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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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adde drunkenness to thirst Deut. 29. 19 No observation among all the Proverbs is more often verified then that of Every mans way being good in his own eyes when the end thereof proves the way of death Prov. 14. 12. and 16. 25. Yea there be many that live and die in this condition and go away without any horrour and roaring of Conscience whom the world calls blessed saying they die like lambs having no bands in death nor trouble upon Psal 73. 4. Conscience Whenas they die rather like Salomons oxe who goes to the slaughter or the fool who goes to the stocks when neither is aware Prov. 7. 22. Or if you will have them die like lambs like Jeremie's Lambs they die Jer. 51. 38 39. They are drunken with delusions and sleep a perpetual sleep before they die therefore they rejoyce and are secure but I will bring them like lambs to the slaughter c. saith the Lord And they shall not awake till they are awakened in hell It is given to him to be in safetie for a little while saith Job and he resteth in it but they shall be cut off as the tops of the ears of corn These Job 24. 24 persons die so securely not because the sting of sin is taken out which were their happiness but because the sting of Conscience is taken out which is their miserie This is therefore a dangerous quiet Conscience Let me rather die the most dreadful death of the righteous then the most hopeful and easie death of the wicked Happier a thousand times to be fetcht away in an instant in Elias his fierie 2 Ki. 2. 11. charet and in a whirlwinde into heaven then to have Nabals lingring fit of the stone and to 1 Sam. 25. 37 38. lie ten daies before his death as if he had been asleep When these are interred wee may as well say Stone to Stone as Earth to Earth and Dust to Dust There is another ill quiet Conscience still 4. The hardened conscience which is the hardened Conscience This treasures up wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 4 5. The hypocrites in heart heap up Job 36. 13. wrath they cry not when God smiteth Then this there is not a greater plague on Earth or Judgement in hell It is a sin that hath as much miserie and a miserie that hath as much sin in it as can be imagined Now there is a six-fold hardness of Conscience A six-fold hardness as you may observe so many several expressions in the Storie of Pharoah's heart-hardness 1. There is a natural hardness and insensibleness 1. Naturall hardness in Conscience which is part of the sin and punishment of Original sin which is in all alike This is that heart of stone which is in all till by Regeneration it be changed into an heart of flesh This made Paul say he Ezek. 36. 25. was alive once without the Law Rom 7. 9. His heart had then this hardness on it he saw no such sinfulness in sin as afterward therefore did he apprehend no danger Thus Pharoahs heart was at first before ever Moses came It might be said Pharoahs heart was hard by natural and original hardness 2. There is an attracted and acquired hardness 2. Attracted voluntarie hardness Acquired by the crebrous and iterated acts of sin which by degrees by the latent deceitfulness in it and the secret curse of God upon it withall brings the soul over to a dedolencie and unsensibleness therefore doth the Apostle warn some Heb. 3. 13. To exhort one another daily least the heart be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin And he doth report of others Ephes 4. 17 18 19. who by walking in the vanitie of their minde had the understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindeness or hardness of their heart who being past feeling have given themselves over to laseiviousness to work all uncleanness with greediness Where you have the steps by which the poor soul goes down to hell and the blinde winding-stairs by which you are going down to the chambers of death if you take not heed 1. The first step is vanitie of minde Therein we commonly think there is little hurt Thought is free Phancie will be working c. So long as we do no evil or speak not vainly what would you have us do Remember that vanitie of minde is the first step to Hell 2. The second step is Darkness of understanding which ever follows upon vanitie of minde and this darkness of understanding leads you to the third step Alienation in affection from the life of God having the understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God Alienated actively on their part they loathing God a sinfull alienation And alienated passively and on God's part His soul abhorring them Zech. 11. 8. a Judicial alienation 4. This alienation leadeth to more darkness still and Excaecation stricken with blindeness of ignorance One sin begets another in infinitum Darkness of Understanding caused heart-alienation from God That again produceth ignorance alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them 5. This ignorance leads next step to hardness not naturall and simple but double and judicial because of the hardness of their heart 6. This hardness carries you on next step to insensibleness who being past feeling 7. Insensibleness brings on Desperateness being past feeling they have Given themselves over Here you may give them over for lost when they come once to this seventh step to give themselves or sell 1 King 21. 25. themselves as Ahab did to work wickedness Here is their love of sin they give themselves over to it when nothing is to be gotten by it 8. This desperateness leads to brutishness and turns a man into a beast They give themselves over to lasciviousness They have 2 Pet. 2. 14 Jer. 5. 8. Rom. 13. 13. Phil. 3. 19. 2 Pet. 2. 12 Eyes full of adulterie and are like fed horses in the morning neighing after their neighbours wife their life is chambering and wantonness their bellie their god their end destruction like beasts they live like beasts they die which are made to be taken and destroied 9. This brutishness leades to laboriousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the working of uncleanness They will labour as a horse in a mill to commit iniquitie They draw sin with cords and iniquitie with cart-ropes Isai 5. 18. As in a gracious heart love of God puts upon any labour for God so love of sin makes men drudges to their lusts and to the Devil 10. This laboriousness next step carries them to unsatiableness which is the next step to Hell They gave themselves over to work all uncleanness nothing comes amiss to them so it bee uncleanness All uncleanness Rom. 1. 23 25. in sinful though natural acts and in more sinful unnatural acts of
shall lament Wo to them that are at ease Luk. 6. 25 in Zion and put far from them the evil day when they cause violence to draw near If he adde drunkenness to thirst and walk in the imaginaon Am 6. 1. 3. of his heart and bless himself saying I have peace and I shall have peace God will not spare such a one but his anger and jealousie Deut. 29. 18 19. shall smoak against that man It is the case of the godly oftentimes to cry fear fear where no fear and danger is And the wicked usually cry peace peace where no safety and peace is Thus yet do many sleep and live and die in peace when Jonah-like there Jonah 1. 4 5. is the greatest storm of Divine Displeasure pursuing them and the Destroyer is ready to swallow them up They slumber and sleep but their judgement all the while lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not For there 2 Pet. 2. 3. is no Peace from God to the wicked Isa 57. ult 2 It is pacifyed from the rage of Satan After 2. From the rage of Satan conscience hath been delivered from the paws of the ravening Bear the reign of sin It must next seek to be delivered from the jaws of the roaring Lyon the rage of Satan This latter is usually more terrible the former more dangerous When Sin is dethroned the first and greatest wo is past When Adonijah flies Solomon presently succeeds and is established 1 Kin 1. 50. in the throne Sin once put to flight the King of Peace reigns in the throne of Conscience This is that happy peace and security promised to the Beleever Mat. 16. 18. Upon this Rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it This is the sum of that other promise Rom. 16. 20. The God of Peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly shewing manifestly our securest peace is when God doth not only restrain but ruine Satan not binde but bruise him not chain him up but tread him down The like Prayer 1 Thes 5. 23. The very God of Peace sanctifie you wholly This peace from Satans rage the godly man may for so me time want who yet hath a good and pure conscience Such a want may stand with a perfect good conscience though not with a perfectly well conscience Conscientia honestè bona may be molestè mala Ames The Philistines often rushed upon Sampson and gave him many alarums hee still Iudg. 16. 9. 12. 15. 14 came off with honour and victory They come ●ut one way and fly seven waies The trouble was his the losse was theirs Yet thus is many a poore beleever often encountered some for longer time some for shorter some even al their life time are kept in bondage through Heb. 2. 15. feare of death and him that hath the power of Death the Devill They mourne they feare they pray they cry they are weary with waiting for the salvation of God When will the redeemer come out of Zion When Rom. 11. 26 Mal. 4. 2. will the Angell of the Covenant of peace come with Healing under his wings Paul had not this Peace sometimes 2 Cor. 7. 5. we had no rest but were troubled on every s●de without were fightings within were feares yet at another time could say 2 Cor. 2. 14. Thanks be to God who alwaies causeth us to Triumph in Christ And Rom. 8. 31 33. ad finem If God be for us who can be against us What shall separate us from the love of God shall Tribulation or Distresse or Persecution or Temptation c. Nay in all these things we are more then Conquerers through him that hath loved us yea I am perswaded that neither the Temptation nor the Tempter nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor Life nor Death nor Height nor Depth nor any Creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God in Jesus Christ our Lord. In this condition Conscience saith to the Soule Returne to thy Rest O my Soule for the Lord hath beene Beneficiall unto Psal 116. 7 thee This is that Peace which Christ hath Purchased and Bequeathed to the Beleever Peace I leave with you my Peace I give to you Jo. 14. 27. b. e. not Peace onely with God and with selfe and with men in midst of a Raging unquiet world but Peace in Despight of Hell Gates and Sathans Darts Of this Peace we may say as Gideon of his Altar Judg. 6. 34 Jehovah Shalom the Lord is God of this Peace or this Peace is the Peace of God Thirdly The third thing Conscience From the displeasure of God Rightly Pacified is at Peace and Delivered from is the Displeasure of God This is the Highest Step of Solomons throne the best part of our Peace above both the former when we can say being justified by faith we have Peace with God through Jesus Christ Rom. 5. 1. This a blessed Peace when not with man or selfe or sin or Sathan but with God Reconciled through Christ This that Peace Christ promised which the world cannot Give Nor Devill take away Jo. 14. 27. The peace of which the Apostle speaketh so magnificently calling it Phil 4. 7. the Peace of God which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praesidio erit Beza passeth all understanding which shall guard and engarison your hearts and mindes through Jesus Christ This Guards the Soule and Conscience from all the feares and assaults of Law sin guilt death hell and Satan In this condition the Soule lyeth downe in Peace and riseth in Peace and saith to the Godly ●ustified Person in Solomons words Eccle. 9. 7. Go thy way eat thy Bread with joy Psal 3. 5. 4. 8. and drinke thy wine with a merry heart for God now accepteth thy works Secondly There are 3 things which Conscience must be Pacified by and those the Conscience is pacified by 3 things same three by which before it was Purified what ever tendes to Purity Tendes to Peace viz. 1. The word 2. The bloud 3. The Spirit of Christ First By the word of Christ Conscience is Pacified and restored to Peace The word By the word of Christ especially the Gospell is therefore cald the word of Peace Tydings of Peace Gospell of Peace Word and ministery of Reconciliation Act. 10. 36 Ro. 10. 15. 2 Cor. 5. 18 The Gospel is the Instrumentum Pacis Christianae Gods Proclamation and our Charter of Peace containing the largest concessions of Grace It is an Act of Oblivion Passed in Heaven God not imputing our sinnes to us and further giving us an Act of Indemnity against all charges and impeachments of law sinne Conscience or Sathan This word we must produce for our security It is by the Mar. 4. 39. 41. Job 34 29 Jer. 20. 9. word of Christ that the winds and stormes are laid in the conscience and a calme made Christ utttereth his voyce and the
a carnall legall abject and low spirit and boldnesse loosenesse frollicknesse accounted Gospell-like walking and the onely proofe of our Redemption and the best Plerophory But know the grace of God teacheth us another Lesson It Tit. 2. 12 13. teacheth us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world The righteous God loveth righteousnesse Psal 11. 7. And with the pure God the Holy One of Israel nothing is approved but purity This is his Image this his Superscription Nothing but this is Gods and to be rendered to God The Kings Coyne hath his Image within as well as his Superscription without the Ring the Christian must have his Image within or it is in vaine to subscribe our selves and to be surnamed by the Es 41. 5. name of Israel The right faith of the Gospell is purifying faith Acts 15. 9. Gospel hope is purifying hope 1 Joh. 3. 3 True love pure love 1 Pet. 1. 23. Our Religion must be pure Jam. 1. 27. Hearts pure Jam. 4. 8. Mindes pure 2 Pet. 3. 1. Wayes pure Psal 119. 1. Hands pure Psal 24. 4. Prayer pure Job 16. 7. Incense pure Malac. 1. 11. Indeed all must be pure King Solo●●● had not a Vessell in either of his houses that at Jerusalem or that of the Forrest of Lebanon but was all of pure Gold he would be served in no other 1 Kin. 10. 21. God will have no other Vessell in either of his Houses that of Jerusalem the Church Triumphant or this Countrey-house as I may call it in the Forrest of Lebanon the Church Militant but what is of pure Gold of beaten tryed and refined Gold Silver was nothing esteemed in the dayes of Solomon Civility and externall Morality is too meane for God too base to enter Heaven The Kings Coyne I said before hath his Image on it it hath first his Image on the one side and then the Kings Armes or the Kingdomes Armes on the other Such is the right Christian he hath this Image and Effigies of God Purity and Righteousnesse stamped on the one side of his conscience and the Kings Armes or the Kingdom of Heavens Armes on the other Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost The Kingdome of God saith the Apostle or if I may so call them the Effigies and Armes of the Kingdom is Righteousnesse and Peace Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. It is observed that the floore of Solomons 1 Ki. 6. 30. Temple was overlaid with Gold both within and without that is to say both the Sanctum Sanctorum and the Atrium sacerdotum the Court of the Priests as it is called 2 Chron. 4. 9. Although the Great Court called the Atrium Populi were not so So it is the minde and will of God that not onely those holy glorified Saints that are within the Vayle of the Sanctum Sanctorum and the Church Triumphant but all those within his true Church distinguished from the world should have the same purity and holinesse although not the same measure Purity is the floore and paving of both Militant and Triumphant Church CHAP. VII Of the sincere Conscience NExt to pure conscience comes the sincere being much alike often taken promiscuously one for the other but though they may never be divided and parted may thus be distinguished Pure is opposed to what is filthy defiled uncleane profane impure Sincere Purity and integrity how they differ is opposed to false deceitfull counterfeit hypocriticall imaginary Every sincere man is really pure and endeavours so to be found but every pure-seeming person is not sincere nor doth intend so to be Sincerity is the glory of purity and of conscience and of every person grace or action It must be sincere faith if any 1 Tim. 1. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faith unfaigned Sincere love if any 1. to Christ Eph. 6. 24. Grace to all them that love the Lord Jesus in sincerity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. If to men Rom. 12. 9. Let love be without dissimulation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good Hezekiah whatever he did he did in his integrity and with all his heart and so he prospered 2 Chron. 31. 21. The sincere is ever a good conscience no sooner sincere but presently good no longer good then can be called sincere Sincerity is the soundnesse health and right constitution of conscience Sincerity here is all our Gen. 6. 9. Job 1. 1. perfection Noah Job and others were called perfect in their generations onely because upright and sincere Sincerity is Earths highest perfection we cannot go higher Innocency was Paradises purity is Heavens Of this conscience Paul speaks 2 Cor. 1. 12. Our rejoycing is this the Testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world c. In which words foure things are very remarkable 1. What is the best temper and complexion of conscience 2. What the clearest markes and best proofes to evidence it 3. What is the worst disease and most destructive enemy to it 4. What is the fruit and benefit of it 1. The temper of the best conscience is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 godly sincerity or as the words are The sincerity of God in all our conversings with men 2. The clearest markes of this sincerity are naked and downright simplicity simplicity of God as it is called and the grace of God 3. The most common but dangerous enemy to conscience which is ever the bane and death of sincerity is fleshly wisdome in sincerity not in fleshly wisdome the more of that the lesse of this Not in fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God nothing so opposite to Gods grace as humane and carnall wisdom if the one increaseth the other ever decreaseth 4. But the fourth thing is the benefit of such a constitution and freedome from this distemper which is above all expression It maintaines the soule in a plight of rejoycing and in a state of glory as it were amidst many pressures when the outward man was ouerburdened sentenced to death and despairing of life and of all outward reliefe vers 8. Wee were pressed out of measure above strength insomuch that we despaired even of life but we had the sentence of death in our selves c. yet there as in another place 2 Cor. 6. 10. he saith As sorrowing yet alway rejoycing As dying yet behold we live Blessed be a good God and well fare a good conscience for it It makes such an alteration that like the night starres when all day light is off the Heaven Quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Leigh Crit. Sacr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illae res proprie dicuntur quae suum duntaxat nativum colorem praesertim album retinent nullo alio admisto ut lilia lana candida farina sincera est quae non est fermento corrupta Zanch. then do these appeare so
was among his Disciples as one that served Luke 22. 27. He could wash their feet and stoope to any the meanest office to leave with them a never dying example of matchlesse humility in remembrance It is no argument of weaknesse said a learned man but of much strength Dr. Staughton to be able to bend the body backward and to recover ones self again so to stoop backward as it were to our brothers weaknesse implies much prudence and strength of grace in us 3. Nor are we to be so tender of the godly 3 Towards all men Phil. 4. 5. onely strong or weake but our moderation must be known to all The wicked himself must see we are tender of his good more then he is of his own good With meeknesse we are to 2 Tim. 2. 26. 1 Pet. 2. 15 instruct such as yet oppose themselves with well-doing not with ill speaking and contumelious reviling to put to silence the ignorance of foolish men and we are to labour to take away all occasion from such as seeke occasion to speak reproachfully of us 1 Tim. 5. 14. 4. But of all others we must shew our 4 Of those nearest to us Josh 24. 15 selves tender most of the good of those who are nearest to us that we and our houses may serve the Lord that all ours may be Gods Job disliked sin in others but was most fearfull Job 1. 5. of it in his children least they should in his absence curse God in their hearts Paul was especially jealous of his Corinthian Believers with a godly jealousie whom he had espoused 2 Cor. 11. 2 6. 11. to Christ because his heart was enlarged to them Austin saith of his mother Monica That it was as much to her as the new bearing of a childe whensoever any childe of hers did amisse Toties filios parturiebat quoties à Deo eos deviare cernebat This is right Religious tendernesse when we put no difference between sin in a friend and in an enemy or stranger unlesse this difference to be more plain in rebuking thy friend and dealing effectually with him to reclaime him If thy signet on thy right hand or thy friend Jer. 22. 24. in thy bosome that is as thy right eye cause thee to offend shew most love to him by the most dislike of his evill way Be not like Pharaoh who would have an Israelite beaten whether there was a fault or no but his own servants in whom the fault was must not be beaten but borne out in all they did Exod 5. 16. Thirdly In respect of selfe tender conscience 3 In respect of self hath much to do and will shew it self in these particulars First in respect of finne already committed his heart now smites him as oft as he sinnes 1 Sam. 24. 5. and 2 Sam. 24. 10. his heart gives him no rest till he hath made his peace with God by renewed repentance and with man by restitution or other satisfaction as Zacheus did This is a certain evidence of the life of grace within when so sensible of sin committed Thus was David after his foule sinnes his iniquities were ever in his eye Psal 51. 3. 38. 8. they cost him many a teare groane yea they made him houle out ere he had done he made his bed swim with teares his eye dimme with Psal 6. weeping and his flesh abate with fasting The like was to be seen in Peter after his shamefull denying of his Master Austin tels us what a change he saw in Confess l. 2. c. 1. Da castitatem da continentiam sed noli modo malebam morbum concupiscentiae expleri quam extingui Conf. l. 8. c. 7. himself after his conversion in respect of sin Exarsi aliquando saliari in inferis He said he could never have enough of it he could have gone to hel to fill his body with it no bread to him like those husks And though he was wont sometimes to think of his sinnes yet all his prayer was rather to have sin pardoned then purged and mortified and his hearts secret wish was that his lusts might be satisfied rather then extinguished He did pray indeed sometimes for continency and victory over his lusts but he was afraid he should be heard too soone But after he had put his hand upon the hole of the Aspe and had done playing before the Cockatrices Denne he tels us what his sins cost him Then he had enough of hell Rodebar intus confundebar vehementer pudore horribili quibus sententiarum verberibus flagellavi animam meam He then felt as he said an inward gnawing worme within him and a fearfull horrour of shame fell upon him that he fell out with himself that he did chide and rattle himself to the purpose in his privacy for his former folly and foule miscarriages 2. In respect of sin not yet committed He feares and departs from evill and shuns all occasions and provocations leading to it How can I yeeld to any such wicked act and sin against God saith Joseph to his immodest Mistresse Gen. 39. 9. whom he did flye from as from a Serpent he would not hearken to her though day after day sollicited by her either to lye with her or be in her company Austin also tels us what care he had after that happy change in him to keep himself from his wonted sins In illa grandi Rixa interioris domus quam fortiter Conf. l. 8. c. 8. excitaveram cum anima mea in cubiculo nostro corde meo c. That there was so much unquiet and chiding in his little house his heart between his lusts and his conscience they fell out so sharply that they must needs part and he would never harbour his wonted lusts any more A happy falling out and a happy parting 3. Tender conscience flies those which the world cals small sins as well as grosse sins He will not be found in a lye no not in an officious or excusatory lye such as Gehazi's was 2 Ki. 5. 25. Eccles 9. 2. Mat. 12. 36 He sticks at a thread and a shooelatchet he feareth an oath even a lawfull oath if not necessary He flyes your lesser Oaths as they are counted of faith and troth he takes heed of idle words wanton looks vaine thoughts wishes and motions he allowes not a light behaviour an unseemly habit he is watchfull against inordinate anger immoderate cares or labour even in his honest calling he knowes in much laughter and unseasonable mirth there is danger in loquacity and multitude of words there is no want of sinne He findes foolish talking and vaine jesting reckoned among sins and forbidden that jesting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which among the Morall Philosophers went for virtue and which common Christians account Eph. 5. 3. all their grace He is better taught then to call any sin little for there is no Poison little death little or Hell little He knowes