurall number we are assured we have a good conscience So that we may safely conlude that as all men have a conscience so there are some that have a good conscience Some there are who have not only a Conscience but also a good Conscience Of this some I find Noah a just man and perfect in his generation Gen. 6.9 and one that walked with God i. e. sincerely in his profession of Religion without hypocrisy Moses the meekest on the earth Numb 12.3 one that despised the vaine and vanishing honour riches pleasures of the world choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God Heb. 11.25 then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season Job a none-such none like him on the earth Job 1. so perfect so upright that feared God and eschewed evill David a man after Gods owne heart Nathaniel a true Israelite indeed in whom is no guile i. e. a man of simple integrity 1 John Paul a continuall practitioner of a good Conscience making it his daiely practice to keep a conscience void of offence both towards God towards man Act. 24.16 Thus might I tire you out with a long Catalogue of blessed Saints who lived in all good conscience from their conversion unto their dissolution Act. 23.1 Q. How came these to have a good conscience seeing all by nature have their consciences defiled A. 1. They had the bloud of Christ applied unto their consciences whereby they were purged from the impurity of dead workes Heb. 9.14 it being the fountaine for sin and for uncleannesse Zach. 13.1 in which poor loathsome leperous soules wash and are cleansed they were put into this poole of Bethesda and came out cleane being made white in the blood of the Lamb. 2. They had the righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto them whereby they were discharged from the debt of sin all hand-writings of accusations being cancel'd and they esteemed holy and unblameable in the sight of God Rom. 5.1 Not for any thing wrought in them and done by them but for Christs sake alone Not by imputing faith it selfe or any other Evangelicall obedience but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ as their righteousnesse received and rested on by faith 3. They by diligence in Christian watchfulnesse do maintaine their Covenant with God and if casually by any slip they seemed to break the peace they were carefull to renue their Covenant by true humiliation and reformation earnestly doing their first works and redeeming their former negligence with double diligence Rev. 2.5 2. Q. Whether a man may not have a good conscience yet the same to be very unquiet and much troubled Answ You must know that there is a 4 fold conscience 1. Good and quiet Purifyed and pacifyed which rests in a sweet feeling of the mercies of God in Christ Such a conscience had Paul that testifyed unto him that in simplicity and Godly sincerity he had his
conversation And Hezekiah when he was upon his death bed as he thought his conscience gave him a testimoniall that commended him to God better then all the men in the world could that he walked before the Lord in truth and in a perfect heart and did that which was right in his sight Is 38.3 This sweet peace of a good Conscience flowes from a certaine inexpressible assurance that we are the sons of God a certaine secret manifestatiō that God hath receiv'd us put away our sins 2. Neither good nor quiet When the heart is as full of sin as hell of darknesse and lies under a serious apprehension of Gods wrath and a certaine looking for of vengeance and fiery indignation to devoure Heb. 10.27 and is in a forlorn condition not knowing where to go for help but God is to him as the burning fire to the withered stubble and as the scorching flame to the melted wax Thus the cause stood with Judas who after he had committed that cursed fact of betraying his Master he was so gnawed by the worme conscience that nothing but an halter could ease him he hang'd himselfe And certainly had not Hell gaped for him he had got by the bargaine This made Cain go in continuall feare of killing and the persecuting Tyrant to cast up his bowels towards heaven and say vicisti Galilaee thou hast overcome O Galilean 3. Quiet but not good This is common to the best of men and they blesse themselves in it that they never had a bad word from conscience all their daies it doth not trouble nor terrify them certainly such a Conscience is seared with an hot iron and who ever is thus stigmatiz'd is marked for a Rebbell against God They sleep in their sins like Jonah in the storme though they are in greatest danger to be cast into the gulfe and sea of Gods everlasting wrath 4. Good but not quiet And such doubtlesse a child of God may have Examples are many as in Job chap. 6. 4. The Arrowes of the Lord are within me Rev. 2.3 the poison whereof drinketh up my spirit the terrors of the Lord do set themselves in array against me So David thine arrowes stick fast in me and thy hand presseth me sore Job 6.4 there is no soundnesse in my flesh because of thine anger neither any rest in my bones because of my sin Conscientia bona turbata Bern For mine iniquities are gone over mine head as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me Thus Ezekiah and others But at such times though they have a good conscience yet do they faile in Assurance Ps 38.2 3 4. they have Paul's conscience but not Pauls confidence it is the latter not the former that makes it quiet and inoffensive and such was Pauls conscience not only good but quiet and inoffensive Christians have somtimes Cleare Sunshini dayes and sometimes darke cloudy daies sometimes they are under a cloud and the light of Gods countenance doth not shine on them sometimes they behold the face of God in righteousnesse and his favour is better to them then life Sometimes like Hannah they are in the bitternesse of their soules Conscientia honestè bona pacatè bona Ames and drinke of the bitter waters of Marah which makes them go mourning all their daies so then it may stand with a child of God to have a disquiet troubled Conscience 1. Use for Tryall whether we be of that some that have a good Conscience he that will not try wants it he that tries superficially hath cause to doubt it but he that is exact and sincere may safely conclude I am assured I have a good Conscience therefore search your selves as with Candles and Torches whether you can find this precious Jewell of a good conscience treasurd up within you yea or no. And the better to incite you to a true and diligent Triall take these 2 Motives 1. The neer resemblance between a Naturall and Spirituall Conscience Motives to a diligent Triall and that in divers respects They both have their conflicts both their loathing of sin they both seeme to turne a broad-side against sin and to complaine against it The Naturall conscience saith I see the better but I follow the worse The Spirituall conscience saith the good which I would do I do not but the evill which I would not do that do I. See here the difference in the latter there is a will striving against sin but in the former no will no striving at all 2. The Naturall conscience is principled only by some generall grounds of Nature acting and making conscience so far as his rules and principles will carry him and so deceiveth the Naturall man making him to boast of what he hath not namely a good conscience Whereas the spirituall Conscience rightly principled by Gods word and sanctified by his Spirit makes the person to have a good Conscience in all things Heb. 13.18 making conscience of all that God commands or forbids Ps 119.6.101 Be therefore carefull in trying your selves 2 Cor. 13.5 And that you may not be deceived take these 5 markes 1. He that hath a good conscience Notes of a good Conscience can truly say that what he doth he doth it for Conscience sake Cōscience stirrs him up unto the duty and he cannot satisfy conscience if he neglect it He subjects himselfe to God and he subjects himselfe to man and this not for wrath but conscience See well therefore to this and the rather Rom. 13.5 because Many there are whose Actions are very specious and yet without any regard to conscience Salomon describing a good man saith he is one that feareth an oath he doth not say that he is one that sweareth not but one that feareth an oath possible it is that a man may not sweare and why because he hath been well educated or he standeth in awe of his Parents or Governours or feareth some mulct from the Magistrate this is no testimony of a good Conscience But if a man sweare not because he feareth an Oath this argueth that the man feareth the commandement and to feare the commandement is a sure note of a good conscience Prov. 13.13 The least haire makes the eye weep so the least sin makes the heart smite Now as in avoiding of sin so in practising piety a man reads the Scripture at home heareth the word preached in publick performes duties in his family But why doth he thus if to satisfy conscience in obedience unto God t is well but if base and sinister ends to please and satisfy his owne carnall desire this is base and far from a good Conscience We find the Shechemites grosse hypocrites in this they will joine with Gods people and doe as they doe be circumcised as they are had this been done out of conscience it would have rejoyced the hearts of all godly ones but here is no such thing they will be circumcised indeed but
are to adde light to light i. e. the light of Scripture unto the light of Nature without knowledge the conscience cannot be good but as a blind man drinke poison as soon as wholsome liquor and stand as securely upon the brinke of a deep dungeon as upon a broad pavement and why because he seeth not the venome of the one nor yet the danger of the other Even so the blind conscience drinks iniquity as water and stands fearelesly upon the brinke of hell without any fear of falling into it and all because he seeth not the vilenesse of the one nor yet the mischeife of the other into which he runneth therefore adde I say unto the light of nature the light of scripture 2. Adde bloud to bloud i. e. the bloud of Christ to thy sin-bleeding soule this is that bloud which must cure thee and no other bloud can do it 1. Beasts bloud will nto heale thy conscience the bloud of buls and goats cannot purge away sin 2. Mans bloud will not as the bloud of Abel or the bloud of Martyrs 3. Thine owne bloud will not cure thee Saul having an evill conscience might thinke to ease him selfe by falling on his owne sword and shedding his owne bloud but alas this will not cure but kill Ther 's nothing can cure our sick polluted consciences but only bathing in the poole of Bethesda There is nothing can make us white but the bloud of the lamb It is Christs bloud only Zach. 13. this is that fountaine for sin and for uncleanesse this is the bloud that must cleanse thee from all sin 1 John 1.7 8. See therefore thou adde unto thy bleeding soule this precious blood 3. Adde spirit unto spirit i. e. unto thy spirit Gods spirit When Gods spirit comes into thy spirit it will not only regenerate thy spirit but witnesse with thy spirits that thou art healed and make thee with a joyfull voice to cry out Abba father Rom. 8.16 4. Adde faith to faith unto thy generall faith an applicative faith thou then wilt not only beleive that these former simples and ingredients thus compounded and as it were mixed will cure an evill conscience but will boldly say my evill conscience by these meanes is purged and quieted Where these principles and simples are thus compounded and happily joined together there is a perfect cure the evill conscience is become a good consceence the defiled conscience a purged conscience the troubled conscience a peaceable conscience thou art made whole therfore as our Saviour unto the Adulteresse when she had received merecy gave her this caveat to sin no more so say I to thee that hast a pure and peaceable conscience go sin no more but observe thy Physitians rules in keeping a good diet be holy to God upright to man sober in thy selfe if not thou wilt fall back into thine old disease so thy condition will be more desperate then ever Now for preservatives that conscience may keep its purity and peace 1. Abstaine from all appearances of evill Account no sin little but remember that a little leake may sinke a ship and one spark of fire may burne a city it was but a wanton glance at first in David when he looked on Bathsheba but if you mark it many sins and many sorrowes followed upon that glance of his so that which James speaketh is here most true behold how great a flame a little fire kindleth therefore abstame from the appearance of sin 2. Beware of intimacy with any ungodly person take heed whom thou makest thy companion the sweetest dispositions are soonest sowred by evill society wicked Ahab is no fit companion for godly Jehoshaphat nor Cerinthus the Heretick for John the Divine Take heed of such as are either erroneous in judgment or vitious in conversation wilt thou joine with those that are enimies unto God doest thou not know that one diseased sheep may infect an whole flock so on corrupt man may corrupt a multitude as we find in Alexander 2 Tim. 2.17 Hymeneus Philetus Phigellus Hermogines and others whose word did eat as doth a Canker which if not seasonably prevented will grow incurable The Originall word is gangrene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to eate as the disease called a wolfe or a canker doth which consumeth not only the part where it is but spreadeth farther in the flesh Such is the Nature of Hereticall doctrine if it be not stopt in the beginning cured by solid confutations and Ecclesiasticall censures upon those that are obstinate it will spread far and run over the whole body of the Church Beware of such a man that is an Heretick Tit. 3.10 11. after the first and second admonition reject knowing that he that is such is subverted and sinneth being condemned of himselfe i. e. convinced in his owne conscience that he shuts his eyes against the light and resisteth and opposeth the known truth The like I say for prophane and vitious persons though they entice thee consent thou not and if they say come with us or be one of us oh come not into the way of sinners Prov. 1.10 nor enter into the counsell of the ungodly Prov. 3.34 lest thou sit in the seat of the scorner and at last become a scorne and a derision unto God and the godly 3. In doubtfull things take the surest and safest way All men have flesh and so consequently error in them Great differences arise in things practicall one holds recreations on the Lords day and another denies it This man for usury that man against it some say Faith and Troth are no Oathes others will tell thee that they are more then yea and nay The Multitude are for Cards Dice drinking of healths Math. 5.37 long haire in men and naked backs and breasts in women but the fewest and wisest are against all these Judge thou therefore which is the safest way to use all these or to refuse them heare what the Spirit tells thee abstaine from all appearance of evill have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darknesse but rather reprove them Doubtlesse it will be safer for thee to deny thy selfe in forbearing Eph. 5.11 then to take liberty in using them Give no offence to tender consciences but follow Paul who was so wary of giving offence to Gods people that even in things lawfull he would deny himselfe resolving to eate no flesh while the world standeth rather then to make his brother to offend i. e. to put a stumbling block before him 1 Cor. 8.13 or give an occasion of sin unto him Wherefore walke on sure ground and be warranted from God for what thou doest Whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just pure lovely whatsoever things are of good report if there be any vertue Phil. 4.8 if any praise thinke on these things 4. Take heed of false and phantasticall Teachers who boast of the spirit of
Chr. 25.16 and Amaziah the priest The first was reproved by the prophet of the Covenant for setting up of false Gods but the King tells the Prophet that he should hold his peace least he were smitten he was so tender he could not beare it The like temper we find in Amaziah the priest when Amos prophesied the rejection of Israel and the destruction of Jeroboams house by the sword presentlie Amaziah goes to incense the King against Amos and tells him that the land was not able to beare his words and bids him slee away and not to come againe unto Bethel for it was the Kings chappell Amos 7.10 a place that he had Consecrated to the worship of the Calves therefore not safe nor fitting for Amos to prophesie against him in that place 2. Some are naturally tender of such a soft and tender Temper that they readily yeeld unto any command of man though countermaunded by god Thus was it with Ephraim Hos 5.11 Ephraim is broken in Judgment because he willingly walked after the Commandement what Commandements the wicked commandements of their Idolatrous Kings and princes therefore the Lord Threatens them that he would be to Ephraim as a Moth to the house of Judah rottennesse i.e. He would consume them by little and little as a Moth doth a garment or as a worme doth a peice of Timber and surely this may be said to be our case our preferring mans mandates before Gods Cōmands hath broken us of this land in peices and if God be unto us as he was to Ephraim a Moth and a worme gradually to ruine us it is but His Justice 3. Others there are which are scrupelously tender They will stick at strawes and leap over blocks make that a sin which God never made a sin and stirr most in that in which God is silent Thus the Priests scruple their going into the Praetorium the house of an Heathen man least they should be ceromoniallie defiled and soe held from the Passeover but yet made no matter of de filing themselves morally with the guilt of innocēt bloud againe they are troubled in putting the price of bloud into their holy Corbam but not troubled to give a price to shed innocēt bloud How carefull are they in washing of hands of cups pots and platters how carelesse in washing their hearts and insides from sin One saith well such as these they can dance amongst thornes and yet know not how to walke upon even ground Herod had too much of this rendernesse when he had passed his word given his oath to grant his wicked Herodias her unreasonable request which was to have John Baptist head in a charger Note the tendernesse of this man he may not breake his Oath and therefore concludes that to go back from his word would be perjurie but to go on though it were to shed the bloud of an innocent this he accounts pietie Many such we have amonst us who doe more scruple an egg then an Oath and like Esops dogg doe so greedily catch at shadowes that they loose the substance therefore I would such would be more wise following the Advice of Paul who in unnecessarie and vaine scruples will have us to asks no Question for conscience sake 1 Cor. 10.25 Beware of all such evill and sinfull tendernesse as enimies to a good conscience and labour for such a tendernesse as is holy and faultlesse which will make you watchfull against every sin that may any waies molest or disquiet conscience thus far of an unholy tendernesse which cannot stand with a good conscience Now followes an holy tendernesse which suits well with conscience and keeps us and our consciences at peace Holy tendernesse is such a tendernesse as is wrought in us by the holy spirit of God Holy Tendernesse Sheff whereby we are made very watchfull against whatsoever may molest or disquet conscience Such a tendernesse we find in Joseph who when his Mistresse tempted him to lye with her he presently refused it and said unto her behold my Master wotteth not what is in the house with me Gen. 39.9 and he hath committed all to my hand and there is none greater in his house then I neither hath he kept any thing from me but thee because thou art his wife how then can I doe this great wickednesse and sinagainst God As if he should have said unto her your desire is very wicked and I may not yeild unto it I may not act the least sin against God how then may I commit so great a wickednesse as to defile my Masters bed is it not Adulterie a complicated sin that contains many evills within it In so doing 1. I should be a Theefe in stealing from him the best jewell in his house namely his wife 2. Most injurious in mixing a bastard brood with his legitimate children 3. I should be sacrilegious in taking my body which is the temple of the holy Ghost and to turne it to carnall pollution 4. I should be most ungracious toward my God and most ingratefull to my kind Master The like we find in Job a man very fearefull to offend conscience he was a Nonsuch by Gods owne testimony Job 1.8 not any one like him upon the earth soe perfect soe upright fearing God and eschewing evill He was one that resolved not to give conscience the least offence and that it should not reproach him all his dayes Though men did reproach him as Eliphas Bildad Zophar who charged him with hypos crisy yet his conscience which was more privy to his waies and could testify more truly Job 27.6 that should not reproach him so tender was he Such must be our tendernesse the like was that in Ioseph Job and others and that we may not be deceived know how it shewes it selfe to God to others and to our selves 1. To God he that hath an holy tendernesse in him will stand for God in what shall make for his truth honour and glory of his name if he see any thing unto which God is intitled or hath interest in such a one will not see his God wronged in the least degree but he will stand upon an hoof with Moses upon an iota or title with Christ he will manifest his tendernesse in all things As 1. to his precepts 2. Exod. 10.26 To his Threats 3. His Judgments 4. His Mercies Of these in their order Math. 5.18 and First of the first namely Gods precepts Cauti esto te Vatab. in h. l. 1. He that hath this holy tendernesse in him will readily yeild unto Gods precepts whatsoever he commands he will do it circumspectly conscientia bona non solúm attendit quid praecipiat Deus sed quid velit quae sit voluntas Dei bona beneplacens et perfect Bern. de virâ solitariâ ad fratres de monte D●i p. 10 20. i. e. warily and with attention Exod. 23.13 Thus Moses is said to be faithfull in