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A93060 A good conscience the strongest hold. A treatise of conscience, handling the nature acts offices use of conscience. The description qualifications properties severall sorts of good conscience. The excellency necessity utility happiness of such a conscience. The markes to know motives to get meanes to keep it. By John Sheffeild, Minister of Swythins London. Sheffeild, John, d. 1680. 1650 (1650) Wing S3062; Thomason E1235_1; ESTC R208883 228,363 432

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as they did Moses Acts 7. for an intruder or busie usurper or an imperious Commander 3. Concerning faith made shipwrack see what followed upon it They did not perfect and mend their faith as they might be ready to pretend or affirm but weaken it not weaken but shake it not shake but sunk it and lost it 4. Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander Consider who these were even great Professors a great while and stout Champions somewhile that had adventured far and ingaged much for the truth and the Preachers of it Alexander especially who had shewed so much zeal to truth and love to Paul Acts 19. that to secure Paul's person he had exposed his own to the danger of an unruly tumult he could have laid down his own life to have saved Paul's and would have parted with his right eye to do Paul service Yet see what is become of these now where will he stay that hath lost his Conscience 5. For they having put away their former good Conscience become now branded Apostates and open enemies of the same Preachers they had before so loved and honoured nay they themselves become Preachers but blasphemous Preachers 6. Lastly after all this the Church that formerly had joined with them now spues them out gives warning to the godly to avoid them and to their grief denie them any more Church-fellowship and gives them over to Satan that no more mischief may be done by their impure Doctrines The Church in her direfull Censures saith Write these men childlesse let no more of their seed rise up after them to bear more gall and wormwood CHAP. XVIII The Application of the Doctrine and first by way of Information THis point admits a sevenfold Application The Application as containing matter 1. For Information 2. Lamentation 3. Reproof 4 Terror 5. Consolation 6 Examination 7. Exhortation with some Directions The Information hath two parts 1. It gives 1. By way of information notice of certain errors and mistakes to remove them 2. Of certain Truths and Duties to assert them 1. It meets full in the face with that too And that first in removing mistakes common and plausible opinion but most dangerous error That to preach Conscience and press Duties in this nature is but legall teaching not preaching Jesus Christ and the Gospell But sure we have more cause to complain of the world for too little of legall living and Christian doing then the world to complain of too much legall preaching When men call us legall Teachers we may with too much truth and as much grief call them illegall ill-Evangelicall and ill-Christian livers Hymeneus and Alexander are alive again and by many Professors counted better Preachers then Paul and Timothy These counted Good-Conscience-Doctrine to be legall strictness and old Leaven of the Pharisees faith was enough faith was all But when Conscience ceased faith deceased they put away Conscience faith suffered shipwrack So that we may more rightly call this an old-new-Testament-error to crie down strictness then you our preaching it an old-Testament Truth and Doctrine This opinion broke out almost as soon as the preaching of the Gospel Paul had preached That where sin had abounded and reigned grace did much more abound and reign Rom. 5. 20. Others inferred hence as good Doctrine and the right knowledg of the Gospel and walking by a spirit of libertie Then may we continue in sin that grace may abound Rom. 6. 1. Paul had said sin shall not have dominion over regenerate believers For we are not under the law but grace Hence others concluded We may sin because we are no longer under the Law but under grace Rom. 6. 14 15. Paul refutes the impietie of both Assertions with the same answer detesting both God forbid Rom. 6. 2. 15. These Tares we see sprung up as soon as the good Seed began to appear We wonder the less if among us there be some that say Believe once and away with Conscience and Dutie and Works and have no more Conscience of sin The truth is once believe and thou hast no more Conscience of sin as to the guilt and punishment of it But once believe and ever make conscience of sin to avoid resist and mortifie it that it reign not in your mortall bodie The other were to overthrow the true grace of God by the name of the grace of God and to set up an imaginary faith and Gospel to beat down reall faith and Gospel while they cry down Sanctification and Conscience of dutie not as to the resting in them but as to the very having and seeking them But let the minde that hath wisdom judge can one grace in God be contrary to another his justifying grace to his sanctifying or sanctifying to justifying 2. Is one Attribute of God opposite to another his grace love and mercie to his holiness justice and puritie 3. Must Christ needs be divided and by redemption and justification drive out wisdom and sanctification two of his benefits destroying other two when he is all or none 1 Cor. 1. 30. 4. Or must two ends of Christs death be opposite to two other ends set down all together Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquitie and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works Must Christ his dying for us and redeeming of us make his people less pure or less zealous of good works 5. Can any imagine that one grace of the same Spirit should cross another the Spirits consolation evacuate the Spirits sanctification and by his obsignation mortifie mortification 6. Can one grace in the Christian be imagined to weaken and destroy another Is faith the enemy of holiness Doth Conscience extinguish confidence 7. Is the Law now against the Promise or Gal. 3. 21. the Promise against the Law did grace then fulfill the Law and est ablish it and doth it now Rom. 3. 31. make it void All these would have been accounted strange Divinitie in the Apostles ears This bewitching errour doth not onely set earth into disorders neighbour against neighbour professor against professor some people against their Ministers and some Ministers though they are not many who are so grosse against other Ministers but it sets earth in rebellion against heaven yea would attempt to put heaven into a combustion and make heaven at variance within it self while it would set Gods Decrees against Gods Decrees Promises against Promises Grace against Grace Saints against Sanctitie And again Decrees against Promises Promises against Commands Commands against Duties and all against Holiness This hellish Doctrine came from the Gnosticks of old and their followers They thought it their perfection to set Conscience at libertie and to discharge it from all puritie Epiphanius and Irenaeus say that the Gnosticks did purposely resolve to live a loose and base life that they might reproach the stricter Christians and wear out that legall Doctrine and as some
is certaine whatsoever Trade the other was of how ominously fatall is it to the undertakers themselves when private Mechanickes do presumptuously invade the Ministery and become publique Preachers 3. There is no dividing between Faith and a good Conscience leave Orthodox Faith and farewell good Conscience or let go good Conscience and you have seene the last of Faith it sinkes it shipwracks 4. How true is that of 2 Tim. 3. 13. That evil men and Seducers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waxe worse and worse deceiving and being deceived seldome staying when they begin to shrinke from their former sincerity and strictnesse till they arrive at the highest of impiety going from sinne to sinne and from Error to Error till by the just judgement of God they are given over to become open Blasphemers and outragious Persecutors 5. Every vicious and infectious Teacher and every bold Broacher of Doctrines corrupting and staining the simplicity of the Faith and every Member of a corrupt and dissolute Conscience are not to be Tollerated and permitted in a new Testament Church but all such are deservedly excommunicated the Church who have once excommunicated Conscience and they justly suffer in being delivered up to Sathan who have wickedly sinned in delivering Doctrines of Sathan No liberty here you see for every kinde of Conscience 6. Yet are not visible and open censures but for visible and open sinnes not for Errors in judgement concealed but published not for want Publice declarantur pertinere ad regnum Satanae quippe qui non pertineant ad regnum Christi Piscator of faith but for opposing it 7 Excommunication Clave non errante is a solemne and dreadfully operative Ordinance a shutting out of Heaven a shutting up in Hell him who is justly cast out of the Churches fellow●hip by that censure He is delivered up to Satan 8 The end of Excommunication and all Church censures is not to serve to the destruction 2 Cor. 10. 8 13. 10. 1 Cor. 5. 5. of the Censured or Private revenge of the Censurers but to edification onely That the offender may be terrified and reclaimed The Traditi sunt ad emendandum non ad perdendum Sedul in locum flesh destroyed that the soule may be saved and that others may be warned and so the infection stayed That they may learne not to blaspheme Vt Castigatione hac adducti desinant falsum suum dogma spargere Piscator But none of these doe I intend to stand upon though I shall have occasion to meet with them in prosecuting the intended Doctrine To the words Holding Faith and a good Conscience c. Holding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Piscator It signifies properly Having and so translated 1 Pet. 1 Pet 3. 16. 3. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Having a good Conscience here Holding To have and to hold in our English speaking are usually put together It is not enough once to have or for some while to have Had unlesse we ever have and hold them Faith Either take it first for that which we call grace-Grace-faith Fides quâ creditur That hee should Hold Act Maintaine Exercise the grace of saving and lively Faith Or Secondly for the Doctrine of Faith Fides quâ creditur In which sence it is used Chap. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. Jud. v. 3. And Expositors do generally understand it so here that Timothy should 1 Tim. 3. 9. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 13. ●ud v. 3. hold the whol●some forme of sound words and still retaine the old received Faith in Orthodox Doctrine for the grace of saving Faith will not be long kept in the heart unlesse we keepe the Doctrine of sound faith and principles in the head And a good Conscience Conscience you seldome 1 Tim. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19 see it without an Epethite and this usually is his Epethite Good Conscience so in many places Cap. 3. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 16. Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 19. Faith had no Epethite of Good you doe not Ordinarily see other Graces called Good as good Love good Repentance Zeale Hope Patience or the like But ever good Conscience The other graces are commonly Nemo tam perditus est ut sit omni conscientia planè expers Ames good or few have them but those that are good But Conscience is a thing which all have though a good Conscience but few therefore get and hold a good Conscience or have none at all Which some having put away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua repulsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de trudo depello arceo ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trudo pello Act 7. 27. 39 Beza Expulsa Piscator quam Repellentes Vulgar Transl thrusling it away This word is used Acts 7. 27. He that did his Neighbour wrong 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trust Moses away as a busie body and an intruding intermedler so did these thrust away Conscience as if it had been a troublesome usurper over them So after Act 7. 39. The rebelling Israelites thrust him from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They would cast off and eashiere Moses no more receive his Dictates nor obey his directions but would set up another Captaine whom they would follow or lead rather into Egypt Thus did these in the Text cashiere and throw off conscience from his be trusted employment and would follow their owne swinge This word is used also Rom. 11. 1. 2. Hath God cast away Ro. 11. 1. 2 his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and v. 2. He answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath not cast away or reprobated his people whom he foreknew But these did reprobate Conscience and would make it a cast away as not to be retained in times of Gospell Light and liberty So that in this place the Translation is with the softest and more gentle it is here then in any other place when it is rendered they put away good Conscience It might have been read they thrust off threw away cashiered disclaimed and even reprobated it Concerning faith made Shipwrack Fide Vacui facti sunt They were emptied and eased of their faith Syriack transl Their souls are Shipwrack'd their Faith Grace Ship-wrack'd aleak being sprung in Conscience the Vessel they lost all they had and saved not the use Comfort Confidence Joy or feeling of former Faith and beleeving Nor did they preserve their former simplicitie and integrity of judgement in matter of Doctrine and Truth But as Conscience was reprobated to their judgement their judgement is now wholly reprobate concerning the Faith Now the words being opened you see they are a Magazine or Panoply of Armor and Ammunition to furnish Timothy and each good Minister yea every Christian with the most necessary and usefull armes both to warre that good warfare v. 18. And to prevent this evill shipwracke v. 19. Timothy thy charge is that thou war a good warfare thy duty is
to get keepe use two weapons especially Faith and a good Conscience get both or neither faith in the one hand good Conscience in the other thou hast many enemies to resist and fight with thou must use both hands not faith alone without good Conscience nor good conscience alone without Faith Both make thee compleately armed and will make thee more then a Conqueror But hold them fast throw down neither but should thy weapons be beaten through violence of persecution to thy head never suffer them through cowardize to be beaten out of thy hands The latter especially he giveth charge abovt viz. a good conscience without this if thou shouldest be all faith all faith cannot save thee nor save it selfe without this second good conscience But faith either stands or swims with a good Conscience or falls and sinkes with a bad Conscience Hence the point intended is In the most Perillous tempests of corrupt and dangerous Obs times wherein we often see others losing their Lives their Graces their Comforts their former Peace their future hopes that our selves may not eternally miscarry and loose all we have on earth for Grace and comfort and all we look for in heaven for glory and happiness Our continuall care must be to get and keepe to have and hold faith and a good conscience If thou lose not these two thou shalt never have cause to complaine of losing times keepe these they will keepe thee In times of common Naufrage and Shipwracke when we see abroad Church-wracks State-wracks Faith-wracks Truth-wracks take heed then of the worst Ship-wrack of all at home Conscience-wrack Our life here is set out by a double Metaphor 1. Of a warfaring condition v. 18. 2. Of a Seafaring condition v. 19. Is our life a warfare These are our principal weapons Faith and good Conscience if faith be the Shield good Conscience is the Brestplate of Righteousnesse Ephe. 6. 14. or the golden Eph. 6. 14. 16. Girdle of truth and sincerity v. 16. Is our condition a Land fight and not of a single combate but of common interest These two Faith and a good Conscience are the two strong holds we must secure our selves in and hold out to the last drop of blood and gaspe of life These two like Jonathan 1 Sam. 14. 13. and his armour bearer will disco mfit an hoast of Enemies and carry all before them and break through the most insuperable difficulties 1 Pet. 3. 16. Having a good conscience 1 Pet. 3. 16 saith the Apostle that whereas they speake evill of you as of evill doers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ q. d. Though they encampe against you beset your houses shoot their arrowes and bullets bitter words and as bad deeds yea should they discharge their murdering Peeces upon you and thinke by firing and storming to carry all before them stand you your ground quit your selves like men retire you like the Cony to this Rock like the Bird to this Hill your Brazen walls of Faith which indeed without any Hyperbole as Jerichoes walls reach up to heaven and that Adamantine Inworke of a good Conscience founded on a Rock no Gates or engines of Hell shall prevaile against But they shall be ashamed when they behold your good and unblameable conversation They shall draw off with dishonour and infamy as Abimeleck when he attempted to fire the Tower of Thebez to which they fled for safety a woman threw a Jud. 9. 51. 52. piece of a Milstone upon his head and sent him packing These indeed shall never be ashamed Ps 127. 5. when they speake with any Enemies in the Gate Is our life a Seafaring condition A good Conscience is the Arke not like that wherein Moses was exposed to drowning and danger Ex. 2. 3. an Arke of Bulrushes daubed with slime and pitch But like that of Noah Pitched Gen. 6. 14. Et Seq within and without with pitch made by Gods own direction wherein thou mayst adventure as he did the whole world both Church and State thereinto God bad him enter therein God shut him and kept him safe it preserved that second Adam and all the reserve of the Creation from that universall Deluge A window it had in the top to let in the light of Heaven not the lest Crevise below to let in a drop of water to endanger it It did shoot off all the Showers that fel downwards and all the Floods that raged upwards The like figure whereunto even Baptisme doth now save us not the putting away the filth of the flesh 1 Pet. 3. 20 21. but the answer of a good Conscience towards God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ 1 Peter 3. 20. 21. Is our Life a Sea-fight These two Faith and good Conscience are our men of warre which we must never yeeld up to any Enemy but chuse rather to perish and sinke in defending them and maintaining our Trust See what Trophees a Christian brings home by making good these two above all Trophees of honour a Conqueror can get from a spoiled Enemy 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this 2 Cor. 1. 12 the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisedome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world but more abundantly to you-wards It had been now an ill time with the Apostle his sufferings did abound v. 5. He was pressed above measure and above humane strength Even to dispaire of life yet even under the sentence and stroke of death He had consolations abounding as much as his afflictions and joyes running over above measure if afflictions above measure And all from this Magazine and Treasury of a good Conscience In pursuite of this point I shall first shew The five particulars to be handled what Conscience is 2 What this good Conscience is 3. Give the particular kinds and sorts of good Consciences 4. Give the reasons of the point and duty 5. Deduce the inferences arising hence by way of Application CHAP. I. Chap. 1. What Conscience is What conscience is TO the first What conscience is This I shall shew in two particulars 1. Explaining what the word Conscience signifies 2. What the thing Conscience is 1. What the word conscience signifies Notatio nominis praemittenda notationi Rei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word in Greeke and Conscientia in Latine and Conscience in English are all compound words and signifie a knowing together and imply two things 1. Some competent measure of knowledge or there can be no conscience Hence the word so translated 1 Cor. 4. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I know Nullius rei mihi conscius sum Beza So. Nil conscire sibi Horat. nothing by my selfe Prov. 8. 12. Wisdome saith Ego sapientia cum Prudentia cohabito I Wisdome dwell with Prudence So Ego Conscientia cum scientia I Conscience dwell with
joynes faith and the good conscience together viz. cap. 1. v. 5. v. 19. cap. 3. 9. Indeed they cannot be parted The life of faith is ever bound up in the life and bundle of good conscience There is no good faith where not good conscience nor yet good conscience where true faith wanting where you see the one looke and you shall finde the other These two are like the Churches two breastes Cant. 7. 3. compared to two young Roes that are twins that are bred and fed and grow and thrive and decay and live and dye together The best Gold and this Bdellyum of a good conscience is no where to be found but in the Havilah of Faith Faith it is which purifyes the Gen. 2. 12. heart Act. 15. 9. and mends the conscience The Tree of Life only grows in Paradise good conscience onely in Faiths Garden Faith is the grace and sheafe To which all other graces and sheafs must bow and do their obeysance This casts her crown at the feet of Christ therefore they all set their crowns on the head of this Faith mends and commends every thing Faith gives being denomination and acceptation to every Gospel Graee and comfort and duty No love without Faith Gal. 5. 6. Phil. v. 5. No obedience but obedience of Faith Rom. 1. 5. 16. 26. No Repentance without Faith Mar. 1. 15. so faith and patience Heb. 6. 12. Faith and hope 1 Pe. 1. 21. No joy but joy of Faith Phil. 1. 25. No works but works of Faith 1 Thes 1. 3. No duties without faith The prayer of Faith Iam. 5. 15. Hearing of Faith Gal. 3. 2. No life but the life of Faith Gal. 2 20. This is the salt that seasons every sacrifice So look first for Faith when thou imaginest thou hast a good conscience Let us draw neer saith the Apostle Heb. 10. 22. with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an ill conscience c. No true heart no assurance nay no Faith where no good conscience yet Nor good conscience to be looked for where Faith is not first to be found Among the Heathen Sages and Philosophers you may read good Sentences hear good expressions finde some good Actions but no good consciences because without Christ and without Faith Among a thousand Civilized morall persons not one good conscience because no Faith For it is the Apostles Rule Tit. 1. 15. To the unbeleeving and impure is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled None were found among the ordinary sons of men men of better tempers sweeter natures lovely and praise-worthy Deportments for Personall and Heroick vertues for sundry memorable sayings and generous actions then were Titus Trajan Hadrian Antoninus Pius Antoninus Verus his Brother yea Valerian and that so much detested Julian yet nothing of good conscience in any of them all strangers to the knowledge and Theory of it All Enemies to the Practise and Power of it All Persecutors of the truth in their severall times and reignes Titus is called Amor deliciae generis humani Trajanus alioqui civiliter bonus laudatus princeps ob justitiam humanitatem adeo clarus ut postea laetae acclamationis quoties Crearetur Caesar praebuerit formulam sis faelicior Augusto Melior Trajano dixisse fertur praefecto praetorij gladium ei tradens Hoc Ense contra hostes utere si justa mandavero contra me si me videris injuste agere c. Hadrianus ingenio excelluit omnium doctrimarum capacissimus Dixisse fertur Imperatorem erga unumquemque debere esse talem qualem si privatus esset sibi vellet esse imperatorem at in Regu● Christi nullas portas regi gloriae aperuit sed inter milites est qui Christum crucifigunt Cent. Magd. Cent. 2. cap. 3. De persecut sub Traiano Hadriano Antoninus Pius solitus est dicere se malle unum civem servare quam mille hostes Occidere M. Antoninus Verus ingenio eruditione valuit Philosophi nomen adeptus est A Philosophiae studijs nec imperij negocijs nec Bellicis occupationibus unquam se avocari aut distr●hi passus est ex illis optimus imperator formatus multa in Remp. Rom. contulit praeclarissima merita Talem se omnibus praestitit ut ab omnibus amatetur At quo in suos commodior eo in Christianos gravior hic Antoninus Cent. Magd. cent 2. cap. 3. Valerian a most bloudy and Raging perecutor was princeps laudatus de quo scribit Trebellius cum senatus authoritate Censor crearetur in senatusconsulto has fuisse voces Valeriant vita censura est ille de omnibus judicet qui est omnibus melior Ille de senatu judicet qui nullum habet erimen ille cui nihil potest obijci de vita nostra sententiam ferat hunc censorem omnes accipimus hunc omnes imitari volumus cent 3. cap. 3. Julian equall to any of them scientia Philosophia Graecarum litterarum in eo magna fuit I● studijs tanta assiduitate usus est ut semnum defraudans suum totas noctes interdum illis daret similis Tito existimatus bellorum successibus Trajano comparatus clementia Antonino Pio moderatione M. Aurelio Antonino litteratum scientia magnis Philosophis Magd. Cent. 4 Cap. 3. Hold faith and a good conscience saith the Text Hold the mystery of faIth in a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3. 9. Good conscience is the Ring faith the Gemme and Jewell enriching and adorning this Ring Good conscience is the Cabinet faith the Pearle lockt up in it Good conscience the Ship faith the Merchandize that the Field this the Treasure hid in it faith the Apples of Gold this the Pictures or Tables of Silver in which it is set Faith is the Christians eye good conscience is the Christians eye-lid with the eye-lid men cannot see at all no sight at all in conscience where faith is not nor can the best eye see long without the eye-lid to cover and defend and guard it from dust and other injuries faith without conscience keeping it will soone decay Faith is the wise virgins Lamp good conscience is the Oyle that feeds it or make faith the Oyle good conscience is the Vessell that containes it what can the Lampe do without Oyle or Oyle without a Vessell So what 's Faith without good conscience or this without that But to conclude this correlation and agreement between faith and conscience or the relation and preheminence of faith to conscience with that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 11. 8 9. 11 12. speaking of the relation between man and wife made to be meet helpers each for other So is faith to conscience so is Gen. 2. 18. conscience to be to faith it is not good nor safe for either to be alone The man is the glory of God the woman is the glory of the man saith he ver 7. So say I faith setteth the Crowne on
Christs head is his glory good conscience sets the crowne on faiths head is faiths glory For though there be two great preheminences which faith hath above Conscience the same that the man hath above the woman 1. That the man is not of the woman but the woman of the man hoc est taken out of man so faith is not out of conscience but conscience out of faith 2. Neither was the man created for the woman but the woman for the man Nor was faith created for consciences use but conscience for faiths Yet he concludes v. 11. Neverthelesse neither is the man without the woman nor the woman without the man in the Lord So neither is faith without good conscience nor can good conscience be without faith in the Lord For the Relation is Reciprocall and the dependance and benefit mutuall ver 12. For as the woman is of the man so is the man also by the woman but all things originarily and primarily of God So also here it is as good conscience is of faith so faith is by good conscience but both of God for mutuall comfort and delight And from this couple the Church is propagated and increased to this day These two as Leah and Rachel build up the house of Israel faith bearing children to the Church on good consciences knees and good conscience bringing up those children which faith hath borne at her breasts as Ruth brought forth children for the comfort of Naomi and Naomi brought up those children for the ease of Ruth Hold Faith and you are sure of a good Conscience CHAP. VI. Of a pure Conscience THe second good conscience is the Pure The Conscience of purity Conscience The fine Linnen clean and white Rev. 19. 8. is the righteousnesse of Saints and the Lambes wifes ornament The pure cleane and undesiled conscience is the inherent and internall righteousnesse of the Saints and the Ornament of the Christian Of this good conscience the Apostle speaketh often to Timothy 1 Tim. 1. 5. The pure heart and good conscience and faith unfeigned put together and 3. 9. Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience 2 Tim. 1. 3. I serve God from my forefathers with a pure conscience The former goodnesse of conscience by meanes of faith makes the conscience good before God the justified conscience This of purity makes it good before men the sanctified and renewed conscience that was by the blood of Christ this is by the Spirit and Grace of Christ Of this wee have spoken somewhat already chap. 2. therefore shall need to say the lesse here Blessed are these pure in heart they shall see God Mat. 5. 8. And 1 John 3. 3. He that hath this hope of seeing God as he is must purifie himselfe as God is pure God is a God of pure eyes and cannot Good conscience is of Hab. 1. 13. pure eyes and must not behold iniquity Great are the comforts benefits and priviledges of this pure conscience and high are the promises made to it With whom will God shew himselfe pure but to and with the pure And to the froward he will shew himselfe Psal 18. 26. Lev. 26. 23 24. as froward To them that walk contrary to him he will walke contrary to them Who is he that shall ascend the hill of the Lord Or who shall stand in his holy place He that hath the cleane Psalme 24. 3 4 5. hands and the pure heart who hath not lift up his soule unto vanity This is the man who shall receive the Blessing of the Lord and righteousnesse from the God of his salvation In the pure water thy face may be seen which cannot in muddy water In a pure conscience Gods face is to be seene no where else in earth and by none in heaven but by the pure in heart This is the Mountaine of transfiguration where Mar. 9. 1 2. alone the Kingdom of God is seene coming with power This is the only Isle Patmos where Rev. 1. are the Revelations and Visions of the Sonne of man Here is Gods Booke with seven Seales unsealed This is the Sanctum Sanctorum beyond that in Solomons Temple all overlaid with pure Gold in which God doth dwell sit upon a Mercy-Seat and make known his minde giving answers whensoever consulted with and enquired after herein The pure conscience is the Heart after Gods heart who is all for purenesse he loveth Righteousnesse and hateth all uncleannesse No Sacrifice in which was any Blemish or Spot Psal 11. 7. 45. 7. was to be offered no Sacrifice with Leaven no Priests sonne might come neere to Officiate Lev. 1. 3 10 Lev. 2. 11. Lev. 21. 18. in whom was any blemish no High Priest presume to sacrifice in any legall uncleannesse on him But his standing Rule is I will be sanctified in them that draw neere to me Lev. 10 3. None were to come in to the Persian King but such as were first purified and had passed through twelve whole moneths in a course of purification Esth 2. 12. What manner of persons ought they to be then that shall come before God either to waite on the Ministery or to partake of Ordinances And what measure of Purification should we come addressed withall Now this Purification is that of Conscience especially Heb. 9. 14. and 10 22. Therefore wash thy heart O Jerusalem that thou J●r ● 14. Mat. 23. 26. mayest be saved Let not vaine thoughts lodge in thee Purge the inside of the cup and platter O Pharisee that thy outside may be cleane also But in these dayes there is much of Liberty little of Purity of Conscience Shall we call them pure with the bag of deceitfull weights and with the wicked Ballances as the Prophet Micah saith Micah 6 10 11. Are there yet the Treasures of wickednesse in the house of the wicked and the scant measure which is abominable and shall these be counted pure There is a Generation indeed pure in their own eyes who are yet not washed from their filthinesse There is such a Generation O how lofty are their eyes and their eye-lids lifted up Prov. 30. 12 13. speaking too lively of such a generation as ours is Shall we say such have any thing of conscience or grace in them who can live loosely speak scurrilously and scoffe at purity holinesse strictnesse and all piety Where shall the wicked and ungodly appeare if onely the pure in heart are blessed Take heed then of all impurity and defilement by any allowed sinne whatsoever weakneth Purity wasteth Peace Conscience is the Temple of God whosoever defileth this 1 Cor. 3. 17 Temple destroyes it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is and him will God destroy The cra●●●r flaw in the Bell not so much lesseneth the soundnesse as marreth the sound of the Bell. How few good Consciences are there then in these impure and licentious dayes to be found when purity and strictnesse is exploded as a badge of
a carnall legall abject and low spirit and boldnesse loosenesse frollicknesse accounted Gospell-like walking and the onely proofe of our Redemption and the best Plerophory But know the grace of God teacheth us another Lesson It Tit. 2. 12 13. teacheth us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world The righteous God loveth righteousnesse Psal 11. 7. And with the pure God the Holy One of Israel nothing is approved but purity This is his Image this his Superscription Nothing but this is Gods and to be rendered to God The Kings Coyne hath his Image within as well as his Superscription without the Ring the Christian must have his Image within or it is in vaine to subscribe our selves and to be surnamed by the Es 41. 5. name of Israel The right faith of the Gospell is purifying faith Acts 15. 9. Gospel hope is purifying hope 1 Joh. 3. 3 True love pure love 1 Pet. 1. 23. Our Religion must be pure Jam. 1. 27. Hearts pure Jam. 4. 8. Mindes pure 2 Pet. 3. 1. Wayes pure Psal 119. 1. Hands pure Psal 24. 4. Prayer pure Job 16. 7. Incense pure Malac. 1. 11. Indeed all must be pure King Solo●●● had not a Vessell in either of his houses that at Jerusalem or that of the Forrest of Lebanon but was all of pure Gold he would be served in no other 1 Kin. 10. 21. God will have no other Vessell in either of his Houses that of Jerusalem the Church Triumphant or this Countrey-house as I may call it in the Forrest of Lebanon the Church Militant but what is of pure Gold of beaten tryed and refined Gold Silver was nothing esteemed in the dayes of Solomon Civility and externall Morality is too meane for God too base to enter Heaven The Kings Coyne I said before hath his Image on it it hath first his Image on the one side and then the Kings Armes or the Kingdomes Armes on the other Such is the right Christian he hath this Image and Effigies of God Purity and Righteousnesse stamped on the one side of his conscience and the Kings Armes or the Kingdom of Heavens Armes on the other Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost The Kingdome of God saith the Apostle or if I may so call them the Effigies and Armes of the Kingdom is Righteousnesse and Peace Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. It is observed that the floore of Solomons 1 Ki. 6. 30. Temple was overlaid with Gold both within and without that is to say both the Sanctum Sanctorum and the Atrium sacerdotum the Court of the Priests as it is called 2 Chron. 4. 9. Although the Great Court called the Atrium Populi were not so So it is the minde and will of God that not onely those holy glorified Saints that are within the Vayle of the Sanctum Sanctorum and the Church Triumphant but all those within his true Church distinguished from the world should have the same purity and holinesse although not the same measure Purity is the floore and paving of both Militant and Triumphant Church CHAP. VII Of the sincere Conscience NExt to pure conscience comes the sincere being much alike often taken promiscuously one for the other but though they may never be divided and parted may thus be distinguished Pure is opposed to what is filthy defiled uncleane profane impure Sincere Purity and integrity how they differ is opposed to false deceitfull counterfeit hypocriticall imaginary Every sincere man is really pure and endeavours so to be found but every pure-seeming person is not sincere nor doth intend so to be Sincerity is the glory of purity and of conscience and of every person grace or action It must be sincere faith if any 1 Tim. 1. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faith unfaigned Sincere love if any 1. to Christ Eph. 6. 24. Grace to all them that love the Lord Jesus in sincerity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. If to men Rom. 12. 9. Let love be without dissimulation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good Hezekiah whatever he did he did in his integrity and with all his heart and so he prospered 2 Chron. 31. 21. The sincere is ever a good conscience no sooner sincere but presently good no longer good then can be called sincere Sincerity is the soundnesse health and right constitution of conscience Sincerity here is all our Gen. 6. 9. Job 1. 1. perfection Noah Job and others were called perfect in their generations onely because upright and sincere Sincerity is Earths highest perfection we cannot go higher Innocency was Paradises purity is Heavens Of this conscience Paul speaks 2 Cor. 1. 12. Our rejoycing is this the Testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world c. In which words foure things are very remarkable 1. What is the best temper and complexion of conscience 2. What the clearest markes and best proofes to evidence it 3. What is the worst disease and most destructive enemy to it 4. What is the fruit and benefit of it 1. The temper of the best conscience is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 godly sincerity or as the words are The sincerity of God in all our conversings with men 2. The clearest markes of this sincerity are naked and downright simplicity simplicity of God as it is called and the grace of God 3. The most common but dangerous enemy to conscience which is ever the bane and death of sincerity is fleshly wisdome in sincerity not in fleshly wisdome the more of that the lesse of this Not in fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God nothing so opposite to Gods grace as humane and carnall wisdom if the one increaseth the other ever decreaseth 4. But the fourth thing is the benefit of such a constitution and freedome from this distemper which is above all expression It maintaines the soule in a plight of rejoycing and in a state of glory as it were amidst many pressures when the outward man was ouerburdened sentenced to death and despairing of life and of all outward reliefe vers 8. Wee were pressed out of measure above strength insomuch that we despaired even of life but we had the sentence of death in our selves c. yet there as in another place 2 Cor. 6. 10. he saith As sorrowing yet alway rejoycing As dying yet behold we live Blessed be a good God and well fare a good conscience for it It makes such an alteration that like the night starres when all day light is off the Heaven Quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Leigh Crit. Sacr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illae res proprie dicuntur quae suum duntaxat nativum colorem praesertim album retinent nullo alio admisto ut lilia lana candida farina sincera est quae non est fermento corrupta Zanch. then do these appeare so
against the poor to make empty the soul of the hungry and to cause the drink of the thirsty to fail Isa 32. 6 7. Conscience knows it is bound in duty as much to shew charitie to neighbour as love to God and to the poor neighbour this love of beneficence and compassion as to God the love of obedience and complacency This is indeed cum aliis scire to know and feel the heart of a stranger and widow and Exo. 23. 9. to say with Adrian What I would have the rich be to me were I poor that must I do to him my self being rich Yea this is cum Deo scire who considers the poor and needy relieveth the stranger He doth execute saith Moses Deut. 10. 18 19. the judgement of the fatherless and widow and loveth the stranger in giving him food and raiment Love ye therefore the stranger for ye were strangers in the Land of Egyp But alas the ill consciences of these times What meaneth the bleating of the sheep and lowing of the exen shall I say Or What meaneth the beating of the poor to pieces and grinding of their very faces saith the Lord Surely he will enter into judgement with the Antients of the People and with the Princes thereof because the spoil of the poor is in their houses Isa 3. 14 15. What judgments do you read threatened in all the Prophets for this unmercifull neglecting or oppressing of the poor Amos 2. 6. God threatens Israel not to turn away their punishment because they made no more of the poor man and his cause then of a pair of old shooes The like Micah 3. 3 4. Surely this is one of the crying sins of our times that the cause is not judged the cause of the poor and the right of the needie But Jer. 5. 28 29. may we not say Hath not the Lord begun to visit for these things and shall be not be avenged on such a Nation as this ere he hath done Rom. 14. 15. When the Apostle in a certain case would tell a man he walks not conscientiously he tels him Thou walkest not charitably What is it therefore to walk charitably but undeniably to walk conscientiously I conclude this therefore with the Apostles exhortation Col. 3. 12. Put on as the Elect of God holy and beloved bowels of mercies kindness humbleness of minde c. And 2 Cor. 8. 7 9. As therefore ye abound in other graces in faith utterance and knowledge see ye abound in this grace also for ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ who though he was rich yet for your sakes he became poor that ye through his pove●ty might be rich This is to be like-minded unto Christ you see 2. There is another charity of benevolence 2 To thy Neighbour to be shewed to thy neighbour whom thou art to love as thy self this is the second great Commandment which so great a part of the Law and Prophets do hang and comment upon Hast thou a friend then shew thy self friendly Mat. 22. 39. Pro. 18. 24. Rom. 13. 8. owe no other debt to any man but this to love one another and this we must owe to every man yet owe it so as to be also paying the debt and pay it so as also to be yet owing the duty alwaies owing and alwaies paying Debts of Justice must be so payed by every honest man that they may be no longer owing but debts of charitie though daily paid must daily be acknowledged and yet we are daily in debt till we come thither where the love of God and brother shall be consummate and where love shall be all in all O what a pleasant and delightfull sight it is to see neighbour with neighbour brother with brother living in this mutuall unity and benevolence there is best living there is best air there is best earth Psal 133. 1 2 3 4. There is best aire perfumed with like ointment to that which Aaron was consecrated with like which none other for any use was to be Exod. 30. 32. compounded and there the best and richest Soile As the dew of Hermon and as that dew that fell upon the Hills of Sion There the Lord commandeth his richest blessings and life for ever But what stinking Aire is Meshech and what noisome Earth is Kedar Ill dwelling with those that hate peace and are still for war Psal 120. The third Charitie and Love is to thy Enemies a love of forgiveness at least and a 3. To thy enemie contending with him for the most glorious victorie not to return him like evil for like or greater for less but to overcom any evil he hath done thee with all that good which thou canst do for him This is the hardest and therefore highest pitch of Love A Lesson not to be learned in the Philosophers Schools Rom. 12. 20 21. Luke 6. 27 28. or in the Pharisees Synagogues but in Christs Sanctuarie and is one of the highest points of Gospel Divinitie and Christian Perfection The Pharisees of old had said Thou must love thy neighbour but corrupted the Text with another addition Thou maiest hate thy enemie Our Saviours command is that thou Love also thy enemie that thou bless them that curse that thou pray for them that revile and persecute yea that we reach out the hand to help those who have lift up the heel to hurt us What thank is it to be but as Heathens and Publicans Mat. 5. 46. Luke 6. 32 33. They are friendly to their friends yea this may be found in Hell Satan is not divided against Satan the devil himself will carrie it fair with those who correspond with him But to cross thy nature and to overcome thy self first that thou maist overcome thy enemie at last Nobile vincendi genus hoc This is a divine and heavenly Spirit and a divine kinde of Love this is to be like Our Father which is in heaven who is kinde to Luk. 6. 35. the unthankful and unkinde and like to his Son on Earth who praied for his enemies and gave his life for those who sought his death Therefore the Apostle addes Col. 3. 12 13. to bowels of mercies and kindeness which we should put on humbleness meekness long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiving one another if any man have a quarrell against any as Christ forgave you so also do ye This Love then must not bee a bare negative Magna virtus est si non laedas cum à quo laesus es Magna gloria si cui nocere potuisti parcas Nobile vindictae genus est ignoscere victo Bern. de inter domo 2. Inward and Ecclesiasticall and Non-revenging Love not to render railing for railing in●urie for injurie vim vi repellere but it must bee an over-flowing over-coming and a Non-removed and unabated Love that when hee doth strive to weare out thy patience by continually reiterated and new provocations thou maiest
first begins to li●e and the man ceaseth to live when once he ceaseth to feel So it is in the Soul the life of grace appears sooner in the sensibleness of Conscience spiritual Compunctions Heart-smitings and Heart-prickings for sin and guilt spirituall fears of his danger sorrow for his sin and miscrie then by any other tokens whatsoever 2. Tactus as Origine primus so it is Necessitate maximus usu summus of greatest use and absolute Necessitie It is first in the Original of life appearing and the most necessarie above all the other senses in the continual course of life A man may want his sight yet be a healthful and understanding man he may want his hearing yet bee a very active and apprehensive man he may want smell and taste yet be a strong man but if he want his feeling he is a dead man These serve more to the bene esse of natural life then to the simple being So is Conscience absolutely necessarie to the very being of a Christian a man may be short in parts defective in knowledge weak in duties have lost his comforts never had the Ornaments of Abilities Expressions Experiences that some others have yet a very good Christian But if he have lost his Conscience he is a dead Christian altogether 3. Tactus they say is Hominis Optimus The other senses other creatures excel man in Vultur odaratu the Dog and Vulture in smelling in sight the Eagle in hearing the mastiff c. But in feeling man which is the most noble and excellent Creature excelleth most he hath the most quick and tender Touch which considered I know no sufficient reason to say of it that Tactus is digniute ultimus when they confess it is Origine primus necessitate maximus So the best Christian excells in the tenderest and quickest Touch of Conscience Others may out-go him in Excellencie of speech and wisdom of words worldly men may have stronger brains to out-wit and over-reach the childe of God who is not so wise in his generations as the children of this world they have Luk. 16. 8. the finer wits stronger memories sharper inventions the better expressions he hath still the better part and is the better man because he hath the better Conscience 4. Whereas other Senses have a particular Organ of their own and lie confined to a narrow roome Hearing lies in the Ear only Seeing in the Eie Taste in the Tongue or Palate Smell in the Nostrils Feeling hath no such narrow confinement but is extended all the bodie over within and without So is Conscience of vast and universall extent over the whole man over all our actions intentions words motions from first to last Faith looks to Promises Fear to Threats Hope to futures Obedience looks to duties Repentance to sins Conscience looks to all This is the great Superintendent and oversees all all Graces duties all sins and snares Therefore saith one well Conscience is not confined to any one part of the Soul it is not in the understanding alone not in the memorie will affections alone but it Dyke hath place in all the parts of the Soul Conscience is the great Mistress of the hous she as soon as she is up calls up all her maids sets them all about their work and calls Pro. 31. 15 27. them to their account 3. The virtue and worth of a good Conscience is most excellent above all other things because it most fortifies the soul with strength against and gives victorie over all Adversities it carries the soul unwounded through the greatest afflictions It 's like Oile that alwaies swims aloft whatsoever waters of distress are below It is as the Ark which hath a window open in the Top to let in the light of Heaven This like Elias Mantle hath divided the waters and earried godly souls through a floud of miseries as on drie land This hath encouraged them in the midst of fire and faggots hath accompanied them in Dens and Caves and made Martyrs sing in midst of Prisons and flames It overcomes all his tormenting Persecutors It 's like the Anvile which breaks all that is beat upon it but is it self by all strokes made more firm It makes a man like a brazen wall Jer. 1. 18. All may fight none can prevail against it at sight of fear it saith Aha At destruction and famine it doth laugh and fears not the beasts of prey Job 5. 22. This like Noahs Ark to which it is compared 1 Pet. 3. 21. is pitcht within and without Ideo bituminata intrinsecus ne aquam emitteret suam extrinsecus ne admitteret alienam Aug. It is pitcht within that it may not let out any of his own water of comfort laid in for his own necessities and relief And pitcht without that it may not let in any thing from without that may endanger the safetie of the ship It keeps in all that may do Good it keeps out all that may do hurt It is the Christians Armourie or Magazine like the Tower of David furnished with a thousand Bucklers Cant. 4. 4. or like the house of the forest of Lebanon wherein Solomon put three hundred shields of beaten gold 1 King 10. 17. This will inable a man with undaunted courage to hold up his head before any Judgement seat Act. 23. 1. yea before God's Tribunal 1 Joh. 3. 21. Keep but Conscience safe it will keep thee safe Keep it in puritie and it will keep thee in peace It will make Tranquilla Conscientia tranquillat omnia thy face to shine as Stevens did The chearful Conscience maketh the chearful Countenance Prov. 15. 13. This will bee a drie house to thee in a wet daie it will make alwaies fair weather within doores what ever weather it is abroad Thou shalt sub tecto imbrem exaudire and thou shalt ever finde it fair above head what ever it is under foot This makes nothing of the Viper of Detraction Envie and Malignitie at which another man would have swoln or sworn but without any more ado shakes it off into the fire whence it came Premat corpus fremat Diabolus trahat mundus illa semper erit secura Let men world and divels do their worst Bernard de Consc ca. 8. they cannot hurt Conscience This is the whole skin which it is good sleeping in for a torn Conscience is the worst rent The wounded spirit who can bear If Prov. 18. 14. thou suffer Conscience to be torn to keep thy skin whole the rent is made worse if thou lose thy Conscience to save thy life thou art a Loser not a Saver and if thou lose thy l●fe to save thy Conscience thou art the greatest gainer by that which the world calls greatest loss Skin for skin and all that I have to save my life saith the world in Satans Language Job 2. 4. Skin for skin and life for life to save my Conscience saith the godly man 4. Good
and love death Good Conscience is the Prov. 8. 39. charge we travell with whatever danger we may meet with in our way we must run or fight or die or fly for it rather then deliver up such a charge Good Conscience is the Ship in which we embarque and adventure all we have Credit State Libertie Life and Soul too as Noab put all into one Bottome all his Familie all the Catholike Church and the Reserve of the whole world and all was safe This Vessel or Man of war must never be yeelded up but rather we must sink and perish in the defense of it Good Conscience is our strong Fort which we must upon no terms capitulate to deliver up to the enemie but chuse rather to die upon the ground Secondly look upon Timothie as a Minister and this doth further inform us That a good Conscience is the good Ministers great Charge This charge I commit to thee Son Timothie to hold Faith and a good Conscience These are Arma Ministri The Ministers weapons The Minister must be a man of Conscience and for Conscience wholly This is the floore he must daily purge This the garden which he must dress and keep The living stone which he must hew and polish to make Temples for Christ of This the Sanctum Sanctorum into which the Gospel-Minister must daily enter Faith and good Conscience are his principall weapons he must be most expert in and exercising at both in Person and Pulpit This is to preach the whole counsell of God to preach Faith in God and Conscience in men To say that Conscience is a Dutie is too little it is the Summe of all Duties To call good Conscience a Grace is too little it is the Summe of all Graces It is Totum Dei The whole Command of God It is Totum homi is The whole Dutie of man Good Conscience is the Contents of the whole Bible and all the Scripture bound up in a small Volume Will you hear in one word the summe of all Keep Faith and a good Conscience This is the whole dutie of man The summe of the first Table is Epitomized in one word Love God with all thy heart Of the second in another word Love thy Neighbour as thy self But the summe of both Tables of the Law and all duties of the Gospel is reduced to this one word Conscience Hast thou Conscience Thou dost fulfill the first hast thou Conscience Thou wilt fulfill the second Thou O man of God look well to thy Charge thy own and thy Peoples Conscience Herein must thou daily exercise thy self as a workman who needeth not to bee ashamed to keep thy self pure and to keep thy peoples Conscience without offense to God and man warning every man and teaching every man in all wisdom that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus Col. 1. 28. The Heathen Priests and Aruspices were to be skilfull in the Entrails of the beasts and by inspection into the Sacrifices they were wont to make their observations The Gospel Minister his Inspection must be into the inwards of his flock The best Christian is he who is most versed in his own Conscience and the best Minister is he who is best acquainted and hath most to do in his peoples Consciences Bernard hath an excellent saying of Conscience Vnicuique suus est Libellus Conscientia propter hunc Libellum omnes alii libri inventi sunt Every mans Conscience is his own Book and Bible and for this little Books sake all the good Books in the world yea the Bible it self were written All Divines Sermons All Divines writings treat of this Book And whatsoever Books are in the world if they no way tend to this end to inform or direct or satisfie or better Conscience it were better that the world wanted all those books How happie were it in these times if Conscience was preached more and Controversies less Whatever is the man that preacheth Conscience would be the matter preached and spoken off whatever be the Auditorie Conscience would be the Argument whatever the Occasion Conscience the Subject of the Discourse whatever be the Text Conscience would be the Doctrine handled whatever the Doctrine Conscience would be the Vse whatever the Companie Conscience would bee the Conference Else I am bold to say whatever be the Preacher or Hearer or Text or Doctrine or Reason or Vse or Conference nothing is spoken fit for the Preacher or pertinent to the Matter or Auditorie or Occasion or Text or Doctrine or Vse or Companie Conscience is the Lay-mans onely Book he can read no other It is the Ministers Concordance which he must peruse and studie most He is not a Preacher that is not well verst in this This little Book is like that little Book given to the two Prophets Ezekiel in the third of Ezek. v. 3. and St John Revel 10. 9 10. which both are commanded to eat and to receive inwardly into their bellie not into their mouth or head or hand Son of man cause thy bellie to eat and fill thy Qui legem Dei recte interpretantur referunt eam ad rectum finem seu scopum qui est charitas ex puro co●de conscientia bona fide non simulata at isti doctores non referunt legem ad hunc sinem sed ab istis commemoratis rebus tanquam à s●●po aberrant ergo non rectè legem interpretantur sed ad vaniloquentiam deflectunt bowels with this Roll which I give thee But with this difference that to the godly and faithfull Minister it is like Ezekiels Roll as Honey for sweetness but to an unsound and man-plea●ing Minister it is like John's Book Sweet in the mouth to discourse of Bitter in the bellie displeasing when it comes to practise This is the mark we should aim at saith Piscator upon that place 1 Tim. 1. 5 6. The end of the commandment is charitie out of a pure heart and of a good Conscience and of faith unfained which some having swerved from have turned a side unto vain jangling That is the right interpreting of the Scripture when we referre all to this end to promote Charitie and Puritie and Faith and Conscience to leave these is to miss the mark and to become Janglers not Preachers Thirdly this informes us in particular how it comes that so many daily break in Citie and Countrey making shipwrack of Credit of States and Families the matter is they were broken at home first in their Consciences then they must needs break abroad Break Conscience and thou art broken none thrive after it This makes the worst bankrupts it makes a man to be out of Credit with God and in his own heart A moth or worm in Conscience is commonly followed with a moth and worm in the estate The inheritance hastily gotten is as soon wasted From the hire of an harlot if it came to the hire of an harlot it returns Micah 1. 7.