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A64963 A heaven or hell upon earth, or, A discourse concerning conscience by Nathanael Vincent. Vincent, Nathanael, 1639?-1697. 1676 (1676) Wing V409; ESTC R27575 204,858 337

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be so unfaithful as seldom to admonish yet at length 't will awake and then 't will be found that it knowes and remembers all misdoings The Regenerate likewise have a Conscience which is enlightned and purged and renewed by the Blood and VVord and Spirit of our Lord Jesus 3. As 't is clear from Scripture that there is a Conscience in Man so 't is evident by experience And here I shall make an appeal unto every ones sense and observation in three following questions 1. What is it that speaks to you when (*) Nemo minus solus quam cum solus alone and tells you that there is an All-seeing God but Conscience (l) NOTE Whenever Conscience performs its office aright t is inlightned and acted by the Spirit of God The Spirit therefore is to be acknowledged for without him Conscience would have no light or life or power or feeling 'T is this which brings to your remembrance that the Lord who is so holy is alwayes present that no darkness or retired corner can hide you from him but he compasses your path and your lying down and is acquainted with all your ways 2. What is it but Conscience that forbids the yeilding to temptations even unto the most secret sins Secret places can hide the Sinner from the eye of man and there are some Sins namely heart wickednesses which man can take no cognizance of and yet we are checkt when we are giving way to these which shewes there is a Conscience as well as a God privy to them When Satan and a deceitful Heart do plead for Sin and perswade to it by this argument that never any are likely to know it yet even then conscience declares against it and cryes out Oh do not that abominable thing which God hates 'T was well said by one of the Ancients to the Gentiles Vos conscios timetis nos conscientiam You are afraid lest others should be conscious to what you do we fear even our own Consciences 3. What is it but Conscience that impresses a fear of a Judgment which is to come (m) Beatus erit quisquis non sine memoriâ divini judicii omnia gesserit Hillar in Psal 118. Rythm Bernard Expavesco miser multùm Judicis severi vultum Quem latebit nil occultum Nec manebit quid inultum Et quis nostrûm non timebit Quando Judex apparebit Ante quem ignis ardebit Peccatores qui delebit It many times with a great deal of Power does mind us of such Scriptures God has appointed a day wherein he will Judge the World in Righteousness Acts 17. 31. We must all appear before the Judgment-seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his Body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad 2 Cor. 5. 10. And Conscience knowing these Terrors of the Lord perswade Men to Repentance and to labour that whether present or absent they may be accepted of him 'T was a saying of Tertullian Conscientia est prae-judicium extremi judicii Conscience is a Judging before the last Judgment but still it tells of and referrs to the last Judgment that hereby the Heart may be over-awed 4. What is it but Conscience which urges unto secret Duties the Omission of which the World can take no notice of There is a Monitor within us which tells us that our Father is and sees in secret and will reward openly such as secretly and sincerely seek him Mat. 6. When our Hearts the desperate wickedness whereof is not quite cured in the best of us draw back from Prayer in the Closet Conscience then presses to it and pleads the Command the Advantage what an Evidence 't is of uprightness to be often with God alone This same Monitor likewise puts us upon the searching into and study of the Scripture for 't is the Character and property of the Blessed Man to have his Delight in the Law of the Lord and in that Law to Meditate Day and Night Psal 1. 2. 5. What is it but Conscience that applies Truths particularly which are more generally delivered in the Ministry of the Gospel I grant indeed that this application is the Work of the Spirit of God but the Conscience of Man is made use of herein by the Holy Spirit The Preacher shoots a great many Arrows The Spirit does direct them to particular Persons and Conscience takes notice where the Arrow sticks The same Language which was in the Prophet Nathan's Mouth to David after his so foul a fall is in the Mouth of Conscience The Word speaks in the general The Soul that sins shall dye the Wages of Sin is Death But then Conscience crys out Thou art the man that hast sinned and therefore Death and Destruction will quickly over-take thee unless there be a coming by Faith unto a Saviour and a turning out of thy Destructive ways 6. What is it but Conscience which does comment upon Afflictions Folly is bound up in thy heart says Conscience therefore thou feelest the Rod to drive it far from thee Thou art Worldly-minded therefore thou meetest with Losses to wean thee from that which if still doated on will both deceive and ruine thee Thou art too much like a slothful Servant therefore says Conscience Affliction is sent to make thee mend thy pace and follow them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises (n) Tempestuous times Amaze poor mortals and object their crimes Herbert When Joseph's Brethren were all put into Ward in Egypt their Consciences commented upon their Restraint and brought their injurious handling of their Brother to remembrance Gen. 42. 21. And they said one to another we are verily guilty concerning our Brother in that we saw the anguish of his Soul when he besought us and we would not hear therefore is this Distress come upon us 7. What is it but Conscience that traces us in all our Actions Conscience takes notice what Principles we are Acted by what Ends we aim at it Observes both the Matter and the Manner of our Actions Conscience Examines whether Love to the Lord constrain us to his Work whether the pleasing honouring and enjoying of God be our great Design whether our Hearts and Affections be in our Services After thy Praying and Hearing and Receiving are ended doest thou not find something within thee running over all thy performances and calling thee to Account whether thou hast Prayed with Faith and Fervency whether thou hast heard believingly and with attention whether thou hast received worthily This is Conscience 8. What is it but Conscience which haunts us upon miscarriages It s Mouth is full of Reproaches and these Reproaches are unanswerable After sins especially presumptuous ones have been committed there is a secret gnawing within and that is the Worm of Conscience (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch De his qui sero à Numine puniuntur pag. mihi 554. Plutarch compares the pleasure of sin which is
qualitate depositi Sic sic in domo propriâ à propriâ familiâ habeo accusatores testes judices tortores Bernard Meditat. devot cap. 13. pag. mihi 1060. My sins I am not able to conceal because where ever I go my Conscience is continually with me and carries with it what I have put in it whether it be good or evil It keeps for me living it will restore to me dying what I have delivered to be kept by it If I do evil Conscience is present if I seem to do good and am lifted up with Pride Conscience is present It accompanies me all my Life long 't will follow me after Death and will be my inseparable either Glory or Confusion according to the Quality of what it has Observed in me Thus thus in my own House in my own Soul I have Accusers Witnesses Judges Tormentors if I dare to give way unto Iniquity 4. Though Conscience may seem to be quite banished and for the present does no more its Office than if there were no such thing yet this Exiled and Banished thing will at last return or to speak more properly this Conscience that was imagined to be in a dead sleep or altogether careless will shew that it has been too much present with the guilty all along These six particulars are here to be Observed 1. Some great Affliction may awaken Conscience When the Widow with whom Elijah sojourned her Son fell sick and his sickness was so sore that there was no breath left in him her Conscience was exceedingly startled and she said to Elijah What have I to do with thee O thou Man of God art thou come unto me to call my sin to remembrance and to slay my Son 1 Kings 17. 17 18. The Locusts which were so very grievous that came over all the Land of Egypt extorted a Confession from Pharaoh's Conscience though his Heart was before hardned He called for Moses and Aaron in haste and said I have sinned against the Lord and against you now therefore forgive I pray thee my sin this once and intreat the Lord your God that he may take away from me this Death onely Exod. 10. 16 17. How does Affliction give new Eyes and make sin appear in other colours than before it seemed to have When the Body of a sinner is first struck with a Disease and the mind apprehends this Sickness may prove deadly and that now being Arrested the sinner must quickly appear before the Judgment-seat Ohthen what a commotion is there in the Soul and how fierce and clamourous is the Conscience which before was deeply silent 2. Conscience may awake after a fall into some scandalous sin When the long covered Hypocrisie is detected and the sly sinner which waxed worse and worse and yet was secure at length does commit some sin that the World crys shame on Oh then Conscience may joyn in with the VVorlds clamors (r) Non aurem solam percutit iracundia criminantis verùm etiam conscientiam mordet veritas criminis August l. 3. contra lit Petilian Tom. 7. and tell him that now his sin has found him out and that Heaven has revealed his iniquity and that because he has despised God he has been suffered to do that which has made himself to be lightly esteemed 3. Conscience may awake at the hearing of a powerful Sermon The messengers of the Lord are commanded to lift up their Voices like a Trumpet and the design is to startle Conscience and that sinners may be made sensible of and to know their Transgressions Isaiah 58. 1. God speaks thus to the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 6. 11. Smite with thine hand and stamp with thy foot and say Alas for all the evil abominations of the House of Israel These gestures this earnestness and crying out of abominations is used to affect the Hearts which before were stupid And truly the VVord of God has oftentimes taken impression even upon those whose Souls were more than ordinarily senseless The Apostles hearers were mockers and yet the VVord being set home they were prickt at the Heart and said Men and Brethren what shall we do Act. 2. 37. Now when the VVord does awaken the Conscience there is more ground to hope that God has a design to work a saving change and that the troubles of Spirit are but as it were the pangs which fore-run the new Birth 4. Conscience may awake when Death is within view I grant indeed that 't is too common for the ungodly to dy stupid and that there may be no bands in their death Psal 73. but yet experience shews that the approach of death does also fill many ungodly ones with horrour and amazement What made Balaam to cry out let me dye the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his Num. 23. 10. Surely he had pre-apprehensions how terrible a thing 't is for the ungodly to dye When nature is almost spent and the earthly Tabernacle is tottering and falling to the ground when Physicians are at a losse and friends stand by weeping and 't is whispered in the room Alas he cannot live many hours to an end Ah then Conscience may wake in terrible fright and the sinner may be confounded and as death comes with its sting so it may prove indeed the King of terrours 5. To be sure at judgment Conscience will be awaked thoroughly though sinners possibly may look death yet they cannot look the Judge in the face without being daunted He will strike terrour into the Hearts of those sinners that were most obstinate and unbelieving VVe read that at the great day the Books will be opened Rev. 20. 12. The Book of Scripture will be opened for by that every one must be judged The Word that I have spoken sayes Christ the same shall judge at the last day The book of Conscience will also be opened and what things are found written there will be taken notice of and must be answered for No Conscience at that day can be stupid The Heavens passing away with a great noise and the Elements melting with fervent heat and the Earth and the works therein being all in a flame every unjustified and unsanctified sinners Heart will smite him and as the Judge will condemn him so he will be condemned by his own Conscience Chrysostome (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in Epist ad Rom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 advises every one to look into his own Conscience presently and to be strict in self-searching that he may not be condemned with the world for 't is a dreadful Tribunal which all must appear before and the trial of every one will be thorow and impartial 6. Conscience will be with the ungodly in Hell to all Eternity Could we go down indeed to the gates of Hell and have some discourse with the damned there and ask them concerning their Consciences they would answer that a great part of Hell lyes there and that they feel within
of his Righteous judgement and whatever punishments he does sentence the Sons of Men unto they will not be able to charge him with the least injustice Their own Consciences will acknowledge every crime that the Lord then shall lay to their charge and when they are thrown down into that Lake which burns with Fire and Brimstone Conscience will be ready to speak the same language which you read Rev. 16. 5. 7. Thou art Righteous O Lord which art and wast and shalt be because thou hast thus judged Even so Lord God Almighty True and Righteous are thy judgments (m) Si reus Conscientiâ suâ premitur silet actacitus expectat suam damnationem suo jam silentio damnatus Calv. in Epist ad Rom. c. 3. v. 19. God will be justified when he speaks and cleer when he judges and sinners Consciences will cleer him fully and will acknowledge that his wayes are equal but theirs have been unequal Every mouth will then be stopped and the guilty will have nothing to object against their Judges proceedings I come in the last place to the Application Vse 1. Shall be of information several weighty Truths may be inferred from this Doctrine 1. If there be a Conscience in Man learn from hence that there is a God There are many arguments to prove this great fundamental Truth the Creatures would never have had a Being unless God had given a Being to them (n) If ever there had been altogether nothing there never could have been any thing His works do abundantly declare both his Being and his Glory But if we look into our selves we shall find this Truth written plain upon our own souls VVe are as I said before so full of self-love that we should not at all regard our own knowledge of our misdoings if Conscience were not convinced of the Godhead whose judgement we cannot possibly escape The Psalmist indeed tells us that the fool hath said in his Heart there is no God Psal 14. 1. but in this he rather speaks what his wishesare than what he is really perswaded of For it has been observed concerning those who have been most Atheistical that Conscience has prickt and terrified them sometimes and the dread of God has when they have heard it Thunder or have been in some great calamity returned upon them 2. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is omniscient If the Lord did confine himself to Heaven and there enjoying his own blessednesse did not at all take notice what is done here below we should sin securely and not be troubled that we have a Conscience perpetually observing us But therefore Consciences eye is regarded because God looks on as well as Conscience Our Hearts know much by us but God is greater then our Hearts and knowes all things Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Lord do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord surely it concerns us to walk circumspectly and exactly since there is not any Creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are open and naked unto the eyes of that God with whom we have to do Heb. 4. 13. 3. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is Holy and Righteous Therefore Conscience speaks so much against sin and reproaches after the commission of it because 't is contrary to Gods holy Nature and his Justice has a sword to be revenged upon the sinner Secure Transgressors are apt to imagine God altogether such an One as themselves but Conscience when it awakes tells them that this imagination is groundless that he is Glorious in Holiness that he is not a God who hath pleasure in wickedness neither shall evil dwell with him the foolish shall not stand in his sight he hateth all the workers of iniquity Psal 5. 4 5. 4. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is Great and Mighty and that 't is a fearful thing to fall into his hands 'T is the consideration of his irresistible strength and the power of his Anger which puts Conscience into such horrour after the commission of VVickedness Heark what the Prophet speaks Nah. 1. 5 6. The Mountains quake at him and the Hills melt and the Earth is burnt at his presence yea the World and all that dwell therein who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fiercenesse of his anger his fury is poured out like fire and the Rocks are thrown down by him The impressions of this anger must needs be terrible therefore Conscience causes such perplexity therefore the wounds of the Spirit are so intolerable because 't is the hand of a great angry God that makes these wounds 5. If there be a Conscience in Man learn that God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him Heb. 11. 6. this is the ground and foundation that Conscience has to shew for that encouragement which it gives unto well-doing Conscience could not set Cursing and Death before us if God were not righteous and just neither could it set Blessing and Life before us if he were not good and gracious 'T is well for us that there is Mercy and forgiveness with the Lord and that with him there is plenteous Redemption else no Conscience could have any peace but every sinner unless strangely stupid would be overwhelmed with trouble and sorrow 6. If there be a Conscience in man learn from hence the Immortality of the Soul (o) Morte carent animae semper que priore relictâ Sede novis domibus habitant vivunt que receptae Ovid Metam l. 15. Beasts who dye for good and all and whose all dies together have no Conscience to disquiet them Man has a Conscience therefore his Soul dies not 'T is evident by the light of Nature that the Soul is immortal Many of the Heathens dreaded sin upon this account lest their Souls after death should be punisht for it But in the Scripture this Truth is evidently delivered Christ says Man cannot kill the Soul though he can kill the Body Mat. 10. 28. But if the soul did dye or sleep with the Body then Man would be able to do the one as well as the other nay he could not kill the Body but he must needs kill the Soul at the same time Besides the Apostle sayes we are willing rather to be absent from the Body and to be present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5. 8. Now what of Paul but his Soul could be absent from his body and present with the Lord The Soul then is certainly immortal How many awakened Consciences upon death-beds have dreaded the Souls immediate punishment how many Saints upon death-beds have been ravished with the assured hopes of their Souls being presently with Christ upon their dissolution 7. If there be a Conscience in a Man learn The certainty of a judgement to come The comming of the Lord to judgment Conscience is frequently bringing to our
no enjoying of God at all Where there is no true Holiness sinners are without God in the World they spend their Mony for that which is not Bread and their labour for that which satisfies not Isa 55. 2. They only have recourse to broken Cisterns that can hold no water but they neglect and by their iniquities are kept at a distance from the Fountain of living Waters Thus that which is the Hell of Hell they undergo on Earth and yet such is their stupidness they are little if at all concerned 2. Without a good Conscience no service that we perform can be acceptable A bad Conscience is like the dead Flie in the Apothecaries Oyntment that spoils the whole This was it that made the Lord to speak thus to Israel of old Isa 1. 11 12 13. To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me I am full of Burnt-Offerings and the fat of fed Beasts and I delight not in the Blood of Bullocks or of Lambs or of He-Goats When ye come to appear before me who hath required at your hands to tread my Courts Bring no more vain Oblations incense is an Abomination to me the Sabbaths and calling of Assemblies I cannot away with it is Iniquity even the solemn meeting When ye spread forth your hands I will hide mine Eyes from you yea when you make many Prayers I will not Hear And the reason of all this was because their Consciences were defiled with Blood with injustice with unmercifulness with oppression Thus also Isa 66. 3. because their Consciences were defiled by chusing their own way and their souls delighted in their abominations the Lord says He that kills an Oxe is as if he slew a man he that sacrifices a Lamb is as if he cut off a Dogs neck he that offers an Oblation as if he offered Swines Blood he that burneth Incense as if he blessed an Idol Two things are absolutely necessary unto the acceptation of our services one is the Mediation of our Lord Jesus and therefore our sacrifices though never so spiritual are said to be acceptable through Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. and the other the cleansing of Conscience from all known and allowed sin for iniquity will separate between us and our God and make him hide his face from us 3. Without a good Conscience there can be no quiet or Peace but will prove exceedingly to our prejudice (p) Malâ tranquillâ conscientiâ sicut nihil pejus ita nihil i●foelicius haec est illa quae nec Deum timet nec hominem reveretur Bern. De Conscien cap. 3. pag. 1109. The mirth of distracted and phrantick persons makes us ready to weep because we know how little reason there is for it and thus unreasonable is security and peace where there is an evil Conscience Sin is such a Master as none of its Servants have cause to be very jocund When Death and Hell which is the wages of sin is paid then I am sure 't will be sad day with sinners and all their jollity will be turned into the height of anguish and tribulation Art thou without a good Conscience and yet art quiet thy quietness is thy Disease As there is a Natural Lethargy whereby Bodies sleep unto natural Death so there is a Spiritual Lethargy whereby Souls sleep unto Eternal Death and they wake not till the sight of an angry God upon the Judgment-seat and the feeling of the unquenchable flames of Hell awake them He had a bad Conscience that said Soul take thine ease and so had he that fared sumptuously every day but their ease did them harm and was a means to bring them unto these torments where no ease is to be looked for Ah woe unto sinners that are at ease the ease of the simple does slay them and the prosperity of Fools destroyes them Prov. 1. 32. 4. Without a good Conscience 't is impossible that we should be truly good our selves If Conscience be bad all things else within us are likely to be a great deal worse If this which should restrain from sin connive at sin how will iniquity abound if this which should be urging unto duty does not it self do its Duty how will duty be cast off there will quickly be a saying unto God depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes what is the Almighty that we should serve him Job 21. 14 15. To say that a man has no Conscience is as much as to say that a man has no goodness When a sinner is indeed turned unto God one of the first things that is wrought upon in him is his Conscience and the more Holy he is still his Conscience does become more Pure and wakeful and tender When a sinner that is almost perswaded to be a Christian falls back again and becomes as vile nay viler than ever his Conscience rings him many a sad peal to prevent his relapse and 't is sometimes a great while before his Conscience can be charmed But if once this is laid into a Dead sleep the lusts of the Heart will grow impetuous and strong the affections will be vile and at length there may be a running out to all excesse of Riot in the Conversation Certainly if Conscience be bad the whole man is defiled if Conscience does exercise no Authority for God sinners will fulfill the desires of the Flesh and of the Mind and will walk according to the course of this World according to the Prince of the Power of the Air the Spirit which worketh in the Children of Disobedience 5. Without a good Conscience as nothing is good in us so nothing is good or pure to us The Apostlet ells us that unto the pure all things are pure but to them whose Minds Consciences are defiled there is nothing pure Tit. 1. 15. A bad Conscience defiles every thing A man that is Conscious to himself of loved and regining sin whatever Creatures he uses he abuses his Food his Estate his Health his Strength are all impure to him because his Corruptions are served with all these his blessings are turned into Curses because he makes a sinful and Cursed use of them Nay not only things secular but also things sacred even the Ordinances of God are prophaned and polluted by an evil Conscience Prayer is turned into an Abomination and the Lord calls it Howling Hos 7. 14. They have not cryed unto me with their Hearts when they howled upon their beds The word becomes a savour of Death unto Death the Eyes being shut and the Ears closed and the Heart being more hardened under it Receiving the Lords Supper is turned into a being guilty of the Body blood of the Lord and Eating and Drinking Damnation to our selves 1 Cor. 11. Thus a bad Conscience which suffers sin to rule without any considerable disturbance spoyls all we do turns good into Evil and the better things are in themselves makes them so much the worse to us
blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord Acts 3. 19. The Gospel also does command a sinner to come to Christ to believe in him 1 John 3. 23. This is his commandment that we believe on the Name of his Son Jesus Christ That is that we receive him as Lord and Saviour and accept those benefits of pardon Grace and Glory which he has purchased and freely proffers to us And thus by this command Conscience is obliged to do that as a Duty which is one of the greatest Priviledges imaginable You see what bindes the Conscience namely the will of God discovered partly by the Light of Nature but principally by the Law and Gospel (f) Constat synteresis latiore sensu partim ex principiis moralibus in natis cum eorum conclusionibus partim ex iis quae Deus insuper homini praescripsit sed utramque partem constituit voluntas Dei revelata quâ homo intelligit fibi suum officium praescriptum esse Hinc lex Dei sola obligat conscientiam per legem autem intelligigimus volunt atem Dei revelatam ità ut contineat etiam illa quae in Evangelio praescribuntur Amas l. 1. De Consc c. 2. p. 5. All these Discoveries of the will of God are to be kept safe in the Conscience one part of which is therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to keep because practical Truths are to be Treasured up there we must be acquainted what is the will of God and do that will as well as understand it The adequate Rule of Conscience is the will of God and of this will in his Word there is the fullest Revelation here mans Duty is prescribed and shewn and so far as the Word commands Conscience is obliged and no further As God alone knows the Conscience and has power to punish it so he alone can bind it I acknowledge that for Conscience sake we are bound to obey the just commands of Men that are in Authority over us but the Obligation upon Conscience to do this comes not from them but from Gods command that we should be Subject to them and to be ready unto every good Work Tit. 3. 1. 3. As Conscience implies a knowledge of the will of God so 't is the Office of Conscience to impell us to comply with his will which is made known to us The Prophet speaking concerning the Spirit bringing the Word to remembrance tells the Children of Israel Isa 30. 21. Thine Ears shall hear a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it when ye turn to the right hand and when ye turn to the left These words may very aptly be applied unto Conscience which is as a Voice within us saying concerning forbidden paths These are not the way and therefore turn out of them but concerning commanded Duties These are the way and therefore practise them When Joseph was sollicited by his Mistress to commit folly and the temptation was strong considering the circumstances which he was in It was Conscience that minded him of his Obligation to his Master which he ought not to requite by defiling of his Bed and especially how evil and hainous such a deed would be in the Lords eyes and he comes to a fixed resolution not to yield not to go contrary to his Conscience and Duty How says he shall I do this great wickedness and sin against God Gen. 39. 9. Conscience is not onely a witness to testifie concerning us nor onely a Judge to pass Sentence upon us but also a Law commanding and stirring us up unto our Duty and when it does thus excite us to Obedience First it uses Gods Name and Authority Secondly it charges under the greatest penalties Thirdly it sets before us the Lords great goodness 1. Conscience to impell us to Obedience uses Gods own Name and Authority Thus saith the Lord says Conscience These commands are the commands of God they are enacted by Him who is the supream Law-giver who hath power to save and to destroy James 4. 12. The Thessalonians when they received the Word of God which they heard of the Apostles they received it not as the word of Men but as it is in Truth the word of God which worketh effectually in them that believe 1 Thes 2. 13. Conscience charged them to receive the Gospel because the Gospel of God and they did receive it though hereupon they were exposed to never so great Afflictions and Tribulations Conscience looks beyond Instruments which are but Earthen Vessels Men of like passions with our selves and eyes that God who employs and sends them In the Publishing of a Proclamation who says Thus saith the Town-Clerk No every one concludes Thus saith the King This is really the will of God says Conscience and therefore do not dare to be obstinate against it It uses the same Language which the Apostle Paul does to Timothy after it has urged unto Duty and to take heed of sin I charge thee before God and the Lord Jesus Christ who shall Judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and his Kingdom 2 Tim. 4. 1. Here is such a Name and Authority used as may well make us to stand in awe 2. Conscience charges us under the greatest penalties It tells us indeed of temporal plagues and Spiritual Judgments and how much sin may cost us in this present World but that 's not all nor the worst of all it also makes Hell naked before us and takes off that covering which is upon Destruction and bids us look down and then asks this Question How will you be able to dwell with devouring fire How will you be able to inhabit everlasting burnings Is it good says Conscience to Live without God in this World and with a curse to depart for ever from him in the next Isit good to enjoy the pleasures of sin which are but for a season and then to be tormented in those Flames which never can be quenched To run into sin is to rush into a Battel against that God against whom none ever hardned themselves and prospered To run into sin is a mad venturing to leap into Hell think of this when tempted Oh how slender are the penalties wherewith Humane Laws are backed Those Statutes which were made by severe Draco which are said to be writ with Blood because he punished every fault with Death had not such a dreadful penalty annexed to them as the Laws of God For what is the Death of the Body if compared with the Damnation of the Body and Soul for ever Luke 12. 4 5. 3. Conscience that it may perswade us to Obedience sets before us the Lords great goodness bids us behold his goodness as well as his severity Rom. 11. 22. It tells us that if we depart from God we forsake our own Mercies we leave our Rock and Fortress and betray our selves into the hands of Enemies It uses the cords of Love to
draw us after God as well as the Reins of fear to restrain us from sin It brings Mercies to remembrance all which and oh how great is the Number of them are as so many Obligations to Obedience and withal assures us that God is such a Master that if we follow him fully we shall not want renewed and multiplied encouragements in his Service What Nathan spake unto David after his sin Conscience does speak after the same manner before to keep us within the bounds of our Duty God has delivered he has loaded thee with benefits and if these are too little he is willing to give more and therefore leave him not but cleave unto him All these ways does Conscience take to move us to do the will of God and indeed especially at some times its impulses are very vehement and strong it fills its mouth with Arguments and evidently lays before us the unreasonableness and danger of sin and uses a rest less importunity to disswade us from it and if Conscience notwithstanding all this be stifled hereby we shall vastly increase our guilt and our sinning will become by far the greater provocation 4. As 't is the Office of Conscience to impell us to comply with the will of God so also to bear Witness concerning our selves and Actions As it tells us what we should do so what we do it exactly observes 'T is very evident from Scripture that this witness-bearing is a main part of the work of Conscience Rom. 9. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my Conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost So 2 Cor. 1. 12. the Apostle speaks of the testimony of his Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity he had had his conversation in the World Conscience is such a witness as is more than a thousand other witnesses for 't is privy to all we do it will many times cry out against us when others flatter us (g) Magna vis est Conscientiae Judicis magna in utramque partem ut neque timeant qui nihil commiserint poenam semper ante oculos versari putent qui peccârint Cicero Orat. pro T. An. Milone pag. 553. And if it testifies good concerning us it will not be controuled by mens censures nor by Afflictions which are seeming tokens of Gods Anger Job's burthen was very heavy his griefs and calamities were more weighty than the Sand so that his words were swallowed up His Friends charge him with Hypocrisie and yet Conscience witnessing for him does prevail Job 27. 5. Till I dye I will not remove my integrity from me and his Heart winessing to his Righteousnesse and sincerity he goes higher Job 16 12. Also now behold my witness is in Heaven and my Record is on High Three things are implied in this witnessing of Conscience 1. A recollection of what we have done It has a notable faculty in running back upon the footsteps which we have taken (h) Cambdens Remains pag. 26. The old English word for Conscience was In-wit because it knows whatever is within us whatever is done by us Those which we read of Jer. 8. 6. who when God hearkned and heard did not speak aright did not say What have we done 't is a sign their Hearts were hardned and their Consciences for the present cast into a dead sleep But here I must say that Conscience though asleep is like Noah who knew what his younger Son had done to him and how he had looked upon his nakednesse when he was asleep Conscience when it wakes will understand all that was done before and the sooner it begins to reflect the better will it discharge its duty 2. This witnessing of Conscience implies a comparing of what we have done with that rule which God has prescribed us What was feigned concerning Janus that ancient King of Italy that he had two faces may truly be affirmed concerning Conscience with one face it looks forward towards the VVord which is the rule of Righteousness and with the other it looks backwards towards our selves and then inquires whether there be that purity and uprightness of Heart and that living soberly righteously and godly which the VVord does so expresly call for 3. The witnessing of Conscience implies its bringing in evidence pro or con for or against us according as we have or have not taken heed to that rule which whosoever walks according to Peace and Mercy shall be upon them Gal. 6. 16. The witnesse of Conscience is an accusation upon doing Evil but an apology upon doing well 1. This witnesse of Conscience is an accusation upon doing Evil. Conscience does charge the soul with guilt and this is a very heavy charge where sinners are not without or past feeling The Conscience of David when Nathan came to him presently seconded Nathan The Prophet accused him Thou art the Man his Conscience also sides with the Prophet and he accuses himself I have sinned against the Lord 2 Sam. 12. 13. An accusing Conscience made David so sensible of his need of mercy and so earnest that he might obtain it the sight of his sins caused most deep dejection of spirit The thirty eight psalm is called a Psalm of David to bring to remembrance His conscience was busie in reflecting and accusing when he wrote it and how does he complain v. 3 There is not any rest in my bones because of my sin for mine iniquities are gone over my head as an heavy burthen they are too heavy for me I am troubled I am bowed down greatly I go mourning all the day long v. 4. 6. There are six things to be observed concerning the accusations of Conscience 1. Conscience accuses undeniably it does not charge the sinner upon hear-say or upon surmise but upon its own knowledge I accuse of nothing sayes Conscience but what I saw done with my own eyes and when I saw it I wrote it down with all the aggravating circumstances of it in my own Book of remembrance and here you may find it registred You may as well deny that you see at all when you see most plainly as deny Consciences accusing testimony We find therefore in Scripture that when Conscience has brought to remembrance sins committed a great while before its testimony even then could not be denyed Josephs Brethren many years after their cruelty towards their Brother cry out We are Verily guilty Conscience accused and they could not deny it Job's Conscience told him of the sins of his youth when he was grown up to riper years and he acknowledges them Job 13. 26. For thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my Youth 2. Conscience accuses boldly as 't is said of Death that it comes as easily to the Princes Palace as the Beggars Cottage so it may be affirmed concerning conscience 't will come and speak as plainly to the highest as to the meanest 'T is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a respecter of
persons Conscience has no more reason to fear the greatest than the poorest Can the greatest man punish his Conscience for being plain with him He may indeed wound it more and more but this will in the end onely increase his own smart and anguish Prophets and Ministers have not accesse unto some nor an opportunity to tell them of their misdoings and if they have and do discharge their duty they may suffer for it John the Baptist was sent to Prison for reproving Herod and afterwards his life was taken away But though Herod was no more troubled and rebuked by John yet his own Conscience does fearlesly and impartially deal with him and therefore when he heard of the fame of Jesus he cries out John is risen from the Dead which shews that his Conscience flew in his face about him 3. Conscience accuses of high matters of such crimes the least of which deserves damnation There is nothing which Conscience does accuse of but sin and sin is the Transgression of a Law and that Law is the Law of God and this God is an infinite Majesty and therefore sin does merit an infinite punishment Though Papists call some sins venial and make but light of them yet a serious Conscience looks upon every sin as justly deserving Eternal condemnation the Apostle speaks indefinitely concerning sin without excepting any The Wages of Sin is Death Rom. 6. ult and by Death he means Eternal Death for 't is opposed unto the gift of God which is Eternal Life by Jesus Christ our Lord. Among Men there are indeed some petty faults which a Malefactor is not so afraid when accused of but how pale does he look when Felony or Murther or Treason is laid to his charge alas the Gallows the Gibbet Hanging Drawing Quartering he now fears Conscience brings in an indictement against the sinner for nothing but what is damnable for every sin against the great God is so in its own Nature And if every sin makes the Soul liable to the vengeance of Eternal fire how may the sinner be amazed when all his iniquities are set in order before him 4. Conscience accuses a man to himself Luther tells us concerning a certain Cardinal that was wont to say Conscientia est mala bestia quae facit hominem stare contra seipsum Conscience is an evil Beast for it makes a man to stand against himself When Conscience is our accuser our accuser is within us and we can go no where without this accuser A man by this means becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-punisher These self accusations do break a mans spirit they imbitter all Temporal comforts and Oh! how bitter then do they make affliction 5. Conscience in its accusations lets us understand that God understands better then it self what it layes to our charge The Apostle tells us that God is greater than our Hearts and knows all things 1 John 3 20. This Text plainly informs us that God knows by us more than we know Many sins slip out of Our memories but none out of Gods Hos 7. 2. They consider not in their Hearts that I remember all their wickedness now their own doings have beset them round they are all before my face When Conscience is awakened and we are beset round with our own doings this causes the perplexity that they are all before Gods face he remembers all though we are not able to number half of them Moses cryes out We are consumed by thine anger by thy wrath are we troubled Thou hast set our inquities before thee our secret sins in the light of thy Countenance Psal 90. 7. 8. 6. Conscience is many times incessant and not to be silenced in its accusations Augustine (h) Qui malas habent uxores domus suas intrare nolunt ad forum exeunt gaudent coepit hora esse quâ intraturi sunt ad domum suam contristantur Intraturi sunt ad taedia ad murmura ad amaritudines ad eversiones Si ergo miseri sunt qui cùm redeunt ad parietes suos timent quantò miseriores qui ad conscientiam redire nolunt ne litibus peccatorum evertantur Vt possis libens redire ad cor tuum illud munda Aufer cupiditatem sordes aufer labem avaritiae malas cogitationes odia non dico adversus amicum sed etiam adversus inimicum aufer ista omnia Intra cor tuum gaudebis Aug. in Enarrat in Psal 33. pag. mihi 237 238. compares a clamorous Conscience to a brawling Woman whose Tongue being set on fire of Hell never lies still but is continually shooting forth bitter words Now Solomon tells us 'T is better to dwell in the corner of a house top than with such a Woman in a wide house Prov. 25. 24. nay 'T is better to dwell in the Wilderness than with a contentious and angry Woman Prov. 21. 19. But how much more intolerable are the reproaches of an enraged Conscience Flashes of Hell fire do issue as it were out of the mouth of it it is continually bringing guilt unto remembrance and speaking of those Flames unto which this guilt does render the Soul that sins obnoxious and liable Thus the witness of Conscience is an accusation upon doing evil and such an accusation as may very much be dreaded 2. The witnesse of Conscience is an Apology upon doing well It will bear witnesse for those that are sincere when they walk before God in Truth and with a perfect Heart It must indeed be granted that in many things all even the very best do offend Jam. 3. 2. But conscience takes notice of the bent and desire of the Soul to please the Lord and how burthensome and bewailed infirmities are Conscience will excuse and defend if there be a will to do good though evil at the same time be present as it was with the Apostle himself Rom. 7. 21. Conscience having looked into the Gospel understands that God does not deal with Believers according to the terms of the Covenant of Works which had a promise of Life only upon condition of perfect obedience but Death was threatned upon the least transgression No no they are not now under the Law but under Grace and in the new Covenant sincerity is accounted and accepted as our perfection before God through Christ Jesus Now Consciences excusing or defending is of great force and weight 'T is not to be checkt by the reproaches of men nor by the accuser of the Brethren 1. Conscience excusing us is not to be checkt by the reproaches of Men. How eager as I hinted before were Jobs friends in their censures and accusations They thought his Religion was but a meer shew and that he had used the Form of Godliness onely as a cover for his wickedness and injustice Heark how he speaks to them Job 19. 2 3. How long will ye vex my Soul and break me in pieces with words these ten times have ye reproached me you are not ashamed
that you make your selves strange unto me and yet notwithstanding all as long as his Conscience did clear him his confidence is not shaken and he says the Righteous surely including himself shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall wax stronger and stronger Job 17. 9. 2. Consciences excusing us is not to be checkt by Satan the Accuser of the Brethren As Job's Friends did censure him so Satan accused him of Mercenariness and selfishness in his Religion Doth Job fear God for nought But put forth thy hand now and touch what he hath and he will curse thee to thy Face These were the words of Satan Job 1. 9. 11. But instead of this when all was taken away Job blesses the Lord nay when his Bone and Flesh were touched he says Shall we receive good at the hand of God and shall we not receive evil Job 2. 10. Job's sincerity is proved and approved is evident to himself and Satan who 't is likely enough was busie to disturb him is demonstrated to be a Lyar. As the Devil does hide the faults of the profane and secure from their eyes so he is continually objecting to the sincere their failings and imperfections by his good will he would have us see no sin at all or nothing else but sin and from the remainders of Corruption he is bold to call the Saints Hypocrites though these remainders are never so much their burthen But if Conscience does give testimony that they delight in the Law of God after the inward Man and that the evil in themselves they hate and desire to be delivered from the Body of sin and Death Notwithstanding Satan's slanders they give thanks to God because there is now no condemnation to them being in Christ Jesus Rom. 7. latter end compared with Rom. 8. the beginning So much for this Office of Conscience which is bearing witness both by way of Accusing and Excusing 5. It follows in the Definition that 't is the Office of Conscience to Judge that is to acquit or to condemn us Judging lies in these two things in absolving and condemning The Judge if Righteous does acquit the Innocent does condemn the guilty Now condemning and not condemning or absolving are both ascribed unto Conscience by the Apostle 1 John 3. 20 21. For if our heart condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things beloved if our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God There is a kind of a Tribunal erected in the Soul of Man and after Conscience has brought in Evidence and Acted the part of a Witness then it Acts the part of a Judge and passes Sentence which is two-fold A Sentence of Absolution a Sentence of Condemnation 1. Conscience as a Judge passes a Sentence of Absolution and if being rightly informed Conscience grounds its Sentence upon Scripture we may conclude that what it looses on Earth is loosed in Heaven When Conscience does declare to the true believer that he is justified by his Faith and has Peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ it says no more than what God himself has plainly spoken Rom. 5. 1. When it declares unto humbled and penitent Souls who are humbled because they have sinned and perverted that which is right and see that it has not profited them and who also confess and are willing to forsake their Iniquities when it declares unto such that Mercy and abundant Pardon belongs to them truly there is plain and sufficient warrant from Scripture for this Declaration To be absolved in the Court of Conscience is matter of great consolation and if Conscience draw its conclusions from Scripture-premises it may be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong consolation such as has a firm basis and Foundation When Conscience does absolve much is contained in this Sentence it pronounces us free from punishment and also sentences a reward unto us it shuts Hell and opens Heaven for a reward and the greatest that can be conceived nay how great cannot be at present conceived is surely though freely promised unto them that are sincere Believers 'T is indeed a reward of Grace not of Debt but because of Grace therefore the more sure Rom. 4. 16. Therefore it is of Faith that it might be by Grace to the end the promise might be sure to all the Seed Conscience in Judging does Act as Gods Vice-gerent He himself will Judge at last as it if it have light and purity does Judge at present And those who are now acquitted in the Court of Conscience shall be also absolved at the great Tribunal The Apostle having said We have known and believed the Love that God hath to us presently speaks concerning boldness in the day of Judgment 1 John 4. 16 17. 2. Conscience as a Judge passes a Sentence of Condemnation (i) Exemplo quodcunque malo committitur ipsi Displicet authori prima est haec ultio quod se Judicè ne mo nocens absolvitur Juvenal Satyr 13. and this Sentence is passed upon the Impenitent the Hypocrites and the Unbelievers and because the Scripture does condemn these we may truly say that what Conscience binds on Earth is bound in Heaven I grant indeed that if Conscience should pass Sentence according to the Law of works every Child of Adam the Holy Child Jesus excepted would be condemned Hark what that Man after Gods own heart said Psal 130. 3. If thou Lord shouldst mark Iniquity O Lord who shall stand And Psal 143. 2. Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified His Conscience saw so much and God saw a great deal more of sin that in strictness of Law and Justice it told him he was a condemned Man But by the Law of Grace they who turn from sin and believe in Christ are acquitted But as for those who will not come to Christ that they may have Life but preferr their fleshly and worldly Lusts and those things wherewith these lusts are gratified before the Lord of Life and Glory as they are condemned by the Law of Works so likewise by the Law of Grace Conscience therefore doing its Office passes a dreadful Sentence upon them and tells them that the wrath of God abides on them John 3. ult But here 't will be needful to note a difference between Consciences condemning a sinner now and the Lords condemning him hereafter that Sentence which Christ will pronounce at the last day will be peremptory unalterable therefore that Judgment is called Eternal Judgment Heb. 6. 2. There is no appeal from that Tribunal no reversing of the Sentence but those that are then condemned Go they must and that immediately into everlasting punishment as the Righteous on the other hand into Life Eternal Mat. 25. ult But when Conscience does at present condemn a sinner it does not preclude and shut up the door of hope against him its Sentence of condemnation is but conditional in case
of continuance and obstinacy in sin But if the unbeliever will believe in Jesus and the impenitent will mourn for their Iniquities and turn from them to God then they shall no longer be under condemnation but as sin hath Reigned unto Death so shall Grace Reign through Righteousness unto eternal Life by Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 5. 21. I have told you how the Office of Conscience is to Judge that is to acquit or condemn Now there are four things that come under this Judgment of Conscience Our Actions our Communication our Thoughts and Affections our Estate to God-ward 1. Conscience judges of our Actions and Conversation and if our Conversation be such as becomes the Gospel if we shine as lights in the midst of a crooked and perverse Generation then it says Well done But if we profess to know God and in Works deny him being abominable and disobedient and to every good work Reprobate Conscience condemns such doings and says many times in plain terms that our profession is but meer Mockery 2. Conscience judges of our Communication though words are commonly called wind yet Conscience does not make light of them It does approve of Holy and Edifying Discourse when out of the abundance of the Word of God in the heart the mouth speaketh that which is good and which may administer grace unto the hearers For when they that feared the Lord spake often one to another the Lord hearkned and heard it and a Book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought upon his Name Mal. 3. 16. But Conscience does condemn corrupt communication especially where the Tongue shews it self an unruly evil full of deadly poyson by that filthy talking lying swearing cursing backbiting which proceed out of the mouth And it does not stick to say The Tongue being not bridled all Religion is but vain James 1. 27. 3. Conscience judges of our Thoughts and Affections these as they ought to be agreeable to Rule so they come under censure The Law is so large that it reaches to our very Thoughts The wicked man is to forsake his thoughts as well as ways else he cannot be a sincere Convert nor obtain Mercy Isa 55. 7. Conscience here is very prying because these internal Acts these thoughts and desires and designs do very much discover what the heart is If wicked thoughts which are all vain and unprofitable and likewise hurtful are suffered to lodge in the heart and are delightful and welcome Guests to it 't is a sign the heart is unrenewed but if these thoughts when they arise in the heart are a burthen are conflicted with and help is implored against them that God himself would shew his power and bring them into Captivity this speaks the heart sanctified If there be a will and desire in the heart to sin though want of Opportunity or fear of Disgrace hinder the Act Conscience will condemn this as a transgression of the Law which does require inward Rectitude as well as outward Righteousness And on the other hand if there be a sincere desire and purpose to obey the Lord Conscience judges this to be Obedience because God is pleased to account it so Abraham is said by Faith to have Offered up his Son Isaac nay 't is twice said that he Offered him up Heb. 11. 17. when he onely had a purpose to have done it 4. Conscience does judge concerning our State to God-wàrd Whether we are or are not reconciled to him If we Live and walk after the Flesh if our main care is to provide for the Flesh and we account it our greatest happiness to fulfill the lusts of it and we are resolved to please our Flesh though God be never so much Angred truly Conscience may then judge our state to be bad But if we walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit if our hearts are renewed by the Spirit and in our lives we are led by him then Conscience may judge us to be in Christ and that there is therefore no condemnation to us Rom. 8. 1. I must here Observe that Conscience may condemn a particular Act when the Estate is not condemned David's carriage towards Vriah was very foul yet his state was not altered from Grace to Nature Asa his trusting in an Arm of Flesh and imprisoning the Prophet that rebuked him were Acts to be condemned yet his State was good and 't is said of him that his heart was perfect with God all his days 2 Chron. 15. 17. compared with Chap. 16. 2 3. 10. But if the state be bad all particular Acts must needs be bad also If the Tree be corrupt the Fruit will be like it for though Conscience may approve of some thing done by a man in a Natural state as being good for the Matter of it yet if it Judge aright it must condemn it as evil in regard of the Manner Thus have I at large explained the Definition which I gave of Conscience That it is a Power of the Soul in Man whereby we understanding the will of God are impelled to comply with it and do bear witness concerning our selves and Actions and accordingly Judge that is acquit or condemn our selves In the third place I am to assign the Reasons why the Lord has given unto Man a Conscience The Reasons are three 1. Conscience is given unto Man that it may be a remembrancer to put him in mind of God To remember God is mans great Duty he cannot begin too soon to do this therefore says Solomon Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy Youth Eccles 12. 1. and after we have begun we must hold on for there can never be any good reason why the Lord should be forgotten How many Millions of things are there which are appointed to put us in mind of God The invisible things of him from the Creation of the World are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal Power and God-head Rom. 1. 20. The Sun the Moon and all those thousands of shining Stars that our Eyes behold in the Firmament the Fowls that fly in the Air the Beasts of the Earth the great Sea and the Creatures that pass through the paths of it the Trees the Plants and Flowers that grow in the Field are all as so many remembrancers to bring God to the thoughts of the Children of Men so that they are without excuse if they forget him But besides all these there is a Monitor within something in their own Breasts and that 's Conscience which will be telling them of God which will be telling them of his Power and Presence and that which Conscience does inferr from hence is this Let all the Earth fear the Lord let all the Inhabitants of the World stand it awe of him Psal 33. 8. Conscience does Comment upon the Creatures How glorious is that God who made all these and he that made can also destroy and therefore
his Anger is to be dreaded He Rules and Governs the World He forms the Light and create● Darkness he makes Peace and creates Evil and therefore surely 't is wisdom to please him and the height of madness to provoke him 2. Conscience is given to Man that it may put him in mind of his own great Interest and concern which is to secure his Soul and to provide for Eternity 'T is not without reason that the Natural Man is called flesh in Scripture Gen. 6. 3. The flesh does so prevail against the Soul as to take up his whole time and care His great enquiries are What shall I eat what shall I drink and wherewithall shall I be cloathed Mat. 6. 31. And thus he would live as if he had no Soul to save or lose if Conscience did not put him in mind of that precious Jewel which he is intrusted with and bring to his remembrance that of our Lord Jesus Mat. 16. 26. What is a Man profited if he shall gain the whole World and lose his own Soul Or what shall a Man give in exchange for his Soul Conscience tells us of a Soul which is of greatest value and which is in greatest danger It calls a Man a Fool for saying Soul take thine ease eat drink and be merry thou hast Goods laid up for many Years Sumptuous Fare cannot satisfie the Souls hunger the most delicious Wines cannot quench the Souls thirst nor purple and fine Linnen cover the Souls Nakedness These things onely gratifie the senses but some thing that 's higher and more durable must be lookt after that may be a proper and sutable good unto the Soul of Man which is of a Spiritual and Immortal Nature and if you ask what that is I Answer the Eternal and All-sufficient God (k) Magnus es Domine laudabilis valde magna virtus tua sapientiae tuae non est numerus Tu excitas ut laudare te delectet quia fecisti nos ad te inquietum est cor nostrum donec requiescet in te Augustin Confes l. 1. c. 1. 3. Conscience is given to Man that it may tell him of his Duty and urge him to the performance of it Such is the corruption of Mans Nature that he hates Instruction and is apt to cast the Law of God behind his back Psal 50. 17. but Conscience observes what that Law requires and sayes 't is Holy just and good and therefore does protest against the Transgressing of it Conscience tells us that God is a better master than sin and Satan He rewards his Servants with Life and Joy but They theirs with Eternal Death and VVoe The Apostle speaks of all men even the Heathens that there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The work of the Law written in their Hearts Rom. 2. 15. The Consciences of Men are the Tables where the Laws of God are written and Conscience is continually opening these Tables and commanding men to read and do their duty I grant indeed that there is a writing of the Law in the Heart which is promised in the new Covenant which all men have not but is peculiar to Believers and when this promise is made good to any not only are their minds enlightned but their hearts changed there is a sutablenesse between their renewed wills and the Laws of God so that now they are desirous to keep them as before they were violently bent to break them But the writing of the Law in the Conscience is commune and Conscience understands this Law that it may presse obedience to it 4. Conscience is given to man that it may warn and caution him against the Tempter It is as it were the Watchman which gives notice of this Enemies approach Of all the powers of the Soul the Devil does least like this for it does most withstand him When Satan promises great matters to those whom he tempts Conscience sayes that a Lyar is not to be believed Either he will not give what he promises or if he does what he gives had better not be given because 't is given to the sinners hurt ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gifts of Enemies are no gifts at all or worse then none When Satan pretends to aim never so much at our advantage or advancement or delight Conscience sees the Snake in the Grass and tells that the Devil is a Murtherer and in every temptation is carrying on a murtherous design against us When Satan comes with the sweet cup of sinful pleasures Conscience sayes Drink not for there is rank poyson in it When Satan transforms himself into a Friend and seems to consult our safety and ease and gain Conscience cryes out Take heed a Murtherer is neer you and therefore yield not to him give him no admission 5. Conscience is given unto Man that it may give Testimony to the Word of God and side with it against all carnal reasonings Affections Our Lord Jesus had to do with Hearers which were captious which were still ready to start their frivolous objections against himself and against his Doctrine as when he said if I be lifted up from the Earth that is Crucified I will draw all men to me they presently object Christ abideth for ever and how then can he be lifted up Joh. 12. 32. 34. Now he does not answer directly to their objection but applies himself to their Consciences and tells them 't was but a little while that the light was to be with them and therefore says he Walk while ye have the Light lest Darkness come upon you for he that walketh in Darkness knoweth not whither he goeth v. 35. So the Apostle did commend himself to every mans Conscience in the sight of God and adds if our Gospel be hid 't is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4. 2 3. Conscience is more ready to close with Truth the Affections hang off because Truth does thwart them while they remain carnal The Consciences of the Jewes many of them were convinced that Jesus Christ was the true Messiah but their Hearts were against following of him for they loved the Praise of men more than the Praise God Joh. 12. 42 43. When a corrupt will sayes concerning a precept This is an hard saying 't is too strict Conscience will confesse 't is just and good to be obeyed When a carnal mind phansies absurdities (l) Prodigiosus certe humani ingenii furor quòd injustitiae potius Deum insimulat quam ut se coarguat caecitatis Calv. in Epist ad Rom. c. 9. v. 14. in the mysteries of the Gospel and says how can these things be Conscience is modest and replies that God is True and mans understanding is shallow and therefore man is to believe what God speaks for certain though he cannot fully comprehend it 6. Conscience is given unto man that this may side with the Lord when he passes Judgment at the great approaching day This day is called a day of the Revelation
and the Soul is still under the Dominion and Power of it 6. The Consciences of the regenerate are not good in respect of Legal Perfection and Exactness The first Adam before his Apostacy was able to reach this Exactness which the Law required he was able to Obey the Law of God without Offending in a tittle Christ also the second Adam did fulfill the Law without the least Transgression all his days He was like unto his Brethren in other regards but sin is excepted Heb. 4. 15. So Heb. 7. 26. Such an High-Priest became us who is Holy harmless undefiled separate from Sinners and made higher than the Heavens But truly the best of Saints fall short Surely they are unacquainted with the Law of God that imagine they are able perfectly to Obey it it may justly be suspected that they put short glosses upon it and then fancy they fulfill it but questionless they are ignorant of its strictness and Spirituality As 't is said of God himself that he is of purer eyes than to behold Evil and cannot look upon Iniquity Habak 1. 13. So it may be said of his Law 't is purer than to allow any evil than to approve of the least Iniquity No Conscience therefore in a Legal sence can be affirmed to be good for the Holy Ghost does not stick to say There is not a Just man upon Earth that does good and sins not Eccles 7. 20. The Consciences of Saints see sin but in part therefore David crys out Cleanse me from secret sins who can understand his Errors Psal 19. 12. and Psal 139. 23 24. Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any wicked way in me and lead me in the way everlasting And as the Consciences of the best are capable of more light than they have so more purity and tenderness may also be attained 7. Conscience may be good according to the Law of Grace though sin is not totally purged away This very Apostle Paul which says he had a good Conscience before God does yet say Not as though I ha● attained or were already perfect Phil. 3. 12. Nay he does acknowledge that sin did dwell in him he complains of a Law in his Members and crys out O wretched Man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this death Rom. 7. 20 23 24. Conscience is good in a Gospel-sence though sin remain as long as it does not Reign in us and we are no longer willing to Obey it in the Lusts of it Now if you ask me in what regard Conscience is good notwithstanding some remainders of evil I Answer 1. Conscience is good comparatively how vast a difference between Saints and Sinners How careful the one how careless the other How are the former afraid of offending God! how are the latter presumptuous and bold How are their Hearts set in them to do evil When Noah is said to be a Just Man and Perfect in his Generation Gen. 6. 9. This is hinted that he was Just compared with the men of his Generation and his Righteousness was the more to be admired since he kept himself unpolluted by their wickedness 2. Conscience may be said to be good sincerely when in the spirit of a man there is no guile as the Psalmist says Psal 32. 2. When there is no sin but the soul consents to be delivered from it and no Grace but the soul desires to be enriched with it and no Command but 't is willing to Obey it and where it falls short 't is grieved and because it has not attained therefore 't is continually pressing towards the Mark and perfecting Holiness in the fear of God (*) Perfecti et non perfecti Phil. 3. Perfecti viatores nondum perfecti possessores et noveritis quod perfectos viatores dicat qui jam in viâ ambulant Quid est ambulare Breviter dico proficere ne forte non intelligatis pigrius ambuletis Semper tibi displiceas quod es sivis pervenire ad id quod nondum es Nam ubi tibi placuisti ibi remansisti Si autem dixeris sufficit periisti Semper adde semper ambula semper profic Noli in viâ remanere noli retro redire noli deviare Aug. De verbis Apostoli Ser. 15. pag. mihi 338. Tom. 10. 3. Conscience may be said to be good so as to be accepted We Serve a very gracious Lord who is not extream to mark our Offences though we come short in point of performance yet if he sees we unfeignedly desire and purpose to please him such is his Fatherly indulgence that he does accept us not according to what we have not but according to what we have I know O my God says David that thou tryest the Heart and hast pleasure in uprightness 1 Chron. 29. 17. If upon tryal of the heart he finds 't is turned towards himself he takes delight in it 4. Notwithstanding many failings which are un-allowed of and mourned over Conscience may be said to be good so as to be rewarded Evangelical good works though they are not meritorious yet they are rewardable therefore a reward is spoken of and assured in Scripture to Believers Rev. 22. 12. Behold I come quickly and my Reward is with me to give to every Man according as his work shall be God promises to be himself a Reward to Abraham Gen. 15. 1. and so he will be to all the Children of Abraham Christ will Reward them with Salvation that do Obey him Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation unto all them that do Obey him If Conscience bear us witness that we are diligent in Trading with those Talents which are delivered to us we may be assured that at last we shall hear Well done good and Faithful Servants Enter you into the Joy of your Lord. We may wonder exceedingly that such a Reward should be promised to a good Conscience and shall we not wonder much more when that Reward is Actually received Since our Obedience is so lame and our goodness so imperfect But we must remember that the Saints imperfections are covered by Christ and in him all the promises of God and surely then the promises of Reward are yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. And therefore Eternal Life which is the Reward promised and expected is also called a free-gift and said to be given through Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 6. 23. These things being thus premised I am to tell you what a good Conscience is Bernard speaking of a good Conscience does very well and also wittily affirm (x) Faelix Conscientia in quâ veritas misericordia obviaverunt sibi justitia pax osculatae sunt Bern. de Int. Dom pag 1060. That Conscience is truly good where Mercy and Truth are met together and Righteousness and Peace have kissed each other The truth of the Gospel does reveal the mercy of God
dissemble upon any terms in those matters where the Glory of God is concerned what a fearful thing is it to be neer and almost a Christian Oh that God ●ould let loose his hand from me that it were with me now as in times past I would scorn the threats of the most cruel Tyrants bear torments with invincible resolution and Glory in the outward profession of Christ till I were choaked in the flame and my Body consumed to ashes Thus great is the Power and Authority of Conscience and a good Conscience does Exercise this Authority but because the Consciences of most seem to have lost all Power therefore I shall direct you how this Power of Conscience may be put forth with vigour VVould you be under the Power and Authority of Conscience then 1. Meditate upon this how Holy and equal the Law is Since we are reasonable Creatures 't is fit we be govern'd by some Law or other (a) Omnium quae in hominum Doctorum disputatione versantur nihil est profecto praestabilius quam plane intelligi nos ad justitiam esse natos neque opinione sed naturâ Jus constitutum esse Cicero de leg 1. p. 221. and what Laws are comparable to the Law of God man stands in need of a Law that may put bounds to his Will and Affections as well as regulate his Conversation humane Laws onely reach the latter but the Law of God principally requires Holiness in the former The Angels themselves are not without a Law the Apostate ones transgressed it and were cast down to Hell God spared not the Angels that sinned 2 Pet. 2. 4. the Elect Angels are affirmed to do the Commandements of God and to hearken to the Voice of his Word Psal 103. 20. And truly all the Commands of the Lord are Holy just and good the more we obey these the greater is our Liberty and freedom from the Power and Tyranny of Sin and Satan unto whom whosoever are subject they are defiled degraded debased and made miserable by that subjection 2. Consider not only the equalnesse of the Law but the greatness and goodness of the Lawgiver Conscience tells you of a Lord who has right to rule you He has given you your Being and upholds you in your Being you could not live or move or be without him And therefore by all right imaginable he is your owner and your Governour We are Debtors says the Apostle not to the flesh to live after the flesh for if we live after the flesh we shall dye Rom. 8. 12 13. he does not expresly say we are Debtors to God this was so evident there was no need to express it The Lord is so great that he may claim obedience from us for we owe him whatever we have and are and his goodness does fully match his greatness He is Optimus Maximus there is abundant reason then why you should listen unto Conscience pressing you to give him the pre-eminence before all other Lords whatsoever No King comparable to the King of Saints how ready is he to defend them how much does he consult his subjects welfare 3. Would you be under the Authority and Power of Conscience fix this upon your Spirits that a good Conscience alwayes uses its Power for your good I may here apply those words which the Apostles uses concerning Magistrates Wilt thou not be afraid of this Power do that which is good and thou shalt have Praise of the same for Conscience is the Minister of God to thee for good Name a sin which a rightly informed Conscience does bid thee abstain from which is not really a mischievous and hurtful as well as a moral evil and thou hast leave to keep it Name a duty which such a Conscience urges which is not for thy profit and thou shalt never be blamed for the omission of it What the Lord wishes Conscience speaks over again Oh that there were an Heart in you that you would fear your God and keep all his Commandments alwayes that it might be well with you forever Deut. 5. 29. Conscience aimes at this perpetually that it may be well with you and well for ever with you nay even then when it puts you upon the suffering of penal evils it does design your good they that are persecuted for Righteousness sake receive an hundred fold in this Life they have so much of grace and of the Presence of God as is an hundred-fold better than any thing that 's taken from them then in the World to come they are assured of everlasting Life 4. Think seriously of the destructiveness of those courses which Conscience would hinder you from taking Thou art not able to hurt the Lord by thy iniquity the Clouds are higher than thou but He is infinitely higher than the Clouds If thou sinnest what doest thou against him says Elihu or if thy transgressions are multiplyed what doest thou unto him Job 35. 5 6. His blessedness is so great and out of the reach of any Creature that by sin thou art not able to disturb it though failing in Duty towards him thou art justly punished So that thou hurtest not him but thy self by sin Do they provoke me to anger saith the Lord Do they not provoke themselves to the Confusion of their own Faces Death is at the end of the broad way says Conscience and therefore go no longer no further in that way but turn thy Feet into the way of Peace If thou goest on still in thy trespasses thy Feet really go down to Death and thy steps will most certainly at length take hold on Hell 5. Would you be under the Power and Authority of Conscience Beg that the Lord himself would stand by and assist this his own Officer and then its Authority will be Exercised to purpose Then strong holds and Imaginations will be cast down and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowlege of God and every thought will be brought into Captivity unto the Obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. When the under-Officer is opposed an higher Magistrate comes with a greater force to help him in the discharging of his Duty If the King himself with a great Military power should be ready to assist a Constable supposing he were resisted none would then dare to withstand When the God of Heaven does Second and strengthen Conscience then all within a Man bows before it and yields unto it As 't is the presence of God and his gracious concourse that does bring Faith and Love and other Holy habits of the Soul into powerful exercise so 't is this which does make Conscience vigorously to do its Office That 's the Second thing implied in a good Conscience The due Exercise of its Authority and Power 3. The goodness of Conscience lies in its being wakeful and attentive What Physitians say concerning Melancholy that it has a tendency either to stupifaction or to distraction may truly be affirmed concerning sin that it has
to sin We have often heard him profess that if 〈◊〉 the one hand he should see the horrour of sin and on the other the pains of Hell and must necessarily be plunged into one of the two he would chuse Hell rather than sin Another thing also which may seem no less wonderful he was wont to say He had rather be in Hell being innocent and free from sin than being defiled and polluted possess the Kingdom of Heaven This tenderness of others may make us wonder at our selves and if seriously considered might be a means to prevent our making so bold with sin any more 't is not good in dally with Divine wrath nor to play with Hell fire 5. That Conscience may be tender avoid every thing that is of a stupifying Nature Whatever does defile ● (h) Nihil in mundo quantum peccare timebat Saepe illum 〈◊〉 veritatis testimonio profitentem audivimus Quod si hinc pecc●●● horrorem hinc inferni dolorem corpor aliter cerneret necessa●● uni eorum immergi deberet priùs infernum quàm peccatum a●●●teret Aliud quoque non minus for san aliquibus mirum dicere● lebat viz. malle se puram à peccato innocentem gehennam ●●bere quàm peccati sorde pollutum coelorum regna tenere De ●● Ansel l. 2. in Oper. Anselm apt to harden Sins against knowledge that are committed presumptuously how do they waste the Conscience when Satan can draw us to these he gives us such a blow as stuns us David after his folly with Bathsheba how stupid was he after he had defiled the Wife how strangely did he carry it towards Vriah the Husband And thus stupid he does continue till Nathan the Prophet is sent to startle him One would have thought that assoon as ever the Prophet proposed the parable of the Ew-lamb that Davids Conscience should have made application but it was so stupid that it did not till Nathan deals plainly with him for his sin and his ingratitude Oh let every one cry out Keep back thy Servant from presumptuous sins let not them have Dominion over me Psal 19. 13. 6. That Conscience may be tender Remember how smarting sin has been to others See how it has put others upon the wrack that you may grow wise by their harms What made Pashur to have his name changed to Magormissabib but because sin made him a terrour to himself and to all that were round about him 'T was sin brought Cain to such a condition that he cryed out my punishment is greater than I can bear Gen. 4. 13. Nay how have the Saints themselves been wounded by Sin and groaned under the burden of it My sore ran in the Night sayes the Psalmist my Soul refused to be comforted I remembred God and was troubled I complained and my Spirit was overwhelmed Selah Psal 77. 2 3. So Psal 88. 7. Thy wrath lieth hard upon me and thou hast afflicted me with all thy Waves Hark how the Prophet Jeremiah cryes out in the Name of the Church I am the man that hath seen affliction by the Rod of his wrath he hath brought me into darkness be turneth his hand against me all the day he hath hedged me about that I cannot get out he hath made my chain heavy also when I cry and sho●● he shutteth out my Prayer He was unto me as a bear lying in wait as a Lyon in secret places he hath filled me with bitterness he hath made me drunken with Worm-wood Oh let Conscience think of this darkness and chaine and gall and VVormwood which are the dismal effects of sin and so be afraid of it 7. That Conscience may be tender Let Death and Judgement be still within view I am perswaded that was one reason why wickedness and security was so great in the old VVorld because it being ordinary for men to live seven or eight or nine hundred years they did banish the thoughts of their latter end but be you wise to consider it The Apostle Paul professes concerning himself I dye daily 1 Cor. 15. 31. that is he did not only dye more to sin and to the World every day but he continually lookt upon himself as mortal and at no time did he grow secure as if he were out of the reach of Death It argued some tenderness in the Consciences of the (*) Herodot l. ● Egyptians of old whose custom it was at the end of their Banquets to bring in the Image of a dead carcass made of Wood and to carry it about unto the guests and to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Look unto this when thou a●● Feasting for after thou art Dead thou shalt be like it 〈◊〉 the Lord did but teach you and teach you he would 〈◊〉 you were desirous to learn that holy Arithmetid● whereby you might be able to number your days aright you would apply your Hearts unto Wisdome Psal 90. 12. Death would have a mighty influence upon your Consciences especially if that which follows after judgement were believingly considered Conscience would stop thee when about to sin if it ask thee and thou dost think of these two questions seriously If I sin when I come to dye will it not be matter of trouble to me When I am judged how shall I answer for it many Consciences awake at Death all must needs awake at Judgment the Meditation of Death and Judgment would help much to awake them immediately 8. That Conscience may be tender meditate much upon Eternity Our Thoughts may endeavour to reach Eternity but they are quickly swallowed up and lost in the vastness of it Eternity is the word of all others that has an awakening sound VVhat is not to be done and suffered for the obtaining of Eternal Joyes How weak should all arguments be to perswade us to that which will bring us to ETERNAL Woes O Conscience get this word into thy Mouth and be alwayes ringing it in sinners Ears Eternity Eternity then thou thy self wilt be more tender and wilt also bear the greater sway O tell all that time is short and the fashion of this world passes away 1 Cor. 7. 29 30. and that 't is madness which nothing can be an Hyperbole to set forth when they may be happy for ever not to consent to their own happinesse and when they are warned to flee from Everlasting misery willfully to throw themselves into it Thus of that fourth particular the goodness of Conscience lies in the tenderness of it 5. The goodness of Conscience lies in its faithfulness in Witness-bearing As we are not to bear false Witness concerning our Neighbour so neither ought Conscience to bear false witness concerning our selves Conscience must not be like Fame Tàm ficti pravique tenax quàm nuncia veri Speaking more Ordinarily what is feigned than what is true God whose Officer Conscience is is a God of Truth and the Word which is given for its Direction is the Word of Truth and if that
the Spirit is Spirit There is not only a combat between Conscience and the Flesh in sincere Believers but there is a Combat in their very Hearts and Wills Lusting or Desiring is an act of the Will now because 't is said the Spirit Lusteth against the Flesh 't is a sign the Heart is weary of it The Will would fain have the Flesh and the Affections of it crucified Peace of Conscience cannot be where sin is liked and cherished When Satan does object against a Believer the remainders of corruption Conscience has this to plead and reply that these reliques of the old man are a very Body of Death which Believers sigh and groan to be delivered from Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this Death But here it may be asked how may this true peace of Conscience he attained I shall say something at present though afterward I shall have occasion to speak to this matter 1. Would you have peace of Conscience be humbled more deeply and grieve more heartily because of sin The Apostle does not only say be afflicted but mourn but weep let your laughter be turned to mourning and your joy to heavinesse Jam. 4. 9. He uses several words importing the same thing to shew that 't is not a slight sorrow which sin calls for nor a little humiliation which will usher in peace Our Lord calls the mourners blessed for they shall be Comforted and the Prophet tells us that the high and lofty one that inhabits Eternity will dwell with them that are of an humble Spirit and to this end that they may be Comforted to revive the Spirit of the humble and to revive the Heart of the Contrite Ones Oh reflect upon your selves call to remembrance how much evil and how little good has been done by you all your days those evils which have been done how have they been aggravated that good that has been done how has it been lessened by your manner of doing it look so long on sin till you find your Hearts break and melt till you are utterly displeased with your selves This is the way to have a kind look and a good Word from God When Ephraim repented did smite upon his Thigh to shew that sin was matter both of his sorrow and indignation when he was ashamed and confounded in himself What does the the Lord say Is Ephraim My dear Son is he a pleasant Child for since I spake against him I do earnestly remember him still therefore my Bowels are troubled for him and I will surely have Mercy on him saith the Lord Jer. 31. 19. 20. 2. If you would have true Peace of Conscience acquaint your selves better with the Gospel The Gospel is called the Gospel of Peace the Word of Reconciliation Christ is called the Prince of Peace and the Father The God of Love and Peace and Ministers are stiled the Ambassadors of Peace that Preach glad tidings of good things Though upon Mount Sinai there be nothing but blackness and Darkness and Tempest though the Law does bind the sinner under the Curse and cause the Heart to quake and tremble yet upon Mount Sion we may behold Jesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and that Blood of sprinking which speaketh better things than that of Abel Heb. 12. 24. In the Gospel Christ is set forth as a propitiation and through him God is ready to forgive and Plenteous in Mercy and Redemption Here 's good news indeed to see all things thus prepared towards an union and agreement and all that is required of transgressors is that they should expect peace no other way but by Christ Jesus and that they should consent to rebell no more Now when the Conscience observes that Christ is alone relyed on for reconciliation and nothing else is trusted in and that the Heart is grieved at its Rebellions and now is willing to yield it self to God Peace hereupon follows 3. Be not strangers unto that duty of self-Examination The reason why sinners are not troubled is because they do not know themselves nor the danger of that Estate in which they are and the reason why Saints have not Peace is because they are not so well acquainted with themselves as they should be they do not so well understand what an happy change the Lord has wrought both relative and real both in their condition and in their Heart and Spirits What delving and digging and turning up the bowels of the Earth to find out Silver and Gold And surely 't is worth our while to ransack and search our selves throughly if that we may find what is much more precious then Gold that perishes The Apostles command is express Examine your selves prove your own selves and the end wherefore they were thus to examine and prove was that they might know themselves whether they were in the Faith whether Christ were in them yea or no 2 Cor. 13. 5. And while you are thus upon trial of your selves since a mistake may undo you for ever cry that the Lord who knowes you would teach you to know your selves and that you may think of your selves as he does 4. Plead the Promises of strengthning Grace For the more strong you are in Grace the more evident the Truth of it will be The Lord has promised you shall grow up as Calves of the stall and that you shall thrive as Willowes by the water-courses The Righteous shall flourish like a Palm-tree and grow like a Caedar in Lebanon those that are Planted in the House of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of our God Psal 92. 12 13. and all this to shew that the Lord is upright and there is no Vnrighteousness in him v. 15. So that these Promises may with confidence be pleaded and God will not be backward to fulfil them The more Grace you have the more 't will be exercised and the more 't is exercised the more plainly you will be able to discern it and consequently have the greater Peace and Comfort in it Those that have little Grace and are full of doubts should strive after so much Grace as to be past doubt 5. Love the Commands of God and do them If once your Hearts are pleased with the Laws of God 't is a sign that you are indeed in Covenant and that the Lord has put his Laws in your minds and writen them in your Hearts and has been Merciful to your Vnrighteousness Hearken to the Psalmist Great Peace have they that Love thy Law Psal 119. 165. Love of the Law will make us carefull to keep it and this is the way to have the Lord manifest himself to us as he does not manifest himself to the World Joh 14. 21. He that hath my Commandements and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that Loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will Love him and will manifest my self to him and v. 23. If a man Love me he
destruction I would here propose these three things unto them whose Consciences are of so great a latitude 1. This largeness of Conscience argues great contempt of God and of his Will there is not a standing in aw of him and of his word His word is very strict his commands holy and requires that we should walk 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exactly and circumspectly this is to be wise to do otherwise is to discover the most dangerous folly Eph. 5. 15. What manner of persons sayes the Apostle ought ye to be in all holy Conversation and Godliness 2 Pet. 3. 11. But notwithstanding all this large consciences live at random as if preciseness were more ado than needs and as if the Lord did but jest in his Holy Precepts and those terrible threats which back them but they to their cost shall find and feel he is in good earnest 2. This largeness of Conscience is a shrewd sign that sinners are in the broad way They that can swallow camels 't is easier for a Camel to go through the eye of a needle than for them to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven The Scribes and Pharisees of old did omit the weightier matters of the Law Judgement Mercy and Faith But Christ does denounce a wo unto them Mat. 23. 23. Largeness of Conscience discovers a great carelessness of the soul and too great an indifferency what becomes of it for ever And what souls are likely to miscarry if such be not We must work out our Salvation with fear and trembling if we will be saved 3. The larger Conscience is and the more is swalowed at present the greater hereafter will the account be We are all Stewards which must shortly give an account of our stewardship and though a● present some like the steward in the Gospel many take their Bills and write Fourscore or Fifty for an Hundred Yet our Lord who will call us to an Account will be exact in reckoning and cannot be deceived by us His judgement is according to Truth Rom. 2. 2. And oh how many things will he condemn at the last day which sinners defend at present 'T will be indeed a day of Light and Manifestation both of things and persons Many persons that went for Saints will then be unmasked and found Hypocrites and have their sad portion with the Hypocrites And many things that where counted no sins will be found great sins and the lighter they were made of the more heavy and damnable they will prove unto the sinner A large Conscience therefore take heed of Attend unto the Law and to the Testimony which does discover evil and be afraid of every evil way 3. They are to be reproved whose Consciences are at peace but that peace has no solid and good foundation The most of sinners in the world have this false peace in their own Spirits sometimes they are a little awakened but are quickly hushed asleep again by that evil One who does destroy souls by thousands and by millions by carnal security Transgressors when first they venture upon sin their Consciences recoyl upon them but by degrees they grow senselesse Custom in sin and Quiet in sin do go commonly together (t) Primùm quando homo peccat videtur ei importabile processu temporis grave videtur paulo post leve judicat cùm crebris ictibus verberetur vulnera non sentit verbera non attendit In brevi vero temporis spacio non solùm non sentit sed placet dulce fit quod amarum erat asperum vertitur in suave Ad extremum non potest avelli quia consuetudo vertitur in naturam quod priùs ad faciendum erat impossibile jam impossibile est ad continendum Bernard De Consc c. 3. pag. 1109. One of the Fathers does excellently describe how the ungodly arrive unto this false peace At first sayes he sin does seem intolerable afterwards onely heavy after that being frequently given way to and Conscience stunned by many wounds makes no great matter of them in process of time sin is not burthensome at all but pleasant at last 't is turned into a second nature and the sinner can no more be drawn from it than the Ethiopian can change his skin or the Leopard his spots Jer. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil A great many not onely Profane but Professors are concerned in this reproof and have no better than a false peace of Conscience Here therefore I am to shew what that peace of Conscience is which is false and also how unreasonable it is to give entertainment to it A false peace of Conscience I shall describe to you in these particulars 1. That peace of Conscience is false where Sin and Misery were never seen They who never perceived any harm in sin and wonder why the Lord in his word does speak so much against it and why his Ministers cannot let men quietly alone in the commission of it who never lookt so far as to behold that eternal death and destruction that is threatned to be brought upon the workers of iniquity these are at peace because they do not apprehend what reason they have to be troubled there is sufficient cause of grief and fear and horrour onely they want an eye to see it so as to be indeed affected There are some that are such fools as to make a mock of sin and count it a pastime to do wickedly These do no more understand what sin is nor the Hell which the Holy God has entail'd upon it than the mad-man understands what he does when he casts Fire-brands and Arrows and Death and saith am I not in sport Prov. 26. 18. Others though far from being indeed justified think they are righteous though sick after a deadly manner yet imagine they are whole and undervalue the great Physitian Both these sort of Persons have peace but 't is without ground for the former do grosly mistake sin and the later do as grosly mistake themselves 2. That peace of Conscience is false where the strong man armed keeps possession where Satan works and rules without resistance Our Lord sayes When the strong man armed keepeth his Palace his goods are in peace Luk. 11. 21. By the strong man we are to understand the Devil by his Palace we are to understand the sinners heart because as a King reigns and commands all especially in his Palace so the Devil bears sway in the hearts of the ungodly And a false peace and quiet is the great means whereby the Devils Rule and Government is upheld If you are careless and unconcerned whom you are led by 't is certain that the Devil leads you for none are led by the Spirit of God without great sollicitousness and fear of being misguided and strong cryes that they may be guided by his counsel unto his Kingdom and Glory Satan is
the week and give Tithes of all that I possess Luke 18. 11. but all this was insufficient to prove him justified There were two great faults in the Righteousness of the Pharisees and of all those who resemble them One is that their Righteousness was only external so their lives were but blamelesse they minded not what lusts reigned in their Hearts The other is that their Righteousness was trusted in as that which was sufficient to commend them unto God whereupon they slighted the sufferings and satisfaction of Christ 'T is unreasonable for any to be at peace who go no further than a Pharisee if they go quite so far for our Lord speaks expressely Mat. 5. 20. Except your Righteousness exceed the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven 8. That peace of Conscience is false that is founded upon some lazy wishes after Grace and Holinesse There may be in unregenerate Hearts especially at som times some pangs of desire and inclinations to that which is good but their desires to continue bad are stronger and do bear down all their inclinations to good which are much more feeble Agrippa cryed out to Paul before a great multitude and before Festus who a little before had charged both Paul and consequently Christianity it self with madness Almost thou perswadest me to be a Christian Act. 26. 28. Here was an inclinableness to Religion but 't was born down by a stronger propension to Worldly greatness and Pleasures A Woman may have some kind of good will and Affection for a Person and yet when it comes to the upshot refuse to have him for an Husband so sinners may have some fluttering good thoughts and wishes for Christ and Grace and yet utterly refuse to give themselves wholly to the Lord Jesus or to be indeed and throughout sanctified Oh how many that say they desire after Grace and to be rid of sin are deceived in and by themselves they know not what they say nor whereof they affirm Sin in the general they desire to be freed from but come to particular sins which are for their profit for their credit among carnal men for their ease and pleasure these they won't let go Not considering who Christ is they are inclined to him but when they are told that as he is a Redeemer so a Ruler and that he must bring their very Thoughts and Affections into captivity and obedience that they must submit to the holiest Commands and not be ashamed or afraid to confesse Him though it cost them never so dear Here they make a demurr then have no real mind to be his Disciples Oh deceive not your selves with lazy desires after Holiness where there is a more vehement and fixed desire to wallow still in your filthyness and pollutions 9. That peace of Conscience is false which is founded upon some confused and general apprehensions of the mercy of God in Christ but this use onely is made of this mercy encouragement is taken from it to continue in sin 'T is the commonest thing in the World for sinners to gagg their Consciences with the mercy of God and the Death of Christ They have sinned but God is Merciful and Christ has dyed for sinners even for the chief of them And upon this they quiet themselvs they use these Truths as charms to cast Conscience into a sleep that it may not be disturbed it self nor disturb them But such would do well to consider that though the Scripture speak glorious things of Divine Grace and Mercy yet there is not in the whole Book of God one promise of Mercy made to sinners who are Resolved to go on still in their wickedness The Lord will not save the ungodly in their sins but from their sins and if they will not be saved from Sin they shall not be delivered from Wrath. Where God does proclaim his Name The Lord Merciful and Gracious long-suffering abundant in loving kindness goodness and truth forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin keeping Mercy for thousands to rap off the fingers of presumptuous Souls from catching hold of what is not their Portion 't is added and that will by no means clear the guilty Exod. 34. 6 7. Guilty does not Relate unto past Guilt for that is supposed in that expression Forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin But by Guilty we are to understand them who are Resolved to Contract fresh guilt by an Obstinate continuance in evil doing while they are of this mind they have nothing to do with Mercy and Christ for they prefer their Lusts before both and so are unlikely to be the better for either hereafter since because of both they presume to grow worse and worse at present 10. That Peace of Conscience is false where the Sinners heart is afraid of a searching Ministry 'T is said concerning the Prophet Amos that the Land was not able to bear his words Amos 7. 10. Which Argued though Israel was secure yet their security was Carnal and groundless Sincerity loves plain dealing but Falshood is afraid of it If you cannot endure these Preachers that Rebuke sharply that apply home that threaten terribly that warn faithfully that examine and try impartially 't is a sign your Peace is Founded upon the Sand and quickly your Building will be overthrown (x) Man cannot serve thee let him go And serve the swine there there is his delight He doth not like this Vertue no Give him his dirt to wallow in all night These Preachers make His head to shoot and ake Herbert p. 93. If those Preachers are most acceptable that never come within a Mile of your Consciences but leave you asleep as they found you how certain is it that the Blind lead the Blind and though they go jolly together yet they are going towards perdition 'T is a startling place Jer. 5. 30 31. A wonderful and an horrible thing is committed in the Land why what 's the Matter The Prophets Prophesie falsly and my People love to have it so I must add also that though you do attend upon the most awakening Ministry if you please your selves with giving a bare attendance and with countenancing the strictest ways but in the mean while you apply Truths to others this concerns such and such but take no notice how you are concerned your selves let me tell you plainly that your Peace is not right but a most dangerous stupidity Thus have I described and Discovered what is a false Peace of Conscience In the next place I am to shew you how unreasonable 't is to give Entertainment unto such a kind of Peace 1. Conscience is at Peace but God speaks trouble When sinners bless themselves God curses them when they promise much good to themselves God threatens ten thousand times more evil The Psalmist tells us that the Reason why many ungodly ones are secure is because they think God to be altogether such an one as themselves Psal 50. 21.
Little ah little indeed did I think that this was the place I was going to I did not imagine the Judge had been so Righteous the Trial at his Tribunal so Strict and that so few would have been saved I did not imagine 't was so ordinary for Souls to be deceived and that there was so much counterfeit grace in the world I thought my self safe when I was farthest from it and never perceived my mistake till now 't is too late to correct it I dreamt of Heaven but am in the lowest Hell I hoped to be saved but must be a damned wretch to all Eternity Oh that I had waked before How happy had I been if a right trouble of Conscience had been in the room of a false peace Wo is me that I flattered and by flattering did undo my self And now what course shall I take Ah this totally confounds me that no course can be taken for my relief Heaven now I see but so far off that I can never get thither and out of Hell there is no Redemption So much be spoken by way of reproof to them whose Consciences are in peace but that peace has no good ground upon which 't is builded 4. They are to be reproved who offer violence to their Consciences and very ordinarily do sin against them Conscience speaks once twice thrice speaks in the name of the Lord tells them of Life and Death of the Life that will be lost and the Death which will be incurred by sin and yet these Transgressors go resolutely on in an evil course and hate to be reformed They do in effect speak to their Consciences as the children of Judah did to the Prophet Jer. 44. 16. As for the word which thou hast spoken to us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee Let Such consider and that seriously 1. Sinning against Conscience is the way to Cauterize and Sear it 'T is bad to have a dul Conscience which does its office so remissly that no good effect at all follows this onely Almost perswades a man to that which is good onely Almost disswades a man from that which is evil 'T is worse to have a stupid Conscience which takes no notice of thousands of sins unless some very crying ones be committed and that commission followed with some grievous Plagues But 't is worst of all to have a seared Conscience which is not at all moved though there be a giving full way to the most foul abomination (y) Cauteriata conscientia est quae nullâ ratione commovetur ne atrocissimis quidem flagitiis in iis praecipue reperitur qui p●stquam fuerint illuminati sceleratae vitae sese dediderunt Ames De Conscient lib. 1. c. 15. Such a kind of Conscience as one observes is to be sound especially in those who have been enlightned but contrary to that Light do sell themselves to do wickedly Where Conscience is seared Light is extinguished there is no Grief or Shame because of sin but an impudence and rejoycing in evil the mind is reprobate and the affections vile and iniquity is committed with Greediness Even some Philosophers have called this searedness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the heart is senseless like a stone and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because such sinners become like brute Beasts made to be taken and destroyed 2 Pet. 2. 12. A Sinner whose Conscience is seared as with an hot iron how does he stand ready for the Devils service and commonly he is employed in the vilest pieces of Satans Drudgery When Richard the third did Murther his two Nephews that he might come to the Throne he employed a couple of villains to perpetrate that murther who were so senseless as to stick at nothing When Belzebub has any eminently and egregiously odious work of darkness to be done he does set a man with a seared Conscience about it such an one is likely to do the business effectually Such Transgressors declare their sin as Sodom they openly bid defiance to Heaven and how soon may the Just and Jealous God by some remarkable stroke destroy them What a madness is it to sin against Conscience since this has so great a tendency unto the fearing of it 2. Sinning against Conscience may bring you to despair If Conscience be not seared by Sin it may be so wounded as that a cure may be conceived impossible The Soul in a great agony may cry out My breach is wide like the Sea and who can heal me Great is the sin great is the horrour of Despair What the Poet sayes concerning Envy may very truly be applied unto Desperation Siculi non invenere Tyranni Majus tormentum The Sicilian Tyrants though infamous for their cruelty never invented a Torment comparable When Despair has once seized upon the Conscience then indeed there is Hell above ground A Despairing sinner is the truest and likest picture of a damned Reprobate The deplorableness of such a state wherein hope leaves a sinner and he gives over himself and all for lost I shall set forth in these particulars 1. A Despairing Conscience remembers God and is troubled it sees frowns in his Face and how terrifying is his Voice for he speaks unto such sinners in his wrath and vexes them in his sore displeasure Then sayes Luther (z) Verus terror nascitur cùm Dei irati vox auditur h. e. cùm sentitur conscientiâ Tum enim Deus qui antea nusquam erat est ubique qui prius dormire videbatur omnia audet videt ira ejus sicut ignis ardet furit occidit Luther Tom. 1. in Gen. c. 12. There is true Horrour when the voice of an angry God is heard and perceived by the Conscience then the Lord who was thought to be no where is every where and he that did seem to sleep before does now hear and see all things and his Anger like the Fire does burn and rage and kill all before it A despairing sinner apprehends what a terrible enemy the Lord is and then to think that this Lord is his Enemy and that justly and withall that he is now irreconcilable oh how does this confound him 2. A Despairing Conscience looks upon the creatures and findes them all miserable comforters Judas in temptation thought thirty pieces of silver a great matter but when he was seized upon with Despair he flung away the silver as that which was altogether unprofitable Mat. 27. 3. 5. Love of money had wounded him and money it self could not heal him nor buy a medicine for him Riches say to the despairing Conscience We are not able to deliver in this day of the Lords anger Pleasures say Help is not to be found in us 't is not in our power to sweeten that cup of trembling which is filled with the wine of Gods indignation Honours and worldly Greatness say We cannot skreen thee from Him that is higher than the highest and who if he will not
withdraw his anger the proudest helpers must stoop under him Job 9. 13. 3. A despairing Conscience remembers sin and those threatnings that are denounced against it and is overwhelmed Oh the mountains of guilt which it does behold and these are high trespasses are grown up unto the Heavens and then it applies all the Curses all the evils that it reads in the Book of God unto it self there is a roll opened before it written within and without with Lamentations and Mourning and Wo to allude to that place Ezek. 2. ult Wherever the despairing sinner goes he is dog'd and followed with Legions of sins and Conscience is still tormenting it self with such sad thoughts How shall all these be answered for How shall that vengeance be undergone which so many iniquities and so heinous do deserve 4. A Despairing Conscience looks upon Christ and the Gospel and is more than ordinarily tormented to think there is help for others but for it self none to be found It calls to mind that once the door was open and the sinner was invited to come in but refused but now concludes the door is shut eternally once the Spirit strived but being resisted is departed for good and all so as never to return again Once sayes the despairing soul I had a day of Grace but I did not know it I did not improve it but now am overtaken by an Everlasting Night and shall never see day more The Prince of Peace the Gospel of Peace are hid from me the hopes of Peace are quite gone I have outdone the very Devils themselves and may expect if it be possible to be more miserable they never refused one offer of Mercy but I thousands they never slighted a pardon but I have slighted it and was unwilling to be reconciled to God they never rejected a Redeemer but I have rejected him and preferr'd vanity nay sin which is of such a damnable Nature before the only Saviour 5. A despairing Conscience remembers Death and Judgement and Eternity and then there is even a Roaring out for Anguish something like unto the yellings of those that actually are in the burning lake Ah how shall I bear the wrath of the Almighty when all of it shall be stirr'd up What ease can I expect in Everlasting Flames How shall I bear the society of the Devil and his Angels How shall I endure to be tormented for ever in the presence of the Holy Angels and in the presence of the Lamb Rev. 14. 10. 'T is not more certain I must dye than 't is certain I must be judged 't is not more certain I must be judged than 't is certain I must be damned 't is not more certain I must be damned than 't is certain that my damnation will be Everlasting This is the Language of a despairing sinner and since to despair is to be upon such a wrack how are they to be reproved that sin against Conscience which has a tendency to despair 6. They are to be reproved who go about to wound and to ensnare the Consciences of Others How careful was the Apostle not to cast a snare upon the Corinthians 1 Cor. 7. 35. nor to enjoyn that as necessary where the Lord had not imposed a necessity and a little after he sticks not to say that they who sin against the Brethren and wound their weak Conscience do sin against Christ 1 Cor. 8. 12. And if I am not by an imprudent use of my Christian liberty to embolden another to venture upon sin against Conscience surely much lesse may I do this either by constraint or by perswasion If it argue want of Love and be a great sin to impair the Estate to blemish the reputation to hurt the body of my Brother how much worse than all this is it to wound his Conscience Those who have no mercy to the Souls of Others surely have little to their Own and they will make bold with their own Consciences who have no care no tenderness in reference to the Consciences of their Brethren Several sorts of persons are here concerned as being injurious to others Consciences 1. False Prophets are injurious to the Consciences of others These do speak perverse things to draw away Disciples after them the Apostle deals very sharply with these he calls them Dogs and bids us beware of them Phil. 3. 2. Beware of Dogs beware of evil workers No wonder that Paul stiles them Dogs since Christ before had call'd them Wolves nay ravening Wolves False Prophets especially strike at Conscience and endeavour to mis-inform That and if once they can prevail so as to make the Conscience put darkness for light and light for darkness a lye for Truth and Truth for a Lye how may souls be carried away truly so far at length as to fall into damnable Heresies and also into grosse impieties and wickedness Those deceived and deceiving ones spoken of 2 Pet. 2. They walked in the lusts of Vncleanness they counted it pleasure to Riot their Eyes were full of Adultery and could not cease from sin their Heart was exercised with Covetous practices and while they talked of Liberty they were themselves the Servants of Corruption 2. Dawbers with untempered Mortar are concerned Conscience is little beholding to them for they heal the wound of it slightly crying Peace Peace where there is no Peace Jer. 6. 14. How miserable is the condition of unfaithful Ministers and likewise of those Souls that belong to their charge The Watchman that gives not warning the Blood of Souls indeed will lye upon his Head but this implies that such Souls do also peris● Ezek. 33. 7 8. O Son of Man I have set thee a Watchman unto the House of Israel therefore thou shalt Hear the Word at my Mouth and shalt warn them from me When I say to the wicked man thou shalt surely dye if thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way that wicked man shall dye in his iniquity but his Blood will I require at thine hand If an unskilful Physician has need of a new Church-yard what shall be said of an unskilful or unfaithful Preacher I will not affirm he has need of a new Hell but I am sure he will help very much to fill the Old one Those that make the way to Heaven broad and easie and regeneration needless and the Death of Christ an encouragement to continue in sin and the Mercy of God so large that 't will put up any thing and will certainly be extended unto any that cry Lord have mercy upon us These are Dawbers enemies to Conscience they build a Wall that shall be rent with a stormy wind in fury and brought down to the ground and they shall be consumed in the midst of it Ezek. 13. 13. 14. 3. All enticers unto Wickedness are cruel Enemies to the Consciences of others If there be a Devil incarnate he is such an one whose businesse is to tempt those to sin whom he has to deal with
sees God to be another kind of Foe and Friend than heretofore he thought him and Christ to be a better Lord and Master than heretofore he did imagine He comes to God and says Lord be Merciful be my Father and let the Lord Jesus become a Saviour to me and write down what Articles thou pleasest I will subscribe them onely help me to do it with my very Heart VVhen he hears that Command Cast away every Transgression he presently crys out Lord let not any Iniquity have the dominion over me VVhen he hears that all the Precepts of the Lord are to be kept diligently he crys out Oh that my ways were directed to keep thy Statutes VVhen he hears of the Necessity of Conversion he crys out Turn thou me O Lord and I shall be turned VVhen he hears what 't will cost to be Christ's Disciple and how he must deny himself and take up his Cross he cryes out Oh let me never be Offended but count all things loss that I may win Christ The Chimes do not more presently follow the Clock than the truly humbled Soul does upon its understanding the will of God desire to submit unto it 'T is willing to do any thing to be any thing to bear any thing to forbear any thing so the favour of God and an Interest in the Lord Jesus may be Obtained Thus you see when Conscience is troubled after a right manner In the next place I am to direct How troubled and afflicted Consciences are to be Comforted And before I begin I have need to cry out The Lord give me the Tongue of the Learned that I may know how to speak a word in Season to him that is weary Isa 50. 4. O you Afflicted Souls that are tossed in a Tempest your Affliction is of all the deepest the Tempest that you are in does beat most hard upon you You have not to deal with an Arm of Flesh nor onely with the Powers of Darkness but the Lord himself has bruised you Now for your Relief I am to bring forth the sweetest Comforts of the Gospel I am to Preach unto you the unsearchable Riches of Christ I am to tell you of Love that has Height and Length and Depth and Breadth and passes Knowledge I am to display the Mercy of God which is great towards humbled sinners as the Heaven is high above the Earth But more particularly I would lay these following things before you 1. This trouble of Conscience that you are under is really the work of the Spirit the Comforter Even under Conviction and while in distress of Soul you are really in a Comforters hand There is a great deal of difference between the wounds of an Enemy and the lancings of a Chirurgeon the latter are the better born because in order unto a perfect Cure and Ease and Health Three things are here to be Observed 1. These Convictions of the Spirit are a great mercy The Children of Men would all of them lye still and at last die in their wickedness if the Spirit did not awaken some of them 'T is a kindness to be told of our danger while 't is possible to get out of it You groan and complain because of your Guilt you fear the wrath of God and desire his loving kindness I may say truly you are highly favoured for how many round about you fearlesly provoke the dreadful God to his Face and turn to their wicked course as the horse rusheth into the Battel Now sin is a burthen your condition is much better than when you made light of it and saw no harm like to follow upon it 'T is good for us to see the avenger of blood pursuing us as long as the City of Refuge is open to receive and shelter us from that avenger 2. These convictions are in order unto Consolation Comfort is that which is proper and suitable to the Mourners and rest unto the weary and heavy laden To go by Hell gates to Heaven is not to go at all out of the way The Lord does bring Souls within the Suburbs of Hell sometimes that they may be the more afraid of sin all their dayes that they may value peace of Conscience at an higher rate and adore the Grace of God in catching them as fire brands out of the burning Jonah cryed unto the Lord out of the Belly of Hell and when his Soul fainted within him Chap. 2. 3 7. And surely his being heard and helped did the more affect him Oh do not think much to Sow in Tears as long as the promise is you shall Reap in Joy Psal 126. 5. 3. It may marvellously support you under your trouble that you do Judge and Condemn your selves The Apostle expresly says that such shall not be Judged that is condemned with the World 1 Cor. 11. 31. They that accuse themselves invalidate Satans accusations against them and they that condemn themselves go the way to prevent Gods condemning them He will not throw into Hell those who are continually sentencing themselves thither and see no possibility of Help but in Rich and Free Grace and who as they Judge themselves for past sins are desirous also for the future to be kept from Offending 2. For the Relief of a troubled Conscience take Notice of the love of God towards the World in sending Christ into it God so loved the World that he gave his onely Begotten Son that whosoever believes in him should not perish John 3. 16. See also 1 John 4. 10. Herein is Love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the Propitiation for our sins This Love of God towards the World is Matter of great Encouragement if it be rightly improved It shews how great a kindness God has for Mankind He has contrived a way for their Redemption and Salvation he has provided a Mediator for them which he did not do for the Angels that fell from him Heb. 2. 16. He took not on him the Nature of Angels or he took not hold on the Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but he took on him the Seed of Abraham Whatever Christ did for Mans Salvation 't was the will of God he should do it The whole work of Redemption is called a doing of the will of God Heb. 10. 7. Sacrifices and Offerings being insufficient to take away sin Then said I lo I come in the Volume of thy Book it is written of me to do thy Will O God Nay the Father is said to Love Christ upon this Account partly because he laid down his Life to save Men from Eternal Death John 10. 17. Because I lay down my Life therefore doth my Father Love me Now you know Christ's Life was given that it might be a Ransom for many All this shews the good will of God towards Man and how ready he is that Man should be brought near unto him and enjoy him and be eternally happy in that enjoyment This Amor Benevolentiae
this Love of good will in God and desire after Man's welfare was taken notice of by the Angels and they are brought in Admiring and Magnifying the Lord when Christ a Saviour was Born into the VVorld Luke 2. 13 14. Suddenly there was a Multitude of the Heavenly Host Praising God and saying Glory to God in the highest on Earth Peace Good will towards Men. Let all this encourage drooping Spirits and banish those thoughts of God which Satan is apt to inject and which are utterly unworthy of his Love and kindness towards Man 3. Study that great Mystery of Godliness God manifest in the Flesh Eye the Incarnation of the Son of God John 1. 14. The Word was made Flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld his Glory the Glory as of the onely begotten of the Father full of Grace and Truth God is the Fountain of Grace but being made Man Man has access into that Fountain and the Son of God shews himself to be truly the Redeemer and (n) Christus Apostolis inde agnitus est pro Filio Dei quod complementum omnium quae ad spirituale Dei regnum pertinent in se haberet denique quod in omnibus vere se praestiterit Redemptorem Messiam quae maxime insignis est nota quâ discerni ab aliis omnibus debuit Calv. in Johan c. 1. Messiah because he is abundantly nay infinitely able to furnish with all Grace whosoever come to him 'T was (o) Magnum hoc mysterium Verbum caro factum pro paucis aut levibus noxis editum orbi non fuit Mel. Adamus in vitâ Cranmeri Cranmer's Comfort in his last Prayer that this great Mystery God manifest in the Flesh was not onely for a few or light Offences The greatest of Transgressors may from hence be Encouraged both the God-head and Manhood of Christ are to be eyed and truly it may be very reviving to contemplate both 1. The Godhead of Christ And if he be God how safely may he be trusted in The Apostle tells us that by Him were all things Created that are in Heaven and in Earth Visible and Invisible whether they be Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were made by him and for him Col. 1. 16. He is said also to uphold all things by the Word of his Power Heb. 1. 3. surely then his hand is not shortned that it cannot save Christ is affirmed to be over all God Blessed for ever Rom. 9. 5. Let not any imagine that he is onely God by Office for he is also styled the true God and Eternal Life 1 John 5. 20. And if the Scripture say that he is the true God let not any Corrupt mind be so bold as to assert that he is God improperly so called Untill we look as high as the God-head of our Lord Jesus we cannot find whereon our Faith may rest nor wherewith our Consciences may be satisfied In Scripture God and Blood Jehovah and Righteousness are joyned together God is said to have Purchased the Church with his own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blood Acts 20. 28. And Jer. 23. 6. This is the Name whereby Christ is called Jehovah or the Lord our Righteousness As his blood could not have been shed if he had not been Man so the shedding of it would not have been sufficient for the Redemption and Purchasing of the Church if he had not been God Because he is God therefore his Righteousness being imputed unto sinners is sufficient for their Justification though they have none of their own that is worth naming The Apostle Magnifies the Gospel because therein the Righteousness of God is Revealed from Fairh to Faith Rom. 1. 17. 'T is called the Righteousness of God not onely because God the Father does accept of it as perfect and sufficient but because 't is the Righteousness of Christ who is truly God as well as Man and from whose Deity is derived such a value and vertue unto his Sufferings and Obedience Surely the more we view the God-head of our Lord Jesus the firmer will be our recumbence upon him and the less shall we be afraid of the Enemies of our Salvation since he can so easily subdue them 2. The Manhood of Christ as well as his Godhead must be eyed How often in the Gospel is he called the Son of man Luke 19. 10. The Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which was lost The Son of man must be lifted up that he might draw all men to him John 12 32 34. The Apostle tells us there is but one Mediator between God and men the Man Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 2. 5. By taking our Nature upon him he is become neer a kin to us and is not ashamed to call us Brethren Heb. 2. 11 12. Both he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one Christ who sanctifieth hath the same humane nature with Beleivers who are sanctified for which cause he is not ashamed to call them Brethren saying I will declare thy Name unto my Brethren in the midst of the Church will I sing praise unto thee With what boldness may the Children of men come to the Lord Jesus who was in all things made like them that he might be a Merciful and Faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2. 17. Ruth emboldned her self to speak unto Boaz Spread thy skirt over thine handmaid for thou art a neer kinsman Ruth 3. 9. Our Lord Jesus is neer a kin to us it belongs to him to redeem both us and our lost Inheritance we may with confidence desire him to spread his skirt over us and to betroth us unto himself for ever 4. For the comforting of a troubled Conscience take notice of that compleat satisfaction that Christ has made unto Divine Justice by offering up of himself upon the crosse for sin Behold the Lamb of God slain and taking away the sin of the world Three things are much to be studied by those that are wounded in their spirits Christs suffering of Death his overcoming of Death and his seconding his sufferings with his perpetual intercession 1. His suffering of Death The Apostle takes much notice of the person who died he was altogether innocent he died indeed for the unjust but himself was just and righteous The penitent Thief spake Truth upon the Crosse when he rebuked his fellow saying Dost not thou fear God seeing thou art in same condemnation and we indeed justly for we receive the reward of our deeds but this man hath done nothing amisse Luk. 23. 40 41. Therefore he is likened unto a Lamb without blemish and without spot He was made sin indeed and a Curse for us but he had no sin of his own whereby the least Curse or Punishment could be deserved Christ was innocent and Oh! how high and great a Person was he He being in the form of God and thinking
it no robbery to be equal with God yet humbled himself in the form of a Servant and became obedient to Death even the Death of Crosse Phil. 2. 6 7 8. And since he that was the Mighty God did thus humble and abase himself there is no sin so great but his humiliation may make satisfaction for it I do not wonder that the Apostle speaks so highly concerning the knowledge of Christ Crucified Here is the ground of mans Comfort and Salvation When I behold the Son of God who has the same Essence Power Glory and Eternity with the Father stooping so low as to become Man when I behold him not only a Man but a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with grief all his days and read that at last he was wounded and bruised and slain for sin I may be satisfied that here is enough suffered to satisfie the justice of God to the full Sin indeed did rise high because committed against God and it has been heightned by many agrravations but the Son of God did stoop low when he became Man and still was more and more abased till he came to the lowest degree of his humiliation besides his sufferings were aggravated for he knew before hand all that was to come upon him John 18. 4. He knew all the bitter ingredients and dregs of wrath that were in that Cup which he was to drink off to the very bottom and in the midst of his sufferings his Father hides his face which made them so much the greater Oh who can conceive the weight that lay upon our Lord when all the iniquities of his whole Church lay upon him at once and being under all deserted did roar out My God My God why hast thou forsaken me Now if it be inquired what the end of Christ was in his suffering of Death the answer must be 't was that he might put away sin his Blood was shed for the remission of sin and to deliver us from that wrath which by sin was merited Oh sweet Scripture Rom. 5. 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in that whilst we were yet sinners Christ died for us much more then being now justified by his Blood we shall be saved from wrath through him Our Lord was delivered for our offences he was stricken for our iniquities and 't is evident that he did undergo to the full whatever was required and paid the uttermost farthing of our debt for he cryed out upon the crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is finished and then gave up the Ghost Joh. 19. 30. 2. The troubled Conscience should not only take notice of Christs suffering Death but also of his overcoming Death in his Resurrection The Apostle in his triumph of Faith speaks of the Elect being secured from the charge of sin by the Death of Christ but rather by his Resurrection Rom. 8. 33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again If he had been still in the grave all our hopes would have been buried with him If Christ be not rais'd your Faith is vain ye are yet in your sins 1 Cor. 15. 17. He was for our debt arrested as it were and thrown into the grave and being come out again we may conclude that justice has no more to demand and as our Surety he has no more to pay Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Rom. 6. 9. His Resurrection shews that his dying once was sufficient 3. Christ seconds his sufferings with continual intercession (p) Porrò hanc intercessionem carnali sensu ne metiamur non enim cogitandus est supplex flexis genibus manibus expansis Patrem deprecari sed quia apparet ipse assiduè cum morte resurrectione suâ quae vice sunt aeternae intercessionis vivae orationis efficaciam habent ut Patrem nobis concilient atque exorabilem reddant merito dicitur intercedere Calvin in Epist ad Rom. c. 8. When he had by himself purged our sins he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High and he ever lives to make intercession for us 'T is lookt upon as a great matter to have a friend in Court that may speak a good word for us to an earthly King but how much more a priviledge is it to have such a friend as the Lord Jesus is in the Court of Heaven ready to back our Prayers with his own intercession which is ever prevalent but troubled Souls may fear that Christ prays not for them since he says I pray for these I pray not for the World but for those which thou hast given me for they are thine John 17. 9. To this I reply that Christ prays for all that believe in him Neither pray I for these alone but for all them that shall believe on me through their word Now those troubled Souls that have no confidence in the Flesh but are willing to receive Christ as he is offered in the Gospel these are to be counted among Beleivers in him and therefore may be encouraged by his intercession Nay the Scripture speaks expresly that He made intercession for the Transgressours Isa 53. 12. That was one of his petitions upon the Crosse Father forgive them for they know not what they do Luk. 23 34. and these Transgressours for whom Christ interceded 't is very likely were those who were charged with murthering of Christ and were prickt in their Hearts Act. 2. and brought unto true Repentance 5. For the comforting of an afflicted and troubled Conscience observe how plainly the Gospel does affirm that Christ is both able and willing to save 1. 'T is very evident that Christ is able to save no guilt so great as to exceed the merit of his Blood his Blood cleanseth from all sin 1 John 1. 7. and that though it be of never so deep a dye Isa 1. 18. Though your sins be as scarlet they shall be white as Snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wool No spiritual malady is hujus medici opprobrium the reproach of this Physician What cures has he wrought what sins has he pardon'd How many that were once heinous transgressors on Earth before their Conversion yet notwithstanding were reconciled and regenerated by his Blood and Spirit and are now triumphing with him in his Kingdom Oh you troubled Souls be encouraged that help is laid upon one that is Mighty that is able to save unto the uttermost those that come unto God by him Heb. 7. 25. The belief that Christ can help will you have an influence upon you The Leper came to Christ upon a perswasion that Christ could make him clean though he had no assurance that Christ would do it Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean says the Leper Christ presently answers I will be thou clean and
not too great for God to forgive if himself is willing to forsake his wickedness The Lord has proclaimed his Name 34. 6 7. He is a God Merciful this may relieve us when sensible of our misery he is Gracious this may encourage us against our vilenesse and unworthiness he is Long-suffering this may keep us from sinking into despair though 't was long before we thought of turning to him He is abundant in Goodness and Truth though we are never so empty here is enough to fill us He keeps Mercy for thousands his Treasures are not exhausted by former ages we may go to him and be enriched he forgives iniquity transgression and sin Let none then say there is no Hope of what sorts or sizes soever their sins be But here let me Caution again that no sin be secretly cherished for if the cause of trouble remain how can Conscience be truly Comforted In good earnest set upon the Mortification of all the Members of the Body of sin but especially pluck out the right Eye and cut off the right Hand Let not thy Soul spare any Lust 't will be more fatal to thee than Saul's sparing Agag which cost him his Kingdom Herbert does very Ingenuously and truly tell us that Peace of Conscience is not to be attained unless there be a flight of sin The Church page 117. 118. Sweet Peace where dost thou dwell I humbly crave Let me once know I sought thee in a secret Cave And ask'd if Peace were there A hollow wind did seem to answer No Go seek elsewhere I did and going did a Rainbow note Surely thought I This is the Lace of Peaces Coat I will search out the matter But while I lookt the Clouds immediatly Did break and scatter Then went I to a Garden and did spy A gallant flower The Crown Imperial Sure said I Peace at the root must dwell But when I digg'd I saw a Worm devour What shew'd so well At length I met a rev'rend good old man Whom when for Peace I did demand he thus began There was a Prince of Old At Salem dwelt who liv'd with good increase Of Flock and Fold He sweetly liv'd yet sweetness did not save His Life from Foes But after Death out of his Grave There sprang twelve stalks of Wheat Which many wondring at got some of those To Plant and Set. It prosper'd strangely and did soon disperse Through all the Earth For they that taste it do rehearse That Virtue lies therein A secret Virtue bringing Peace and Mirth By flight of sin Take of this Grain which in my Garden grows And grows for you Make Bread of it and that repose And Peace which every where VVith so much earnestness you do pursue Is onely there I have laid down several grounds of Consolation for troubled Consciences it will be needful now to Answer some Objections they are wont to make against all that Comfort which is tendred to them Object 1. Some do cry out that their sins are primae Magnitudinis of the first Magnitude that guilt which they have contracted is so vast and themselves are so inexcusable in their wickedness that they cannot let it once enter into their thoughts that ever God should pardon or save such provoking wretches and rebels as They have been They call to remembrance what they have been and what they have done their Iniquities which they have committed have been of a very hainous Nature and as to their Number what was said concerning Abraham's Seed may very well be applied here they have been so many as the Stars of the Sky in multitude and as the Sand which is by the Sea-shore innumerable To speak Truth the Greatness of sin is the grand Objection against Comfort Answ 1. VVhen the greatness of sin causes perplexity behold how much greater the Mercy of the Lord is This Mercy is high as Heaven what canst thou do deeper than Hell what canst thou know The measure thereof is longer than the Earth and broader than the Sea But yet as great as 't is it does not give the least encouragement to presumption but against despair and despondency it may be a mighty Antidote Contemplate the Mercy of God in Christ eye his sufferings which were very great eye the greatness of him that suffered and then you will see sin (*) Peccatum est sicut Magnus Goliah omnibus viribus oppugnat Conscientiam sed si credas in Dominum Jesum pro te morruum senties peccatum stipulâ levius infirmius Luther Tom. 3. p. 367. b. exceeded by the sufferings of Christ and the Mercy of God Hark to the Apostle Rom. 5. 20. Moreover the Law entred that the Offence might abound but where sin abounded Grace did much more abound that as sin hath Reigned unto Death even so might Grace Reign through Righteousness unto Eternal Life by Jesus Christ our Lord. Though Souls are sensible never so much of the abounding of sin Grace does superabound let Man do as much as he can in a way of wickedness the Lord can out-do him in a way of Grace and Mercy That is a notable promise Mic. 7. 19. having said Who is a God like unto thee pardoning Iniquity delighting in Mercy it follows thou wilt cast all their sin into the depth of the Sea In the deepest part of the Sea the greatest Mountains if they could be cast in would be swallowed up as well as Mole-hills Divine Mercy is such a depth it can cover the greatest sins as well as the smallest and being once cast into this depth they shall never rise again unto the sinners Condemnation any more than things cast into the deepest part of the Ocean can ever be fetched up again 2. In Scripture you may find the greatness of sin used and pleaded as an Argument for the obtaining of Mercy and forgiveness Listen to the Psalmist Psal 25. 11. For thy Name-sake O Lord pardon my Iniquity for it is great this is a strong Argument for the greater sin is the more Glorious is the Lords Name and Grace in passing it by Just as 't is more for a mans Honour to forgive the Debt of a Thousand pound than of a few pence onely The Lord is willing to Honour his own Mercy and ready to forgive much But he expects that they to whom much is given should love much as there is very good reason Object 2. Those in trouble of Conscience do Object They fear 't is now too late to come to Christ and turn to God indeed if they had accepted of invitations in time it might have been well with them but now they are afraid the Sun is set and will never rise more and that the day of Grace is past and gone and that the Night of Darkness and Trouble upon their Souls is but the sore-runner of the blackness of darkness for ever Answ 1. Who tells thee that the day of Grace is past If it be Satan surely such a Liar is not to
be believed besides he contradicts himself for heretofore he used to tell thee 't was time enough hereafter to Repent If it be the sad surmise of thine own heart surely such an Ignorant and deceitful heart as thine is not to be credited as if it were infallible If God tells thee so then 't is either in his Word but thou canst not shew the place where he has said it or by some extraordinary Revelation but this thou canst not if sober-minded pretend unto 2. Remember some have been called at the eleventh hour of the day nay the Thief upon the Cross but one moment before Night who then can peremptorily say that the day of Grace is past as long as Life remains Let not presuming sinners make an ill use of this which has been said for they that put off Repentance because of the lasting of the day of Grace before they are aware may drop into the Grave and Hell and then they will Repent for ever that they did not Repent sooner but their Repentance will be too late and to no purpose 3. If your need of Grace be seen and Christ and Grace are valued above Gold that perishes and all the Pleasures and Honours of the World which are onely for a season The day of Grace is so far from being past that Grace is really wrought in you If the Spirit had not been and were not still really at work in you you would not have such desires to be Sanctified throughout as well as Justified from all Offences Object 3. Some do further say that they are Judicially hardened they can think of God and Christ and Sin and Death and Hell and yet their hearts are no more affected than if they were stocks or stones upon this they conclude that God has spoken concerning them as he did concerning Israel of Old Isa 6. 10. Make the heart of this People fat and make their Ears heavy and shut their Eyes lest they see with their Eyes and hear with their Ears and understand with their Heart and Convert and be healed Answ 1. Your dulness and unaffectedness may possibly proceed not so much from your Hearts as from distemper and cloudiness of your Heads and if in all things else you find a kind of stupidness and unconcernedness even about your worldly matters also you must not from distemper of Body conclude the judicial hardning of your Hearts 2. Those in Scripture which were judicially hardned never complained of their hardness but this is your complaint and burthen Pharaoh and the Pharisees were both hardned in a way of judgment but though Pharaoh was sensible of other Plagues yet not at all of this which was incomparably the worst of all the Plagues of Aegypt he cries out pray to the Lord to take away the Locusts the Frogs the Thunder and Hail but never pray to the Lord to take away the Heart of Stone from him And as for the Pharisees they thought themselves Righteous and whole and slighted a Physician and Saviour for they thought they could do well enough without him 3. You are not altogether past feeling because you feel your own hardness and 't is a mercy that you know this Plague of your own heart Oh go to the Physician who has promised to cure it and to give an heart of Flesh to you This is Gods way and method to make sinners sensible of their hardness that he may soften them of their blindness that he may give them eye-Salve of their filthiness that he may cleanse them of their guilt that he may pardon them of their emptinesse that he may fill them Object 4. They under trouble of Spirit do further object alas we are not able to come to Christ though our Eternal Salvation does lye on 't our Consciences are wounded but we cannot come for cure and ease Answ 1. Is this a small matter that God has made you sensible of your natural inability how many do mistake and think they have a power to help themselves and this hinders them from seriously applying themselves unto Him that alone is able to save You see and say you have no might 't is well a promise belongs to you Isa 40. 29. He giveth Power to the faint and to them that have no might he increaseth strength i. e. To them that see they have no might for all have really none 2. Though you cannot come to Christ for Grace and Comfort yet the Father can draw you and have not you an Heart to cry to him to do this for you What 's your Language in secret Prayer Is it not Draw me and I will run after thee Is it not Turn thou me and I shall be turned Thus spake the Spouse Cant. 1. Thus spake Ephraim of Old Jer. 31. and both were heard nay the Lord says I have surely heard Ephraim surely your cryes for drawing and turning shall not be in vain 3. You say you are not able to come to Christ but are you willing to come to him Yes pray who has made you able to be thus willing but onely that God who works to will of his own good Pleasure If you are willing to come you are able to come for your coming lies in being willing If you are willing to have the Son you have him and Life by him (*) Non pedibus sed affectu non migrando sed amando venitur ad Christum Augustin for 't is with your Wills that you receive him and so have Power to become the Children of God The Apostle tells us That with the Heart man believes unto Righteousness Rom. 10. 10. By the Heart in Scripture is commonly meant the Will so that if the Will consents to have Christ as Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption Here is indeed that Faith which is Justifying and Saving Christ having taken the Will has taken the main Fort that by Nature stands out against him and Commands the whole Soul Object 5. Some under trouble of Conscience cry out They have been enlightned and under Conviction heretofore but since their Illumination and Convictions they have fallen away and therefore now they conclude there is nothing remains but a certain fearful looking for of Judgment and of fiery Indignation which shall devour the Adversaries Answ 1. All back-sliding though grosse is not the unpardonable sin David and Peter were both enlightned both did fall and that into gross wickedness and yet both Repented both were pardoned and restored to favour and both are now in Glory 2. Even Back-sliders are called upon to return The Children of Israel had played the Harlots with many Lovers they had spoken and done evil things as they could and yet many times in one Chapter Jer. 3. they are called after to come home to God from whom they had so deeply Revolted though therefore you ought to mourn and be in bitterness for your Apostacies and unstedfastness yet you must not mourn without hope 3. Promises are made to Back-sliders if they return
would principally lye at Satans door as all the Glory of that good which is done by us is to be ascribed unto God The Devil did not thrust the forbidden fruit into Eve's Mouth whether she would or no but only did cunningly and strongly perswade her to eat of it In like manner he deals with us he layes his baits (z) Vnam esse omnium rem pulcherrimam eoque pulchriorem si vacet populo neque plausum captans se tantum ipsa delectet Quinetiam mihi quidem laudabilior a videntur omnia quae sine venditatione sine populo teste fiunt non quo fugiendus sit omnia enim bene facta in luce se collocari volunt sed tamen nullum the atrum virtuti conscientiâ majus est Cicero Tuscul Quaestion l. 3. pag. mihi 146. before us and endeavours our ruine by offering what does please us But a good Conscience is deaf unto the Devil and scorns his offers for his offers are to the losse of the Righteous man What are the riches of the World which Satan talks so much of compared with the unsearchable Riches of Christ what are the pleasures of sin compared with peace of Conscience what are all Earthly advantages and preferments compared with Communion with God and the Light of his Countenance A good Conscience is firmly perswaded that 't is good for us to draw near to God Psal 73. ult to be near to Him is for our Honour Interest Safety Delight and satisfaction and hereupon the Believer rejects Satan with an Holy contempt and indignation for he see● 't is folly as well as wickedness to leave his Fathers House where there is bread enough and to spare and to go feed upon busks in the farr Country 7. He that hath a good Conscience can look upon death with desire which is so exceeding terrible unto others The Believer may indeed be willing to live that he may serve his generation according to the will of God and that he may do that for Christ on Earth which he cannot do when he comes to heaven but his Conscience being pure and peaceable having an assurance what a kindness death will do him He does with the Apostle desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is far better Phil. 1. 23. There is profit pleasure and honor in a Believers departing no wonder if he desires to depart There is profit in it to dye is gain says the Apostle he gains more grace in the instant of his dissolution than he got all his dayes before for upon death his Spirit is made perfect in Holiness There is pleasure in death for sometimes 't is sweetned with ravishing transports of Spirit and it is the Porter to open the gate into full and Everlasting joyes having put an end both to sin and sorrow Finally there is honour in Death for the Believer having fought a good Fight and finished his course and kept the Faith he goes to receive the Crown of Righteousness 8. He that hath a good Conscience can look into Eternity and be filled with joy unspeakable and glorious That is one of the Richest jewels in the Crown of Life that it fades not away The good Conscience looks up to Heaven fixes its eye upon God sees that bosom in which the sanctified Soul must lye and (a) Da Pater omnipotens menti conscendere sedem Da fontem lustrare boni da luce repertâ In te conspicuos animi defigere visus Disjice terrenas nebulas ponder a molis Atque tuo splendore mica Tu namque serenum Tu requies tranquilla piis Te cernere finis Principium vector dux semita terminus idem Boetius de Consolat Phil. l. 3. met 9. pag. mihi 88. rest forever After millions of years are spent praise will be continued delight will be as green and fresh as ever there will be no loathing of that heavenly Manna after so many thousands of ages as there have been minutes since the Creation Joy in heaven will be as far from an end as it was when first of all it did begin Mortality and change are the disgrace of all temporal delights and pleasures but a good Conscience rejoyces and well it may do so in a better and enduring substance it sees how sure how near Eternal Life is and upon this follow raptures of pleasure Cyprian (b) Exultabunt Sancti in gloriâ videbunt Deum gaudebunt Ibi non gustabunt quam suavis sit Dominus sed implebuntur satiabuntur dulcdinemirificâ nihil eis deerit nihil oberit omne desiderium eorum Christus praeens implebit Non senescent non abescent non putrescent ampliùs perpetua sanitas foelix Eternitas be atitudnis illius sufficientiam confirmabunt Non erit concupiscentia in membris non ultra exurget rebellio carnis sed totus hominis status pudicus pacificus sana ex integro Natura sine omni maculâ rugâ deinceps permanebit Erit denique Deus omnia in omnibus illius praesentia omne animae corporis implebit appetitus Cyprian Serm. de Christ. Ascens does excellently set forth this full and Everlasting happiness of the Saints in Heaven They says he shall see God and Rejoyce and be Delighted they shall Enjoy that Glory and be swallowed up in that Joy for Ever-more There they shall not only taste how sweet the Lord is but shall be filled and satisfied with his wonderful sweetness nothing shall be wanting nothing shall be hurtful Christ being present will satiate all their longing They shall not grow old or weak or dye any more There will not be Concupisence in the Members nor Rebellion in the Flesh against the Spirit but Mans Nature will be fully restored and Sanctified and Healed and so will remain without any spot or wrinkle Everlastingly Finally God will be all in all and his immediate and glorious presence will so abundantly fill the Saints that they shall not be able to desire more You see now in several respects how desirable 't is to have good Conscience wheresoever such a Conscience looks upwards downwards inwards forwards still there is peace and Consolation Oh look into your Consciences and see what they are whether good or bad and oh that all bad Consciences may be utterly restless till they are made good ones VSE IV. Of Advice unto them whose Consciences are good which have been cleansed and quieted by the blood of Christ and by the VVord and Spirit of Grace My Advice is in these particulars 1. Be very thankfull for this unspeakable Gift of a good Conscience The largest Empire in the VVorld a Crown of pure Gold upon the Head is nothing near so great a Blessing as a pure and peaceable Conscience I may use the Angels Salutation to the Virgin Mary unto every Saint that has such a Conscience Hail thou that art highly Favoured The Lord is with thee Blessed art thou among the Sons of Men.
every where present as that we are continually under his Power the Psalmist tell us that his Kingdom ruleth over all Psal 103. 19. His Eyes run too and fro to shew himself strong on the behalf of them whose hearts are perfect with him And he is 〈◊〉 mighty to beat down and to destroy his Enemies he can make destruction to come upon them like a Whirlewind and though they may promise themselves safety yet they can in no wise secure themselves against his Almighty hand 3. God is every way present by his very Essence oh the incomprehensible immensity of his being He is not far says the Apostle from every one of us Act. 17. that is he is really neer us for in him we live move and have our being (e) Nos gentes nationesque distinguimus Deo una domus est mundus hic totus Reges tantum regni sui per officia ministrorum universa novére Deo indiciis opus non est non solum in oculis ejus sed in sinu vivimus Cuncta deo plena sunt Minutius Foelix p. mihi 80. You must not imagine that the Essence of God is divided so as to be part in Earth and part in Heaven but after an unconceivable manner 't is whole in it self whole in all things whole in every thing 't is whole within all whole without all 't is not mingled or defiled with any thing 't is no where included no where excluded nothing does or can contain it and yet by it all things are contained surely then this God does compasse our paths wherever we go and is acquainted with all our wayes Psal 139. 3. In the second place I am to shew you how we are to look upon God when we set our selves before him 1. We are to look upon God as our Maker 'T was a complaint made by Elihu Job 35. 10. None saith where is God my Maker He is the former of our bodies and the Father of our Spirits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are his off spring and we should be often enquiring to what end he made us which was that we might yeild fear and service and love and praise to him that gave us our beings and if we thwart the end of our Creation and serve our lusts and Satan who are our Makers Enemies he may repent of making us as he did concerning the old World and then destruction will follow 2. We are to look upon God as our Owner We are not our own who can lay claim to us Satan by right cannot all that dominion that he has over us is by usurpation and our being so foolish and wicked as to subject our selves voluntarily to him But the Lord is by right our owner to him we are debtors and owe all that we have and are We are not just unlesse we yeild our selves to him 3. We are to look upon God as our Ruler 'T was a very prophane brag of those Psal 12. 4. Who is Lord over us God ought to be acknowledged as our Lord and if he be not obeyed as such he will shew himself a Lord by breaking us if we will not bow before him We should often be asking our selves whose servants we are if sins if Satans we should propound another question What wages these are likely to give us and should we toyl and work hard to make our selves miserable and bring our selves to Death and Hell Onely the Lord has a right to rule us We should still be enquiring what his will is and since he is the supream Soveraign of Heaven and Earth and is so Holy Righteous Gracious his will should never be thwarted by ours but we should endeavour to do it on Earth as 't is done by those in Heaven There is abundant sweetness at present in being not wedded to our own wills in obeying the Lords will besides the future infinite recompence of reward He that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 John 2. 17. 4. When we set our selves before God we are to look upon him as our preserver 'T is of his Mercy that the Children of men are not consumed their provocations are many but he being full of Compassion spares them Our sins have been crying out against us all our dayes and Satan would fain have destroyed and devoured us long ago but God is Rich in Goodness and forbearance Rom. 2. 4. The Ox knows his owner and the Asse his Master crib and shall we never consider to whom we are beholding he is the God of our lives and the Father of every Mercy which we receive 't is both our duty and interest to walk worthy of and suitable unto his Care and Kindness especially if we are Believers for then he is not only the Father of our Mercies but our Father likewise (f) Falsa theologia est Deum iratum esse agnoscentibus peccata sua talis enim Deus nec in coelo nec usquam est sed est idolum perversi cordis quia verus Deus dicit Nolo mortem peccatoris Luther Tom. 4. 383. a. and being always under our Fathers eye we should follow him as dear Children Eph. 5. 1. 5. We are to look upon God as Him who alone can make us happy Sin cannot do it for it has a quite contrary effect how many millions has it undone and made miserable for ever and daily 't is undoing more The World cannot make us happy for if the world had had power to do this Solomon being exalted to the top of worldly greatness and having so much of wealth and Earthly pleasures that he could not desire more would not in the midst of all have cryed out all is vanity and vexation of Spirit and there is no profit under the Sun Eccle. 2. 11. The Lord can satisfie the Soul of man though other things cannot He can supply all our needs according to his Riches in Glory by Christ Jesus Phil. 4. 19. he can do more then our Souls can desire or conceive nay exceeding abundantly above all that we either ask or think Let us be perswaded that if ever we are happy God must make us so and that he makes us happy no other way but by giving himself and Communicating his Grace to us in his Son and this will cause us to cleave unto him 6. We are to look upon God as one that is very jealous of us lest we go a whoring after other Lovers we are really idolaters if we love other things more than God and Idolatry is Spiritual Adultery and if Jealousie be the rage of man how much more is the Lords jealousie to be feared we should call that Wife impudent with a witness that should commit lewdness before her Husbands face Spiritual whoredom is never committed but God looks on Oh how daring are the Children of men Think of Gods jealousie when your hearts are about to depart from him and to be taken so exceedingly with the things of the world Hark to the
things willing to live honestly Such a Conscience is well instructed in that lesson Tit. 2. 11. 12. For the Grace of God which bringeth Salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly and Righteously and Godly in this present world In the handling of this Doctrine I shall first shew how a good Conscience is concerned in the Life and Conversation Secondly Instance in several kinds of Actions that a good Conscience has an influence upon Lastly Conclude with the Application In the first place I am to shew how a good Conscience is concerned in the Life and Conversation This will appear in these following particulars 1. There is no action but Conscience is to examine Every action is a step one way or other and Conscience is to see which way every step has a tendency whether upward towards the Hill of the Lord or downward towards the lake of Fire There is no action but Conscience will be wounded with it if it be a work of darkness and Conscience may reap satisfaction from it if it be a work of Righteousness 2. Conscience if good will not admit of loose principles It will not argue licentiously from the Righteousness of Christ which alone is imputed to us for our justification that therefore there is no necessity of inherent Holyness It will not argue from the superabundant Grace of God that therefore we may safely continue in sin Rom. 6. 15 16. What then shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace God forbid Know ye not that to whom ye yeild your selves Servants to obey his Servants ye are to whom you obey whether of sin unto Death or obedience unto Righteousness A good Conscience will not argue from the falls of Saints recorded in Scripture that we may venture to fall as they did but contrarily concludes since such eminent Saints have fallen it does concern us to look to our standing and not to be high minded but fear Finally it does not argue because Gods Covenant is Everlasting and his love unchangeable that therefore we may live as we list but on the contrary it tells us that because the Lords love is so great and unchangeable he is to be loved the more by us and followed more fully and more willingly obeyed 3. Conscience if good will not abuse Christian liberty The nature of this is not to be mistaken 't is not a liberty to make provision for the Flesh nor to walk after the course of the World nor to mispend your precious time nor to omit or do the work of the Lord negligently They that take such a liberty take that which God never gave them and by this liberty they become slaves and vassals to the Devil who employes and leads them captive at his pleasure But Christian liberty lies in being free from the bondage of Corruption from the Curse of the Law and the Power of Darkness and in having freedom of accesse to God through Christ and in being enlarged by the Spirit to run the wayes of his Commandements Christian liberty is an holy thing A good Conscience therefore is the more watchful lest we go beyond the bounds of Christian liberty and venture upon what is unlawful or use lawful things unlawfully for so 't is possible nay usual licitis perire even in these things to perish To Eat to Drink to Buy to Sell to Plant to Build to Marry and to be given in Marriage were none of them in themselves unlawful yet when the old world and Sodom were thus employed and these things were only minded and spiritual things neglected a Flood came and swept away the one and Fire and Brimstone did destroy the other Luk. 17. 26 27 28 29. 4. A good Conscience looks well to the Principles of our Obedience That it springs from a renewed nature for unless we are made good Trees how can we bring forth good Fruit that it proceeds from Faith for by Faith we must believe what we do to be according to the will of God and by Faith we must desire strength from our Lord Jesus to do that will which is discovered to us Our Obedience also must flow from love 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. The love of Christ constraineth us to love not unto our selves but unto him that died for us Love is the first and great Command and that which makes us to yeild obedience to all the rest And we must be acted by Fear as well as Love a childlike reverence and awe of God how circumspectly will it make us walk Job feared God and eschewed evil Finally our Obedience must spring from gratitude and a sense of our obligation to serve the Lord who hath so loaded us with innumerable benefits All the mercies and deliverances which God did work for and extend to Israel were to induce them to observe his Statutes and to keep his Laws Psal 105. 45. 5. A good Conscience has a regard unto the matter of our actions That this be agreeable unto the Word of God This word is the rule we are to walk by that peace and mercy may be upon us There is a word which God will do his word of Promise he will accomplish his word of Threatning he will execute and his word of Prophecy he will fulfill There is a word which he will have us to do and that 's the word of Precept A good Conscience respects the precepts of the Law the sum of which is to Love the Lord with all our Heart and Soul and Mind and Strength and our Neighbour as our Selves Mat. 22. 37. 39. This Law is not made void but establish'd by Faith even in the Covenant of Grace the Lord promises to write this Law in our Hearts and sayes he will put his spirit within us to cause us to walk in his Statutes and to observe his Judgements and do them The Gospel has precepts also as well as the Law which a good Conscience knowes are to be obeyed And if we will indeed obey the Gospel we must believe on Jesus we must repent from dead works we must live by Faith we must give all diligence to make our Calling and Election sure we must love our Brethren as love is a new command and enjoyned upon a new motive namely the great love of Christ We must engage in all the Ordinances and Institutions of our Lord Jesus finally we must hold fast our profession without wavering whatever troubles upon that score do overtake us 6. A good Conscience Eyes the Manner of our Obedience That it be out of choice David did chuse the way of the Lords Precepts he considered these precepts esteemed them concerning all things to be right and preferred them before all the False and destructive wayes of sin Obedience must not only be out of choice but it must be universal in regard of the object all the commands be respected and in regard of the Subject the whole man must
then Learn if the Conversation be bad Conscience must needs be bad also If wickedness be Ordinarily practised in the Life 't is a sign either that Conscience is stupid and takes little notice of what is done or if it does observe yet 't is without power to restrain and hinder it 2. Learn what an Happiness 't is to a Nation to have much of a Good Conscience among them This will hinder Warres and Fightings and Confusion this will hinder Injustice and Oppression and Uncleanness This would cause Unity and Peace turning our Swords into Plough-shares and our Spears into Pruning-hooks and prevent our hurting and destroying one another any more Isa 11. 6 7 8 9. Those are Enemies to the common Good who endeavour to debauch the Consciences of men for they go the ready way to fill the places where they live with all Impiety and Unrighteousness VSE II. Of Advice which shall be in the words of the Psalmist Shew that you have indeed a good Conscience by departing from Evil and by doing Good Psal 37. 27. 1. Depart from Evil. There cannot possibly be a greater Evil than Sin this is the procuring Cause of all other evils there had never been any such thing as Sickness Pain Death Hell if Sin had never been Sin dos alienate from God Col. 1. 21. 'T is a most base Employment we cannot be engaged in fouler and filthier work than in working of Iniquity and is there any good that comes of it No no the works of Darkness are Unfruitfull Rom. 6. 21. What fruit had ye then in those works whereof ye are now ashamed All will repent of these evil works sooner or later the sooner the better for to repent in Hell will be too late Mind therefore your Consciences bidding you cease to do Evil else Evil will be extremely aggravated But if Evil be forsaken the great Bar to Mercy is removed and God is ready to pardon and be at peace with you Isa 55. 7. 2. Learn to do well Conscience will be pleased if God be pleased God is a Gracious Lord compare Him and Sin together Him and Satan together His Commands are not grievous he is ready to help you to do whatever he requires and to work all your works in you and for you Isa 26. 12. Your work if truely good will be wages because of that Peace and Joy at present to be found in the way of Righteousness for by good works it appears that Faith is of the right kind is the Faith of Gods Elect. Finally you must be judged according to your VVorks Rev. 22. 12. Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me to give to every man according as his work shall be As you would stand at that day up and be doing the work of the Lord now I have done with that fourth Doctrine A good Conscience has a great and lasting Influence upon the Life and all the Actions Doct. 5. The fifth Doctrine is this A good Conscience steels a mans Heart with courage and makes him fearless before his Enemies Paul earnestly beheld the Councel He was not afraid to face them because his Conscience was clear Nay we read that Foelix the Judge trembled while Paul the Prisoner was confident the reason was because the Judge had a bad Conscience which flew in his face when he heard of Righteousness Temperance and Judgement to come Act. 24. 25. but the Prisoner being acquitted by a good Conscience did not tremble but rejoyce at the thoughts of Judgement to come VVhen Bradford was brought before the Chancellour he thought to brow-beat him but could not Bradford look'd him steadfastly in the Face and out-look'd him and then look'd up to Heaven I do not wonder that he did not fear the the Look of a Popish Bishop who was not afraid as it appeared afterwards of a fiery Faggot Now the grounds why those that have a good Conscience are Fearless be these 1. The Strength of God who is engaged for them is everlasting Isa 26. 4. In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength 2. As his Strength so his Covenant and Kindness are also everlasting Isa 54. 10. For the Mountains shall depart and the Hills be removed but my Kindness shall not depart from thee nor the Covenant of my Peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy upon thee Nothing shall be able to separate Believers from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Rom. 8. ult 3. Let the weakness of Enemies be considered Why should he that has a good Conscience be afraid of a Man that shall die and of the Son of man that shall be made as Grass 4. As Enemies are weak so they are limited they are absolutely under Gods Power they are as a staffe in his hand and cannot move or strike but as he pleases Let not the Axe boast it self against him that heweth therewith Isa 10. 15. Why should a good Conscience be afraid of the Axe since the Lord in whose hand the Axe is is so sure and great a Friend 5. There is an excellent Promise That what Men do mean for Evil shall turn to Good Nay all all things shall work together for good to them that love God Rom. 8. 28. God does admirably over-rule the Sins of men and does make these subservient to his own Glory and the Good of his people (i) Bonum est ut mala sint aliter non sineret Deus ut mala essent non sinit autem nolens utique sed volens Augustin The Selling of Joseph was the Preservation of Israel the Persecuting of the Christians the Enlargement of the Church the Killing and Death of Christ the Redemption and Salvation of Mankind VSE I. Of Encouragement to the Saints the Lord takes care to secure them from Fear as well as Harm His Spirit dwells in them to comfort them and Conscience is commanded to speak Peace unto the Sons of Peace in the Lords Name (k) Injustè torqueris quid nunc diceres si juste nullum nempe tormentum conscientia majus est illâ incolumi externâ haec despicito intra te est consolatur tuus Quosdam career ad insignem gloriam alios ad eximiam fortunam multos ad coelum misit ad sepulchrum omnes nullum cepit quem non redderet Petrarch VSE II. Of Caution Take heed of wounding Conscience for that will make you exceeding timerous If you comply a little in a sinfull way and use any unlawfull Means for securing of your selves this will spoyl your Peace and your Confidence and you must expect greater straits to make you see the folly of the Course you have taken And 't will be very sad to have a Storm without and a Tempest within at the same time VSE III. Of Terrour to Believers Adversaries There is very good reason why Fear should seize upon them they are engaged in bad work they have a bad Conscience and their End if they go on in this way
they are in will be a bad End God made known his Power and got himself a Name in the destruction of Pharaoh who was a bitter Enemy unto Israel Doct. 6. Those that are truely Conscientious love their Enemies and wish them no worse than if they were their Brethren This is the sixth and last Doctrine Paul said Men and Brethren The Reasons of this Doctrine are these 1. The Command is express and plain to love Enemies Mat. 5. 44. But I say to you love your Enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute you 2. Those who now have a good Conscience were once Enemies and yet they were loved though now the Children of God yet there was a time that they were the Children of wrath even as others Eph. 2. 3. Though now they have obtained Mercy yet there was a time wherein they had not obtained mercy They should compassionate Enemies since Divine Compassion was shewed to them even when they were Enemies 3. Enemies may be converted and become Friends to God and to his People Stephen had a Love to his Enemies when Stoning him to death and prayes for them his Prayer was heard and Saul that was consenting to his death was afterwards converted and became an Apostle and laboured more abundantly than all the Apostles to spread the Gospel of Christ Jesus 4. When Enemies are loved there is great Peace and Sweetness in such a temper this is a great Evidence of Sincerity and the Heart is emptied of that Malice Envy Revenge which are greatly torturing as well as very sinfull 5. To Love Enemies makes us very like unto our Heavenly Father for he is kind unto the unthankfull and to the evil he makes his Sun to shine upon the evil and upon the good and sends Rain upon the just and upon the unjust Mat. 5. 45. The Use that I shall make of this Doctrine shall be in these three particulars 1. If the Conscientious love their Enemies surely they will much more love their Brethren How much is Love called for in the Gospel what Motives are used to perswade to it 'T is the Mark upon the Sheep of Christ that they love one another and He that dwells in love dwells in God and God in him 1 Joh. 4. 16. 2. Because so little love we may conclude there is but little Conscience (†) Pigri mortui miseri eritis si nihil a metis Amate sed quid amatis indete Amor Dei amor proximi Charitas dicitur amor mundi amor hujus saeculi Cupiditas dicitur cupiditas refraenetur charitas exicetur charitas bene oper antis dat ei spem bonae conscientiae Augustin Tom. 8. Enarrat in Psal 31. pag. mihi 188. 186. Love is grown cold and therefore surely Iniquity does abound and Conscience is grown dead 3. To revive Conscience is the way to Vnity and Peace 'T is sad to see the Members of Christ at variance among themselves While one cryes out I am of Paul and another I of Apollo and another I of Cephas 't is a sign they are all carnal and walk as men 1 Cor. 3. 3 4. 't is a sign there is little of Conscience Conscience if good is an Enemy to Strife and Division 't is against perverse Disputing and that Pride and Passion and Selfishness with which those Disputes are managed A good Conscience charges them in whom it is as they will approve themselves Subjects of the Prince of Peace and Children of the God of Peace and make it evident that they understand the Gospel of Peace that they take care to keep the Vnity of the Spirit in the Bond of Peace Eph. 4. 3. The Conclusion THus have I finished all the Doctrines which I raised from the words of my Text. I hope I have not been all this while beating the Air or Plowing upon a Rock and losing my Labour My Hearts desire and Prayer to God for this whole Congregation is that they may be Awakened Converted Built up and Saved I have spoken many words to you Now I shall address my self unto Conscience within you and desire it to speak all my words over again Satan be dumb and tempt no more Or if he will not be dumb be you deaf to his Temptations Be silent O thou Flesh and perswade no more unto that which is unto the Souls Ruine But let Conscience be heard in what it speaks in the Name and from the Word of God O Conscience rouze up thy self understand thy Power know thy Office lift up thy Voyce and do thy Duty Tell this Congregation thou hast something to say to every Mothers Child of them and command them to hear thee or else threaten to Reproach them in Hell for ever for their refusing to hearken 1. Then speak unto the Ignorant Cause a dreadful sound in their Ears (l) Hic consentiamus mala facinora conscientia flagellari multos fortuna liberat poenâ metu neminem quia infixa nobis ejus rei aversatio est quam natura damnavit ideo nanquam fides latendi fit etiam latentibus quia coarguit illos conscientia ipsos sibi ostendit Seneca Epist 97. Tell them that their danger is greater because they do not apprehend their danger and that if they are Ignorant of God and Christ they have none of that Knowledge which is Life Eternal John 17. 3. Say How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity and Fools hate Wisdom Turn you at my Reproof and use the means to obtain Understanding and especially ask it of God that he may pour out his Spirit unto you and make known his Words unto you Prov. 1. 22 23. Tell the Ignorant that the Devil is the Ruler of the darkness of this World and therefore those that are in darkness are under the Devils power bid them look unto Christ Jesus for Light and for Redemption that they may be rescued out of Satans hand and made free indeed 2. Speak O Conscience to the Profane tell them that 't is not more certain that God is Holy than that he is their Enemy they Declare themselves open Rebels against the great and glorious Majesty of Heaven and Earth And he has threatned to break such with a Rod of Iron and to dash them in pieces like a Potters Vessel Psal 2. 9. Tell the Notorious Drunkards and Swearers and Whore-mongers and Sabbath-breakers that their sins at last will find them out that wickedness will be found and felt to burn as the fire and that God must needs be infinitely too hard for all that harden themselves against him Oh call unto these Frantick self-destroying sinners to stop presently lest the very next step be into the bottomless Pit of woe out of which there can be no Recovery Roar in the Ears of those Ranting Roaring Fellows and let them not Eat or Drink or Sleep much less sin in quiet for thee tell them
that there is but an hairs breadth between them and Death between them and Hell and inform them that 't is possible even for the most Profane to be saved if they come and submit to the Lord Jesus and break off their sins by Righteousness 3. O Conscience speak unto the Civilized sinners that trust in their own Righteousness Tell them that the Prophet counted his Righteousnesses as filthy Rags Isa 64. 6. And ask them how they dare to trust in theirs Convince them that 't is not enough to escape the more scandalous wickednesses for the Pharisee was not an Extortioner nor Vnjust nor an Adulterer he Fasted and Prayed and gave Tithes of all that he Possessed and yet all this could not Justifie him Tell them that they are not so whole but they need Christ the Physitian and must needs die without him as well as others Tell them that their very Hearts must be renewed and taken off from sin and the Creature and turned unto God else they must of Necessity perish 4. Speak O Conscience unto Hypocritical Professors tell them that that which is highly esteemed among Men is abomination many times in the sight of God Say to them in the words of the Apostle and be sure to speak home Gal. 6. 7 8. Be not deceived God is not mocked for whatsoever a Man Soweth that shall he also Reap He that soweth unto the Flesh shall of the Flesh Reap Corruption Tell them that their Secret sins their secret Intemperance and Uncleanness and Dishonest dealing is set in the Light of Gods Countenance and though they may shut their own Eyes and not see God yet they cannot shut Gods Eyes nor hinder him from seeing them Tell them that Hypocrisie is most hateful and that as Hell is prepared for the Devil and his Angels so in a special manner for the Hypocrite and the Unbeliever 5. O Conscience speak unto the Rich in this world and tell them how hard 't is for them to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven and as long as they love the World and desire it more than Communion with God 't is utterly impossible Bid them to think of the Rich Man in the Gospel that went from a great Estate and from a full Table and a brave House and sumptuous Fare unto a place of Torment Put them in mind that the Love of Money is the root of all evil and that wealth has proved unto Millions onely like a weight to sink them into Destruction and perdition Bid them mind a Treasure in Heaven which is infinitely better than Gold and Silver which are Corruptible 6. Speak O Conscience to the Poor and tell them 't will be sad for them to be miserable in both Worlds 't will be sad to receive evil things here and ten thousand times worse hereafter Bid them take heed of Lying and Stealing and trusting in any sinful course for a Livelihood but perswade them to seek first the Kingdom of God and his Righteousness that all other things which are needful may be added to them Mat. 6. 33. Charge them to be Poor in Spirit to be contented with their Condition without murmuring against God or envying at those who have more than themselves and above all things to endeovour that they may be rich towards God Rich in Faith and then they will be Heirs of the Kingdom which the Lord has promised to them that Love him James 2. 5. 7. O Conscience speak unto Traders of all sorts tell them that false Weights and Measures and Balances are an abomination in the sight of God When they are about to Cheat give them a check and assure them that an Estate gotten by fraud is attended with a Curse Be with them in their Shops and at the Exchange observe how they Buy and Sell and examine all their gains bid them to mete the same measure unto others that they would have mete unto themselves and to do as they would be done unto Mat. 7. 12. Tell them that 't is the height of Madness to venture the losing of their Souls for a pound or for a shilling or for Six-pence unjustly gained since Christ who knew the value of Souls says that a Soul is more worth than the World and all the Wealth of it put together 8. Speak O Conscience unto Back-sliders tell them that it had been better for them never to have known the way of Truth and Righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the Holy Commandment delivered to them 2 Pet. 2. 21. Call them Dogs for returning to their Vomit and Swine for wallowing again in their former Mire Tell them that where there was but one unclean Spirit before they are likely to be possessed with seven now and the latter end will be worse with them than the beginning 9. O Conscience speak unto them that are truly humbled for sin and are willing to have Christ upon any terms and tell them that God is rich in Mercy ready to forgive freely the Debt of many thousand Talents These are the Sons of Peace and therefore let thy Peace and thy Lords Peace come and abide upon them (m) Futurae beatudinis non est certius testimonium quam bona conscientia mundus enim volubilitate circumvoletur ploret ridea pereat transeat nunquam conscientia mercessit Bernard lib. de Conscen c. 4. Those that mourn for their Iniquities and hate every false way and are desirous to be washed and Sanctified by the Spirit of Christ as well as Justified and reconciled by his Blood oh be sure to comfort them tell them that the Lord will not break the bruised Reed nor quench the smoaking Flax untill he send forth Judgment unto Victory Mat. 12. 20. Bid them not to be cast down not to be disquieted but to hope in the Lord and praise him who is so nigh to them that are of broken Heart and saveth such as be of a contrite Spirit 10. Lastly O Conscience speak one word to the Preacher himself and speak effectually Thou that Teachest others be sure to Teach and Learn thy self Practice not the sins thou cryest out against neglect not the Duties thou urgest others to perform Be not like those who dig in Mines and enrich others but are poor themselves Or like that Statue in Greece which shewed the way to Thebes and Athens but it self stirred not Oh take heed lest after thou hast Preached Christ and Conscience unto others thou thy self be found a cast-away FINIS A Poem out of Mr. George Herbert Called Longing pag. 142 143 144 145. WIth sick and Famisht Eyes With doubling Knees and weary Bones To thee my cries To thee my groans To thee my sighs my Tears ascend No end My Throat my Soul is hoarse My heart is wither'd like a ground Which thou dost curse My thoughts turn round And make me giddy Lord I fall Yet call From thee all pity flows Mothers are kind because thou art And dost dispose To them apart Their Infants them and they suck thee More free Bowels of pity hear Lord of my Soul love of my mind Bow down thine ear Let not the wind Scatter my words and in the same Thy Name Look on my sorrows round Mark well my Furnace O what flames What heats abound What griefs what shames Consider Lord Lord bow thine ear And hear Lord Jesu thou didst bow Thy dying head upon the Tree O be not now More dead to me Lord hear Shall he that made the ear Not hear Behold thy dust doth stir It moves it creeps it aims at thee Wilt thou deferr To succour me Thy pile of dust wherein each crumb Says Come To thee help appertains Hast thou left all things to their course And laid the reins Upon the horse Is all lockt hath a sinners plea No key Indeed the World 's thy book Where all things have their leaf assign'd Yet a meek look Hath interlin'd Thy board is full yet humble guests Find nests Thou tarriest while I die And fall to nothing thou dost reign And rule on high While I remain In bitter grief yet I am I stil'd Thy child Lord didst thou leave thy throne Not to relieve how can it be That thou art grown Thus hard to me Were sin alive good cause there were To bear But now both sin is dead And all thy promises live and bide That wants his head These speak and chide And in thy bosome pour my tears As theirs Lord JESU heal my heart Which hath been broken now so long That ev'ry part Hath got a tongue Thy beggers grow rid them away To day My love my sweetness hear By these thy feet at which my heart Lies all the year Pluck out thy dart And heal my troubled brest which cries Which dyes