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A21059 Tvvo treatises the one of Good conscicnce [sic]; shewing the nature, meanes, markes, benefits, and necessitie thereof. The other The mischiefe and misery of scandalls, both taken and given. Both published. by Ier: Dyke, minister of Gods Word at Epping in Essex. Dyke, Jeremiah, 1584-1639.; Dyke, Jeremiah, 1584-1639. Mischiefe and miserie of scandals both taken, and given. aut; Dyke, Jeremiah, 1584-1639. Good conscience. aut 1635 (1635) STC 7428; ESTC S100168 221,877 565

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few that can marry with that joy wherewith a good conscience dies It enables a man not onely to looke Ananias and the Councel in the face but even to look death it selfe in the face without those amazing terrours yea it makes the face of death seeme lovely and amiable Hee whose conscience is good and sees the face of God reconciled to him in Christ hee can say as Iacob did when he saw the face of Ioseph Gen. 46. 30. Now let me dye since I have seene thy face It is the priviledge of a good conscience alone to goe to the grave as Agag did to Samuel and to say that truly which he spake besides the booke 1 Sam. 15. 32. Hee came pleasantly and hee said Surely the bitternesse of death is past Hee was deceived and therefore had no such cause to be so pleasant but a good conscience can yea cannot chuse but be so pleasant even when going out of the world because the guilt of sinne being washed away in Christs blood it knowes that the bitternesse of death is past and the sweetnesse of life eternall is at hand A man whose debts are paid he dares goe out of doores dare meet and face the Sergeants and the conscience purged by the blood of Christ can look as undauntedly on the face of death He that hath forgotten the sting that is the guilt of conscience taken away by faith in Christ he lookes not upon death as the Israelites upon the fiery Serpents but lookes upon it as Paul doth 1 Cor. 15. O death where is thy sting Who feares a Bee an Hornet a Snake or a Serpent when they have lost their sting The guilt of sinne is the sting of conscience it s the sting of death that stings the conscience The sting of death is sinne 1 Cor. 15. Plucke then sin out of the conscience and at once the conscience is made good and death made weake and disarmed of his weapon And when the conscience sees death unstinged and disarmed it is freed of feare and even in the very act of death can joyfully triumph over death oh Death where is thy sting A good conscience lookes upon death as upon the Sheriffe that comes to give him possession of his Inheritance or as Lazarus upon the Angels that came to carry his soule into Abrahams bosome and therfore can welcome death and entertaine him joyfully And whereas an ill conscience makes a man see death as if he saw the Devill a good conscience makes a man see the face of death as Iacob saw Esau's face Gen. 33. I have seene thy face as the face of God they see the face of death with unspeakeable joy ravishment of heart and exultation of spirit Well now what a motive have wee here to make us labour for good conscience Even Balaam himselfe would faine make a good end and die in peace and who wishes not his death-bed may be a mount Nebo from whence he may see the heavenly Canaan Lo here Balaam the way to dye the death of the righteous I have lived in all good conscience untill this day They that have conscience in their life shal have comfort at their death they that live conscionably they shal dy comfortably they that live in all good conscience till their dying day shall depart in the abundance of comfort at their dying day There will come a day wherein wee must lay downe these Tabernacles the day of death will assuredly come How lamentable a thing will it then be to be so destitute and desolate of all comfort as to be driven to that extremity as to curse our birth day oh what would Comfort be worth at our last houre at our last gaspe whilst our dearest friends shall be weeping wringing their hands and lamenting then then what would inward comfort be worth Who would not hold the whole world an easie price for it then Well then would wee then have Comfort and Ioy oh then get a good conscience now which will yield comfort when all other comforts shall utterly faile and shall be life in the middst of death How happy is that man that when the sentence of death is passed upon him can say with Hezekiah Is 38. 3. Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight Indeed the text sayes that Hezekiah wept sore but yet not as fearing death for hee could not feare death who had thus feared God but because the promise was not yet made good to him in a Son and Heire of his kingdome hence came those teares It is otherwise an unspeakable joy that such a conscience as Hezekiahs was will speake to a man upon his death-bed Every one professes a desire to make a good end Here is the way to make good that desire to live in all good conscience Alas how pittifull and miserable a condition live most men in All the dayes of their life and health they have no regard of a good conscience Notwithstanding that men are pressed continually to this one care by the instancie and importutunitie of Gods Ministers yet how miserably is it neglected Well at last the day of death comes and then what would not they give for a comfortable end If the gold of Ophir would purchase comfort it should flie then Then poast for this Minister and run for the other as in the sweating sicknesse in King Edwards dayes then for Gods sake but one word of comfort then O blessed men of God one word of peace Now alas what would you have them to doe Are they or your own courses in fault that you want comfort at your death What would you have us doe Wee must referre you to your owne consciences we cannot make oyle of flint nor crush sweet wine out of sowre Grapes we dare not flatter you against your cōsciences If you would give us a world we cannot comfort you when your owne consciences witnesse against you that such comforts belong not to you Doe not idely in this case hope for comfort from Ministers be it knowne unto you you must have it from your owne consciences Many on their death-bed cry to the Minister as she did to the King 2 King 6. 26 27. Helpe my Lord O King But marke what hee answers If the Lord doe not helpe thee whence shall I helpe thee out of the barne floore or out of the Wine presse So must wee answer to such as cry Helpe helpe O man of God If God and your owne consciences helpe you not whence shall we help you If there had beene Corne within the barnes the King could easily have helped her but he could not make corne So if men have carryed any thing into their consciences if they themselves have inned any provision and comfort by being conscionable in their lives then we can helpe and comfort them but otherwise doe not thinke that we can make comforts and make
stand to him that will stand for it When Nebuchadnezzar heares his Furnace seaven times hotter than at other times then a good conscience will speak comfort seven times sweeter than at other times Are Gods Saints for good conscience ●on Acts and Mon. Omnis nobis vilis est poena ubi pura comes est conscientia Tiburt apud Baren An. 168. sake in prison Good conscience will make their prisons delectable hort-yards So doth Algerius an Italian Martyr date a comfortable Epistle of his From the delectable hortyard of the Leonine prison a prison in Venice so called So that as he said that hee had rather be in prison with Cato than with Caesar in the Senate house so in this regard it was more comfortable to be with Philpot in the Cole-house than with Bonner in his Palace Bonners conscience made his Palace a Cole house and a Dungeon whilst Philpots made the Cole-house a Palace Are Gods Saints in the Stocks Better it is sayes Philpot to sit in the Stocks of the world then in the stocks of a damnable conscience Therefore though they be in the Stocks yet even then the righteous doth sing and rejoyce yea even in the Stocks and prison Paul and Silas sang in the Stocks Sing in the Stocks Nay Hinc est quod è contrario innocens etiam inter ipsa tormenta fruitur conscientiae securitate cum de poena metuat de innocentia gloriatur Hieron ad Demetti ad ●● 1. more they can sing in the flames and in the middst of the fires Isay 24. 15. Glorifie God in the fires And worthy Hawks could clap his hands in the middst of the flames So great and so passing all understanding is the peace and comfort of a good conscience So that in some sense that may be said of it which is spoken of faith Heb. 11. 34. By it they quenched the violence of fire Gods servants were so rapt and ravisht with the sense of Gods love and their inward peace of conscience that they seem'd to have a kind of happy dedolencie and want of feeling of the smart of outward torments Who knowes what trialls God may bring him to Wee have no patent for our peace nor his free liberty in the profession of the Gospel Suppose we should be cald to the stake for Christs sake Would we be chearful would we sing in the flames Get a good conscience The cause of Christ is a good cause now with a good cause get a good conscience and wee shall be able with all chearfulnesse to lay downe our lives for Christ and his Gospel sake CHAP. XII The comfort and benefit of a good conscience in the dayes of Death and Iudgement IN the fourth place The time of death is a time wherein the benefit and comfort of a good conscience is exceeding great Death hath a ghastly looke and 4. The comfort of a good conscience at the day of Death terrible able to daunt the proudest and bravest spirit in the world but then hath it a ghastly looke indeed when it faces an evill conscience Indeed sometimes and most commonly conscience in many is secure at the time of death God in his justice so plaguing an affected security in life with an inflicted security at Death And the Lord seemes to say as once to the Prophet Go make their consciences asleepe at their death as they have made it asleepe all their life lest conscience should see and speake and they heare and be saved God deales with conscience as with the Prophet Ez. 3. 26. I will make thy tongue cleave to the roofe of thy mouth that thou shalt be dumbe therefore they die though not desparately as Saul and Achitophel yet sottishly without comfort and feeling of Gods love as Nabal But if conscience be awakened and have its eyes and mouth opened no heart can imagine the desparate and unsufferable distresses of such an heart Terrours take hold of him as waters Iob 27. 20. Terrours make him afrai on every side Iob 18. 11. Then is that true Iob 25. 23 24. Hee knowes that the day of darknesse is ready at hand Trouble and anguish shall make him afraid they shall prevaile against him as a King ready to the battell And no wonder for hee is now brought unto the King of Terrours as Death is called Iob 18. 14. A man that hath an ill conscience if his eyes be opened and his conscience awakened he sees death in all the terrible shapes that may bee Sometimes he sees death comming like a mercilesse Officer and a cruell Sergeant to arrest and to drag him by the throat to the prison and place of Torment Psal 55. 15. Let death seize upon them They see it comming like that cruell servant in the Parable to his fellow Math. 18. catching them by the very throat Sometimes he sees death in the shape of some greedy Lyon or some ravening Wolfe ready to devour him and to feed upon his carkasse Ps 49. 14. Death shall feed on them even as a ravenous beast shall feed upon his prey Imagine in what a terrible plight the Samaritans where in when the Lyons set upon them 2 Kin. 17. and by it imagine in what case an ill conscience is when it beholds the face of death It puts an ill conscience into that case in good earnest that David was in in the case of triall Ps 55. 4 5. My heart is sore pained within me and the terrors of death are fallen upon me fearfulnesse and trembling are come upon mee and horrour hath overwhelmed me Sometimes againe he sees death as the Israelites the fiery serpents with mortall stings Sometimes as a mercilesse landlord or the Sheriffe comming with a Writ of Firmae ejectione to throw him out of house and home and to turne him to the wide Common yea he sees death as Gods executioner and messenger of eternall death yea hee sees death with as much horrour as if hee saw the Devill In so many fearfull shapes appeares death to an evill conscience upon the death-bed So as it is indeed the King of terrors to such an one that hath the terrors of conscience within There is no one thought so terrible to such an one as the thought of death nothing that hee more wishes to avoid Oh how loath and unwilling is such an one to dye But come now to a man that hath lived as Paul did in all good conscience and how is it with him upon his death-bed His end is peace so full of joy and comfort so is hee ravished with the inward and unspeakable consolations of his conscience that it is no wonder at all that Balaam should wish to dye the death of the righteous the death of a man with a good conscience The day of a mens mariage is the day of the joy of a mans heart Can. 3. 11. and the day of mariage is not so joyfull a day as is the day of death to a good conscience There are but
gaine by Dauids Scandal Could hee but get Dauid in and bring him to commit Adulterie with Bathsheba it would strike a greater stroke on his side and do him more seruice then if a thousand such as Doeg Shimei or Achitophel should doe the like How many men would thereby be stumbled at Dauids zealous profession How many hearts bee thereby hardened in their euil wayes How many mens wayes be blockt vp for going to Heauen How therefore in this case would and did the Deuil put on to get Dauid downe and to cause him to fall so fowly The practises of the Carpocrasians and the Gnostickes were stupendiously and prodigiously filthy and impure Neuer the like horrid Impurities practised or once heard of amongst the most godlesse heathen that euer were on the face of the earth The Apostle speakes of the heathen that it was a shame to speake of those things which they did in secret but surely the most degenerate heathen that had put off nature could not but think it a shame to speake of those things in secret which they did openly and familiarly who tooke vpon them the name and profession of Christians b Quod hominum genus ad Ecclesiae Dei probrum scandalū adornasse submisisse Satanas videtur quippe qui Christianorum sibi nomen indiderint vt propter illos ofsense Gentes à sanctae Dei Ecclesiae vtilitate abhorreant nunciatanique veritatem obimmania illorum facinora incredibilem nequitiam repudient vt inquam frequentibus illorum sceleribus animaduersis eos quoque qui è sanctâ Dei Ecclesiâ sunt tales essesibi persuadeant atque ita à verissima Dei doctrina aures auertant aut certè paucorum improbitate conspectâ in vniuersos eadem maledicta conijciant Atque ea demum causa est cur plerique Gentilium vbicunque istius sectae homines deprehenderint nullam nobiscum velint neque dati acceptique neque consilij neque audiendi diuini verbi societatem coniungere acne aures quidem praeberesustineant vsque adeo nefarijs illorum flagitijs consternati ac deterriti sunt Epiphan lib. 1. Haeres 27. Ad detrectationem diuini nominis Ecclesiae à Satana praemissi sunt vti quae sunt illorum audientes homines putantes omnes nos tales esse auertant auressuas à praeconio veritatis Iraen lib. 1. cap. 24. Now what was the ayme of Satans malice in bringing those Carpocrasians and Gnostickes tearming themselues Christians vnto such more then heathenish Impurities Surely none other but this that vpon the sight of their loathsome courses the heathen might abhorre the Church of God and might be so scandalized thereby that they might vtterly reiect the truth of God preached vnto them By their scandalous filthinesse they tooke occasion to rayle on Christian Religion and so to iudge all Christians of the same stampe that they would not onely none of their Religion but no manner of dealing with them no not in ciuill commerce So strongly by their scandalous lifes did Satan hedge and fence vp their way from comming into the Church and vnto Christ With these thornes did the Deuill hedge vp their way from entring into the Church 3. From the corruption falsenesse hypocrisie and deceitfulnesse of mens hearts There bee in the Church of God and in the number of such as professe the Name of God two sorts of persons 1. Such as professe his Name hypocritically such as make Religion but a maske and a cloake to hide and couer their rotten insides and take vpon them the profession of Religion for base and by-ends onely to aduance their credit and their profit as the Shechemites would bee circumcised for sheepe oxen and substance Some put on a c Quaenam sunt istae pelles ouium nisi nominis Christiani extrinsecus superficies Tertull. de praescript aduers Haeret. Quae sunt vestimenta ouilia species videlicet simulatae religionis eleemosyna simulata oratio simulata ieiunium simulatū c. Chrys oper imperf in Matth. hom 19 sheeps clothing but inwardly are rauening wolues Now when Religion is thus personated and men doe but act a part corruption restrained will breake out at last Yea and God in his Iustice will vncase and discouer such by giuing them vp to fowle and notorious grosse euils Iudas vnder hope of some temporall preferments both professed and preached Christ forsakes all and followes him and was as forward as the best of them But because all this was in hypocrisie therefore his corruption held in for a time vnder this violent restraint at the last breakes fowly out and because hee fowly takes Gods Name in vaine hee is by diuine Iustice left to himselfe and falls into that fearefull scandal of betraying Christ Obserue that Matth. 7. 27. The house built vpon the sand fell and the fall of it was great When Hypocrites fall they fall not the ordinary fals of other men Great was the fall of it They fall into great and hainous scandals As Moses speakes of those Numb 16. 29. If these men die the common death of all men as euery men dies c. So these men fall not the common fals of all men not as euery man fals but when they fall their fall is great with great and notorious scandall Other men may fall on the ground but they fall into the kennell the puddle into the very mire The Sow that is washed to her wallowing in the myre 2. Peter 2. 22. She lies not downe in the dust nor in the dirt but in the myre and not onely lies downe or fals downe into the myre but wallowes in the myre and so becomes all ouer fowle and filthy It is so with Hypocrites they so fall as if a man fell into and wallowed in the myre so fowle and scandalous are their fals Now then inasmuch as it cannot be auoyded and it is impossible but that there will and shall be Hypocrites in the Church of God and Satan will be standing amongst the children of God Iob 1. and in as much as it cannot be but that rotten hypocrisie will breake out and in regard of Gods Iustice must sometimes bee discouered in this life therefore there must needs be scandals and therefore it is impossible but that offences should come 2. Such as professe sincerely and in Truth Now euen in these there are yet great remaynders of corruption the very best beare a bodie of sin and death about them And because they are not so watchfull as they should to looke so narrowly to their owne hearts as they ought therefore comes it to passe also that offences must needs come The heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things Ier. 17. therefore should Christians bee watchfull ouer it aboue all things But because they trust their false and loose hearts to much and grow remisse in their watch thence comes it frequently to passe that offences must needs come When they keepe not their own Vineyard their mothers children are
Christians may doe such vile things as these then I trow it is not such an hainous thing for vs that make no such profession to bee Drunkards Adulterers Swearers c. And thus by occasion of this scandal did they confirme hearten and harden themselues in their iniquities Suppose any of the Christians had after the falling out of this scandal but offered to haue reproued an Heathen Corinthian for Fornication Drunkennesse c what answere was he like to haue had but such an one as this Oh Sir it is no maruell you should find fault with me though now and then I may bee drunke or commit fornication yet I am not such a beast as such an one your fellow Christian that made such adoe with his holinesse that hath now married his fathers Wife I would you should know it I am as honest as he and as good a liuer as hee for his heart And so shooke they off all admonition and reproofe hardened their hearts against all remedies by occasion of that scandal And so was there a woe to many an Heathen Corinthian from the scandal of that Incestuous Christian because they stumbled at it were ensnared by it so as to harden thēselues in their sinful courses so by that hardnes were sealed vp to assured wrath There is nothing hardens men in their Iniquitie more then to Iustifie them in their sinfull wayes There is a Instification of a sinner from his vngodlinesse and there is a Iustification of a sinner in his vngodlinesse The first is a blessed thing and makes a man happie Psal 32. 1. 2. The second is woful dismall and dangerous Iustification of a sinner frō his sins is called a Iustification of life Rom. 5. 18. But Iustification of a sinner in his sins is a Iustification of death that seales vp a man to damnation Iustification of a sinner from sin is an Act of Gods grace mercy and so hee iustifies the vngodly Rom. 4. 5. on him that iustifies the vngodly by acquitting discharging and absoluing him from the guilt of his vngodlinesse Iustification of a sinner in his sin is an act of Gods wofull vengeance punishing men for former vngodlinesse and making way for the infallible ascertaining of his damnation And for Iustification of a sinner in his sinnes is way made by scandalous euents And that scandalous euents doe iustifie vngodly men in their sins and so harden them therein may appeare by that Ezek. 16. 51. Neither hath Samaria committed halfe thy sinnes but thou hast multiplied thine abominations more then they and hast iustified thy sisters in all their abominations which thou hast done Samaria was one of Iudahs sisters The Samaritans were an idolatrous wicked people Iudah shee professed her selfe the people of God Now Iudah that professed her self Gods people fel into foule and scandalous abominations Samaria committed not halfe her sinnes Vpon this Samaria begins to Saint her selfe and to iustifie her selfe being iustified by Iudah Which may be vnderstood not only of the euent that Samaria was lesse vniust and vnrighteous in comparison of Iudah but also of the effect or consequent of that euent because Samaria in comparing her selfe with Iudah finding her felfe more iust that is lesse vniust did thereby positiuely iustifie her selfe as if shee were in a good case and a good way because Iudah's abominations were so many and so great and because Iudah is blacker then she therefore she beginnes to imagine her selfe Lilly white I sayes Samaria it is no maruell that Iudah is so godly so religious so holy a people and that I am so idolatrous and so sinfull I am sure I am not halfe so bad as she For all their godlinesse and Religion they talk of for any thing I see my life courses dealings are as good and honest nay more iustifiable then theirs And if Iudah that professes such singular holinesse doe thus and thus I hope my wayes being better then hers my condition is better I am therefore resolued to ride on in the old road still I will not change lifes and wayes with Iudah for all her godlinesse and Religion Thus questionlesse did Iudahs abominations occasion Samaria to iustifie her selfe and by such iustifying of her selfe she hardened and strengthened her selfe in her sinnes and so were Iudahs scandals and abominations woefull euents to Samaria because thereby her heart was hardened to her destruction It is with scandals as it was with those false Prophets Ezek. 13. 22. Yee strengthened the hands of the wicked that hee should not returne from his wicked way Men cannot bee saued if they bee not turned from their euill wayes men cannot be turned from their euill wayes if their hands bee strengthened in them and their hearts hardened Now here was the mischiefe and the woe that came by those false Prophets they strengthened mens hands and hardened their hearts in their euill wayes that they could not be saued Such is the mischiefe and the woe of scandals men cannot bee saued vnlesse they returne from their wicked way they cannot returne from their wicked way so long as their hands bee strengthened and woe to the world because of scandals for they strengthen the hands of the wicked and so make way for their fatall ruine Scandals are that to the World that those things were to the Iewes Rom. 11. 9. Let their table bee made a snare a trap and a stumbling blocke and a recompence vnto them When no meanes of grace wil soften hard hearts and bring them to Repentance God in his Iustice disposes of scandals and they are made snares traps and stumbling blockes and a recompence vnto them that God may recompence them for their vnprofitablenes and by those scandals occasion them to harden their hearts to their ruine that would not bee softened vnto life It is otherwise to the World from the scandals and fals of Professors then it was to the Gentiles from the fall of the Iewes from Christ The fall of the Iewes was for the happinesse of the Gentiles Rom. 11. 11. 12. Haue they stumbled that they should fall that is fall quite and cleane off God forbid But through their fall saluation is come vnto the Gentiles The fall of them is the riches of the world But now in scandalous fals of Professors into foule sinnes it is contrarie Thorough their fals damnation comes to many and they are the mischiefe miserie and vndoing of many And that on this manner God many times vouchsafes the meanes of grace and repentance to a people in those meanes striues a long time with them but striues in vaine Therefore he resolues thus My spirit shal striue no longer with them but since they will not they shall not be saued I will take a sure course for their damnation I am resolued they shall not be saued and because they shal bee sure neuer to bee saued I will make sure they shall neuer be conuerted And that they may bee made sure for euer being conuerted I
him So that he that hath a good conscience hath the onely Antidote the most excellent Amulet and plague-cake at his brest that is in the world to save him from the pestilence and infection of Popery Arminianisme Brownisme Anabaptisme c. So long as the Ship of conscience is whole so long the Iewell of faith is safe Paul would have a Bishop to hold fast the faithfull Word and to be sound in doctrin Tit. 1. 9. But yet marke it that he would first have him be a man of a good conscience in the two foregoing verses And 1 Tim. 3. 9. he would have the Deacons hold the mysterie of the faith in a pure conscience Contrarily nothing so endangers the losse of the faith and truth and soundnesse of doctrine as doth the losse of good conscience A corrupt conscience soone corrupts the judgement 1 Tim. 1. 19. Holding faith and a good conscience which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwracke If the ship of conscience cracke how soone will the merchandize of faith wrack If once the conscience crack the braine will soone prove crazie and an unsound conscience makes a fearefull way for an unsound and rotten judgement 2 Tim. 3. 8. They resist the truth there is their corrupt conscience what followes upon it Men of corrupt minds unsound in their judgement concerning the faith How frequent a thing is it in experience to see men when they lose good conscience together with it either to lose their gifts as the unprofitable servant his Masters talent or else to lose the truth and to fal into pestilent and dangerous errours So those Prophets that made not conscience in faithfull and holy execution of their office see what was the fruit of their evill conscience Micah 3. 5 6 7. Therefore night shall be unto you that ye shall not have a vision and it shall be darke unto you that ye shall not divine and the Sun shall goe downe over the Prophets and the day shall be darke over them c. Their darknesse in life shall be plagued with darknesse in judgement To which purpose that is notable Zach. 11. 17. Woe to the idoll shepheard that leaves the flocke There is an unconscionable shepheard a man that makes no conscience to attend his ministery What becomes of him The sword shall bee upon his right eye his best eye And his right eye shall not be pore-blind or dimmed but shall be utterly darkened The losse of good consciences brings upon men of knowledge and learning that reproach that Nahash the Ammonite would have brought upon all Israel 1 Sam. 11. 2. It thrusts out the right eyes Ill consciences not only make men look asquint but it blinds them and takes away their sight And what is the reason that Popery gets ground so fast and so many turne Papists so easily Surely it is no wonder how should it be otherwise when men either having lost all good conscience or making no conscience of their wayes but living loosely viciously and licentiously have thereby prepared a way for Antichrist and his Religion to enter withall successe No wonder that men turne Papists so fast when long since they have turned good conscience going For that which Bellarmine speakes is in the Cum ariae ventilari incipiunt non frumenta sed paleae vento abripiente separantur ab area Ita prorsus cum Ecclesia per Ethuicorum persecutiones vel Haereticorum deceptiones Deo permittente cribratur aut ventilatur à Satana non veri sancti garves sed improbi leves curiosi lascivi ab Ecclesia avolantes ad Ethnicos haereticosue transfugiunt nec fe●o solet accidere ut ante circa fidem aliquis naufraget quam naufragere caeperit circa mores Bellarm. Orat prefix tom 4. generall certainly true though by him falsly and maliciously applyed That they be not holy and grave men but wicked light curious wanton ones that turne Ethnickes or Heretickes and that it seldome comes to passe that any man makes shipwracke concerning the saith that first makes not shipwracke concerning manners See the truth of it in many of our backsliders to Popery especially such as have beene zealous propugners of the truth Where began the first declension where the first flaw Had not their cōsciences first brusht upon some rocke was not the first leake there and when they had first put away good conscience then there was a speedy banishing of truth and a ready entertainment of errour And for the common sort of their converts consider if many times they have not beene the very riffe-raffe of our Church swearers grosse profaners of the Sabbath vncleane and debauched drunkards such as our Church was sicke of and desired even to spue forth and then when they have become a prey to all vicious courses through want of conscience through Gods just judgement they have become a prey to Romish Locusts whose commission is only to hurt such and not those whom the sap of a good conscience keepes fresh and flourishing as the greene grasse and trees of the earth Apoc. 9. 4. For as Salomon speakes of the bodily harlot Eccle. 7. 26. so it is true of that spirituall Whore of Babylon Her heart is snares and nets her hands as bands her delusions strong who so pleases God and hath a care to keepe a good conscience shall escape from her but the sinner and he that makes no conscience of his wayes shall be taken by her Well let us thinke well upon this motive we live in dangerous and declining dayes wherein men with a greedinesse turne to their Romish vomit againe Besides the Factors of Antichrist are exceeding busie and pragmaticall to draw men from the faith of Christ and the Holy Ghost tels us they shall come with strong delusions Now then all you that be the Lords people save your selves from this dangerous generation all you that have or would be knowne to have the seale of God on your foreheads save your selves from the seduction of these Locusts I but how may that be done The delusion is strong and it may be we are weake Lo then here is a remedy against their danger Get and keep a good conscience live as Paul did in all good conscience thou shalt be safe from all their delusiōs I have kept the faith sayes Paul oh let it bee the care of us that that may be our closing voice at our last day and if we would keep the faith let us keep a good conscience He that in his life time can say I keepe a good conscience he at his death shall be able to say I have kept the faith Faith and a good conscience are both in a bottome Hold one and hold both As therefore thou wouldest feare to turne Papist or any other Heretick so be sure to hold a good conscience to hold on a good honest and a conscionable man So long as thou standest upon that ground thou art impregnable and the gates of hel
blood in what feares yea what idle feares lived hee Hee is so haunted with feares that though he had lived in Paradice yet had he lived in a land of Nod in a land of agitation yea of trepidation Iudge what case his evill conscience made him in by that speech Gen. 4. 14. It shall come to passe that every one that finds me shall slay me Surely there could not bee many yet in the world and those that were in the world were either his parents brethren sisters or neere kindred his feare seemes to imagine multitudes of people that might meete him yea and that every one hee meets would murther him What will his Father or Mother be his executioners What if any of his sisters meet him shal they slay him is not such a swash-buckler as he able to make good his party with them Lo what fearfull and terrible things a guilty conscience projects As an evill conscience is miserable in its feares so in those perplexities which this feare breeds These perplexities doe miserably and restlessely distract a man Isay 57. 20. The wicked are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up mire and dirt What is the reason of these trouble some perplexities The want of peace of a good conscience verse 21. There is no peace saith my God to the wicked The winds make the sea restlesse and stirre it to the very bottome so as the waters cast up mire and dirt See in the troubled Sea the Emblem of a troubled conscience But the Torment exceeds all and the maine misery of an evill conscience lies in that It is a misery to be in feare a misery to have inward turbulencie and commotions but to be alwayes on the racke alwayes on the Strapado this is far more truly the suburbs of Hell than is the Popish purgatory Oh! the gripes and girds the stitches and twitches the throwes and pangs of a galling and a guilty conscience So sore they are and so unsufferable that Iudas seeks ease with an halter Poena autem vehemens multo saevior illis Quas Ceditius gravis inven● Radamanthus Nocte dieque suum gestare in pectore testem Iuvenal Satyr 3. and thinks hanging ease in comparison of the torture of his evill conscience All the racks wheeles wild horses hot pincers scalding leade powred into the most tender and sensible parts of the body yea all the mercilesse barbarous and inhumane cruelties of the holy house are but flea-bitings meere toyes and May-games compared with the torment that an evill conscience wil put a man to when it is awakened It is no wonder that Iudas hangs himselfe it had been a great wonder rather if hee had not hangd himselfe The Heathen fabled terrible things of their hellish furies with their snakes and Nolite enim putare quēadmodum in fabulis saepenumero videtis eos qui aliquid impie scelerateque cōmiserint agitari perter●ori furiarum taedis ardentibus Sua quemque fraus suus terror maximevexat suum quēque scelus agitat amentiaque afficit Suae malae cogitationes conscientiaeque animi terrent Hae sunt impiis assiduae domesticaeque furiae quae dies noctesque parentum poenas à consceleratissimis filiis repetant Cicero pro Rosc Amor Suum quemque facinus suum scclus sua audacia de sanitate ac mente deturbat Haec sunt impiorum furiae flammae hae faces Idem L. Pison fiery torches vexing and tormenting hainous and great offenders These their furies were nothing else but the hellish torments of guilty conscience wherewith wicked persons were continually haunted as some of the wiser of themselves have well observed All snakes and torches are but idle toyes and meere trifles to the most exquisite torment of a guilty and accusing conscience The sting of conscience is worse than death it selfe Apoc. 9. 5 6. Their torment was as the torment of a Scorpion when hee strikes a man And in those dayes shall men seeke death and shall not find it and shall desire to dye and death shall flee from them Popish ones tormented in their consciences by the terrible and uncomfortable doctrines of satisfactions Purgatory fire c. which those Locusts doe so terrifie them withall should rather chuse death than live in such an uncomfortable condition The sting of death not so smart as the sting of a Scorpion in the conscience The sting of an accusing conscience is like an Harlot Pro. 7. 26. More bitter than death And as Salomon there speaks of the Harlot so may it be said of a tormenting conscience Who so pleases God shall escape from it but the sinner shall be taken by it Gods deare children themselves many of them are not freed from trouble in their consciences but they have their hels in this life Ion. ● 2. Out of the belly of hell I cryed unto thee God for their triall speaks bitter things unto them and not only denies them peace but causes their consciences to be at war with them Now when God puts his owne children to these trials and disquiets of conscience they are so bitter and so biting that had they not the grace of God to uphold and preserve them even they could not be saved from dangerous miscarriage Iob was put to this triall and his conscience apprehended Gods anger and we shall see what a case he was in Iob 6. 8 9. O that I might have my request and that God would grant me the thing I long for even that it would please God to destroy me that hee would let loose his hands and cut me off Nay worse Iob 14. 15. Thou scarest me with dreames terrifiest me through visions so that my soul chooses flrangling and death rather than life Gods grace preserves his Saints from selfe-murther but yet not alwayes from impatient wishes Iob wishes strangling and chuses it of the two but goes no further What wonder then that Iudas doth strangle himselfe when his conscience stares him in the face when as Iob with whom God is but in jest in comparison chuses strangling If Iob wish it what wonder that Iudas doth the deed Conscience doth chastise the godly but w th whips but it lashes the wicked with scorpions Now if the whips be so smarting to Iob as makes him chuse strangling what wonder that the scorpions be so cutting as makes Iudas seek reliefe at an halter Yea and that which addes to the misery of an evill conscience being awakned it is such a misery as no earthly comfort can asswage or mitigate Diseases and distempers of the body though they bee terrible yet Physick sleep and rest upon a mans bed yields him some ease and some comfort Sometime in some griefes the cōfortable use of the creatures yields a man some refreshments Prov. 31. 6 7. Give wine unto those that be of heauy hearts let him drinke and forget his poverty and remember his misery no more But conscience being disquieted finds no
of Professours of Religion for they be set vp to be stumbling stones and rockes of offence against which men of the world shall dash themselues they be set for ginnes and for snares in which they shall bee taken In the case of passiue scandals where offence is onely taken there the trap is baited with the bread of life In the case of Actiue scandal where offence is giuen there the trap is baited with baine and poyson with deadly poyson death is in the trap Now if woe to the world when the trap is baited with the bread of life how much more woe to the world when it is baited with ranke and deadly poyson Scandals and offences are dismal and fatal to wicked men because God in his intention and administration disposes and orders them as the meanes that shall make way for the surer and sorer punishment of them for their vnprofitablenesse vnder and their contempt of the Gospell the meanes of grace and the holy examples of such as are truly godly Therefore are they fatall and wofull euents because they are sent as executioners of diuine vengeance vpon the disobedient rebels against the Gospel God giues men his word and the Ministerie of it to conuert and saue them the holy examples of his children to guide and lead them Now neither one thing nor another will reclaime men of the world nothing will doe them good still will they goe on in their vnbeliefe and hardnesse of heart notwithstanding the light of the Word and the light of holy examples notwithstanding the shining light of both they will loue and liue in darknesse still So then God seeing this that nothing will better them but to Hell they will goe and damned they will be let his Ministers and his people do what they can he thereupon enters into a resolution to make sure worke with them and to take such a course as shall infallibly and irreuocably make way for their eternall ruine and to this end in his prouidence disposes of these scandalous euents as stumbling stones and stumbling blockes at which they may so stumble as they may fall and be surely ruined As if the Lord should speak on this manner I haue giuen you my Word and Gospel it hath beene preacht amongst you plentifully and powerfully all the meanes notwithstanding you haue not beene one whit the better but rather worse yee are more stubborne more rebellious more malicious and to Hell yee will doe my Ministers what they can Well then since there is no remedie since yee will goe I will take an order to set you going surely Behold in my prouidence I will dispose of scandalous euents to fall out that shall lie as stumbling blocks in your way at which stumble yee and fall yee and be yee remedilesly ruined I gaue you my word that you might haue risen but you would not be raised by it I wil therfore lay a stumbling block in your way at which you shall bee sure to fall I gaue you my word that you might haue liued but now I will lay a stumbling blocke that you may die Ezek. 3. 20. You would not bee drawne to Heauen by the holy examples and lifes of my Saints therefore shall yee bee head-longed another way by the scandalous euents that shall by my prouidence fall out I sent my Ministers whom I made fishers of men with their nets and baites to catch you but by no meanes would yee bee caught in their nets nor bite at their baites nor bee catcht with their hookes therefore now will I dispose of scandalous euents which I will set as traps and snares and ginnes for you greedily and eagerly shall you come to them shal be ensnared and held fast for euer getting out againe And thus doe scandals come as messengers of wrath and death Gods dealing with wicked men in euents of scandals is cleane contrarie to his dealing with good men Such as loue the truth of God and subiect vnto it though scandals come shall not bee ensnared by them God will secure and saue them from being ensnared Psal 119. 165. Great peace haue they which loue thy law and nothing shall offend them or they shall haue no stumbling blocke Such as loue Gods truth haue great peace great securitie when scandals fall out they shall haue no stūbling blocks God himselfe will keepe them that they shal not dash their feet against these stones they shall haue no stumbling blockes to hurt them But now on the contrarie great danger and mischiefe shall they haue that loue not the Law they shall haue stumbling blockes and therefore because they loue not Gods law shal they haue them that God may bee auenged vpon them for the neglect and contempt of his truth And because they loue not Gods Law therefore shall scandals come that shal bee fatal stumbling blocks for them That looke as Salomon speakes of the Harlot Eccl. 7. 26. I finde more bitter then death the woman whose heart is snares and nets and her hands as bands who so is good before God shall escape from her but the sinner shal bee taken by her So may it be said of scandals Mare bitter then death woe vnto the world because of scandals are scandalous euents for they are as snares and nets who so is good before God an holy and a godly man shal escape and bee deliuered from being ensnared by them but the sinner the neglecter and contemner of Gods grace shall be taken and bee ruined by them and therefore woe vnto the sinners of the world because of scandals It is in this case betweene men of the world and scandals as it was in Ahabs case betweene him and his false prophets 1. King 22. 20 21 22. God had a purpose out of diuine Iustice and vengeance that Ahab should fall and bee ruined Now God enters into counsell what course shall bee taken to bring it about that hee may fall and perish Verse 20. Who shall perswade Ahab that hee may goe vp and fall at Ramoth Gilead There comes forth a spirit Verse 21. and sayes I will perswade him The Lord askes Verse 22. How or wherewith Hee answers I will goe forth and bee a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets And the Lord said Thou shalt perswade him and preuaile also Goe forth and doe so The case is the very same here God bestowes his Word and the Ministerie of it vpon a people it workes them not to Faith Repentance Hereupon is the Lord prouoked to anger and vpon that hee enters into a consult of reuenge Here be a company of men that haue had the meanes of grace but they will not bee conuerted and raised vp I am therefore resolued they shall fall into Hell for euer But who will now take some course that they may fal Then steps forth Satan I will take a course to make them fall fatally And the Lord sayes what course wilt thou take Satan answers I will goe forth
hee haue no more to doe with Episcopal or Ministerial function And this Discipline of theirs wants not foundation in Scripture It seemes to be the same thing that God himselfe constituted Ezek 44. 12 13. Because they ministred vnto them before their Idols they shall beare their iniquitie and they shall not come neere vnto mee to doe the office of a Priest vnto me nor to come neere to any of mine holy things in the most holy place but they shall beare their shame and their abominations which they haue committed Vpon their Repentance they were receiued againe to some other places Ver. 10. 11. but they must meddle no more after that scandal of Idolatrie with the Priest-hood And this Discipline did Iosiah put in practise 2. King 23. 9. Some priuiledges vpon their Repentance were granted vnto the Priests of the high places that had defiled themselues with Idolatrie but the office of Priesthood they were quite excluded from it And this was the ancient Discipline against the giuers of offence and indeed such zeale and such seueritie it did concerne and euer will concerne the Church of God to shew to scandalous delinquents Facilitie and an ouer easie readinesse to comply with such breedes a fresh scandal to the world and giues them iust cause to n Et quoniam and●o Charissimifratres impudentia vos quorundā premi verecundiam vestram vim pati oro vos quibus possum precibus vt euāgelij memores vos quoque sollicitè et cautè petentiū desideria ponderetis vtpote amici domini cùm illo post modum indicaturi inspiciatis actū opera merita singulorū ipsorum quoque delictorum genera qualitates cogitetis ne si quid abrupte indignè vel à vobis promissum vel à nobis factū fuerit apud Gentiles quoque ipsos ecclesia nosira erubescere incipiat Cypr. Epist 11. reproach the Church and opens the mouth of iniquitie to say you bee all such Whereas discommoning and discarding such from our familiar and priuate societie and when neede and power is from communion in holy things gaines the Church a great deale of honour and stops the mouth of iniquitie from calumniating Gods people to bee fauourers and countenancers of such persons Such will bee pressing in to gaine their credit and to recouer their respect but when such suddenly and easily get into credit it is no whit for the honour and credit of the Church God will bring woes vpon them in their outward state their peace their posteritie Elies sonnes runne into foule Scandals 1. Sam. 2. 22. It was scandalous for priuate persons much more for Priests to bee vncleane and adulterous It was scandalous to haue done so vnclean an act in any place but to doe it in a scared place with women comming thither vpon deuotion this was egregiously scandalous God therefore takes them to doe and does execution vpon them and cuts them both off in one day by the Sword of the Philistims God brought the wo of the Sword vpon them Nay when they ranne into Scandal because Eli did not restraine them see what God threatens vpon his Posteritie 1. Sam. 2. 36. that hee would plague them with such base beggerie and miserie that they should beg their bread If God thus punish him for not restraining how much more would he haue punished him for the committing of a Scandal If it goe thus hard with Eli that restraines not how hard will it goe with Hophni and Phinehas that commit the scandal Wee cannot haue a more pregnant and full example in this kinde then Dauid himselfe Hee after his scandal committed was truly penitent the guilt of his sinne pardoned a solemne absolution and discharge giuen him by the Prophet And yet for all this wee shall see how terribly this woe pursued him in temporall crosses in this kinde First God smites his childe with death then followes his daughter Thamars defilement by her brother Amnon then Amnons murder then the treason of Absalom in which the hand of God was exceeding smart God turnes him out of house and home Whose heart would not earne and bleede to see his dolefull departure from Ierusalem 2. Sam 15. 30. And Dauid went vp by the ascent of mount Oliuet and wept as he went vp and had his head couered and hee went barefoote and all the people that was with him couered euery man his head and they went vp weeping as they went vp Who could haue beheld so sad and so woefull a spectacle with drie eyes But this was not all his life is endangered his Concubines defiled in open view on the house top And what thinke wee was the ground of all this For the childs death we see 2. Sam. 12. 13 14. The Lord hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not die howbeit because by this thy deede thou hast giuen great occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme the child also that is borne vnto thee shall surely die It is verie much that fasting and praying can doe it can cast out deuils This kind goes not out but by fasting and praying Mark 9. 29. And yet fasting and praying could not keepe off this woe that Dauids scandal brings vpon him in the childes death woe vnto Dauid by whom that offence came therefore shall his childe die And for all the rest of all those wofull sorrowes 2. Sam. 12. 9. 10. 11. 12. we see the cause of them all these woes were vpon Dauid for his scandal And if Gods woe in these temporall outward calamities will thus pursue and follow a repēting an humbled scandalous offender how much more will that hand of God pursue that man vpon whose scandal followes no Repentance and Humiliation If Dauid the man after Gods owne heart must not escape what then shall others looke for If a beloued Dauid shall haue his teeth on edge with his owne sowre grapes of his scandalous courses who then shall thinke to goe scotfree that is guilty of scandalous transgressions what a sure irresistible wo is that which Repentance it selfe cannot keepe off from a mans children his life person and goods And thus temporall woe is to him by whom offences come 2. God will pursue and pinch such as giue offence with spirituall woe God will fill such mens hearts specially if they belong to him with much spirituall woe and bitternesse of soule He will awaken conscience to smite pinch and gripe them at the heart He will so loade and burden their consciences that in the anguish and bitternes of their spirits they shal be forced to cry out woe is mee vile wretch that I was borne that euer I breathed thus to dishonour God It is true that there is an happinesse in this woe and it is singular mercy that men are not seared and hardened in their sinne but yet for all that there it a great deale of smart sorrow and a great deale of wofull bitternes in the worke