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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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Leah instead of an imagined Rachel It climbes the Tree of Knowledge and cuts down the Tree of Life It taketh and chuseth a Barabbas but renounceth and condemneth Christ Jesus It Mar. 7. 8. 11. 12. will make a Pharisee set more by an old Tradi●ion then a divine Precept and a Pharisees di●ciple Acts 16. 9. Gal. 1. 13. 14. Psal 3. 6. Mat. 23. 15 look more after the Corban then his du●y to his aged and indigent Parents This set Paul blindfold to persecute and blaspheme Christ onely that he might shew his zeal to God This makes others compasse both sea ●nd land to make one their Proselyte who when all is done is but a double childe of hell Oh the wofull work erroneous Conscience hath made in all Times in the past Ages of the Church And this my story of iniquity worketh hitherto and is still working more mischief amidst our sad and dismall distractions This is one part of the spirituall wickednesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in heavenly things or places Ephes 6. 12 13. Against which must be taken the whole armour of God This like Saul hath slain his thousands not of Philistines but Israelites This like that wood which in a bloody day devoured more by erring disordering and intangling them then the sword devoured 2 Sam. 18. 8 This destroys more then ignorance or superstition or prophanesse This lets go Scripture duties upon more credit given to Revelations Upon this mistake a true Prophet once contrary to expresse commands of God gave up his faith obedience and withall his conscience upon a report of a later revelation and an Angelicall apparition to the old Prophets bare but false asseveration of a newer and cleerer light 1. King 13. 18. I am also a prophet as thou art and an angel spake unto me by the word of the Lord saying Bring him back with thee to eat bread and drink water but he lied unto him This above all other is the evil conscience intended in this place It was nothing but erring conscience at first that caused Hymenaeus and Alexander to relinquish their former Profession and having put pure conscience out of doors they come to make a fearfull shipwrack of their faith totally and o● their souls finally Enlightened conscience feareth and departeth from evil this fool rageth and is confident Prov. 14. 16. Englightened conscience hath his eyes open and seeth the angel in the way erroneous conscience like the seduced false Prophet rusheth forward into the midst of danger Erroneous conscience is he whose deceived heart turns him aside who feedeth on ashes as the Prophet saith Esay 44. 20. hath a lie in his right hand so that he cannot deliver his soul This is he whose plague is in his head Levit. 13. 44. This is the man whom ye may bray in a mortar with a pestell among wheat yet will not his folly depart from him Prov. 27. 22. There is more hope of a fool then of this man because he is wiser commonly in his own conceit then seven men that can render a reason Prov. 26. 12 16. Erroneous conscience is the eye that puts darknesse for light and light for darknesse It is the mouth that puts bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter It is the traveller that leaveth the ancient paths and the good way to walk in new wayes wayes not of Gods casting up and Scriptures chalking out Jer. 18. 15 A good Conscience must therefore be purified from Errour Thirdly It must be purified from naturall From deadnesse or hardnes deadnesse or hardnesse which is as bad a disease as either ignorance or errour So that although thou mayest escape the fear of ignorance by the instructions of Wisdom and-the snare of errour by the light of the Gospel yet if thou be taken in the Pit of deadnesse and naturall hardnesse thou art never the neerer thou hast not yet a good conscience Heb. 9. 14. The conscience must be purged from dead works that it may serve the living God A dead conscience is not for a living God One may be a knowing hypocrite or an orthodox nonconvert but what is he neerer to salvation while in this deadnesse There is a generation pure in their own eyes yet not cleansed Pro. 30. 12 as to conscience from their own deadnesse God I thank thee I am no Papist say they no Anabaptist Antinomian Sectary I am a catholike Christian I am an old Protestant but an unsanctified Christian and the common carnall Protestant is no better then they He is blinde and cannot see afar off and forgets that he is not yet cleansed from his old sins 2. Pet. 1. 9. Except you be regenerate and raised from naturall deadnesse you cannot see the kingdom of God Al that are not seducers as Jesuits false Teachers or seduced as common Papists Antinomians Libertines Anti-scripturists prophane Atheists and Socinians are not therefore necessarily saved There is a plague in the heart that every one must see and bewail and get cured of or else it is as pernicious to the 1 Kin. 8. 38 soul and sends more certainly to hell then any plague or leprosie in the head Levit. 13. 44. We call not that Arm or Leg good which is onely not bruised wounded out of joynt when it is benummed or paralytick It hath no pain indeed but what use is there of it So what though conscience be not bruised raging and tormenting and out of joynt by errour if it be benummed stupified or dead There is no use of such a conscience Conscience must therefore be purged from deadnesse Secondly There be three things which Conscience must be Purified by which are 1 The Three things conscience is purified by 1. The word of Christ word 2. Blood 3. Spirit of Christ First The word of Christ is the Great heart Searcher and Conscience Purifier Heb. 4. 12. The word of God is quick and Powerfull and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart c This is the Fanne with which Christ doth purge his Floore Canscience John 15. 3. Now are you clean through the word which I have spoken to you saith Christ to his Disciples and for them he prayes Joh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is that sanctifying truth This removes those before named discases of conscience 1. This is that which removes ignorance Psal 119. 105. Thy word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my paths What can the best eye see without a light of Sun or candle What can we know concerning God and his will without his word This written word is a more sure discovery of the minde of God then all apparitions or the most famous particular revelations 2 Pet. 1. 19. To which we must take heed and have recourse as to a light shining in a dark place This giveth knowledge to the simple Psal 119. 130. This is sufficient to remove all ignorance and uncertainty in divine things 2.
second Temple of our latter Reformation And that we should finde that observation of Austin made good who moving the question Whether Peace or War devoured more Christians resolved Peace Pax cum bell● de crudelitate certavit vicit Peace and War once strove saith he who should do most mischief in the Church and Peace carried it Thus have I given the Description of these ten Good Consciences and shall name no more There are more I confess then these ten to bee found in the Word But this I am bold to say If these ten were to be found in the world in this age in this Nation God would deal with us yet as he had done with Sodom had hee found ten Gen. 18. 32 Righteous men there wee should not bee destroied but this whole Nation spared for these Tens sakes yea doubtless had not the Lord reserved a very small Remnant in whom these ten properties of Good Conscience have been found wee had alreadie been made as Sodom and should have Isai 1. 9. been as Gomorrah before this time CHAP. XV. Of the Excellencie of a good Conscience and the benefits thereof HAving hitherto spoken of the nature of good Conscience in generall and of these severall kinds of good Conscience in particular I shall now proceed to give such reasons and use those arguments which may provoke us to get and keep such a good conscience Which reasons are drawn from three generall heads 1. From the excellency in and bene●●t gotten by a good Conscience 2. From the danger and mischief of an evil Conscience 3. From the difficultie of getting and keeping a good and escaping a bad Conscience This Chapter shall speak of those excellencies which are in and the benefits gotten by a good Conscience Which appears in five particulars 1. The excellency of good Conscience appears The excellencie of good Conscience both in the Honourable Title given it above all other graces and the reall Preheminence it hath if compared with all other things 1. It hath this proper Epithite and denomination given it ordinarily of good Conscience Act. 23. 1. 1 Tim. 1. 5. 19. 1 Pet. 3. 16. 21. whereas other graces excellent in their place and kinde seldom called thus When do you reade of good faith good repentance or love or holiness or obedience but still conscience is called good Conscience There is surely some eminent and superlative goodness yea much communicative goodness in it It is good it self and makes the good faith and good love and repentance and obedience c. which all cease to be good when separated from good Conscience Then compare it with all other good things and it hath the better of them What Quid prodest plena bonis Arca si inanis sit Conscien tia good is there in a chest full of goods when the Conscience is empty of goodness said Austin What is a man better if he have all goods and want this one good what if he have good ware in the Shop good stock in the ground houshold in the house clothes on his back and good credit abroad and have not a good Conscience in his heart all this were like a rich suit on an ulcerous body This man is like Naaman a rich man 2 Kin. 5. 1. but a Leper a great and honourable man but a foule man What are all great Parts and excellent Gifts and Abilities of minde without good Conscience but as so many sweet flowers upon a dead man wrapt up in fair linen He is a drest man but a dead man outwardly sweet inwardly smelling or like a sounding brasse and tinkling Cymball This is above knowledge alone Adde Con to Science and you have the compleat Christian Omnibus numeris perfectum Take away Con and leave all Science you leave nothing but Cyphers Though saith Bernard many seek Knowledge and desire Science few care for Multi scientiam quaerunt pauci Conscientiam Conscientia autem quam scientia citius apprehenditur utilius retinetur Bern. Conscience yet is Conscience gotten with more case and kept with more advantage then all your Knowledge This is above All Faith alone therefore they oft go together in Scripture 1 Tim. 1. 5. and 19. and 3. 9. when Conscience is put away the text saith Faith is cast away and shipwrackt Nothing profits alone without this not Baptisme 1 Pet. 3. 21. not coming to the Lords Supper Heb. 10. 22. not Charitie 1 Tim. 1. 5. not any serving of God 2 Tim. 1. 3. not our subjection and obedience to men or Magistracie Rom. 13. 5. not all our sufferings 1 Pet. 2. 19 20. Take any man with all endowments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dirt kneaded with bloud as they call'd Tiberius Nero. without Conscience you have but the carcaese of a man without the soul What is the learned Philosopher and eloquent Orator without Conscience but a rational brute or a speaking beast who may like Balaams Ass open his mouth to rebuke another more mad yet is beaten himself What is a Magistrate without Conscience but as the Gyant without his eye or the eye without his sight Let all Duties be performed and Conscience not regarded you have but an Hypocrite let all gifts remain and Profession stay if Conscience go you have but an Apostate Bernhard saith excellently to this purpose It is better running to Conscience then to all your wisdom unless you mean by your Vtilius est currere ad conscientiam quam ad sapientiam nisi cadem sit sapientia quae conscientia wisdom nothing but Conscience The unlearned man with his good Conscience saith Austin will get the start of thee and be in Heaven before thee when thou with all thy learning and abilities wilt be cast into hell Surgunt indocti rapiunt regnum Coelorum c. 2. Consider the absolute Necessitie of a Good Conscience to the very esse and being of a Christian when many other things serve onely to the melius esse better being And this will shew you a higher Excellencie in Good Conscience which should set us upon getting it This constitutes the Christian and is that sine quâ non To suppose a Christian without Conscience were to suppose the Sun without Light or fire without heat this is of the very same consequence to spiritual life as the sense of feeling is to natural life which compared with the rest of the senses hath the preheminence in sundrie particulars as the Philosopher laies down in his Axiomes all applicable to Conscience 1. Tactus Origine primus they say Feeling Conscience to the soul is as sense of feeling to the bodie in four respects is the first sense in being So is Conscience the primum vivens and ultimum moriens in the new Creature Life discovers it self in the soul first in his sensibleness and tenderness as in the childes feeling appears the first of natural life the childe beginneth to feel when it
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
Lordships pardon for this boldnesse and Prolixity and a favourable acceptance and perusal of this homely Treatise shall continue to efflagitate and importune God that as he hath made you high in Place and Honour and Dignity So you may be made much more high in Name and Praise and Grace and Glory Your Lordships humble servant in every Christian service Jo SHEFFEILD To the Conscientious Reader CHristian and Consciencious Reader for such I desire to find at least to leave thee the World is now full of Books so full that it cannot contain all that is written and of how many may it be said that they do but proclaim the vanity of the Writer and procure wearinesse if not vexation to the Reader As for the subject and matter of this Discourse it cannot but receive thy Approbation Howsoever the homely and plain language in it the unelegancy and untakingness of the composure and composer in this now so knowing but more censorious Age may cause it to be laid aside with neglect by some who as in hearing they hear not Sermons but names so in reading use not to read Treatises but Titles O my Lord I am not Eloquent Vir verb●rum Ex. 4. 10. but of a slow Speech and of a slow Tongue yet if the Lord say I will go with thee and be with thy mouth and with this Rod and Pen in thy Hand how much may a stammerring and discouraged Moses undertake and go through with Jerom said he did diligere Christum in Augustino Love Austin the better for Christs sake our times invert it and we do onely diligere Augustinum in Christo we love Christ the better for St. Austins sake and it may be should not like Christ at all if it were not in Austins mouth and parts The preaching of Christ in a crucified stile now is accounted foolishnesse as heretofore in a crucified state But as of all Divinity it may be said Ornari res tanta nega● contenta doceri so especially a discourse of Conscience needs least the dresse of humane Ornaments requires most the strength of Divine Evidence and Demonstration of the Spirit It is a subject wherein many of eminent worth have travelled some more antiently many more of latter times and among our selves All which will have their deserved praise in the Churches of Christ unto succeeding Ages And yet it were much to be wished that either more were written in these dayes by those who are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of more leisure and abilities or that what is already written were more read studied perused and practised As for me although I cannot but be so far at least Conscious to my own weaknesses and insufficiencies as to say with Gideon Is not my thousand the least in the Tribe and is not some others Gleanings better than my whole Vintage yet having expected that some of more dayes and name and parts should have spoken in Abners language to Joab calling for a Cessation 2 Sam. 2. 26. or a Retreat How long shall it be ere thou bid the People return from pursuing their Brethren that our Swords of Contention may he beaten into Plough-shares of more use and fruitfulnesse for the Lords field and our Spears of difference into Pruning-hooks to prune and dresse the Lords Vineyard least all practicall Divinity be eaten up of controversal which being exhaled first from more specious utrums shortly congeales into more gross dubious neutrums at last dissolves into irreligious nihilums and settles in scepticism at last or foulest Atheism and fearing least our smal Coal or Spark which is yet remaining our sacred Coal of Israel of Religion Faith and good Conscience should be quite put out which to me seems to be struck at and in great danger I have with Craesus Son who had never spoken before till he saw his Fathers life in that danger broken that silence and broke out from that privacy which I could gladly have enjoyed But if Religion be in danger as clearly it is I concluded that if Dumb men should not cry out the very stones would cry out against them Conscience is the Book of Books the ancientest piece of Scripture in the World the first Tables of Gods own hewing and Hand-writing in the heart of man for whose sake all other Books since yea the Scripture was after purposely written to Comment upon it Unicuique suus liber Conscientia propter hunc libellum omnes alii libri inventi sunt if Bernard say true This is thy Book which thou must be well versed in or all thy other reading will be unprofitable To study other Books may make thee a Scholler but to study this makes thee a Christian Conscience is a little Map or volume of Divinity there is more of God to be seen in Conscience than in any other piece It is the rarest piece that God ever made Of all Creatures there is more of God to be seene in Man than in them all in Man most in the Soul in the Soul most in the Conscience This smelleth more of God saith one than the Heavens the Sun the Stars or all the glorious things of the Earth Gold precious Stones Rubies or the sweetest Herbs Roses or Lillyes Conscience is the Art of Arts and Science of Sciences which every one of whatsoever Degree Quality Science is of absolute necessity bound to be skilled and exercised in A Book it is which neither the Learned when it is delivered to him with this Charge Read this I pray may refuse put away as he Esa 29. 11 12. and say I cannot for it is sealed It is an open Book Or when to the unlearned with the same Charge Read this now he may not say I cannot for I am not Book-learned It is ●n easie Book the Lay-mans Book or Primmer Multae sunt Scientiae hominum sed nulla melior illa quâ homo cognoscit seipsum Many Sciences there are but none like that whereby a man knowes himself The Tree of Knowledge hath often proved to the sons of men the Tree of Evill the fruit though delightful to the eye and pleasant to the taste often proving bitter Apples of contention God hath justly hedged it in and set an Angel to keep man from approaching it But the Tree of Conscience is ever the Tree of Life his fruit is meat his leaves medicine and his very shade comfort●ble And truly if a man have but so much Knowledge as to get and keep a good Conscience though he can never attain to those high Speculations which the world admires it is enough I would have you saith the Apostle to the Ro. 16. 19. Romanes as simple to evill as wise to good And our Saviour to those of Thyatira whose parts could not reach the bottome of those strange and deep notions which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depths though depths of Satan counting their doctrines of licentiousnesse depths and the old plain sincerity and conscientiousnesse but
is certaine whatsoever Trade the other was of how ominously fatall is it to the undertakers themselves when private Mechanickes do presumptuously invade the Ministery and become publique Preachers 3. There is no dividing between Faith and a good Conscience leave Orthodox Faith and farewell good Conscience or let go good Conscience and you have seene the last of Faith it sinkes it shipwracks 4. How true is that of 2 Tim. 3. 13. That evil men and Seducers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waxe worse and worse deceiving and being deceived seldome staying when they begin to shrinke from their former sincerity and strictnesse till they arrive at the highest of impiety going from sinne to sinne and from Error to Error till by the just judgement of God they are given over to become open Blasphemers and outragious Persecutors 5. Every vicious and infectious Teacher and every bold Broacher of Doctrines corrupting and staining the simplicity of the Faith and every Member of a corrupt and dissolute Conscience are not to be Tollerated and permitted in a new Testament Church but all such are deservedly excommunicated the Church who have once excommunicated Conscience and they justly suffer in being delivered up to Sathan who have wickedly sinned in delivering Doctrines of Sathan No liberty here you see for every kinde of Conscience 6. Yet are not visible and open censures but for visible and open sinnes not for Errors in judgement concealed but published not for want Publice declarantur pertinere ad regnum Satanae quippe qui non pertineant ad regnum Christi Piscator of faith but for opposing it 7 Excommunication Clave non errante is a solemne and dreadfully operative Ordinance a shutting out of Heaven a shutting up in Hell him who is justly cast out of the Churches fellow●hip by that censure He is delivered up to Satan 8 The end of Excommunication and all Church censures is not to serve to the destruction 2 Cor. 10. 8 13. 10. 1 Cor. 5. 5. of the Censured or Private revenge of the Censurers but to edification onely That the offender may be terrified and reclaimed The Traditi sunt ad emendandum non ad perdendum Sedul in locum flesh destroyed that the soule may be saved and that others may be warned and so the infection stayed That they may learne not to blaspheme Vt Castigatione hac adducti desinant falsum suum dogma spargere Piscator But none of these doe I intend to stand upon though I shall have occasion to meet with them in prosecuting the intended Doctrine To the words Holding Faith and a good Conscience c. Holding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Piscator It signifies properly Having and so translated 1 Pet. 1 Pet 3. 16. 3. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Having a good Conscience here Holding To have and to hold in our English speaking are usually put together It is not enough once to have or for some while to have Had unlesse we ever have and hold them Faith Either take it first for that which we call Grace-faith Fides quâ creditur That hee should Hold Act Maintaine Exercise the grace of saving and lively Faith Or Secondly for the Doctrine of Faith Fides quâ creditur In which sence it is used Chap. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. Jud. v. 3. And Expositors do generally understand it so here that Timothy should 1 Tim. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. ●ud v. 3. hold the whol●some forme of sound words and still retaine the old received Faith in Orthodox Doctrine for the grace of saving Faith will not be long kept in the heart unlesse we keepe the Doctrine of sound faith and principles in the head And a good Conscience Conscience you seldome 1 Tim. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19 see it without an Epethite and this usually is his Epethite Good Conscience so in many places Cap. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19. Faith had no Epethite of Good you doe not Ordinarily see other Graces called Good as good Love good Repentance Zeale Hope Patience or the like But ever good Conscience The other graces are commonly Nemo tam perditus est ut sit omni conscientia planè expers Ames good or few have them but those that are good But Conscience is a thing which all have though a good Conscience but few therefore get and hold a good Conscience or have none at all Which some having put away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua repulsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de trudo depello arceo ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trudo pello Act 7. 27. 39 Beza Expulsa Piscator quam Repellentes Vulgar Transl thrusling it away This word is used Acts 7. 27. He that did his Neighbour wrong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trust Moses away as a busie body and an intruding intermedler so did these thrust away Conscience as if it had been a troublesome usurper over them So after Act 7. 39. The rebelling Israelites thrust him from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They would cast off and eashiere Moses no more receive his Dictates nor obey his directions but would set up another Captaine whom they would follow or lead rather into Egypt Thus did these in the Text cashiere and throw off conscience from his be trusted employment and would follow their owne swinge This word is used also Rom. 11. 1. 2. Hath God cast away Ro. 11. 1. 2 his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and v. 2. He answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath not cast away or reprobated his people whom he foreknew But these did reprobate Conscience and would make it a cast away as not to be retained in times of Gospell Light and liberty So that in this place the Translation is with the softest and more gentle it is here then in any other place when it is rendered they put away good Conscience It might have been read they thrust off threw away cashiered disclaimed and even reprobated it Concerning faith made Shipwrack Fide Vacui facti sunt They were emptied and eased of their faith Syriack transl Their souls are Shipwrack'd their Faith Grace Ship-wrack'd aleak being sprung in Conscience the Vessel they lost all they had and saved not the use Comfort Confidence Joy or feeling of former Faith and beleeving Nor did they preserve their former simplicitie and integrity of judgement in matter of Doctrine and Truth But as Conscience was reprobated to their judgement their judgement is now wholly reprobate concerning the Faith Now the words being opened you see they are a Magazine or Panoply of Armor and Ammunition to furnish Timothy and each good Minister yea every Christian with the most necessary and usefull armes both to warre that good warfare v. 18. And to prevent this evill shipwracke v. 19. Timothy thy charge is that thou war a good warfare thy duty is
Dyke I shall not trouble my selfe to debate whether Scot. Bon. Dur. Conscience be an Habit as many of the Schoole-men affirme Or whether a faculty or power as reverend Mr. Perkins judicious Rutherford disp against pretended liberty of cons cap. 1 Ames de consc lib. 1. cap. 1 Rutherfurd and divers of the Schoolmen determine Or whether an act onely as acute Dr. Ames contendeth Nor shall I with any curiosity at all discourse of it Origen had an odde fancy as he had many an other that it was another spirit in the soule But somewhat is in it for as I said before it is as a wheele in a wheele a wheele full of eyes a wheel ful of motion a wheel ful of spirit of life And as all the sight is contracted in the apple of the eye so I may say is conscience as much as con-knowledge or knowledge contracted and epitomized and conscience as it were the apple of the soules eye I shall describe it thus Conscience is the soules acting and reflecting on it selfe and on all a mans own actions This is consciences worke these are his Bounds what hast thou to doe with another mans Conscience in this sence or what 1 Cor. 10. 29 hath hee to doe with thine A man standeth or falleth to his owne conscience That standeth or falleth to his owne Master and onely to him Ro. 14. 4. Humility Patience Meekenesse Compassion Justice Righteousnesse Chastity c. extend to others my charity may and must relieve others knowledge may and must informe and benefit others But consciences worke is to make every man his owne keeper CHAP. II. What a good Conscience is NOw I am next to shew what a good Conscience is For there are two kinds of consciences 1 Evill conscience Heb. 10 22. 2 Good 1 Tim. 1. 19. This of which I speake The evill conscience is mainly two-fold mala turbata an ill Troubled mala Pacata or Quiet Or as Dr. Ames more clearely viti sé mala molesté mala So is there a double good conscience bona turbata Felix conscientia in qua obviarunt sibi verritas misercordia in qua osculatae sunt pax justi cia Bern. de in t do good troubled Bona pacata or good quiet And to a right good conscience there must a double goodness concur to the constituting of it 1. A goodnesse or sincerity 2. A goodnesse of security It must be hon sté bona Pacaté bona Ames Or more plainely it must be Purificatè bona Pacatè bona And here I shall give you a full def●nition of a perfect good conscience when it hath both these goodnesses in it The good conscience what it is That is the good conscience which is rightly purified and rightly pacified by the word and blood and spirit of Christ regularly performing all his Offices to which it is designed First I call it the Conscience purified Here is the first and principall part of Consciences goodnesse though yet for the present it have not peace Peace alone without purity makes not the Conscience good at all as purity alone without peace makes not a perfect well Conscience Conscientia aedifieanda sed prius mundanda said Bernard well Conscience is to be edified but first to be purified As the wisdom that comes Security without sincerity is not security but stupidity Jam. 3. 17. from above is first pure then peaceable So Consciences first goodnesse stands in purity then in peace The first goodnesse of the eye is the clearnesse of sight It is but an inferiour goodnesse to say it is not inflamed or blood-shotten nor do we call it good at all if it want its sight So neither is Conscience good at all though it rage not be not inflamed or bloodshotten if it want his purity All negative goodnesse is but a poor and heggerly goodnesse Now that conscience may be rightly purified there are three things which it must be purified from and three things which it must be purified by These things conscience must be purified from The things it must be purified from are ignorance errour hardnesse or naturall deadnesse First it must be purified from ignorance The conscience void of knowledge is a conscience void of goodnesse Rutherfurd The blind From ignorance Mat. 6. 23. Mat. 5. 13 mans conscience is ever an ill conscience his light is darknesse how great then is that darknesse His salt unsavoury what then shall season him Conscience in the best unregenerate Luk. 8. 16 person is as a light whelmed under a bushell or thrust under a bed gives but a dim light and reacheth not far In things between man and man it can discern more clearly and like those nightbirds which can with their weak Ex. 18. 19. eyes see where better eyes sometimes see not a Jethro herein may be able to advise a Moses But in the Things of God he is little skilled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blinde and cannot see afar off What a night-bird was Doctour Nicodemus in conceiving of the necessity nature and manner 2 Pet. 1. 9. of regeneration Hence it is that the Scripture calls the naturall mans wisdom foolishnesse with God as Gods wisdom is accounted foolishnesse with him It is enmity to God it is not subject to the law of God nor indeed can be 1 Cor. 2. 14 Rom. 8. 7 The ignorant mans judgement therefore is no judgement his peace no sound peace his hopes no safe hopes for his thoughts are not Gods thoughts nor his wayes Gods wayes Tit. 1. 15 To the unbeleeving and unpure is nothing pure because their very minde and conscience is defiled Good Conscience must therefore first be purified from ignorance Secondly it must be purified from errour The From error erroneous conscience is ever a desperate and dangerous conscience It is the pestilence that walketh in darknesse Erroneous conscience Ps 91. 6. maketh strange work in the world but worse in the Church Look what swine are to garden-beds or a wilde Boar to a Vineyard or wilde beasts to Vines or young Foxes to grapes that is erroneous conscience to Churches to Doctrines to Truths to Graces and to Duties It overturns all Erroneous Conscience engaged Herod under opinion of piety to destroy a holy man to save a wicked oath and gratifie a clamourous woman Matth. 14. 9. for his oaths sake the king commanded John Baptists head to be given her Others Jerem. 44. 16. make no scruple to make voyd Gods Commands because they must make good their own vows This is the Horse that rusheth headlong into the battle impatient of all restraints Puts men often upon dangerous wayes and designes yet they say not once what have I done Jer. 8. 6. but suppose their ways are right wayes and often they think they do God the greatest service when they do the Church the greatest disservice Oh the grosse mistakes of erring conscience It embraceth a blear-eyed
This rectifies errour being as a voyce behinde us Esay 30. 21. Thine ear shall hear a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it when ye turn to the right hand and when ye turn to the left This ends all controversies Esay 8. 26. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them This resolves all doubts How is it written in the law how readest thou Luke 10. 26. 3. This removes deadnesse of conscience and hardnesse Is not this word an hammer to soften the heart and is not this the immortall seed by which we Jer. 23. 29. 1 Pet. 1. 23 Psal 119. 25. are begotten again Therefore David finding his conscience in a dead frame prayed My soul cleaveth to the dust quicken me according to thy word Again verse 50. It is my comfort in my affliction for thy word hath quickened me So verse 93. I will never forget thy precepts for with them thou hast quickened me The word is the first thing by which conscience is purified and set right This makes the man of God perfect and thorowly furnished to every good work 2 Tim. 3. 17. Secondly By the blood of Christ is the conscience 2. By the blood of Christ further purified we must not rest in the word alone without this blood which cleanseth both the book of Conscience and is sprinkled on the book of Scripture to give vertue to it Heb. 9. 14. Shall not the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God This is it that purgeth the defiled and guilty conscience from all his diseases and filthinesse Christs spittle opened the eyes of two blinde men once His blood openeth the eye of Mark 8. 23 Joh. 9. 6. blinde conscience ever This is the blood of sprinckling which alone purifies the heart from an evil conscience Heb. 10. 22. So that the soul may now draw nigh to God with boldnesse and much assurance Other blood and observances Read the 9. and 10. chap. to the Hebr. might serve to make an Israelite under the Law legally pure as to the flesh Onely this blood of Christ typified by the purification water the hyssop scarlet blood of bulls and goats can make a Christian Evangelically pure before God and Internally in the court of Conscience The book and people and all things pertaining to the Tabernacle were consecrated with blood Heb. 9. 22. And almost all things by the Law were purged with blood And without shedding of blood there is no remission To teach us what is more plainly expressed 1 Joh. 1. 7. The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin Wash me O Lord with this hyss●p and I shall Psal 51. 7. be clean Purge me with this blood and I shall be whiter then the snow Thirdly Conscience is purged by the Sperit 3 By the spirit of Christ of Christ together with the word and blood without there be a concurrence of all three the work is not done not the word alone without the blood and spirit can effect it no● the blood without the word and spirit nor yet the spirit without both the former The word is sprinkled on the Conscience to inform satisfie and purifie it The blood of Christ is sprinkled on the word as Exod 24. 8. compared with Heb. 9. 20. which it was not sufficient to have read but sprinkled with the blood of the Covenant to give vertue to it And the blood it self must be applyed by the spirit that the vertue of it may be brought home to the conscience The blood of Christ without the spirit is no better then his flesh without the spirit The flesh profits nothing It is the Spirit that quickeneth The principall Jo. 6. 63. part of the work of purifying Conscience belongs to the Spirit It was that eternal Spirit whereby Christ offered his Blood Heb. 9. 14. which did commend our conscience to God And this Spirit applying the blood offered doth commend and seal Gods Covenant to our Consciences Thus the spirit heals those three diseases It properly removes Ignorance being the Spirit of Illumination Eph. 1. 17 This rectifyes Errour being the spirit of Truth Joh 14. 17. This removes Deadness being the spirit of life Rom. 8. 2. This is the great Purifyer this the Refiners fire this the Fullers soape Malach 3. 2. whereby Christ doth refine and purifie the sons of Jacob. This the Spirit of Judgement and Spirit of burning wherewith God hath promised to wash away the filth of the daughter of Zion Esay 4. 4. CHAP. III. Of the Conscience rightly pacifyed Conscience rightly pacified II. A Right pacifyed Conscience This is the second property and part of the good Conscience laid down in the Definition Purity indeed is the more excellent kinde of goodnesse it being essentiall to the very being of good Conscience Peace is but an additional and a secondary part of that goodness and conduceth more to the bene esse then to the bare esse of good conscience It is a spirituall good but of a temporary nature not standing and immovable Peace is so far good as that the Conscience is not perfectly well without it but right Peace it must be or it is not good at all which that it may enjoy There are three things which Conscience must be 1. Pacifyed from 2. Pacifyed by Three things it must be pacified from 1. The three things Conscience must be pacifyed from are 1. The Reign of Sin 2. The rage of Satan 3. The displeasure of God 1 It must be at peace from the dominion of sin So long as Adonijah Reigneth Solomon is in danger while Sin is in his Power and Throne 1 From the raigne of sinne Conscience cannot be in safety Our Peace therefore which we should seek is not such a Peace as we are born unto or are possessed of while the strong man is Armed but is a recovered Peace regained by deposing the Usurper Like Israels Peace after the seditious commotion 2 Sam. 20. 22. was quietly setled when Shebahs head was off No peace to conscience while a Sheba up in Armes There is a Peace indeed when Sin and Satan are strongly armed and keep the house Luk. 11. 21. This is no good Peace this is the peace of a sleepy not an awakened conscience No war so miserable as Pax est sed Bello pax ea deterior such a peace when the soul is at ease in it self at peace with Sin at peace with Satan at agreement with Hell but at war and enmity with God Conscientia pacatè optima may be vitiosè pessima In tali pace amaritudo mea amarissima as Bernard or Ad pacem advenit Amara mihi Amaritudo as Junius reads that of Hezekiah in Is 38. 17. Wo to these that ●laugh now they
the two prisoners dreams Pharaoh made it good Hic crucem sceleris precium tulit alter honores Gen. 41. 13. It came to passe saith the Butler to Pharaoh as he interpreted to us so it was me he restored to mine office him he hanged Joseph is then said to hang the one and restore the other because he foretold it so and it fell out accordingly so conscience is said to absolve and condemn because according to the sentence of this lower Court and Judicatory of conscience usually is the last sentence of that highest Court in Heaven If my conscience Job 31. 35. 36. clear me let my adversary write a Book and Libell against me I shall wear it as a Isa 50. 8. Crown my witness is at hand and he is near 1 Sam. 2. 25 that justifieth me But if my conscience Libell against me who shall Apologize for me If a Quamquam humana sub tersugiem judicia judicium propriae conscientiae fugere non valeo Bernard man sin against another the Judge shall judge them but if a man be condemned by himself who shall be his Dayes-man I may flie mans judgement seat or stop the Judges mouth but I cannot escape the Bar nor stop the mouth of my own conscience Prima est haec ultio quod se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur Improba quamvis Gratia fallacis Praetoris vicerit Vrnam Juven Sat. 13. I might adde to these four named Offices of Consciences registeriall office conscience a fifth his Registerial Office for conscience is the great Register and Recorder of Vbicunque vado conscientia mea ●●e non deserit sed prae s●ns ad s●s●it quicquid facio scribit Bernard the world It is to every man his private Notary or Secretary keeping notes or records of all his Acts and Deeds Hence it hath his name Synteresis given it Conscience hath the Pen of a ready writer and takes in short hand and in an illegible character from thy mouth as fast as thou speakest yea from thy heart what thou contrivest consciences writing at present is not legible as that which is written with the juyce of a Lemmon is not to be read by Day-light but against the fire by night you may read it so consciences writing will be read by fire light of distress or in that day when Heaven and earth are on fire then shall this book be opened and the Cypher be discovered Conscience is the poorest mans Historiographer who hath no Chronicler to write his Story Every mans Acts both first and last are written in the Apocryphal Book of conscience The sin of Judah is written with the pen of iron and with the point of a Diamond it is graven upon the Table of their heart Jer. 17. 1. It is not the lot of every mean man to have his Acts and memory perpetuated it is the honour of Kings and sometimes of some other more eminent persons of David it is said 1 Chro. 29. 29. Now the rest of the Acts of David the King first and last behold they are written in the Book of Samuel the Seer and in the book of Nathan the Prophet and in the Book of Gad the Seer But of every man of whatsoever quality it may be said the rest of his Acts though they be not mentioned in the book of the Chronicles of the Kings yet first and last they are all written in the book of the Chronicles of conscience by Syneidesis the Seer and Synteresis the Recorder Now to draw to a conclusion conscience I said was then a good conscience when it doth discharge all his forenamed Offices A Magistrate a Minister a Judge a Witness is then good when each of them is good in his proper place and function and indeed that every one is in truth which he is in discharge of his particular Calling Then is conscience good when it doth officiate well and doth the part of a Minister of a Magistrate of a Witnesse and of a Judge In these four tespects I may say of conscience Ipsa indicat ipsa imperat ipsa observat ipsa judicat as Bernard excellently Ipsa testis ipsa judex ipsa tortor ipsa carcer Ipsa accusat Lib. de consc cap. 9. ipsa judicat ipsa punit ipsa damnat A good conscience is a good Minister a good Magistrate a good Witness a good Judge the best of friends but an ill conscience is an observer of thee will be an informer against thee and both thine adversary and accuser and witness and Judge and Jaylor and Executioner and Tormentor too the worst of enemies Hence flow five Corollaries or conclusions Corollary 1. Conscience is to perform his two first Offices viz. of a Minister to inform and direct and of a King to command and prescribe before a work is to be done or when in fieri Conscience should call in Understanding and Faith to advise with and herein imitate God who Gen. 1. 26. intending to Create Man propounds his Action propounds his End and propounds his Model Let us make man in our Image after our likenesse and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowl of the ayre and over the cattell and over all the earth c. So should we say Let me upon deliberation do such an Act after such a manner to such an end This is to Act according to conscience and consequently according to God Corollary 2. When a work or action is already done In facto esse conscience is to discharge his two last Offices of a witness and of a Judge to accuse or excuse to approve or reprove and so to passe sentence Thus did God after every dayes work finished he reviewed his worke and saw with much content and fulness of approbation it was good And at last Gen. 1. 31. God saw every thing that he had made and behold it was very good So should we review all our actions before we passe from them to new businesses Let thine eyes look right on and let thine eye-lids look strait before thee Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy ways be established Prov. 4. 25 26. There you have these two rules in the well learning and practising whereof lies the chiefest businesse of Practical conscience Coroll 3. When a man goes wilfully against the two first Acts or Offices of Conscience viz. Ministerall Regall he commits the highest sin and draws on the greatest guilt Maxima violatio Conscientiae maximum peccatum Ames What made the sin of the lapsed Angels unpardonable but because they went against a full and clear light of a fully informed conscience and divinely irradiated understanding Their sin had many ingredients of that sin against the holy Ghost in it being committed against clear light much received grace with full consent of will having much of malice in it therefore no wonder it became unpardonable And whence is it that the sin against the
There is as much danger oft of taking offence unjustly as of giving as 1. From God who can never give any yet Christ pronounceth Mat. 11. 6. him a blessed 1. From God man that should not by one means or other be offended in him Therefore is Christ called in the worlds-sense lapis offendiculi a stone of stumbling and rock of offence Rom. 9. 33. yea all the disciples were at once offended at him Mat. 26. 31. Some have taken offence at his person Isa 52. 12. 53. 3. Some at his doctrine Mat. 15. 12. Some at his Parents Mat. 13. 54 57. Some at his Disciples and followers Mar. 2. 16. Some at his life Mat. 11. 19. Some at his death yea almost all at the ignominy of his death and crosse 1 Cor. 1. 23. But we preach Christ crucified to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks foolishnesse To both unsavory yet all these offences were taken without cause none without sin 2. From Gods way when the stony ground 2. From Gods way hath received the seed it springeth up immediately but not having root or moisture is scorched with the heat of the sun Mat. 13. 21. Such are those hearers who at first receive the Word with joy and much forwardnesse but when they see the Lyon in the way and Tribulations arise they are offended at the way and the gospel and at Christ himself and are like that impotent and passionate widow who was content to entertain the Prophet when she and her son might live upon him but when her son was dead she was offended with the Prophet What have I to do with thee oh thou man of God Art thou come to call my sin to remembrance and slay my son 1 King 17. 18. 3. From Gods people and their weakness 3. From Gods people so far as either to condemn their persons or dislike their profession Wo to the world because of offences on both hands Mat. 18. 5. Giving too much just occasion of offence to the godly and again taking too much occasion of offence but unjustly at the godly it 's impossible but offences will come from some hands but woes a thousand to him from whose hand they come meritoriously and as many woes again to him that taketh such an offence at a particular person or at a particular miscarriage in one person to reject and condemn a whole profession True godliness makes a man apt to take all in good part 1 Cor. 13. 5. It thinketh no evil it suspecteth nothing but believeth all things it makes a man more severe to himself and more charitable to others With himself he may be displeased with another he is unwilling to be displeased to him self he is just and impartiall to others more milde and indulgent 4. Lastly we must take heed of offence-taking 4. From the world from an ill world Because all men speak evil of the way of God and forsake it must we be offended Say not a confederacy to all them to whom this people shall say a confederacy neither fear ye their fear nor be afraid but sanctifie the Lord of Hosts himself and let him be your fear and let him be your dread Isa 8. 12 13. Thus much of the inoffensive Conscience CHAP. IX Of the wel-sighted Conscience THe quick sighted Conscience is ever a Of the wel-sighted conscience good Conscience and one necessary qualification which good conscience cannot want Conscience's whole work is circumspection and therefore must have eyes in every place running to and fro Mat. 6. 23. Mens lumine Spiritus Sancti gubernata facit omnes actiones nostras lucidas Deo placentes Mens coeca nec illustrat● lumine verbi nec gubernata Spiritu Dei hominem ducit in avios errores scelera omnesque actiones ejus deturpat Parae in Mat. 6. 22. Hence some have said Conscientia totus oculus Conscience is all eye If this eye be single the whole man is full of light if this eye be darkness all is darkness A good conscience must be like Ezekiels wheels Ezek. 1. 18. Or like the creatures before the throne Rev. 4. 6. 8. that were full of eyes round about full of eyes before and full of eyes behinde and especially full of eyes within Thus must good conscience be qualified it must be full of eyes before behinde and within Before to view and oversee actions to be done behinde to review and overlook actions already done especially it must be full of eyes within to make a privy search in the inwards of the belly as Solomons expression is Conscience is to take account of the inward motives from which actions are undertaken of the inward intentions and affections with which they are undertaken and of the inward ayms and true ends for which they are undertaken Vt nemo in sese tentat descendere nemo And further very observable it is that Persius Sat. 4. those wheels spoken of Ezek. 1. 19 20. were as admirable for their motion as for their eyes they moved after a divine mover as the spirit moved they moved whether the spirit went they went when the spirit rose up they arose when the spirit stood they stood but they never returned or went backward Conscience must not be all sight no motion or all for speculation nothing for action Again those creatures before the Throne are not more to be admired for their abilities then imitated in their practise and imployment they had many eyes and they had many wings Rev. 4. 8. Each had six wings they were full of eyes and full of praises not only much in contemplation but as much in adoration They rest not day nor night saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come What was it but a monstrous image that in Nebuchadnezzars vision Dan. 2. 32 33. Whose head was fine gold his legs iron and his feet base Iron and clay They are monstrous Christians who have such heads of gold for Science but feet of clay for practise all knowledge no action all contemplation no conversation The Pharisees were full of eyes without Sed praecedenti spectatur manticae tergo Pers had none within full of eyes before had none behinde Non viderunt id manticae quod in tergo ●rat They could censure other actions not see their own they had heads of gold feet of clay could speak excellently and do as badly They say and do not Mat. 23. 3. What they teach that do ye what they practise that shun These doth our Saviour after all their knowledge and learning and talk and tongue call fools and blinde fools again and again All this knowledge is but as a candle Mat. 23. 17 19. 24. in their hand to light them to Hell that they may not go thither in the dark These go to Hell as Bernard saith with a great deal of Sinite sapientes hu●us saeculi alta sapientes terram lingentes
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.
Therefore Satan commonly begins here and seeks Entrance for less sins upon the Conscience as House-robbers put in their less boies into the windowes to set open all the doors of the house for all the companie to enter Nemo repente fuit Turpissimus No man arrives at the height of impietie at once And this is commonly the first step One unclean spirit entertained makes room Mat. 12. 45. for seven worse to follow When Conscience likes not to retain the knowledge of God God gives up to vile affections at length to a reprobate minde at last to be filled with all manner of unrighteousness Rom. 1. 26 28 29. The hopefull Professour by this meanes soon becomes a dangerous Apostate and at last a down-right Atheist in life as the Apostle saith Titus 1. 15 16. when once the minde and Conscience is defiled they may profess still to know but in works they denie God being abominable disobedient and to every good work as any reprobate When the wormwood star falls into the fountain of Conscience all the rivers become bitter the sun beginning to set in Conscience night hastens on in the affections Then farewell Grace And when the sun goes back in the heaven of Conscience the shadow must needs go back as many degrees in the Diall of Comfort Then farewell Peace 2. As the first decay is here commonly begun so it proves the worst decay and danger that can befall a man a breach in Conscience is like a breach in the Sea banks proves desperate or like the Leake sprung in the ship drowns men in utter perdition after a crack in Conscience a man proves an utter Bankrupt after other shipwracks one may recover and get up again there are post naufragium Tabul● but this is a fatall and commonly irrecoverable shipwrack Some sins and slips are like breaking of a Leg or an Arm which may be set again this is like breaking the Neck few recover to take hold of the paths of life after this Judas brake his Conscience Neck and that brake his Neck Enquire as oft as you will by what degrees any is come up to the highest sins As for instance how some came to give themselves over to lasciviousness to the committing of all uncleanness even with greediness Ephes 4. 19. The Apostle tells us they had been practising upon their Conscience first they had first blinded their mindes and had stunted their Conscience to bring them to that dedolencie that they might bee past feeling Again do you wonder and enquire how it is that in these last daies so many do depart from the faith and give heed to seducing spirits yea to the very doctrines of devils as was foretold 1 Tim. 4. 1. the answer is at hand in the next verse They had first seared and stupified their Conscience Do you enquire again how it comes that some most hopefull Professours become at last most violent and enraged Persecutors and as bold broachers of accursed errours you have the answer in the Text Hymeneus and Alexander laid down their Old-Testament weapons Faith and a good Conscience then became filled with new wine then grew corrupt themselves then vented blasphemies then were delivered up to Satan as fitter for Hell then the Church They fell into prodigious opinions and conceits making a fable of the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2. 17. At last this Alexander came to be an open enemie to Paul and Persecutor of his doctrine whom he praieth against more then he doth against any other 2 Tim. 4. 14. This is indeed the readie way nay the onely way to sin that unpardonable sin the sin against the holy Ghost which never hath forgiveness because it never hath Repentance A man that hath lost his Conscience is like a Bee that hath lost his sting becomes a Droan ever after and is at last expelled the Hive The beginning of the Decaie of Conscience is like the beginning of the Hectick feaver which at first as the Phisitian saith were easily cured but that it is hardly known but at last it is easily known but hardly cured 3. The third danger and mischief is that either thou must resolve to make this Good warfare required in the Text for a Good Conscience or to suffer an ill warfare made upon thee from an ill Conscience either thou must make this Tree good and his fruit good or else make the tree corrupt and his fruit corrupt but Mat. 12. 33. know that this war is the worst war which can bee made All wars are bad and end in bitterness but of all wars civil wars are the most dreadfull worse when it is between Citie and Citie then if it were Nation with Nation and of all civil wars domestical in the same Familie when divided is worse then when a Kingdom divided And in the same familie again Matrimonial war when in the same bed is worse then any other war in the same house between father and son for where the Relation is nearest division there is unkindest But there is one war yet worse then all these the personal division is worse then any division between man and wife This is to speak properly the onely Intestine war when two are divided against three and three against two Vnderstanding and Conscience joyning together to keep in order Will Affections and Practises but these joyntly rise up to suppress their Legall and Rightfull Superiours Vnderstanding and Conscience It is a sad Storie to read that of the father and his two sons who separating from our Churches in England kept together a while but ere long the two brothers divided among themselves again and when the father could not reconcile them he left the one childe to adhere to the other but after that differences grew between the father and this one son and they must Anathematize each other Here was a lamentable Example to see in three persons of nearest naturall Relation such an Enmitie each stood aloof from the rest all three stood excommunicated and accursed by each other But this separation and difference I speak of is beyond that when a man doth separate from his Conscience and excommunicate it first then after doth Conscience separate from him and accurse him yea and he shall be cursed Many have thought that they have been able to make offensive war against Conscience none have ever been able to make the defensive To fight aginst Conscience is to fight against God and who hath ever hardened himself Job 9. 4. against him and prospered Pharoab would begin with God and make an offensive war Who is the Lord I know him not I will not let Israel go but he was wearie of the defensive Exod. 5. 2. Let us flie for the Lord fighteth against us So if thou thinkest it a light thing to Exod. 14. 25. challenge and provoke Conscience while it would be at peace with thee know thou wilt finde it next God himself the heaviest adversarie that thou couldst have had If Conscience
of later times have had the boldness to call it that Idoll of Sanctification That no regard was to be had to any scandall taken by others That all things Studiosè sibi iurpem vitam elegerunt ut infamiam opprobrium Ecclesiae conciliarent Basilides vesci jussit Idolothytis seu victimis rebus illis quae simulachris immolatae essent indifferenter sine respectu Conscientiae etiam in casu scandali Fidem perjurio negare tempore persecutionis Carpocrates omnibus operationibus libidinibus indifferenter uti necessarium d●●it ut sine Turpitudine nemo perfectionem mystagogtae consequi posset Alli se Jesu similes alii se Petro Paulo praestantiores ob excellentiam cognitionis dixerunt Vide Plura Mag. Cent. 2. cap. 5. were lawfull That they might converse with any Idolaters and Idolothytes That the onely way to perfection in their mysterious Religion was to give themselves to any libidinous and obscene actions That some of theirs were equall to Christ Jesus himself and nothing inferiour to him And as for Peter Paul and the other Apostles they were far their superiours and their Doctrine more perfect then any of theirs That to denie and forswear their faith in case of danger was lawfull c. These are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Text speaks of who deal with Conscience as Amnon did with Thamar first ravish and abuse 2 Sam. 13. 17. it then put it out of doors And like those Sons of Sodom who will no longer endure any more reproofs but assault the reproover in his own house This is he who came to Gen. 19. 9. sojourn and he will now be a judge therefore will we deal worse with thee c. These give the Harlot erronious or seared Conscience the living childe from the right mother pure and tender Conscience laying the dead child at her doors But while these give Conscience a Bill of divorce God gives them a Bill of divorce And while they would make Conscience a reprobate themselves become reprobates A shame it is these things should be said or suffered among Christians What would those ignorant Heathens now say if they should see these things who when once they saw the Spirit carriage and Acts of the Apostles cried out The Gods are come down to Act. 14. 11. us in the likeness of men But changing their voice say that rather Devils are come up to us in the likeness and under the name of Saints But to conclude This particular conscience is that which doth constitute and commend the Christian and all that belongs to the Christian The Christian is no more a Christian if he have not and keep not a good Conscience Our Baptism is no Gospel Baptism but without efficacie if there want a good Conscience 1 Pet. 3. 21. Knowledg not right Gospel Knowledg if not according to godliness Tit. 1. 1. Faith no more Gospel Faith if not joined with Conscience 1 Tim. 3. 9. Love no more Love if separated from good Conscience 1 Tim. 1. 5. nor assurance good assurance if not joined with good Conscience Heb. 10. 22. nor Obedience acceptable except for Conscience Rom. 13. 5. nor Sufferings thank-worthy if not for Conscience 1 Pet. 2. 19. You may do much in vain and suffer and expend much in vain and all be in vain if not for Conscience sake Yea the blood of Christ it self profits not if not sprinkled upon pure Conscience Heb. 9. 14. 2. The second mistake is a practicall mistake of those who reckon not Conscience a Fort or Tower but a Snare and a Prison rather and think in evil times to abandon and desert it is the onely safetie He that looks overmuch to Conscience must die a begger is a chief Article of the worlds Creed Better protection is to be had in policie and a safer refuge in lies and falshood and to make an agreement with hell and covenant with death or to break the Covenant with God and agreement with Heaven is the onely way to securitie But shall not an overflowing Isai 28. 17 18. scourge come and sweep away the refuge of lies as the Prophet saith And shall not men at last be forced to say That the effect of righteousness is onely quietness and assurance for ever Isai 32. 17. When the sinners in Sion shall be afraid and the hypocrites surprized with fear crying out Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings Isa 33. 14 15. Then shall he that walketh uprightly be set up on high and have his defence in the munition of rocks c. 3. There be others who will easily yeeld that good Conscience is worth making of but are mightily mistaken in judging what good Conscience is And there be many mistakes in this respect First some and those very many do conceive if they live according to their Conscience they doe well although their Conscience bee but a naturall Conscience Now the nature of Conscience is very good but the Conscience of Nature is very bad Some good naturall Conscience may have in it but good it cannot be called 1. It may make a man cum seipso scire Rom. 2. 15. And so become a law unto himself 2. Such an one may cum aliis scire and so far is good as Adrian said to do that to others which he would exspect from others 3. Such an one may be exact in matters of the second Table he may answer all the duties of naturall and civill Relations observe the Lawes of humanitie and friendship religiously be true to his trust interest countrey friend promise engagement to his Oath taken as Regulus To the salt of the Palace Ezra 4. 14. as those Idolaters were 4. He may make scruple of many sins such as the light of nature condemnes gross sins commonly Abimelech abhors adulterie Gen. 205. Pilate's Conscience grudges and relucts Joh. 18. 31 38. 19. 4 8. Act. 25. 27 to condemn an innocent man to death Festus holds it unreasonable to send a Prisoner bound without matter of weight charged upon him to be inserted in the Mittimus 5. He may have some sense of the Deitie of God and of the force of Religion Rom. 1. 20. and 2. 14 15. 6. May in that respect tremble sometimes and be terrified in Conscience for sin and hell as Felix Act. 24. 25. 7. He may sometimes and ever and anon when he seriously reflects on himself have a dislike of his own state and wayes and know and confess his sinfull doings yea he may have store and plentie of teares and make shew of much passion and compunction for sin so did Saul 1 Sam. 24. 16. and 26. 21. Hee was under great and frequent fits of horror of this naturall Conscience 8. Or he may on the other side have much inward and pleasing naturall Peace while he observes the rules and dictates of his naturall Conscience Rom. 2. 15. They have their
he not be able to finde it out 3. It prefers a supposed fictitious Revelation before written and clear Revelations as did the deceived prophet 1 King 13. Now all Divine Revelations coming from the Spirit of Truth ever are consonant to the word of truth which is the Rule to trie all Revelations by 2 Pet. 1. 19. 4. It prefers a strong impulsion from his own thoughts before Gods own thoughts Jer. 7. 31. God said what they did never came into his minde to approve it yet would they do it because it was their Conscience and it came into their minde But the strongest impulsion of our spirits though gracious Spirits can be no Rule David had a very strong impression once to build God a house he consults with Nathan a Prophet he hath the 2 Sam. 7. 2 3. same apprehension of the work Go on for God is with thee yet was it not therefore good in Gods eyes because good in both theirs David had another vehement and impetuous Motion to be avenged on Nabal for his inhumanitie 1 Sam. 25. 22. and uncivilities towards his servants sent in his name he backs that motion with an Oath yet upon Abigails submission he changeth his minde blessing both ver 33. God and her and the counsell given to stay him from proceeding so fiercely according to the wilde light of an erring Conscience God did appoint his people under the Law Numb 15. 39. to wear fringes on their garments that they might remember Gods written Commandments and not seek after their own heart after which they were apt to go a whoring He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool the wise man Pro. 28. 26 saith And Job gives a serious Item in this case Let not him that is deceived trust in vanitie for vanitie shall be his recompense Job 15. 31. 5. Erroneous Conscience interprets difficulties and discouragements as a discharge from dutie The time is not come say they to build the House of God nor is it any more our dutie because the Kings of Persia forbad and the adversaries hindered it Hag. 1. 2. But this is the sluggards Conscience when he seeth a lion in the way Prov. 26. 13. 6. It conceives a fair intention or a good end may legitimate an unwarrantable action Now though true it is That the goodness of the end propounded hath a great influence upon an action to make it theologically good yet can no good end alter the nature of an action that is materially bad to mend it To do the greatest good to an evil end as to pray to be seen of men and to do the least evil to attain the best end as to lie for God are Job 13. 7. alike abomination Our Rule from the Scripture is not to do the least evil to gain the greatest beneficiall good or to avoid the greatest penall evil Rom. 3. 8. 7. Lastly this fool so rageth and is so confident that he dare appeal to God to patronize his exorbitancies Jo. 16. 3. They think they did God greatest service when they did the Church the greatest dis-service in killing the Apostles So did Pauls erring Conscience once stimulate him Out of zeal persecuting the Church Phil. 3. 6. Jehu could not look upon it as any other then true zeal to God when he saw himself so violent in rooting out Ahabs house and Baals priests Come see my zeal for the Lord saith he And were there not fourty zealously enraged against Paul who had made a religious vow not to eat again unless they had killed Paul Act. 23. 12. Quantum Religio poterit suadere malorum what so evil that erroneous Conscience will not call good It puts bitter for sweet and darkness for light familiarly 7. The next mistake is of them who mistake a scrupulous Conscience for a good Conscience whenas all their scruples are about minute and triviall matters about indifferent or impertinent things overlooking things of greater consequence they stand upon Tythe Mint Annise and Cummin and neglect the weightie matters of the Law Mercie Justice Faith Strain at a gnat swallow a camel stick at joyning with a Christian Congregation in the commanded duties of publike worship and Communion but never stick at joining with scorners in sinful communion or in conforming to the fashions of the world Surely we may say as Paul to his Ephesians But ye have not so learned Christ Ephes 4. 20 21. if ye have heard him and have been taught by him c. These make ado about washing pots and cups and outsides when the heart is brim full of pride hypocrisie malice censoriousness rapine and all iniquitie scruple rubbing ears of corn when hungrie but not swallowing a poor widows house The high Priests were troubled in Conscience and rent their clothes when Christ said he was the Son of God but when themselves blasphemed Christ and resisted the holy Ghost there was then no rending hearts nor renting garments When Judas brought back the money and threw it down they would not once touch it and into their Corban it must not come it was the Price of blood now but when they drove the bargain with Judas and told him out that very money then it was not the price of blood out of Corban it might lawfully come but into Corban again it must not go Oh painted sepulchres and whited walls 8. Such again on the other side who think that scruples and strictness and tenderness are the onely arguments of an ill Conscience and that Libertie and bold adventurousness are the best arguments of a good Conscience And so all the world is of a sudden become very Conscientious and our Reformation brought unto perfection All men crying Conscience Conscience Libertie Libertie But shall we go down and see whether they have done altogether according to this crie Gen. 18. 21. Is this the onely good Conscience that the world hath left Must wee needs leave Jordan and go wash in Abano and Pharpar that we may be clean Must we beat down one altar and set up many altars going the clean contrarie way to Hezekiahs Reformation to make sure that our Reformation shall not be Legall must we say that uniformitie is the onely slaverie That one heart one waie one faith one Baptisme and one Table of the Lord is too little under the Gospel That Jerusalem is not the place it is too much to meet all in one place Dan and Bethel may do as well private places are as good as publike The meanest of the people as fit as the most learned Well we see the one part the worse part of that prophecie fulfilled Micah 4. 5. for all people will walk every one in the Name of his God when shall we see the other and better part fulfilled which followes And we will walk in the Name of the Lord our God for ever Shall this serpent Libertie eat up all our other Rods Must all the legitimate sons of Gideon be slain
Ce●titudo Sal●tis non e●t ab aliis neque alias per●ipitur ni● ab iis qui una●um fide ●●tinent bo●am Conscienti●m idque dwn eam retinent sine graviore aliquo vulnere quod à peccatis iis infertur quae vastare solent Conscientiam Dr Ames in this respect Look saith he how much thy Faith and good Conscience do rise or fall so is thy Comfort and Assurance of Salvation more or less Therefore saith he Assurance of Salvation is neither had by other men nor by any other manner then by those who together with Faith do keep a go●d Conscience and that onely while they keep Conscience from any greater wound which is usually given by those sins which do waste and make havock of Conscience And at last he concludes Qui igitur sine ulla fidei Resipiscentiae sensu aut cu●â certò sperant Salutem praesumendo sperant sperando pereunt Whosoever without care had of Faith Repentance and good Conscience persuade themselves they have Assurance of Salvation that Perswasion is their Presumption and that Presumption will be their Perdition Conscience doth not use to collogue and flatter any man it will tell every man his own If you make it sad it will make you as sad And if you be found to it what you should not wonder not if you finde that to you what you would not who can make me glad but the same who was made sorrie by me said the Apostle in another case 2 Cor. 2. 2. When thou hast put away Puritie of Conscience wonder not if thou wantest Peace of Conscience The Bell when cracked loseth not onely his former soundness but the pleasantness of his former sound The crackt Conscience makes but harsh musick What man could exspect a song of the Lord in a Babylon of sin There was no voice of Bridegroom or Bride or sound of Harp to be heard any more Revel 18. 23. But the Harpers and Singers are onely to be found upon Mount Sion Revel 14. 1 2. 8. This informs us whence it is that many come to die so Tragically despairingly and to make such fearfull ends They have like Zimri set their own house of Conscience afire and now must perish in it Some have attempted to make away themselves some have done it as Saul Judas and Abithophel some have accursed themselves as Spira some have blasphemed God as Cain and they mentioned Revel 16. 11. All fruits of this shipwrack of Conscience All these fierie and devouring flames break out of the AEtna of a sulphurie and hellish Conscience Maxima violatio Conscientiae maximum peccatum Ames The more thou doest wound another mans Conscience thou dost offend against Charitie and therefore dost the more wound Christ 1 Cor. 8. 12. The more thou woundest and grievest thy own Conscience thou offendest against Pietie and therefore thou sinnest against and grievest the holy Ghost Paul while a Pharisee had done worse acts then Judas he had been a raging Persecutor a desperate blasphemer of Christ a compeller of others to blaspheme he had his hand in the bloud of holy Martyrs Judas did none of these hideous Acts yet Paul saved Judas damned Paul found mercie because what he did he did ignorantly in unbelief he had never gone 1 Tim. 1. 13 against the light of his own Conscience Therefore he said Act. 23. 1. he had walked in all good Conscience before God to that day The like 2 Tim. 1. 3. I thank God whom I serve from my forefathers with a pure Conscience But as for Judas he could have no cloak for his sin he went fully against the clear light of his own Conscience therefore he had the more sin and the more horrour The consumption of Conscience doth not onely bring the outward state into a consumption that such die beggers or bankrupts but it as usually brings the inward man into fits of Convulsions which are hardly cured and at last they die in one of those fits in great horrour When Conscience hath been often fretted and grated upon by known and allowed sins at length it breeds an Vlcer in Conscience which is the most tormenting disease in the world beyond any Vlcer in Bowels or Bladder These live and die in great extremities of Miserie The stroke at Conscience is the stroke at the fift Rib the fatall and deadly stroke 9. Lastly it informs us whence it is that some have arrived at the highest pitch of impietie to commit that sin of sins that sin against the holy Ghost It is ever first by muzzling and snubbing their Conscience and afterwards intreating it worse wasting worrying and stabbing of it No other way of coming up to this incurable disease and unpardonable state but by violation of Conscience Keep this fierie sword in thy hand The Word of God turning every way in the door of Conscience and the Tree of Life is guarded The Gate of Paradise kept no danger of committing the sin against the holy Ghost But on the other side when thou dost cross the Line and swim through and over and beyond thy Conscience then is the Gulf fixed and the Gate of Hell shut that there is no coming thence for them that would as no coming thither but over this Gulf. CHAP. XX. Of the second Application of the Point by way of Lamentation THe second Use is of Lamentation And it may 1. Be a Generall Lamentation carrying a Wo in the mouth of it for the Generall want of Good Consciences in this age And I may justly make it as large as that of our Saviour Matth. 18. 7. Wo to the world saith he because of offences All the world is faultie in this kinde more or less So may we say Wo to the world because of ill Consciences All the world in generall and most called Christians in particular herein being blame-worthy Run to and fro into the Cities of Israel and in the streets of Jerusalem Jer. 5. 1. and enquire and see if you can finde a man of Conscience in this Generation We may change Job's Quaere Vbinam invenienda est sapientia Job 28. 12 20. ubinam est locus Intelligentiae Where is wisdom to be found and where is the place of understanding into ubinam invenienda est Conscientia ubinam est Locus Integritatis where is Conscience to be found and what is the Place of Integritie The best of men that make Enquirie after her complain that shee is not seen so much abroad as she was wont to be The most of men say that shee is either departed or drawing on toward her departure And prophane ones say that Conscience was hanged many a day ago indeed my Text tells us that shee was drowned long ago and perished in shipwrack but they are much mistaken to say it was good Conscience for it was the ill Conscience that perished The Good Conscience fears neither the Gallowes nor Hell it is the best Preservative against both But sad it
is that there is so little reckoning made of Conscience now adaies Bernards old complaint may be renewed Multi Scientiam pauci Conscientiam quaerunt Many are for Science few for Conscience In stead of that Double Knowledge of which we spake at first for such is Conscience we have only single which is Speculation and therefore in stead of single dealing such is Sinceritie we have too much of double which is Dissimulation In former time we were wont to call the Godly man The conscientious man The man of conscience Now we commend the man of Parts and the able man whereas when all is done the Conscionable man will be found the able man And this better part is the best Parts The man of wisdom is the Prov. 24. 5. man of strength said the wise man though now we call the proud happie and the bold and daring man we call wise judicious prudent But did not our fathers hearts and Lives and Dealings excell ours much more then our knowledge gifts and light exceed theirs They might desire to see our daies for Libertie of Profession and Puritie of Ordinances and we may desire to see their dayes again for strictness of life singleness of heart and uprightness in their dealing They had more Conscience though less Knowledge we have more Knowledge but less Conscience we have greater Scholars they had better men they were more for Devotion we are more for Disputation As Seneca commended former times when men strove rather to do well and virtuously then to speak well and eloquently but blamed the following times when men had got the art of speaking accurately but lost the Habit of doing worthily Vbi docti prodierunt boni esse desierunt So may we say of our times compared with those of late before us We have all learnt to speak the Language of Canaan yet live the life of Canaanites We have yeelded up our two Forts Faith and Good Conscience the Bulwarks of Christendom as I may call them of Christianitie they are unto the enemie That of Faith into the hands of infidelitie errour and heresie and that of Good Conscience into the hands of hypocrisie impietie Libertinisme Where is our old English Sinceritie to be found Our first Love to old truths Our zeal for God Contending for the Faith Our Humilitie of life Our strictness and exact walking It was a great reproach to Israel that there was more faith found in one Centurion him an Heathen then in all of Luke 7. 9. them again and what a dishonor is it unto us that there was more of singleness of heart more of Faith of Love of all Pietie to be found in our fathers in the daies of begun Reformation then is to be found in a Land professing righteousness and by Covenant engaged to Personall and Exemplarie Reformation We may say Surgunt indocti rapiunt Regnum Coelorum c. They went into the Kingdom of Heaven before us and we may fear to be shut out after them They might well be saved though more ignorant we may fear to perish though more knowing They were as it were in the night but had the Pillar of fire among them in which was heat more then light we are indeed in the Sinite ergo finite sapientes hujus saeculi de spiritu hujus mundi ●umentes alta sapientes terram lingentes sapienter descendere in infernum de Vit. Sol. day but have onely a cloud in which is more coolness and shade then light and beautie Bernard speaks of some that were much wiser and more skilfull then others yet all the use they made of their wisdom was to go to Hell in a more neat and handsom manner And let them go thither saith he with all their wisdom and fine Parts How much is it to be lamented that all the use that many make of the present light of the Gospel is but to light them into the chambers of death and this onely benefit they have by it that they do not go to Hell in the dark as others have done These when they come at death to reflect on themselves may take up Nero's words and cry out Quantus Artifex pereo How great an Artist was I to undo my self and how great skill had I to go to Hell 2. And here have we not just cause to proceed in our Lamentation further when we take notice not onely of the want of Conscience in the most and of the decay of Conscience in the best but when we have been beholders of the fatall and frequent shipwracks of good Conscience that have been made in these tempestuous and Faith-trying times to the hazarding of the loss both of Church and State both of Truth and Peace Wracks and Losses at Sea if many together and frequent whether the Vessels be taken by Pyrates or cast away by Tempests tend to the decaying and impoverishing of the greatest States and Kingdomes All being concerned in such a Loss Commodities thereupon growing more scarce and dear Though the Loss be greatest to the Adventurers and Owners who are usually undone thereby and their backs broken as we say How sad and dismall a sight is it to behold a ship now neer her sinking in the depth of the Sea whether it happen through the Pilots carelesness splitting against a rock or the Mariners slackness to do their dutie at the Pump and stopping Leaks or through the badness of the Vessell But what a lamentable Exoritur clamorque virum stridorque rudentum spectacle is it exceeding all Expression what hideous noise is then made what crying out what taking on what running up and down what catching hold But whether can they run what can they catch hold of They are all at their wits end they perish both young and old all together buried all alive in one vast and insatiable grave What a sudden what a horrid what a Totall what an irrecoverable Loss is there all at once A sudden Loss of all their goods a horrid Loss of all their Persons and Lives a totall Loss of the ship and all in her An irrecoverable Loss of All. In one shipwrack a thousand may be concerned and very many utterly undone A shipwrack is more dreadfull then the Calamitie of fire ordinarily The water being the more merciless and masterless Element of the two though both dreadfull and in many things alike amazing and undoing Yet 1. Fire doth not usually break out on such a sudden This may be in an instant 2. From the Fire somewhat ordinarily may be reserved by carrying away the goods off the Ground What can be preserved here 3. From the Fire the man whose house is consuming may escape and save himself and his little ones though he have not opportunitie to remove his goods Here is no flying here 4. In a dangerous Fire the Neighbours come neer offering their common contributions to help to stay it Here who can come neer to rescue 5. In the fire one part
the great State The godly man saith there is no such necessity for me to have two eyes or two hands there is no necessity of preserving my credit of securing my state of providing for my family no such necessity of gathering riches to live honoured and so dye wealthy but there is an absolute necessity lyes upon me to fly hell save my soul lay hold on eternall life and to this end to get a good conscience If I have but a good conscience left me faith the Christian I have enough while I have that I can want nothing I may be counted poor yet am truly rich I may be looked upon as outwardly sorrowing but behold I am alway rejoycing as dying but I live 2 Cor. 6. Austin said of some Christians Amiserunt omnia quae habebant nunquid fidem nunquid pietatem nunquid interioris hominis bona qui est ante Deum dives de civ Dei l. 1. c. 10. as unknown yet well known as a deceiver yet true as having nothing yet possessing all things I may have dirt cast upon my face good conscience will wipe all off 1 Pet. 3. 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil they may be ashamed who falsly accuse your good conversation in Christ I may lye under great pressures even to despair of help or life good conscience supports me and makes all light 2 Cor. 1. 12. I may have my credit blasted yet repaired againe as Joseph had State ruined yet restored againe as Job had life lost yet found againe as Christ Jesus promised but if conscience be lost I am a lost man The world may with their lightning as the Philosopher saith Consume the scabbard but not at all peirce the sword destroy and split the caske but not spill the liquor or wine in it yet how sad it is that the getting and using conscience is so much among the most of men neglected Every one observeth his rule and way Si curtatus in aequali Ton sore capillos Vel si Toga dissidet impar Horat. Vide Domine quomodo diligenter observent filii bominum pacta literarum syllabarum accepta à prioribus locutoribus à te acceptvae terna pacta perpetuae salutis negligant Conf. l. 1. c. 18. of living but the Christian Every Artificer studieth to be exact in his kind the Taylor hath his measure or his patternes the Carpenter heweth and Squareth his timber the Mason his stone by rule he maketh his wall by Line and Plummet must not the Christian observe his measure his patterne his rule and line The welbred Gentleman is ashamed to be seene abroad in an undecent habit if he be not drest from Top to Toe in the best fashion he thinkes he is not like himselfe And is not the Christian to observe his fashion and demenour Austin did observe and bewaile this exceeding Pathetically the Grammarian observeth his Rules of speaking given him by his master and shall not we observe our Rules of doing given us by God himself the Grammarian or Orator observes his Construction his Pronounciation will not say Inter hominibus for inter homines will not lose you a Letter nor an accent nor an aspiration saith he which is no Letter he will not commit such a Verball fault as to say Ominem for Hominem yet saith he he that will not against the Rules of Grammer the Precepts of his Schoolemaster pronounce Ominem for hominem dare against the Rules of Divinity and precept of God Hate a man odisse Hominem Yea saith he you may observe the Eloquent Orator or Lawyer is more carefull of his words when pleading against his Adversary and is more afraid to speake one word improperly then to aggravate his charge without all charity and Conscience Vigilantissimè Cavet ne Per linguae Errorem dicat inter hominibus et ne per mentis furorem hominem auferat ex hominibus non eavet yea he confesseth and bewaileth it as one of his owne sins when he was a young Scholler that he did abhor Barbarous Solaecisines and Incongruities of speech more then absurdities and incongruities in his actions But let all men know wheresoever Conscience is wanting or not attended there is yet no Grace nor shall there ever be glory First there is yet no Grace at all in that heart the first lesson and the A. B. C. of a Christian is Make Conscience The first thing that God doth worke in that mighty change from nature to Grace and Translation from death to life is the new heart He begins ever with Conscience He a wakens it he softens it enlightneth it enliveneth it He cleanseth it he Sanctifieth it Ezek. 36. 25 26. He dwelleth in it The first worke of Grace is the Donation of a new heart and the change of a stone into flesh The sense of Externall feeling is the first Indication of the life of nature this sense of Internall feeling is the first and best discoverie of the life of Grace He that hath not his Conscience sprinkled purged quickned renewed and of a new impression is not at all of God yet nor belongeth to him Because he neither hath his Image nor his Superscription Therefore neither shall he ever have Glory which is the second thing Secondly where is yet no Good Conscience There shall be no Glory As in the New Creature where God worketh Grace he begins with Conscience as was said before So in the new Covenant where God promiseth Glory he begins with Conscience also This is the Covenant of grace when God promiseth to blot sinnes out of his booke of Remembrance He giveth unto man a New Conscience for a Book of Remembrance unto duty and obedience Heb. 8. 10. 11. 12. This is the Covenant I will make with the house of Israel I will put my lawes into their mind and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a People And they shall not teach every man his Neighbor and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least to the greatest for I will be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and their sinnes and iniquities will I remember no more In which words the Lord alludeth to what he did to his people Israel when he made the old Ceremoniall Covenant with them He spake to them gave them his mind in writing delivered them the two Tables containing the Tenor and duties of the Covenants these Tables were to be layd up in the Arke God will do much more now he will speake to the heart write the law in new Tables fleshly Tables of the heart and keepe them there as in the Arke And there they shall be for a continuall monitor remembrance that they shall need the lesse of outward teaching and humane Laws they having an inward Directer and Admonisher and a Divine Law within God will pardon no mans sinnes which is
on part of the Covenant where this written Law is not in the heart which is another and former part of the Covenant The High Priest might not go into the Sanctum Sanctorum unlesse Sanctified and sprinkled outwardly with the bloud of the appointed expiation nor shall any enter into Heaven whose Conscience is not first sprinkled and purified with the bloud and Spirit of Christ The Persian King had none came in unto him but they were first purified prepared a whole twelve moneth before There shall Esther 2. 12. certainly be admitted into Gods presence and Kingdome nothing that is defiled and uncleane But all must be in some good measure Reu. 21. 27 purified that they may be made meet to be partakers of that inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. In the second place it doth much more reprove those that sometimes had some kind of Conscience and have now lost it This is the losse of losses If a man have losses at Sea he takes on if lost a child he mournes if lost an eye or an Arme he grieves if by a Dead Palsie he hath lost the use of a side he sees Death on himself and reckons himselfe halfe dead what is it thinkest thou to have lost thy Conscience If Quae laedunt oculos festinas tollere si quid est animumi differs curandi tempus in Annum any Moat or Dust be in the eye he Rubbes and wipes his eye and cannot be quiet till he get it out If but a thief in the candle he takes it out but who is sensible of the losse and spoyle of Conscience which is the greatest losse Now a man may recover most losses or beare any losse but this and not be miserable This he cannot sight may be lost and recovered a child may be lost and thou mayst have another credit may be broken and regained as Iosephs state broken and repayred as Iobs liberty lost and regained as Iehoiakins life lost and be redeemed and a better given for it but this is the undoing loss this breaks a man for ever and makes a Bankrupt of him he never recovers This was Iudaas's Rupture This man falles downe Headlong Breakes in pieces in the midst all his bowels fall out with this fall and to his place he hastens The man that hath lost his Conscience may justly cry out with Micha's complaint what have I moreto lose I have lost my God Jud. 18. 24 I have lost my Priest I have lost my Conscience which was to me as both and what have Vt in portum perueni amus regendus est bona Conscientia navigationis nostrae cursus I more I have lost my Jewels and all my goods shall any stop my mouth and say what aylest thou losse of Conscience is like the losse of a Pylot to the Ship or the losse of Card Compasse Sayles Anchors to the Pylot they are at mercy of the Sea and in the next storme in danger of being cast away It s a sad and fearefull sight to see a man in a Phrensie that hath run out of his wits and hath lost his understanding he is now besides himselfe he knowes not friend from foe nor mindeth what he does nor what comes of him what a Phrensie is the man in that is run out of his Conscience He hath lost his Right minde indeed and is quite Distracted and beside himselfe A man cannot be called Compos mentis as a Christian if he be not Compos Gonscientiae It is the Countrimans observation as a Prognostick of an Ill and stormy day to follow If the Sun Rise and appeare betimes and go to bed againe as they call it then they looke for ill weather ere night you may observe it while you will it never fayles If Conscience in a young Professor be up betimes and then go to bed againe such a man hath sorrowes and miseries following upon his spirit and many an ill storme he must expectere he die The losse of Conscience to a man is like the losse of the sting to the Bee shee gathers no more Honey but becomes a Drone and is expelled out of the Hive Losse of Conscience makes a man to be as Nabuchadnezar when he had lost his Reason It was the losse of his Kingdome He was Deposed from the Throne driven away by Dan. 4 33 34 36. his people acknowledged no more for a King nor looked upon as a man but a fit companion for Beasts till he looked up to God and received his reason againe A man rejecting Conscience is like Saul rejecting the word of God rejected and cast off by God for it 1 Sam. 15. 26. Thou hast rejected the word of the Lord and the Lord hath rejected thee Because thou hast despised knowledge God hath despised thee Hos 4. 6. The losse of Conscience to a man some time acquainted with it and guided by it is like the losse of the Star to the Wise men Mat. 2. it is as much as the losse of all thy Grace and of all thy Peace all thy comfort is worth It is the losse of Christ They had not their joy againe till they saw the Star again nor could they go to Christ without it CHAP. XXII The use of Terror to four sorts of men THe next Use speaketh Terror and that in particular to four sorts of men 1. To such as have no care to get or keep a good Conscience nor to avoid an evill All the diseases of the soul are bred first in an evill and vicious Conscience all the torments miseries of Hel are epitomized in an unquiet and self-tormenting Conscience Suam secum Gehennam Portat Ipsa testis Ipsa judex Ipsa Torter ipsa carcer This man carries his Hell along with him where ever he comes or goes he carries his offence his accuser his witnesse his Judge his Jaylor his tormentor with him This is the sad melancholly Ague which will set thee a shaking that no fire can warme Sua quemque fraus suum facinus suum scelus sua audacia de sanitate ac mente Deturbat Hae sunt improrum furiae hae flammae hae faces Cicero Cur tamen hos tu evasisse putes quos diri conscia facti mens habet attonitos surdo verbere caedit occulto quatīente animo tortore flagellum Juvenal Sat. 13. thee nor canst thou get any heat within thee and though it may intermit and leave thee for a day or two it is but gathering strength to assault thee more fiercely when the next fit comes None can altogether excuss and extinguish Conscience let him do what he can snub'd it may be betrayed it may be as Sampson was Imprisoned it may be you may cut his locks put out his eyes make him grinde and be thy slave and drudge thou maiest be so secure as to make sport with him yet will his locks grow againe his strength will returne and he will be revenged
deluded and inchanted with Endoxius an Arrian Bishop he soon cooled in his affections and so staggered in his judgement that they could not tell what to make of him he was neither Fish nor Flesh neither Arrian not Christian But after he fell wholly from his Religion and gave toleration to all manner of Religions to every Nation his own Religion Judaism Paganism all Idolatrous and whatsoever wicked practises were permitted freely onely to preach and professe the Apostolick doctrine prohibited a bitter Persecutor he proved and at last renouncing God to the Oracle he went to enquire of the Devil who should be his Successor 2. To draw to an end The other part of the Exhortation concerns the Minister particularly The Text being a charge or exhortation from a Minister to a Minister from Paul to Timothy to hold Faith and a good Conscience Which the Minister must make good 1. Personally 2. Doctrinally He must be a man of Conscience for his person a man for Conscience in his doctrine 1. In his personal carriage he must be Conscientious that he may be an exemplary pattern to his flock If he be thus a Burning light he shall also be a Shining light to others The Minister must strive to excel others in every spiritual gift in this especially A City set on a hill cannot be hid He must so walk that they may see the law in his steps as well as in his lips He is to be as the Sun the light of the inferiour world is therefore to move regularly steadily uniformly that the Dials and Clocks below may be set right when they go along with this Sun It is said that nothing cuts the Diamond but the Diamond I am sure none is so fit to work upon the Conscience of a man as the man of Conscience The ministers lips then must disperse knowledge to the People but his heart must retain Conscience to himself This little volume Conscience he must be exactly read in whatsoever other volumes he be a stranger to whatsoever language he be defective in he must be well acquainted with that of Conscience It was an excellent speech that of Jerome Discamus in terra quorum Ad Paulin. scientiá nobis perseveret in Caelo Those things are worth learning on Earth the knowledge whereof will be of use in Heaven A saying which famous Paraeus ever had in his mouth and caused to be written in the publike Schooles where he read his Divinity Lectures Learned Beza tels us what was Calvins counsell Cum te 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non vulgari donatum esse videam quâ saepe ad moximos decipiendos viros abusus est Satanas velim te diligenter cavere nè te ullis inanibus arguti is irretias usually to younger Divines in whom he saw any pregnancy of parts to take heed of abstruse Questions and unnecessary controversies lest they should be catched and insnared in the Toyles of wit and so prove unhappy instruments of Satan to pervert others And he further reports he had given the same counsell to himself which he had observed to his dying day and did exceedingly blesse God for The want of observing this counsel was the utter undoing of that Conradus Vorstius a man otherwise of much acumen who carried away with the fleetnesse of his wit and the nicenesse of his spirit after he had read Socinus and such other corrupt writings became a pernicious corrupter of the younger Students who were his hearers and an occasion of much mischief to the Church And since that I am speaking to the Minister I desire to speak two words apart to two sorts of persons that are now in the Ministery The first is to our younger Timothies who as they are to be the Successors of our 1 A particular Exhortation to Timothy elder Pauls when they die so are they their hopes and delights while they are alive To these we can say nothing but good Watch you in all things stand fast quit you like men be strong despise afflictions for the Gospel Look well to the Charge of God the Charge of Faith and of a good Conscience Take heed to your selves and your doctrine Avoid prophane jangling vain bablings oppositions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 6. 21. 1 Pet. 2. ult 1 Pet. 5. 4. of science Pseudo science Study to shew your selves men of God approved workmen that need not to be ashamed Your work and charge is great but your promised assistance greater your reward and crown is greatest I mean not from men but from the hand of the Arch-bishop and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he is called in the day of his great visitation Remember that famous Apophthegm of Mr. Perkins which he wrote in the frontis-piece of all his books Minister verbi es hoc age Thou art a Minister of the word mind thy businesse well Be sure to hold fast the form of sound words as being wel nourished up in the words of faith and good doctrine wherin you have made so great a pro-proficiency Read over over your Directory Pauls Epistles to Timothy and Titus It is the Jesuites instruction to their younger Preachers when they have to do with some persons as Princes and great ones to instill Principles into them quae liberiorem reddunt Conscientiam Abominate ye such policie and compliance as greatest impiety In freer and looser times let your principles be the stricter not the slacker It is the reproach of some Lawyers that it may be said of them they have venalem linguam a tongue to set to sale Take heed that it be not said of any Divine that he hath linguam mercinariam animam venalem a tongue to be hired and a soul to be sold Though you may be younger men for Cum ad edificium arbusta succidimus ut prius viriditatis humor exsiccari debeat expectamus ne si eis recentibus fabricae pondus imponatur ea ipsa curvarentur confracta citius corruant quae immaturè in altum levata videbantur Cur non in hominibus ad animarum curas admitiendis custoditur quod in Lignis Greg. l. 4. ep 95. yeares seek to grow past Neophytes and younger plants which may be easily plucked up by the roots from the ground they stand upon or be bent and bowed by any hand as they stand Gregory very elegantly warneth concerning such as are young and tender Plants That they be not like green unseasoned Timber which if put into a piece of building will warp and bow and break that no weight may be laid upon them Secondly here I must crave leave to give 2. To Hymenaeus and Alexander an Item to Hymenaeus and Alexander who of late Disciples are now become all on the sudden above their Masters more than ordinary Ministers who not sent yet run not being called yet they go and having Jer. 23. 21. left the Anvile and the Forge have taken the sacred Hammer in hand Is