Selected quad for the lemma: conscience_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
conscience_n law_n obedience_n obligation_n 1,036 5 9.4199 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A36453 A sermon preached before the Right Honorable the Lord Mayor of the city of London and the court of Aldermen at Bow-Church, on the feast of S. Michael, 1682 : the day for election of a Lord Mayor / by Henry Dove ... Dove, Henry, 1640-1695. 1682 (1682) Wing D2049; ESTC R31365 14,854 36

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Peace may justly be reputed an Enemy to the whole Community and ought to be punished as a disturber of it 3. Obedience to our Governors is founded in the highest Equity and Reason For day by day we receive invaluable benefits by the influence of their Government and Conduct Protection of our Lives and Estates of our Priviledges Properties and Religion secure Possession of the Gifts of God and Liberty to encrease our substance by Trade and Traffick and to eat the fruit of our Labour every man under his own Vine while there is no breaking in nor going out no leading into Captivity and no just complaining in our streets Happy are the People that are in such a case if we had but hearts to be thankful for it and if we compare our condition with other Nations we cannot but acknowledge our own happiness Yea Blessed are we of this Island who enjoy these things in Peace and may the Blessing of God rest upon them who promote and preserve our Peace Wherefore let us unanimously shew forth our thankfulness by our Obedience and chearfully endeavour in our several stations to uphold and maintain that Government that maintains and secures us it is but an equal and just return in regard of the benefits we receive from it By that we enjoy great quietness and plenty and therefore we ought to accept it always and in all places with all thankfulness And if it be Equity to uphold the Government because it upholds us what is it but great Iniquity to oppose or disturb that to which we stand so much indebted 4. Obedience to our Governours is a duty incumbent on us in point of ingenuity and gratitude For in preserving the Peace and Prosperity of the Nation they do not only preserve ours but for our advantage also they undergo many cares and troubles great toyl and labour attending continually for this very thing Rom. 13. 6. It is a great mistake in those that judge only by appearances to think the Lives of our Governours more pleasant and easie than other mens whereas indeed they are of all most difficult and full of Trouble Their splendor and Attendances their Riches and affluence of outward things and whatever else is necessary to support their State and Grandeur does not half countervail their continual sollicitudes and cares from within their crosses and disappointments from without the censures and obloquies of querulous and peevish persons the want of ease and liberty they sustain and all for our sakes that we way live in quiet In regard of what they do and endure for us watching early and late for our good they are deservedly stiled Parents of their Countrey and therefore 't is an ungrateful thing to add to their burden and increase their trouble by our frowardness and disobedience 't is not only disingenuous but unjust not to render 'em freely what may encourage and comfort 'em in the discharge of their arduous Office that they may do it with joy and not with grief Obedience will make their Office easie and our own condition safe 5. No man can disobey his Governours without breaking the most Sacred Laws of Justice and Honesty without downright Perjury towards God and perfidiousness towards man Every one as soon as he is born is under the Protection of the Government and becomes a Subject to his Natural Liege Lord and therefore when he comes to exercise his senses and to discern between good and evil as Religion and Reason will engage him to Fear God in the first place who has given him Life and Being so in the next it will teach him to Honour the King and submit to the Government by which under God he enjoys his Well-being and he cannot but conceive himself under a natural obligation of Obedience to the Laws of the Community of which Providence and Nature have made him a Member And in pursuance of this as well as the Law of God the Government has a Right to tye the Consciences of men by the firmest bonds it can and to exact Oaths of Allegiance and Promises of Fidelity and Loyalty that so it may secure and sustain it self and be better enabled to Protect them In which Promises and Oaths being once engag'd it is horrible impiety and wickedness to violate 'em for nothing can excuse us from the obligation of an Oath but the plain unlawfulness of the matter to which we are sworn Now this can never take place when we swear Allegiance only to our Lawful Governours according to the will of God the dictates of Nature the reason of the thing the Example of all Ages and the known Laws of our own Nation Wherefore I counsel thee to keep the Kings Commandment and to live in Obedience to his Government and that in regard of the Oath of God 'T is the Counsel of the Preacher Eccl. 8. 2. and 't is my Duty to mind you of it These things being seriously consider'd it will easily appear That Disobedience has all that is base in it and that Rebellion contains a whole conjugation of Wickedness of which there seems to be an undeniable sense in all mens minds since even they who love the thing do usually hate the name of Rebels and such as are conscious of the guilt would gladly avoid the reproach of it a plain indication of guilt as guilt is a manifest Argument of Sin and Wickedness And therefore it is well compared by the Prophet Samuel to Witchcraft 1 Sam. 15. 23. Rebellion is as the Sin of Witchcraft and stubborness is as Iniquity and Idolatry 'T is a Sin next to Blasphemy to speak evil of dignities a degree of prophaness to disobey 'em and intolerable Iniquity to Rebell against ' em It is as bad in its own nature as Murder or Theft being as expresly forbidden as these and in its consequence 't is far more mischievous Witness the dreadful miseries that usherd in and ensued the dissolution of a flourishing Monarchy within our own memories when prosperous wickedness prevail'd and Rebellion rid in Triumph For to rifle one man of his goods is not so bad or hurtful as to rob the Publick of its Peace to set an House on fire is not so pestilent and hainous as to be an Incendiary of the State to make combustions in the Nation and to blow up the Foundations of Publick Quiet To poyson or assassinate one private Person is not so horrid as to stabb a Common-wealth to sow the seed of Sedition in the Peoples minds and to raise intestine commotions in it in a word to wrong one man is nothing in comparison to the injuring of a Prince and in Him the whole Common-weale for in Him you wrong me and my Neighbour and every one that is protected by Him who are concerned in him and ought to defend him as a Common Father I might proceed to shew how Rebellion debauches the Conscience and hardens men in impiety and opens a gap to all sort of Villany till at
perform it because nothing can oblige us to do evil But what if the thing commanded be neither good nor evil but of an indifferent nature what must we do in that case why then we must undoubtedly obey it for otherwise there will be nothing left wherein the Magistrate may use his Power What is good or evil in it self must be done or avoided for Gods sake what is not so in it self but only in regard of the end for which it is enacted being judg'd so by the Magistrate for the good of the Community this must be observ'd both for God's sake and his too because God requires our Obedience to him in these things But what then becomes of our Liberty if another must judg for us It is where it was before we must obey and yet we are as Free as Christ hath made us nay I doubt not to add we are most Christ's Freemen when we duly obey our Governors just Laws for seeing Christ hath commanded us to be subject not only for wrath but for conscience sake that so we may avoid the guilt of sin that Obedience which keeps us from sin which is the only vassallage of a Christian can by no means infringe but does rather advance our Christian liberty As free says the Apostle 1 Pet. 2. 16. and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness but as the servants of God As though he had said Don't urge your liberty for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pretence to cover your craftiness as if that would excuse your Disobedience you are free indeed from sin but not from your Obedience Servants of God and yet Subjects to your Prince and so much the better Servants by how much the more you are good Subjects Another pretence of near a kin to the former is that of Private Conscience for here again 't is pleaded if I judg the thing commanded to be evil I cannot be free from sin for to me at least it is sin if I comply with the command during that persuasion because the Apostle assures me Whatever is not of Faith is sin But what if that persuasion be false and erroneous dost thou not in cur a greater sin What if it be not assuredly grounded on the clear word of God but only in thine own Opinion must a private Opinion weigh down the ballance against the publick good the laws of the Community the conscience of thy Governors and the great Rule of Faith and Conscience which is the Word of God That Word commands thee to Obey and so binds thy Conscience thy Conscience bids thee not and so binds thee which of these in reason shall take place must the Word be null'd by the Conscience or the Conscience guided by the Word What a sad condition is that man in who brings himself into these straits where Conscience which should be his guide becomes his greatest snare For such is the nature of an erroneous Conscience that it unavoidably betrays a man to sin whether he follows it or whether he resists it if he follows his Conscience he sins because it is erroneous if he resists it though it be erroneous he sins against his Conscience What then shall be done or which way shall he turn him in these perplexities Why I know no expedient but one that he speedily burst his shackles which himself has fastned and not God by ridding himself of such a Conscience And the way to do it is this That he be not overwise in his own conceit nor lean too much to his own understanding but allow the possibility at least of his being in an arrear that he is but a man and not infallible That he lay by Passion and Prejudice Partiality and Interest and sincerely examine the grounds of his persuasion not as pleasing men but God who tryeth our hearts That he humbly consult better judgments whose Office it is to inform and ease his Conscience namely his lawful Pastors whose lips preserve knowledg and are set over him in the Lord for that purpose That he believe his Governors have a conscience too for which they must answer as well as himself and seriously consider whose plea is most likely to be admitted at Gods high Tribunal And above all that he earnestly pray for the spirit of meekness and humility the spirit of wisdom discretion and holy fear while he compares his Conscience with the Rule of Gods Word impartially and God himself hath promis'd that he will not deny his Spirit to such an humble Petitioner and Enquirer To these we may add in the last place the pretence of both together I mean liberty of Conscience To which I shall only say two things and I leave 'em to your sober thoughts First that Liberty of Conscience if it be well weigh'd sounds like a contradiction for Liberty imports Freedom without restraint but Conscience was always bound ever since it was plac'd in humane souls and though I am free indeed in regard of my actions which proceed from my Conscience yet my Conscience is not freed from the antecedent rule of my actions which is the law of God for by that it is always bound The second is this There is no such phrase throughout the Bible as Liberty of Conscience not one place in Scripture where these words are joyn'd together but for Obedience to our Governors there are twenty I speak to knowing men judg ye what I say 3. The Duty of Pastors and Teachers inculcated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Put 'em in mind admonish 'em often of it and bring it to their remembrance as S. Peter does twice together in another case 2 Pet. 1. 12 13. I will not be negligent to put you always in remembrance of these things though ye know them and be established in the present truth Yea I think it meet as long as I am in this tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance There are some Duties we are apt to forget or very unwilling to remember and some people there are who care not for a Preacher that tells 'em often of their duty insomuch that a moral Preacher is made a by-word to fright the ignorant and to render 'em averse since they know no better to their Parish Guide If he rub up their memories and touch 'em in a sore place they have a present remedy for it by hearing him no more and think it sufficient excuse for their absence or going astray to say They do not like his way But if a man set up a separate Congregation in opposition to the Established Laws and Worship if he fill their heads with aiery Speculations instead of practical and searching Truths if he daub with untemper'd mortar or sow pillows under their elbows and can but help 'em to an evasion from this Duty of Obedience he shall have followers enough This is a certain sign that tho men know their Duty yet they do not love to hear it since they forsake the Assemblies where they are