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A33338 Medulla theologiæ, or, The marrow of divinity contained in sundry questions and cases of conscience, both speculative and practical : the greatest part of them collected out of the works of our most judicious, experienced and orthodox English divines, the rest are supplied by the authour / by Sa. Clarke ... Clarke, Samuel, 1599-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C4547; ESTC R1963 530,206 506

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God the Armour of Faith and Charity with other Graces wrought in us by the Holy Ghost are to fortifie us against vice and to enable us to a vertuous life All the good motions from God tend to perswade us to vertue and to disswade us from vice God therefore gives us so many Teachers and Preachers to keep us from sin and to allure us to Godlinesse The Scriptures were written as letters of love from God to invite us to vertue and dehort us from vice The Sacraments those Seales of the Covenant were instituted for the spiritual refreshing and watering of our soules to the encrease of vertue in us God in infinite mercy besides his Word hath given us the examples of godly and vertuous men but especially of Christ himself to draw us to the imitation of their vertues By vertue of the Communion of Saints we enjoy the prayers of all the faithful who continually beg this mercy for us God by his continual Providence doth watch over us for our good to sustain our weaknesse to raise us when we fall to direct us when we erre to succour us in our wants to mitigate the tempests of tentations and to moderate the waves of wicked occasions Vertue of it self if neither reward had been promised nor judgments threatned because of her internal beauty grace and excellency might move us to love and follow her Remember the rare and precious Promises that are made to those that follow after righteousnesse Quest. Is it not mercenary to yield obedience to God upon hope of reward Answ. No for if the Lord use such meanes and motives to quicken us in Heavens way it s not mercenary but lawful to make use of them for that end So John 3.16 18. Rom. 2.7 Heb. 11.26 Quest. Wherein stands the sanctified exercise of those affections that flie from their object Answ. In that they shun all evil soundly orderly and constantly according to the direction of Gods Word Quest. What Reasons may induce us to shun that which is evil Answ. The remorse and pangs of conscience in the very act of sinning may deter us from it The infamy and disgrace which attends wickednesse For no man can truly love a vicious man All well-governed Common-wealths appoint punishments for vices to root them out By sin we deface Gods Image in us and so are injurious not only to our selves but to God our Father and King Vicious persons profane their bodies and soules the Temples of the Holy Ghost whom they put forth of his just possession by their wickednesse The dreadful judgments threatned in Scripture and inflicted for sin should deter us from it It cast Adam out of Paradise drowned the old world cast the Angels out of Heaven c. But especially the bitter suffering of our crucified Saviour in soul and body are the monuments of sin and memorials of our wicked life The extream wrong we offer to God by it transgressing his Law perverting his order injuring his infinite goodnesse despising his Majesty and sh●wing our selves ungrateful for his love should above all disswade us from sin By vice our soules are spoiled of their riches their most precious robes and heavenly attire are made the very dens of devils and therefore we should avoid it No day nor hour passeth wherein appear not some silent Sermons to perswade us to avoid sin and follow goodnesse As sicknesses plagues pains diseases c. and death of others shew us what is the wages of sin By sin we abuse Gods mercies to his great dishonour Like ungrateful deb●ois who oppose their Creditors with their own goods By it we abuse our soules and bodies with all the powers and parts which we have received from God by making them instruments of his dishonour All creatures made by God for our use exclaim against a vitious life the Sun gives light to works of light and not of darknesse c. The exquisite and eternal torments of Hell and the losse of the beatifical vision should warne us to flie from sin and pursue good Quest. But is it not servile to foregoe sinne for fear of punishment Answ. The Scripture commands the godly to fear him that is able to cast both soul and body into hell Mat. 10. ●8 Heb. 4.1 and 2.3 and 10.26 Feare of eternal wrath as it makes men avoid sinne may well stand with confident assurance of eternal happinesse and final perseverance Quest. May the state of our soul be discerned by our affections Answ. Yea we may know our estate to be good by our embracing of good things by our joy and delight in them and by our wonderment at them As Oh how I love thy Law Psal. 119.97 One day in thy Courts is better th●n a thousand elsewher● Psal. 84.10 Oh the depth of his Mercy Rom. 11.33 One thing have I desired of the Lord and I will desire it c. Psal. 27.4 when the soul stands in admiration of God and good things ready to welcom Christ and heavenly things and in comparison thereof to count all but dung c. A man is then in a good estate when hearing of the excellency of heavenly things he is exceedingly affected therewith and gives them a room in his heart It shewes our faith to be true For where there is true faith there is alwayes love joy and delight in the things believed and on the contrary deadnesse in affections discovers Atheism and Unbelief in the heart Quest How happens it then that Gods children sometimes even when their judgements are convinced yet finde their affections so flat crying out Alas that I should believe such happinesse as heaven such glory and yet should have my affections no more stirred in me Can I be a childe of God Answ. Sometimes the Judgement may be convinced and yet the affections not so quick 1. Because there may be some division at the same time as some present crosse or some present thing lawfully loved that may take up our affections at that time Gods children are sometimes deceived in judging of their affections but when opposition comes then they are discovered As for want of stirring up the grace of God in themselves or for want of good means or by bodily indisposition their affections may seeme dull But let religion be disgraced or opposed any way and then you shall finde that their affections are deeply rooted towards heavenly things but they appeared not before because there was no opposition This is a certain rule that a mans affections are as his perswasion is and his perwasions as his ●ight is As he hath a heavenly light discovering heavenly things so is his perswasion of a better state then the world can yeild and answerable to his perswasion so is his soul raised up to delight in the best things Quest. What rules are to be observed for the better goverment of our affections Answ. They must be guided by the word of God If they have not this rule to guid them they will wander
c. Mal. 3.17 Ps. 30.5 Hos. 6.1 2. Isa. 54.8 Ps. 71.20 Secondly In that our afflictions exceed not our strength In anger he remembers mercy Hab. 3.2 He corrects in judgment Jer. 10.24 and 30.11 1 Cor. 10.13 yea he proportioneth them according to the scantest measure of necessity laying no more upon us then he is necessarily enforced to do having therein respect to his own glory and our benefit Thirdly in that God the Father hath committed the tempering of our Cup to Christ our Saviour who as he hath manifested his love to us in giving his life for our Redemption so hath he no lesse skill in tempering a Cup fit for our strength For he remembreth whereof we are made c. Psal. 103.14 Yea he himself began to us of this Cup and drank it all off and hath left us only some few drops His was given him in anger for the purging away of punishment in respect of sin but ours in love either to purge out sin or to prevent sin Isa. 53.4 5. Heb. 4.15 16. and 2.17 18. and 5.2 Job 5.18 19. Mat. 12.20 Fourthly in that the Holy Ghost is present with us and powerfully assisteth and comforteth us in all our afflictions whereby we are enabled both to bear and overcome Mat. 8.24 Exod. 2.23 and 14.10 Psal. 118.18 2 Cor. 4.8 9. Rom. 8.35 2 Cor. 1.5 7. Psal. 94.19 and 46.4 and that he gives strength also See Isa. 40.29 30 31. Psal. 41.1 3. 2 Thes 3.3 Isa. 41.10 13 14. Psal. 46.1 2 3. God uses to moderate our grief for worldly crosses by giving us spiritual comforts Rom. 5.3 Act. 7.76 Fifthly God afflicts us no more then is necessary for his own glory and our salvation For 1. He takes no delight in our sufferings but uses all means to prevent our punishment Lam. 3.33 Isa. 28.21 Mich. 7.18 2. The measure of our afflictions exceeds not necessity and therefore first he corrects us gently and if that prevail he proceeds no further 3. By Gods corrections and medicines we may guesse at the greatnesse of our faults and grievous diseases 4. Our great afflictions argue that our sins are great either in their own nature or as they are aggravated by circumstances Sixthly Gods love appears in the ends of our afflictions which are his own glo●y and our good For the first 1. As a Souldier behaving himself valiantly in fight the honour returnes also to his Captain so when we fight manfully against temptations and afflictions God our General is glorified thereby and that in the manifestation of his power and goodnesse assisting us in our afflictions 2 Cor. 12.9 and 4.7 Ps. 44.3 5 6 7 8. 2 Cor. 10.17 Isa. 25.3 4. 1 Sam. 2.6 Psal. 50.15 2. God is glorified in our afflictions as they are trials of our spiritual graces John 21.19 Psal. 44.22 Thirdly that God by our afflictions doth much advance the good of our neighbours and that 1. As they learn by them to feare God in his judgments 1 Pet. 4.17 2. As they serve to restrain them from committing the like sin which they see punished in us Thus God severely chastened Moses and Aaron for their distrust that others might be aware of the like so David for his adultery Lots wife for looking back Luke 17.32 So 1 Cor. 10.6 11. 3. As they serve to manifest Gods graces in us and so make us examples of piety unto them and Presidents for their imitation So Abrahams trial in offering Isaac Gen. 22.2 Moses was tried both with prosperity and adversity Heb. 11.25 So Jam. 5.11 Acts 5.41 Jam. 5.8 10. Mat. 5.12 Phil. 1.13 14. 4. As they are Partners of humane frailty whilest in our afflictions we bewray impatience For this will comfort a man when he beares his Crosse with much weaknesse and imperfection in that he observes that Gods dear children yea and great Worthies have shewed the like frailty as Job 3. Jer. 20.18 5. As they are occasioned hereby to acknowledge and magnifie Gods power appearing in our weaknesse his wisdom in our foolishnesse and his goodnesse and the vertue of his graces in our frailty and natural corruption 2 Cor. 1.11 6. As our hearts are made tender by afflictions so that we are apt to pity others in the like miseries as also because after we are delivered we are the better able from our own experience to comfort others with those consolations wherewith ourselves have been comforted So Psal. 34.4 5. 2 Cor. 1.4 So it was in Christ Heb. 2.18 Quest. How will it appear that afflictions cannot hurt the children of God Answ. First because the afflictions of this life do neither deprive us of any of those things which are of chiefest excellency not bring upon us any of those evils which are principally to be avoided They cannot separate us from the love of God Rom. 8.38 39. Heb. 12.6 they do not extinguish no● diminish in us Gods sanctifying Graces but rather they are encreased by them they do not make us more slack in the service of God but rather kindle our affections in them Nor do they hinder our heavenly happinesse but rather further it Again they bring not upon us the chiefest evils that are to be avoided For they do not empair our spiritual estate for though the outward man decay the inward man is renewed daily they defile us not with sin but rather like files scoure off our rust they do not subject us to the Curse of the Law or to the wrath of God or to the torments of Hell but rather by bringing us to a fight of our sin and sense of our misery drive us to Christ the great Physician of our soules they hurt us not in the day of death but by our being inured to suffer them death becomes much more tolerable c. Psal. 34.19 22. and 129. 2 3. 2 Cor. 4.8 9. Exod. 3.1 2 3. Secondly because God not only aimes at but powerfully effects our good by afflictions He b●ings honey out of this gall blessings out of these curses Rom. 8.28 Deut. 8.16 Lam. 3.27 Ps. 119.71 So Gen. 50.20 Quest. How doth God intend and work our good by afflictions Answ. First in this life whether we consider them as trials or as fatherly corrections 1. As trials for they are not alwayes chastisements for sin but somtimes gracious trials whereby God trieth us for his glory and our own good So Deut. 8.2 Zach. 13.9 1 Pet. 4.12 13. Job 1.9 10 12. and 23.10 Psal. 139.1 5. and this God doth not to better his own knowledge for Psal. 139.1 2. Jer. 17.10 Heb. 4.13 but to make us known better both to our selves and others Again God tries us by afflictions whether we are true Christians or no lest we declare ourselves to others as the stony ground did Mat. 13.5 6. So Mar. 10.22 Christ tried the young man Yea God by afflictions trieth what measure of grace we have attained unto as what measure of faith and affiance we have in God So Acts
and was not this done for our imitation So David and Christ delighted to do Gods Will because it was so written of them Psal. 40.7 8. Paul exhorts children to obedience because it 's the first Commandment with promise Eph. 6.2 Paul preached what was in the Old Testament Acts 22.20 what is it but Popery to make the spirit within to be the supream Judge and superior to the Spirit of God in the written Word without The grace of God appearing in the Gospel will have us to walk worthy of God in all well-pleasing according to the Law Tit. 2.12 13. and to mourn bitterly that we are so unlike the will and image of God revealed in the Law Rom. 7.23 24. Object Paul speaks of a Law written and engraven in stone and therefore of the Moral Law which yet he saith is abolished by Christ in the Gospel 2 Cor. 3.6 7 11 13. Answ. The meaning of this place as also Gal. 3.25 is that the Apostle speaking of the moral Law by a Synecdoche comprehends the ceremonial Law also both which the false Teachers urged as necessary to salvation and justification at least together with Christ against whom the Apostle here disputes The moral Law therefore is abolished First as thus accompanied with a yoke of ceremonies Secondly as it was formerly dispensed the greater light of the Gospel obscuring that lesser light of the Law as ver 10. Thirdly he may speak of the moral Law as a Covenant of life which the false Teachers urged in which respect he calls it a Ministry of death and a letter which killeth and thus it s abolished by Christ that with open face we may behold the glory of the Lord as the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that doth believe Object The Gospel under which Believers are requires no doing for doing is proper to the Law which promises life and requires conditions But the Gospel promiseth to work the conditions but requires none and therefore a beleever now is fully free from the Law Answ. The Gospel and the Law are taken two wayes 1. Largely the Law is taken for the whole doctrine contained in the Old Testament and the Gospel for the whole doctrine of Christ and the Apostles in the New Testament 2. Strictly the Law pro lege operum for the Law of Works the Gospel pro lege fidei for the Law of faith The Law of Works is strictly taken for that Law which promises Gods favour and life upon condition of doing or of personal obedience the Law of faith is strictly taken for that doctrine which reveals remission of sins and reconciliation with God by Christs righteousnesse only apprehended by faith Now the Gospel in this latter sense excludes all works and requires no doing in point of justification but only believing but take it largely for the whole doctrine of Gods love and free grace and so the Gospel requires doing For as it 's an act of Gods free grace to justifie us without calling for our works so it 's an act of the same free grace to require works of a justified person to serve him in righteousnesse and holinesse all the days of our lives Tit. 2.14 and to think that the Gospel requires no conditions is a dreame against multitudes of Scriptures which contains conditional yet evangelical promises There are indeed no conditions required of us in the Gospel but what the Lord himself hath or shall work in us but it doth not therefore follow that no conditions are required of us for requiring the condition is the means to work it and the means and end should not be separated As Christs righteousnesse must go before as the matter or moving cause of our justification so faith must go before this righteousness as an instrument or applying cause of it by which we are justified 'T is true God justifies the ungodly But not immediatly without faith but mediately by faith Rom. 4.5 when the Apostle affirms that we are justified by faith without works he doth hereby plainly give that to faith which he denies to Works so then as he denies works to be the antecedent condition of our justification so he affirms the contrary of faith which goes before our justification Believe and live Object There is no sin now but unbelief which is a sin against the Gosp●l onely therefore there being no sin against any Law Christ having abolished it by his death the Law cannot be our rule Answ. Are drunkenness whoredome theft c. then no sinns to be repented of or watched against but only unbelief will not the Lord judge men not only for unbelief but for all the works done in the body as Rom. 2.16 2 Cor. 5.10 Is not the wrath of God revealed from heaven against all unrighteousnesse c Rom. 1.18 If there were no sin but unbelief how can all flesh Jews and Gentiles become guilty before God that so they may believe the Gospel as Rom. 3 21 c. if they be all guiltless till unbelief comes in No sin indeed shall condemn a man if he believe but it will not hence follow that there is no sin but unbelief sin is before unbelief comes a sick sinner before an healing Saviour sin kills the soul as it were naturally unbelief morally No sin shall condemn us if we believe but it doth not hence follow that there is no sin before or after faith because there is no condemning sin unlesse we fal by unbelief Object But now to preach the Law savours of an Old Testament spirit which was wont to wound then to heale to humble and then to raise But now we are to be Ministers of the New Testament and no Law is to be heard of Answ. Indeed to preache the Law as the means of our justification and as the matter of our righteousnesse without Christ or together with Christ as they did 2 Cor. 3.6 is a Ministry of the letter not of the Spirit But to preach Christ plainly as the end of the Law to preach the Law as the means to prepare for and advance Christ in our hearts is no Old Testament Ministry neither doth it put a vaile upon mens hearts that they cannot see the end of the Law as 2 Cor. 3.14 but it takes away the vail of all conceit of mans own strength and righteousnesse by seeing his curse that so he may flie to Christ and embrace him for righteousnesse Object Indeed the children of the Old Testament were under the Law as their School-master to lead them to Christ Gal. 3.24 25. But now saith the Apostle we are no longer under this School-master Answ. Be it so that the sons of God are now no longer under the terrour of this School-master is it not therefore a Ministers work to preach the Law unto the slaves of sin Object No but we must say Thou poor drunkard c. here is a God that hath loved thee and a Christ to die for thee here is salvation by him only
from God either secret when the heart by distrust is withdrawn or open when men do blaspheme the truth and rail at the Doctrine of God as those Jews did Act. 19.9 Secondly there is a temporary defection or falling away which afterwards is repented of Or a final of such as die in their Apostacy as Julian did Thirdly there is a spiritual defection from some part of Doctrine and obedience as in David Peter c. And a total when the foundation of faith is denied Fourthly some fall from God in their first yeares following their superstitious Ancestors as many that are borne of Popish parents Others that fall in their middle age after their enlightning with the truth as sundry inconstant Protestants which fall to Popery or Heresie So 1 Tim. 4.1 Foretold 2 Thes. 2.3 Fifthly there is a universal departure from the whole Doctrine of Christ after it is once known by the enlightning of the Spirit with a malicious despite of it because its the truth of God Heb. 6.6 and 3.12 and 10.29 Read more of it 2 Pet. 2.20 1 Joh. 5.16 Quest. How farre may a childe of God Apostatize and fall back Answ. First he may loose all his zeale and be but lukewarme Rev. 3.15 16. so 1 Sam. 17.16 there was no zeale in any to oppose the blasphemy of Goliah This was foretold Matth. 24.12 The love of many shall wax cold Secondly he may lose all his affections which are the wings of the soul as it was with Sardis R●v 3.2 so with Asa 2 Chron. 16.10 and David 2 Sa● 11.25 Thirdly he may grow to be senseless of sin and of the grace of God so were Josephs brethren when they had thrown him into the pit Gen. 37.25 so the Israelites when they had made the golden calf Exod. 32.6 so David 2 Sam. 11.13 Fourthly he may grow to be notoriously vain and worldly so Paul complains of some of his dear friends Phil. 2.21 Fifthly he may grow to that pass that the service of God may be a burden to him he may cry out as those Mal. 1.13 Hence Paul exhorts the Galatians ch 6.9 Be not weary of w●ll-doing Sixthly he may be so dead that nothing can quicken him and so it may fare with the whole Church even when God shews signes of his departure Hence Isa. 59.16 I wondred that there was no intercessor Quest. Where then is grace in such an one Is he unchilded againe Answ. The grace of a childe of God can never be wholly lost not for any goodness in himselfe but through the goodness of God to him For First there is a seed of God still remaing in him 1 John 3.9 so that he cannot commit sin with that full swinge as wicked men do Regeneration is an immortal seed 1 Pet. 1.23 25. Secondly there are supernatural habits remaining in him whereby he hath inclinations to good and against evil Psal. 37.24 Though the righteous fall yet shall he not utterly be cast down c. Now the difference between the seed and habits is this This seed is immediately in the soul though it runnes through all the powers of it But these supernatural habits are immediately in the powers and faculties of the soul and herein they differ from moral and natural habits in that these do naturally incline but supernatural habits do never actually incline but upon concurrence of special grace Thirdly a childe of God hath ever an anointing 1 John 2.27 i. e. a gift and grace of God whereby his eyes are enlightned to look upon God and his Ordinances and all sin and iniquity with an heavenly eye which can never be taken away so that he will not think or talk of God as a natural man doth he will discover that he hath something of God still in him Fourthly there is a little strength in his heart as Rev. 3.8 He doth a little fear God hath some good desires though but weak and a little endeavour to please God though corruptions be very strong Quest. Whence proceeds this back-sliding in Gods children Answ. From their giving way to sin and not looking to themselves to abstain from it as from worldliness passion c. as 1 Tim. 5.6 This David found by woful experience and therefore prays Psal. 51.12 that God would uphold him with his free spirit So we see in Peter Matth. 26.47 now the reasons why sin doth so deaden grace in their hearts are First sin is a soul-killing thing when the devil hooks a man into sinne he draws him into the dead Sea Hos. 13.1 when Ephraim offended in Baal he died Eph. 2.1 ye were dead in sinne Hence he calls the Law of sin the Law of death Rom. 8.2 sinne weakens all the powers and faculties of the soul and body that they cannot stir to any duty It 's like a great weight on a mans back Heb. 12.1 As Christ saith cares overcharge the heart Luke 21.34 It separates between God which is the fountain of life and the soul and therefore no marvel if it deaden it Secondly sin grieves the holy Spirit of God and we know that all the quickening of a Christian consists in the gracious assistance of Gods Spirit so that if he withdraw and suspend his actions we can do nothing of our selves Hence Eph. 4.31 Grieve not the holy Spirit of God c. And 1 Thes. 5.18 19. It quencheeh the Spirit Thirdly it puts a most bitter hard task upon the soul to go through which causeth her reluctancy For such a man must humble himself greatly before God must renew his repentance with bitter remorse for his sins must come to a reckoning for it This made David so loth to call himself to account when he had sinned with Bathsheba Fourthly it defiles the conscience till it be again purged by the blood of Christ Heb. 9.14 It knocks off a mans fingers from laying hold of the Promises which are the things by which men live Isa. 38.16 It makes the conscience say the Promises do not belong to me For God is an holy God and his Promises are holy and there is no medling with them without holinesse Fifthly sin doth either utterly destroy or mightily weaken all our assurance of welcome to God and therefore it must needs dead the heart in all duties as a childe when he hath committed some great fault is afraid to come into his Fathers presence as we see in Jonah and David Quest. What are the particular sins which cause this deadnesse and backsliding Answ. First the niggardlinesse of Gods children in his service when they will do no more then they must needs do whereas a quickned heart will rather superabound then be wanting As often in Scripture the duty is commanded but not the quantity as how often and how long we should pray meditate give almes c. now a Christian in such cases will rather overdo then underdo as Philemon v. 21. I know thou wilt do more then I ask So 2 Cor. 8.3 Secondly neglect of our
manifold is the witnes● of Conscience Answ. Twofold Either to accuse or to excuse Rom. 2.15 To accuse for evill to excuse by freeing from evill unjustly laid to ones charge the Jews Conscience accused Joh. 8.9 St. Pauls's excused Act. 23.1 Hence follows trouble or peace to a mans soul as Matth. 27.4 Rom. 5.1 Quest. What is a good Conscience Answ. That Conscience is said to be good when it obeyeth such light and direction as it doth think and take to be true and sound light and direction Act. 23.1 Quest. How many things concurre to make up a good Conscience Answ. First the matter whereupon it worketh which is a conformity in the whole man to the whole will of God Gods will made known to man is mans rule whereunto all his thoughts words and actions ought to be conformed Secondly The proper act of it where this matter is to be found the Conscience will beare witness and give a true testimonie thereunto Thirdly The Consequence following thereupon which is peace and quietness to the soul. Such a good Conscience was perfect in mans innocency but by his fall it was clean lost and became an evill conscience For Gen. 6.5 Quest. How doth an evill Conscience faile in the proper works thereof Answ. Sometimes in defect Sometimes in an excess 1. In the defect when it suffers a man to run into all evill and doth neither check nor trouble him for the same Called a seared conscience 1 Tim. 4.2 2. In the excess when it doth so out of measure trouble him as it takes away all hope of pardon and hinders sound and true repentance yea and makes his life a burden to himself So Judas's Matth. 27.3 4 5. Hence Isai. 57.20 21. Quest. What must concurre to the renovation of Conscience and making it good Answ. First Faith in Lord Jesus Christ whereby the Conscience is purged and purified from the naturall defilement which it had Heb. 9.14 Hence we are exhorted Heb. 10.22 to draw near with a pure heart c. Secondly A sanctified work of the Spirit whereby the heart is alienated from sin and made watchfull against it and withall it is put on to conform it self to the holy will of God whch conformity being true and entire without hypocrisie moveth the Conscience to bear witness thereunto Rom. 9.1 2 Cor. 1.12 This is stiled a pure Conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 2 Tim. 1.3 and a Conscience void of offence Act. 24.16 Quest. What then since mans fall is counted a good Conscience Answ. First That which giveth a true testimony of a mans Faith in Christ for the pardon of his sins and reconciliation with God Heb. 10.22 Secondly Which bears witness to his conformity in the whole man to the holy will of God in all manner of duties to God and man Act. 24.16 particularly and specially in those duties which belong to his particular calling whereof he is to give an especiall account Matt. 25.21 Thirdly That which worketh peace and quiet in the soul Rom. 5.1 2 Cor. 1.12 Dr. Gouge on Heb. Quest. What other definitions may be given of Conscience Answ. Conscience is the judgment of a man concerning himself and his own wayes in reference and subordination to the judgement of God Dr. Ames Or It s the souls recoiling on its self Ward Dike Or It s the souls acting and reflecting on it self and on all a mans own actions Quest. How many sorts of good consciences are there Answ. A good troubled conscience Bona turbata Secondly A good quiet Conscience Bona pacata Quest. VVhat goodnesse must concurre to a right good Conscience Answ. First a goodness of sincerity Secondly a goodness of security It must be honeste bona pacate bona Quest. What then is a truly good Conscience Answ. A good Conscience is that which is rightly purified and rightly pacified by the Word Blood and Spirit of Christ regularly performing all the Offices unto which it is designed Quest. What must it be purified from Answ. First Ignorance A Conscience void of knowledge is void of goodness the blindy Conscience is alwayes an ill Conscience Tit. 1.15 Secondly From error the Erroneous Conscience is ever a desperate and dangerous Conscience Look what Swine are to a Garden a wilde Boare to a Vine-yard young Foxes to grapes c. Such is an erroneous Conscience to Churches Doctrines Truths Graces and duties It overturns all It engaged Herod under an Opinion of piety to destroy John to save his wicked Oath Mat. 14.9 Others make void Gods commands to make good their own vows Jer. 44.16 It made Paul to persecute the Church Act. 26.9 others to compass Sea and Land to make Proselites Matth. 23.15 Thirdly From naturall deadness or hardness Heb. 9.14 A dead Conscience is not for a living God Quest. How must conscience be purified Answ. First The word of Christ is the great heart-searcher and Conscience-purifier Heb. 4.12 Joh. 15.3 17.17 This removes ignorance Psal. 119.105 130. It rectifies Error being a voice behind us Isa. ●0 21 ends all controversies Isa. 8.26 Resolves all doubts Luke 10.26 Removes deadness and hardness Jer. 23.29 It s an Hammer to soften It s immortall seed c. 1 Pet. 1.23 Hence Psal. 119.25 50 93. Secondly The bloud of Christ further purifies it Heb. 9.14 and 10.22 1 Joh. 1.7 Thirdly The Spirit of Christ together with the Word and blood of Christ purifies it Joh. 6.63 Heb. 9.14 the Spirit heals those diseases before mentioned 1. Ignorance being the Spirit of illumination Ephes. 1.17 2. Errour being the Spirit of truth Joh. 14.17 3. Deadness being the Spirit of life Rom. 8.2 Its Refiners fire c. Mal. 3.2 Hence Isa. 4.4 Quest. What must Conscience be pacified from Answ. First It must be at peace from the dominion of sin there is a peace when sin and Satan are strongly armed and keep the house Luke 11. ●1 But this is the peace of a sleepy not of an awakened Conscience woe to them Luke 6.25 Amos. 6.1 3. Conscientia pacate optima may be vitiose pessima In tali pace amaritudo mea amarissima Ber. there is no peace to the wicked Isa. 57. ult 2 Pet. 2.3 Secondly From the rage of Satan this is the happy peace promised to Believers Matth. 16.18 the summe of that promise Rom. 16.20 the God of Peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly Thirdly From the displeasure of God when we can say Rom. 5.1 being justified by Faith we have peace with God This is the best part of our peace such as the world cannot give John 14.27 So Phil. 4.7 This guards the soule from all fears and assaults of the Law Sin Guilt Death Hell and Satan Quest. What must Conscience be pacified by Answ. First By the Word of Christ its pacified and restored to peace hence the Gospel is called the Word of Peace c. Acts 10.36 Rom. 10.15 2 Cor. 5.18 Isa. 57.19 and 52.7 Secondly By the blood of Christ. This is the procuring cause of
compelled many to blaspheme yet saith he I obtained mercy Mat. 12.31 Christ tells us that upon repentance it shall be forgiven The Devil would perswade us that all blasphemy is the sinne against the Holy Ghost but we must deny it and our reason must be because we are sorry for it and were it to be done again we would not do it for all the world but he that sins against the Holy Ghost is not sorry for it is not grieved for his offence would have all others to commit the same sinne Is desirous to have Hell as full as he can wishes that wife children Parents friends neighbours all might commit the sin against the holy Ghost as he hath done See Capell on Tentations Quest. How doth the hainousness of this sin of Blasphemy appear Answ. First It s one of the most horrid sins in the world Some sins are more directly and immediately against mens own persons as idlenes prodigality c. Some are against other mens persons as lying slandering c. but the blasphemer fights directly against God other sins strike at God but this pierceth him and strikes through his Name with execrations c. and therefore such were to be put to death Lev. 24.10 11. Isa. 36 6. Hab. 3.14 Secondly It s an high contempt of God a desperate flying into his face a charging him with folly cruelty and tyranny Job 1. ult It so provokes God that usually he cuts them off sooner then other sinners as those that are ripe for destruction Thirdly It argues the highest ingratitude in the world for a man like a mad dogg to flie into the face of his master who keeps and feeds him to use that heart and tongue which God made for his praise to the disgrace of his Creator To load him with injuries who daily loadeth us with mercies To curse him who blesseth us c. they are said to crucifie Christ afresh Heb. 6.6 Magis offendunt qui blasphemant Christum regnantem in coelis quam qui crucifixerunt ambulantem in terris Aug. they are worse then those that actually crucified him Fourthly it exceedingly debaseth a man and makes him viler then the vilest creature for they in their kind praise God and shew forth the wisdom power and goodness of their Creator but the blasphemer dishonours him in all his attributes Fifthly it is a most unprofitable sin other sins have some seeming pleasure and profit to allure but what pleasure or profit can it be to rage against the just and great God Sixthly such are guilty of the most pestilent scandal that can be they grieve the godly harden the wicked offend the weak who are quickly turned out of the way they become an evil example to their families who like soft wax are easily cast into any forme Now woe be to them by whom scandals especially blasphemous scandals come Mat. 18.6 7. Seventhly it 's a sin which makes men most like the damned in hell As the Saints in heaven being filled with joy shall vocally sing the praises of their Redeemer So the damned in hell being filled with the wrath of God shall vocally blaspheme him and if the wicked in this world that do but taste of the cup of Gods wrath yet blaspheme him for their torments Rev. 16.9 how will they be filled with blasphemies when they shall be filled with the wrath of God for ever Eighthly as its the greatest sin so it makes men liable to the greatest judgements of God and to the severest punishments of the Magistrate When a man shall directly and purposely speak reproachfully of God denying him in his Attributes or attributing that to him which is inconsistent with his nature this is called direct and immediate blasphemy and if it be acted not out of infirmity of nature the person not being distempered by sicknesse melancholy nor madnesse but out of malice deliberation and obstinacy the party should die without mercy Lev. 24.13 14 15 16. This was not a judicial Law belonging to the Jews onely but it being of the Law of Nature is a universal Law for all Nations Hence wicked ●ezabel that she might stone Naboth to death proclaimes him a blasphemer 1 Kings 21.11 14. So John 19.7 and they stoned Stephen for this pretended cause Act. 7.57 Nebuchad●ezzar by the light of Nature made a decree that whosoever blasphemed the God of Heaven c. should be cut in pieces and his house be made a dung-hill Dan. 3.29 How much more should Christian Magistrates make severe Laws for the punishment of such notorious offenders which if they neglect to do as their light is greater so their punishment shall be greater They punish Thieves and Murtherers with death They punish Traitors that seek to destroy the lives of Princes or that speak against their honour and dignity with death and shall not he that speaks against the King of Kings die the death And when men neglect their duty in this kinde God takes the sword into his own hand He cut off blasphemous Senacharib and his Army for it 2 King 19.35 The Syrians blaspheming God and calling him the God of the Mountaines but not of the Valleys many thousands of them lost their lives for it 1 King 20.29 30. blasphemous Arius voided his bowels and died miserable See many more Examples of Gods judgments upon Blasphemers and blasphemous Hereticks in my Mirror in those two Chapters Master Hall upon 2 Tim. 3.2 Quest. How comes Satan to tempt Gods children to blasphemy Answ. When he cannot overcharge the conscience of the weak Christians by ripping up and aggravating those sins which he hath in truth committed nor cause him desperately to desist from going forward in the course of sanctification then he suggests into his minde horrible blasphemies against Gods Majesty and continually turmoils him with most impious thoughts that thereby he may distract his minde from holy meditations and utterly discourage him in all Christian exercises Quest. Of how many sorts are these his hellish suggestions A●sw Of two sorts 1. Such as seeme to have some ground in corrupted reason for the sugge●ting whereof he oft-times useth our sinful flesh as his wicked instrument and these arise sometimes from our over-great prosperity whereby we are brought to forget and neglect the Lord who hath been so bountiful unto us sometimes from the grievousnesse of afflictions whereby men are moved to murmur against God and to repine at his judgements sometimes from some offence unjustly taken from Gods Word or works As from the plainnesse of the Scriptures the unequal dispensation of Gods benefits and punishments whence arise these tentations that there is no God or if there be yet no particular providence that he hath not eyes to see all things nor power to rule them That he is not just in his judgements but an accepter of persons That his Word is not true either in the promises or threatnings That he makes little account of vertue to reward it or of sin to punish
that evil will come by the discovery of a religious truth or though they should let truth be maintained though the inconveniences be never so great Tbough one abuse a sword yet all must not be disarmed for that Though the Gospel be to some a savour of death yet must not Ministers therefore forbear to preach it Because some women will abuse this Doctrine yet they which are discreat and vertuous must not therefore be kept in ignorance of their duty and have their consciences ensnared and burdened with that which is not sinful yea with that which is honest and commendable Many wives undo their husbands with their daintinesse in fare curiosity in furnishing their houses and costlinesse in their apparel but few in doing works of charity Quest. To whom are almes to be given Answ. Almes-deeds are to be extended only to the poor and needy Deut. 15.11 1 John 3.17 Eph. 4.28 2 Cor. 8.14 Luke 3.11 Now these poor are of divers kindes Christ reckons up six Mat. 25.35 Hungry thirsty harbourlesse naked sick and poor prisoners To which adde the oppressed and exiled Isa. 58.6 7. especiallie if they suffer for the constant confession of the truth Adde also such as are indebted above their meanes the lame blind aged decrepid the poor Widow and distressed Orphans c. Isa. 58.6 7. Nehem. 5.11 Luke 14.12 Jam. 1.27 Quest. What order are we to observe in giving almes Answ. First they which are in extream necessity and near perishing are first to be relieved be they acquaintance or strangers friends or foes Mat. 5.42 Rom. 12.23 Luke 6.30 yet if we cannot relieve all such we are to prefer our kindred and friends and the godly in the first place We must also have respect to those who by Providence are first cast upon us who thereby seem by God himself to be preferred before others Luk. 10.33 1. Again the whole Church and Common-wealth is to be preferred even before our selues if there be such a necessity for its better that one member perish then that the whole be destroyed therefore the Primitive Christians sold all they had to relieve the common necessitys 2. We must take care to provide necessaries for ou● selves For charity begins at home then for our second selves our wives then for our Parents Contrary reproved Mar. 7.11 12. then for our children and the rest of the family 1 Tim. 5.8 then our spiritual kindred except our kindred in the flesh be godly also and then they are to be preferred Gal. 6.10 1 John 3.17 Rom. 12.13 Mat. 10.41 and 25.40 So David Psal. 16.3 Then our Benefacto●s to whom we formerly have been beholding 2 Cor. 8.14 Prov. 18.24 Then to our kindred in the flesh Gen. 29.13 14. Then common friends and neighbours For Prov. 27.10 Better is a neighbour that is near then a brother afar off Then out Countreymen and strangers Lev. 25.35 Rom. 12.13 H●b 13.2 Gen. 18.3 and 19.2 Isa. 58.7 Mat. 25.35 Deut. 15.7 11. Then it must extend to our very enemies Rom. 12.20 2 Kings 6.22 Quest. In what manner may we most conveniently distribute our almes Answ. Almes are either more publick and common or more private and particular First in the former our best course is to follow the Lawes and Customes of our Countrey Secondly for our private almes we may give them to such poor as upon enquiry we have found out to be honest and needy or else to such others as God by a more immediate Providence doth unexpectedlie present to us Quest. What may be thought of giving almes at our doors Answ. It cannot be condemned till the good Lawes made be put in execution for the reformation of this disorder yet with these cautions First the whole stream of our charity must not run that way Secondly we must give to such as are in apparent misery as to the aged decrepid lame blinde c. not to idle vagrants and common beggars and that for these reasons 1. Because they which are truly poor will by this meanes be neglected whilest idle drones devour that which belongs to them 2. Hereby the bold and impudent will often speed better then the modest and shamefast 3. Our almes shall by this meanes be distributed unequally some having all and others none neither can they be fitted to the quantity or quality of their wants 4. Such giving encreaseth the number of idle vagrants encoura●ing them to continue in their wicked courses without any feare of God or subjection unto men 5. It crosseth Gods Ordinance who would not have a beggar in Israel Deut. 15.4 Proclaiming both the negligence of Magistrates in not reforming this disorder and the hard-heartednesse of private persons who through the want of mercy and compassion thrust their neighbours into such sinful courses 6. Hereby those excellent Lawes which are made to prevent such disorders are transgressed and so the Christian Magistrate is justly offended Quest. VVhat are we to judge of such almes as are given by men at their death Answ. They are to be esteemed and censured according to the quality and condition of the persons by whom they are performed For 1. Either they are done by such as according to their abilities have exercised such charity in their whose lives after their Conversion out of love and obedience to God and mercy towards men Or Secondly out of self-love vain-glory or servile fear by such as have utterly neglected them in their life-time and now think to make satisfaction for their former neglect For the former we are to judge that they proceed from their love to God and their neighbours being not content with what they have done in their life-time but also take care that they be continued even after their death Neither are we to take exceptions though the quantity now given doth exceed all that they have done in their lives seeing herein they deal no otherwise with the poor then with their own children and friends upon whom they bestow more by VVill then ever before they gave them and its just that men should keep the largest part of their goods while they live for their own maintenance giving to the poor what they can conveniently spare and they are very charitable if they design a great part of their estate to religious uses when as themselves shall have no further use of it But for those who wholly neglect works of mercy in their lives and think it sufficient to give something at death they are not absolutely to be condemned lest hereby they take occasion to neglect both Besides these may be after-fruits of their late repentance They are also good to the receivers and for the givers they are better then such as neither do good in life nor death neither can they be taxed for doing them now but because they did them no sooner Which fault that we may avoid Consider 1. That its better and more commendable to give liberally in our life-time making our own hands our Executors and our own
our sins was a bitter cup to drink off hence Matth. 26.39 6. This work Christ finished and compleated Quest. In what particulars did his finishing this work consist Answ. First in that he did it wholly and universally there was not one tittle of the Law which he did not fulfill Secondly He finished it universally for parts and not only so but fully for degrees He did not only love God but loved him as much as the Law requires All that he did was so fully done that there wanted not the least degree of grace in any duty Thirdly Because he had not only an objective perfection in parts and degrees but also a subjective perfection all within him was throughly and perfectly holy So that as we are originally and actually polluted he was originally and actually holy so that the Law had no fault to finde with him Luk. 1.35 Heb. 7.26 and 4.15 Fourthly He finished it in respect of duration the Law requiring continuance though there were perfection of parts and degrees and subjective perfection also yet Cursed is he that continues not therein Gal. 3.10 Fifthly He so finished it that he left nothing to be done either by Angels or men in that way and kind as he did it Object Then what needs diligence and zeal in the wayes of God Sin or not sin all is one Christ hath done all c Answ. Our duties are not required to that end which Christs was but yet they are necessarily commanded for other ends because God hath commanded them as the way to walk in if we will be saved as also to glorifie God and to restifie our thankfulness and love to him yea there is an inseparable connexion btween a man interessed in Christ and a holy life as there is in the fire with heat and light Quest. What are the properties of the work which Christ finished Answ. Fir● it was a work of infinite value because he was God as well as man Secondly Mediatory all that he did and suffered tended to a propitiation and reconciliation with God so that as the nature of them was infinite so the end of them was pretious and admirable Thirdly It was not only his work but our work He did them not for his own sake but for ours Fourthly It was of necessity and that 1. From the Justice of God which being infinite could not be satisfied but by that which is of infinite value 2. From the holinesse of the Law that admits of no work but what is perfect pure and holy 3. From our own impotency which proclaims the necessity of Christs perfection For take us as we are in our selves and so we are nothing but sin and a curse instead of doing Gods work wee doe the Divels and take us as regenerate and then though we be partakers of Gods Grace yet the remnants of corruption within us doe staine and infect all we doe Fifthly Here is the glorious visibility of Christs perfect working in his Resurrection Ascention and now sitting at Gods right hand in glory which could not have been had not Christ perfected his work Quest. What are wee further bound to believe concerning Christ Answ. First That whatsoever Christ had or was was not for himself but for us His fulness for our emptiness His attonement for our sins as the full breasts are for suck to the child the vertue of the head for the members of the body the fulnesse of the Fountaine for the streams Isa. 9. ● 1 Cor. 1.30 Quest. In what particulars will this appear Answ. First His Incarnation was for us not for Angels nor for any other end If there had been but one man of all mankind to be saved Christ would have dyed as Paul said Gal. 2.20 who gave himself for me It was not the multitude of Believers which made Christ to become man for comparatively there are but a small remnant but it was because such are given to him as Mediatour and so he would be faithfull for one as well as for many Secondly All that Christ did was not for himself but for us All his miracles Joh. 11.15 His miracles tending to the confirmation of their faith So was his obedience to the Law and fulfilling the righteousnesse thereof for our sakes Thirdly His sufferings and rendring himself an Attonement and Sacrifice on the Cross was for us Isa. 53.5 He died for us gave himself for us c Heb. 12.24 Abels blood cried for vengeance but Christs for mercy Fourthly The fruits and benefits of his mediation redound to us Justification pardon of sin sanctification victory over lusts assurance of Gods favour all these come by Christ but to those only for whom he was appointed a Saviour Secondly that all this was of God the Father It s his will and gracious appointment that Christ should do all these things for his Col. 1.14 Thirdly it s the duty of all Gods children to know and believe this fulnesse of Christ for them and to look upon Christ and all his benefits as for them Quest. Why is it their dutie to do so Answ. First because otherwise Christ would be in vaine and not of that use that God hath appointed him for the fountaine runs in vaine if none will drink of it Secondly because in and through him God doth magnifie his glory his attributes of grace mercy and unspeakable bounty so that if we do not thus receive Christ we deprive God of all his intended glory Thirdly because of the insufficiency of all other things to satisfie the troubled and broken heart which may make us to flie to this and to say Whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life Fou●thly our necessity may enforce us to it Consider when our own hearts disquiet us when the perfect Law troubles us and when the Devil accuses us we should then flie to Christ which will answer all Quest. Whether did not Christ die for all men Answ. Christs Mediatory prayer John 17. and Death is not for all the world but onely for some certaine persons who are given by the Father to him Quest. How can this be made out and proved Answ. First Consider that there is a necessary connexion between Christs prayer or intercession and his death they are of equal latitude whom he prayed for he died for and whom he died for he prayed for So Rom. 8.34 and this must needs be so because Christs prayer is one part of his Priestly office and the oblation of himself a sacrifice for sin was the other Secondly though Christ in his prayer and death had special love and regard to some of mankinde and not to all yet there is no man that is damned that can lay the blame any where but upon himself So Hos. 13.9 Death and hell are the wages of sin Thirdly we must distinguish of the sufficiency and worth of Christs death in it self and the effectual application of it Christs death is of value enough to redeeme ten thousand worlds because its the
seek and procure them by evil 1 Pet. 2.15 A good conscience must not go out of Gods way to meet with sufferings nor out of sufferings way to meet with sinne It s not Poena but Causa the cause not the punishment which makes a Martyr 2. If thou sufferest for ill-doing yet be sure that it be wrongfully 1 Pet. 2.19 and if thou beest charged with any evil that it be falsly Mat. 5.11 that thy conscience may say we are as deceivers yet true as unknown yet well konwn to God 2 Cor. 6.9 10. Thirdly if thou desirest chiefly and especially to suffer in the cause and for the name of Christ this with him is to suffer as a Christian. In the matters of the Kingdom Daniel was careful to carry himself unreprovably but in the matters of God he cared not what he suffered Dan. 6.14 5. Life as it is too little worth to be laid out for Christ so it s too precious to be laid out in any other cause It s an honour if we can call our sufferings the sufferings of Christ Col. 2.24 and our scarrs the marks of the Lord Jesus Gal. 6.17 and can subscribe our selves the prisoners of Christ Eph. 3.1 Fourthly if thou lovest to see the ground thou goest upon that thy cause be clear the grounds manifest that thou beest not thrust forward by a turbulent spirit or a mis-informed conscience but for conscience towards God or according to God that thou mayest say with the Apostle I suffer according to the will of God 1 Pet. 4.19 Fifthly if thou beest careful not only that the matter be good but that the manner be good lest otherwise we disgrace our sufferings 1 Pet. 2.19 c. If thou suffer wrongfullly yet thou must suffer patiently This is to suffer as Christ suffered 1 Pet. 2.21 22 23. Sixthly if thou committest thy self in thy sufferings to God in well-doing 1 Pet. 4.19 suffering times must not be sinning times He is no good Martyr that is not a good Saint A good cause a good conscience a good life a good death a good matter to suffer for a good manner to suffer in make an honourable Martyr Tenthly a conscience of charity This the Apostle speaks of as the end and perfection of the Law and Gospel too 1 Tim. 1.5 where there is the truth of charity there is the truth of conscience also the more of charity the more of conscience Now this charity is twofold 1. External or civil which respects 1. The poor to whom is to be shewed the charity of beneficence 2. To the neighbour and friend a love of benevolence And 3. To the enemy a love of forgivenesse 1. To the poor a love of beneficence and well-doing this kind of charity is the worlds grand benefactor the poors great Almoner the widows Treasurer the Orphans Guardian and the oppressed mans Patron This lends eyes to the blinde feet to the lame deals out bread to the hungry cloaths the naked and brings upon the Donor the blessing of him that was ready to perish This Zacheus shewed Luke 19.8 and Job Chap. 30.12 c. and Obadiah 1 King 18.13 and Nehemiah Chap. 5.15 Hence Psal. 112.5 Prov. 31.20 26. So Cornelius Acts 10.2 4. Isa. 32.8 2. To our neighbours must be shewed the charity of benevolence we must love them as our selves Matth. 22.39 Rom. 13.8 For Prov. 18.24 He that hath a friend must shew himself friendly It s a pleasant thing to see friends and neighbours living in this mutuall love and benevolence Psal. 133.1 c. 3. To our enemies a love of forgiveness This is the hardest and therefore the highest pitch of love a lesson only to be learned in the School of Christ. The Pharisees taught otherwise which Christ laboured to reform Matth. 5.46 Luke 6.32.33 This makes us like our Father in Heaven who is kind to the thankfull and unkind Luke 6.35 and like his Son on Earth who prayed for his enemies This we are exhorted to Col. 3.12 13. 2. Spirituall or Ecclesiasticall which is to be shewed in the love we bear to the Church and truth of Christ and to the souls of our brethren This Charity is to be preferred before all the former the former may be amongst Heathens and civilized Christians but this is the peculiar badg of the people of God A love of Symphonie in judgment and opinion of Sympathy in heart and affection and of Symmetrie or Harmony in an offensive conversation This is often and earnestly pressed Phil. 2.1 c. 1 Pet. 3.8 It s the end of the Law the adorning of the Gospel the lively Image of God and of Christ the first fruit of the Spirit the daughter of Faith the Mother of hope the sister of peace the kinswoman of truth the life and joy of Angels the bane of Divels It s the death of Dissentions the grave of Schismes wherein all Church rupture and offences are buried 1 Joh. 4.8 16. Joh. 13.34 Gal. 5.22.6 Yea it s the very bond of perfection Col. 3.14 and that which covers all sins 1 Pet. 4.8 Quest. What is the excellency and benefit of a good Conscience Answ. First The excellency of it appears in the honourable titles given to it above all other graces and the reall preheminence it hath if compared with all other things as 1. It hath this proper denomination given it ordinarily of a good Conscience Act. 23.19 1 Tim. 1.15 1 Pet. 3.16 21. whereas other graces though excellent in their place and kind are seldom so called Where do we read of good Faith good Love Holiness c. whereas Conscience is good of it self and makes the good Faith the good Love the good repentance c. which all cease to be good when severed from the good conscience Again compare it with all other good things and it hath the better of them what good is there in a chest full of goods when the Conscience is empty of goodness Quid prodest plena bonis Area si inanis sit Conscientia said St. Austin What if he hath good wares in his shop a good stock in his ground good cloaths to his back c. if he hath not a good Conscience in his heart This man is like Naaman a rich and honorable man but a Leper What are all great parts and abilities without a good Conscience but as sweet flowers upon a stinking carcass It s above all Faith alone therefore they oft go together in Scripture 1 Tim. 1.5 19. and 3.9 If this be put away Faith is shipwract Nothing profits alone without this not Baptisme 1 Pet. 3.21 not Charity 1 Tim. 1.5 not coming to the Lords Supper Heb. 10.22 not any serving of God 2 Tim. 1.3 not obedience to Magistrates Rom. 13.5 not all our sufferings 1 Pet. 2.19 20. Let all duties be performed and Conscience nor regarded and the man is but an Hypocrite Let all gifts remain and profession stay and the man is but an Apostate Hence Bernard Vtilius est
the Devil when God left Satan to buffet and tempt the incestuous person he was almost swallowed up with too much grief Quest. What are the false wayes that a wounded conscience is prone to take Answ. First some when troubled for sin call it melancholly and pusillanimity and therefore they will go to their merry company they will drink it away rant it away or go to their merry pastimes As Herod sought to kill Jesus as soone as he was borne so these seek to stifle troubles of conscience in the first beginnings of them Secondly when this will not prevaile but that still they think they must go to hell for their sins they set themselves upon some superstitious austere ways as in Popery to go on Pilgrimage to enter into a Monastery c. thinking thereby to get peace of conscience but Luther found by experience the insufficiencie of all these courses Mr. Anthony Burges of Original sin Soli Deo Gloria A TABLE Of some of the principal things contained in this VOLUME A ABuse of lawful things how prevented Pag. 4. Adoption marks of it 11 134. Afflictions 350 351. Apparel how men sin in it 2. Assurance no Doctrine of liberty 129 B Backsliding whence it proceeds 100 Baptisme inward the Marks of it 15● 9 Believers temporary 104 Blasphemy tentations to it 180 c. 354 Bodily deformities whether they may be hidden 114 254 Bodily health how preserved 189 C Callings how men sin in them 3. Charity the best 442 Charms sinful 146 Chastity how preserved 19 Christ when truly affected 25 Christ when he first lives in a Christians heart 276 Christ proved to be God 278 298 Christs actions which to be imitated 302 Christ to walk as he walked 365 Company how men sin about it 3 Conference amongst Christians 377 Confession of Christ. 364 Conflict when none in man 399 D Deadness in Christians 102 Death how to prepare for it 352 Desertion 331 333 Desires true and false 343 Diligence about assurance 131 Drinking see eating E Eating and drinking how men sinne in them 2 Election how known 134 F Faces may not be painted 114 Families how men sin in providing for them 3 Fashions strange sinful 112 Father whether any man may be called so 258 Flight in persecution 387 388 G God may be served upon hope of reward p. 29. and for fear of punishment 30 How a false instead of a true God is set up 149 151 Good works 427 Grace signes when we decay in it 105 H Hardness of heart how manifold 445 I Image worship 14 15 Infants and ideots what to be thought of them 410 Justification how evidenced 95 L Law our rule 89 Love to the godly 198 199 Gods Love how to know that it dwells in us 365 M Marriage how men sin about it 3 Melancholly the distempers of it 357 O Ornaments to be used with cautions 109 110 P Parents consent necessary in marriage of children p. 259.260 and in their contracts 264 Parents caution in naming their children 264 265 Prayer of Christ and ours differ 292 Praying for the Church 313. How to prevaile 314 Presumption how it differs from assurance 135 R Recidivation Cases about it 355 Recreations what should be used 190 191. How men sin in them 3 Redemption uniuersal disproved 279 282 284 346 Repentance diverts Gods anger 86 Reprobates what benefit they receive by Christ. 284 S Sin how it differs in the godly and wicked 172. How to resist it 420. None small 420 421 Sins of others whether to be rejoyced in 369 Sins of inferiors when charged on superiors 368 Sorrow godly 347 Spirit how we may know that we have it 363 Spirits testimony 122 c. 133 Sufferings 440 Sincerity signs of it 434 439 T Thoughts of distrust 152 Thoughts distinguished from Satans suggestions 181 Tongue to be watched 418 How we are guided into all Truth 403 U Usury whether lawful 194 W Watchfulness of Christians 324 326 c. Word of God carefully to be attended 221 FINIS Eccl. 12.12 B. H●lls Epist. to his Cases of Conscience Act. 18.8 Summum apud Deum est nobilitas cl●rum esse virtutibus Hierom. Psal. 48.11 Isa. 6.13 Col. 3.1 2. 3. Rule VII Rule X. Rule