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A03759 A short exposition of the 20. and 21. verses of the third chapter of the first epistle of S. Iohn Containing a very profitable discourse of conscience, and of al the actions, sortes, and kinds thereof, wherby euery man may easily know his estate, wherein hee standeth in the sight of his God, and whether his conscience be good or euill, with all things also belonging either to get a good conscience, or else to releiue it out of trouble, being grieued and wounded, as in the epistle to the reader is more specially mentioned, and in the discourse itselfe clearely expressed. Howesoun, John. 1600 (1600) STC 13878; ESTC S116556 26,751 68

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the freedome and libertie that we haue by Christe from the rigour of the law which craueth perfite obedience and condemneth all imperfection But sinne hath no more dominion ouer them that are in Christ Ro. 6.14 Gal 3.13 1. Ioh. 5.3 because they are not vnder the Law or rigour thereof but vnder grace and in Christ 11 And therefore it is that God accepteth our imperfite obedience if it be sincere yea and as the Prophet sayth Will for worke Mal. 3.16 12 and Desire for Deed. The third is freedome from the ceremoniall law For after that the truth of all those shadowes is come wee are no more vnder the shadowes to keepe and obserue the same which serued to the Iewes as a schoole-maister Gal. 3.25 Ephe. 2.15 Gal. 3.14 to lead them to Christ who was to come but we hauing the truth to wit Christ who is alreadie come and hath suffered for vs in the flesh haue no neede now of those types and shadowes of the ceremoniall law Thus much concerning the first stay and property of a regenerate Conscience 13 The secōd propertie or stay of a regenerat Consciēce Rom 8.15 Ephes 4.13 Math. 14 31. 21.21 Iames 1.6 Ro. 8.20 The second property or stay of a regenerate Conscience especially when this same excuseth is an infalliable certaintie of our sinnes to be pardoned and of life euerlasting by faith in Christ wrought in our hearts by his spirit wherof al the scriptures of God beare witnes that are heere vnder written against that desperate doctrine of the Bishoppe of Rome and Councell of Trent As Rom. 8.15 Ephes 4.13 Math. 14.31 Math. 21.21 Iames. 1.6 Rom. 4.20 Therefore it is that Basilius demandeth this question What is the property of faith To the which demaund he answereth that it is to be one assured perswasion voyde of doubting disputation Of these places of Scripture aboue mentioned 14 let euery christian make this reason to wit Euery one that beleeueth is the child of God but I beleeue I therfore am the childe of God and Gods children must needs be saued Wherefore I cannot perish against the doctrine of the papists who will haue vs to doubt of our Saluation against the Scriptures of God and Articles of our beliefe which doe command euery man woman both to say I beleeue in God In Iesus Christ his onely Son our Lord who is God also equall with his father In the holie Ghost who is likewise God the third person of the Godhead 1. Ioh 3.2 And finally both to beleeue remission of our sins and life euerlasting But to doubt and to beleeue are words which importe contradiction God commandeth vs to beleeue the remission of our sinnes life euerlasting through the merits death of Christ in the Articles of our beliefe the Pope and Councell of Trent do accurse al such for presūptuous persons as doe not continually doubt of the remission of their sinnes certaintie of Saluation and life eternall And therefore the conclusion is true that the Pope is aduersary to Christ and consequently that same Antichrist the mysterie of whose iniquitie beganne euen in the dayes of the Apostles and which hath so increased sensine that in all the heads of Christian religion his doctrine is repugnant vnto Christs And in this point directlie to the verie Articles of our Christian beleefe It may bee demaunded heere by way of question 15 Question Answer A good conscience may both accuse and excuse at one time but not in one respecte if one and the same conscience may not both accuse and excuse Gods children at any one time Answer that it may For else if our Conscience should not still accuse vs when wee doe amisse then shoulde manie great sinnes assaulte vs at once make hauock of our soules And therefore wee affirme that it may both accuse vs and excuse vs at one time but not in one respect For it excuseth vs in that it assureth vs that our persons doe stand righteous before God as cloathed and couered with the righteousnesse of Christ And in respecte that we haue our desire and doe endeuoure ourselues in the generall course of our whole life to walke vprightlie and to please God And yet neuerthelesse of this it muste needs accuse vs perpetually for our particular slippes and for the manifolde wants and imperfections that bee in all our good and beste actions by reason whereof it telleth vs perpetually in our care Luek 17. that we are vnprofitable seruants Thus much of a good Conscience 16 Euill conscience what and why it is so called Now followeth an euill Conscience which is so called partly because it is corrupted by originall sinne and partly by reason it is euill that is troublesome and painefull to our sence and feeling as are vnto vs all other sorrowes calamities or miseries whatsoeuer which for this same cause are called likewise euils 17 The propertie of an euil cōscience is ever to accuse Luke 5.8 The propirtie of it is euer to accuse condemne and thereby to make them that haue it affrayde of the presence of God and to flee from him as from their enemie Example in our first parents in Peter who falling downe at Christes knees besought him to goe from him in respect his Conscience toulde him and accused him that he was a sinfull man 18 Euill conscience is ether dead or waking Euill Conscience is eyther dead or waking and stirring the dead Conscience is that which albeit it can but accuse lyeth commonly quyet accusing little or nothing at all and that for diuers causes to witte want of reason strength and force of wicked and fleshly affections ignorance of Gods word and reuealed will A dead Conscience hath two properties the first is to be benūmed 19 A dead consciēce hath two properties Gen. 44.16 vnfeeling or dosened as that of Iosephs brethren for the space of two and twentie yeares or thereby This raigneth in drowsie Protestants luke-warme Gospellers and ciuill honest persons who liue without common slander to the gospell Of this kinde of Conscience let vs take heede For it is like to a wilde beast who so long as it lyeth a sleepe troubleth nothing but when it awaks flyeth into mens faces and deuoureth them This is it that the Poets did call the Furies because it pursueth them that haue it vnto death and desperation The second property of a dead Conscience is 20 to be feared or burnt as the Apostle saieth with an hotte yron that is the Conscience which is past all feeling in this life and is neuer mooued with the remorse of sin thorowly or to any purpose And this is in the onely obstinate wicked and such as are giuen vp into a reprobate minde Rom. 2.15 This shall be wakened at the day of death and last iudgement by God to accuse and condemne them that haue it whē the bookes of the dead both
A SHORT EXPOSITIon of the 20. and 21. verses of the third Chapter of the first Epistle of S. Iohn CONTAINING A VERY PROfitable discourse of conscience and of al the actions sortes and kinds thereof wherby euery man may easily know his estate wherein hee standeth in the sight of his God and whether his conscience be good or euill with all things also belonging either to get a good conscience or else to releiue it out of trouble being grieued and wounded as in the epistle to the reader is more specially mentioned and in the discourse itselfe clearely expressed PROV 15. verse 15. A good conscience is a continuall feast EDINBVRGH PRINTED BY ROBERT WALdegraue Printer to the Kings Maiestie Anno Dom. 1600. Cum privilegio Regio TO THE READER ALbeit the dulnesse of this time be such gentle Reader in the Lord that it rather mooueth manie to content themselues with other mens writings then to take paines to write for the profite of any thing themselues yet such is the zeale of some that they cannot suffer men to sleep in the danger of sinne to their owne destruction but wil if it be possible awake them let them know the deadly danger wherein they stand which is a thing most needful although it be neyther plausible to the worlde nor acceptable to the flesh for who is he that seeth not the security of the world in this age the contempt of God and of his word and doth not sorrow at the heart for it And seeing it is not possible that any can truely sorrow and sit still and say nothing especially when he perceaueth the moste part of all this blind age by the craft of Sathan cast into a deadly sleepe of damnable security So that they neither care for the true knowledge of God while they are young nor think that they stand in neede of it being olde but spend or rather mispend all their time in the vain cares and pleasures of this transitorie world without heedfull care vnto their callings or giuing eare vnto their conscience when the same accuseth them convicteth them and condemneth them before God as guiltie of infinite thinges whereof one day they must giue an exact accounte and at his handes receaue the wages of eternall death for their works vnlesse they awake while time is truelie repent them of their former security trye al their actions thoughts words deedes by euery mans conscience the which the Lord hath giuen him both to be vnto him witnesse and iudge of the same And therfore to the ende that al men may doe this the better to whose hearing or reading this discourse shall come I haue thought it good being mooved in my conscience to write this treatise therof Wherby eueryman may know his owne estate and his God as he hath revealed himselfe in his worde to the worlde Both the which points saith Bernard are aboue all things necessary for all men that desire to escape hell and come to heauen For as of the knowledge of thy selfe commeth the feare of God of the knowledge of God the loue of God so of the ignorance of thy selfe commeth pride and of the ignorance of God of his word desperation saith he Wherefore whosoeuer will avoyde this deadlie dart of desperation in the ende must not neglect the meanes which God hath appoynted to escape it That is first to know his sins and heare his conscience vvhen she accuseth or excuseth him according to the rule of Gods word And next to know the way of deliuerance from them And that he take heed that in seeking a salue for them he be not deceaued therin for conscience being wounded with sin is that thing that neither can bee healed with coulors of Retorick with sweetnes of musick with delicacie of daintie meates with beawtie and pleasant sights with mans inuentions or else with any other thing except onely Christ as he hath offered and revealed himselfe in the Scriptures apprehended by faith receaued and kept with a good conscience without the which if any man liue dye it had bin farre better for him that vvith Kain Iudas he had neuer bin borne Receaue therefore gentle reader this short discourse wherein thou mayest see both what a thing conscience is what an intollerable thing the grief wound thereof is when it is troubled What are all the actions and offices of it in al men and women What are the sorts kinds thereof what is mans duety touching it How to get a good conscience keepe it being gotten and lastly how to relieue helpe it being troubled that it accuse and condemne vs not before our God whose sentence when it accuseth shall euer stand condemne vs without reclamation before the Lord. But if not then shall vve haue boldnes towards our God to whom be glory for euer 1. IOHN CHAP. 3. 20 If our heart condemne vs God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things 21 Beloued if our heart condemne vs not then haue we boldnes toward God THE Apostle in these words doth teach vs that seeing the knowledge of God doth infinit degrees passe the vnderstanding of our harts or consciēce It must needs therfore follow that none can stand before his holie maiesty without the integritie of a pure and good conscience In the testimonie whereof consisteth all our comfort and reioycing saith Paul 2 Cor. 1.12 In this place Iohn doth neither speak of the conscience of reprobates Ephes 4.19 Math. 9.12 who are past feeling and giuen themselues to worke vncleanes euen with greedines Neither yet of Hypocrites who flattering themselues doe boast them of their owne righteousnes But onely of them that haue their conscience drawen forth before the iudgement seate of God by him to make them vnderstand and feele his anger and wrath against them Psal 6.3 38.3 51 4. 1. Sam. 2 6 In respect of some sinnes whereof their conscience dooth accuse them that they should speedely turne vnto him that he may heale them whoe hath wounded them In the 21 verse hee sheweth by the contrarie how greate a treasure it is to men or womē to haue euer the testimonie of a good conscience for then saith he if the same accuse vs not as guiltie of anie offence vnto our God whereof we doe not from our heart repent vs with assurance of pardon for Christ his sake in whome we onely beleeue to finde all that we stand in neede of Then may we without feare both approch with boldnes and come before the throne mercy seate of our God call him our louing father Rom. 5.1 Ephe. 3.12 and assure our selues that he will be fauorable and mercifull vnto vs for his Christs sake by whom we haue both boldnes and enterance with confidence by faith through whome also we haue that peace with him sayth the Apostle in our Conscience that passeth all Treasures yea all vnderstanding Not that anie mans conscience beareth