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A08989 Christian see to thy conscience or a treatise of the nature, the kinds and manifold differences of conscience, all very briefly, and yet more fully laid open then hitherto by Richard Bernard, parson of Batcombe in Somerset-Shire. Anno 1630. Bernard, Richard, 1568-1641. 1631 (1631) STC 1928; ESTC S113805 87,184 494

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righteousnesse for the Gospell First commendeth the law vnto vs as spirituall holy iust righteous and good Rom. 7. 12. 14. 1 Tim. 1. 8. Secondly It repeateth the Commandements with approbation and for continuing vse Rom. 13. 9. Thirdly it interpreteth the Commandements and the imposed duties therein more largely in a more spirituall sense Mat. 5. and 6. 1. Ioh. 3. 15. Fourthly it vrgeth the duties commanded by the law to be done Eph. 5. and 6. Col. 3. and 4. Rom. 13. 1. Tit. 3. 1. 1. Pet. 2. 13. and such vertues as it prescribeth Phil. 4. 6. Eph. 4. 32. 1. Tim. 6. 11. 18. 2. Pet. 1. 5. 6. 7. Fifthly these are vrged in Christs name as his commandements Eph. 6. 6. 1. Th. 4. 1. 2. 3. and as his wholsom words 1. Tim. 6. 3. Sixthly the doing of such duties are commended by Christ himselfe Mat. 5. 19. By Saint Iames cap. 2. 8. and by Saint Paul 1. Cor. 7. 19. and by Saint Peter 2. Pet. 1. 8. 9. Seuenthly the ministers of the Gospell are commanded to teach such duties 1. Tim. 6. 2. Tit. 2. 13. and 3. 1. 8. Lastly the sinnes forbidden by the law are condemned in the Gospell and disswaded from 1. Th. 5. 15. Eph. 4. 28. 31. Col. 3. 9. 1. Cor. 7. 8. 14. 1. Ioh. 5. 21. And to auoid such sinnes the Apostle saith was the commandement of Christ 1. Thes 4. 2. 6. and to teach otherwise is contrary to wholsome doctrine 1. Timoth 6. 3. 1. 10. 11. Yea Christ condemneth the breach of the Law Matth. 5. 19. and in the Gospell wrath is denounced against such as liue in wicked transgression against the Law Rom. 2. 8. Ninthly they erre therefore that teach that wee vnder the Gospell are not tyed to the Precepts of the Law to obserue them as a rule of life for the Law is established Rom. 3. 31. it remaineth perpetually Matth. 5. 18. Christ came to fulfill it not to destroy it and condemneth such as teach the breach of the least Commandement Matth. 5. 17. 19. Quest Here it may bee asked in what manner doth the Gospell bind the regenerate Conscience to the Law Answ It doth it not as the Law requireth to wit to obey it in the rigour thereof to bee thereby iustified or else to remaine accursed but it bindeth according to it owne nature as the word of grace that is Euangelically and this is first to take it now as from the hand of Iesus the Law-giuer to vs who hath written it by the new Couenant in our hearts by his holy Spirit Secondly to obserue it onely as a rule of life we hauing already attained to the righteousnesse of the Law in full perfection through faith in Christ Thirdly to performe the prescribed duties thereof by vertue Ioh. 15. 4. 5 Gal. 2. 20. Psal 40. 8. from Christ in obedience to him willingly without any seruile feare in vprightnesse of heart though imperfectly performed done to adorne the doctrine of the Gospell of God our Sauiour Christ in all things To this Euangelicall obedience the Gospel bindeth vs and not otherwise to the Law Section 4. From what things the regenerate mans Conscience by this power of the Gospell is freed in respect of the Law VPon the Gospell thus binding to the Law Euangelically the Conscience of the Regenerate is free from the Ceremoniall Law because it is bound by the Gospell to make him stand fast in the libertie purchased by Christ Gal. 5. 1. who hath abolished the law of Commandements of ordinances Eph. 2. 15. and blotted out the hand-writing of ordinances against vs Col. 2. 14. 16. Hence is it that the conscience of the Regenerate troubles him not about meates holy dayes nor offering vp any legall sacrifices Heb. 10. 2. It is also quit from the morall Law in respect of the rigorous dominion of it in respect of iustification by personall fulfilling it in respect of the malediction and the irritation thereof of which the Apostle speaketh Rom. 7. 8. Hence likewise it is first that the Regenerate conscience cannot vrge vs to the exact fulfilling of the Law nor can condemne vs for that wee doe not perfectly in our selues fulfill it Because the Gospel and Law of faith binds the Regenerate conscience as it is regenerate to the contrary to wit to witnesse that we fulfill it in Christ that therefore in him wee cannot bee condemned Rom. 3. 1. 4. 32 33. for this but if it accuse it accuseth for want of sincerity sometime and for failings but cannot condemne vs for not perfectly fulfilling the Law 2. Hence is it that it vrgeth not iustification by workes nor condemneth vs for not so seeking to be iustified Because by the Gospell the Regenerate is bound to cast off righteousnesse by the works of the Law Gal. 2. 16. and 5. 14. And to seeke by faith to be iustified which is the righteousnesse taught by the Gospell Rom. 3. 21. 22. without the workes of the Law Vers 28. 3. Hence is it that the Regenerate Conscience doth not condemne the regenerate man for the irritation by reason of sinne taking occasion from the commandement to worke all manner of concupiscence as it doth in others Rom. 7. 5. 8. Because the Conscience of the Regenerate is bound to beare him witnesse and so doth witnesse through the worke of the Spirit by the Gospell that after the inner man hee delighteth in the Law of God and hath a will to doe it Rom. 7. 22. Psal 1. 2. and 40. 8. that he would doe more good then he can that he hateth the euill hee doth Rom. 7. 15. 18. 19. that he hath an vnfeigned resolution to keepe Gods Commandements Psal 119. 57. 107. and that in studying the Law by grace receiued from the Gospell hee is more delighted in it and more desirous to doe it Of all these conscience beareth the Regenerate man witnesse and therfore cannot condemne him for that irritation by the Law through inbred corruption to grow worse 4. And lastly hence is it that it cannot nor doth not conclude the malediction and curse of the Law vpon the man regenerate because now this his Conscience is bound by the Gospell to witnesse his faith in Christ by whom he is freed from that curse Gal. 3. 13. that hee is the Child of God Rom. 8. 15. and that therefore belongeth to him the blessing with Abraham Gal. 3. 14. and eternall life by Iesus Christ Rom. 6. 23. Thus may we see what a happy acquittance the regenerate Conscience hath by the power of the Gospell from the Law Section 5. Why the Regenerate man is yet so much troubled about the Law THis before being so and the Conscience so freed by the authoritie of the Gospell it may bee demanded here Why a Regenerate man in his Conscience is more troubled about his legall omissions and committing of euill against the Law then for his omissions commissions against the Gospell hee not being now vnder the Law but
iudgment to finde out the true Religion and to be able to difference it from all false religions or rather superstitious See a little Booke intituled Good Christian looke to thy Creed and Satanicall inuentions Fourthly to striue to feele the power of this true Religion that so Conscience may be bound to hold vs to the vnfeigned performance of the same CHAP. 29. Of the large Conscience THere is an euill large Conscience a spatious and wide Conscience like the way to Hell This is the Conscience of such as can swallow downe sinnes great and many that can admit of cart-loades thereof without any rub or let to this Conscience This is the conscience of some worldlings some of all sorts of professions vsurers extortioners and such like The cause of this spacious and so large a Conscience is the vnderstanding highly esteeming of profit and preferment and in respect hereof vnder-valueing and vnder-prizing of Religion of iustice and of vpright dealing Whence followes sinfull practises to gaine and to come to aduancement giuing way to any sinne that may hale in profit make a man rich and exalt his estate in the World No sinne stickes in the way as sinne but onely for the infamy thereof if openly knowne or the danger of the Law by which may ensue punishment otherwise through largenesse of Conscience all is fish that comes to net all is lawfull prey and booty that may finely and cunningly bee come by The remedie to bounde this wide conscience is by tying it strictly to the Rule of righteousnesse and by vnderstanding iustice iudgment equity and euery Prou. 2. 9. good path for our right dealing CHAP. 30. Of the Cheuerill Conscience THere is a Cheueril ill Conscience which is like Kids leather which may bee made wide or strait This is the Conscience of him that can as occasion serues his turne make large or straiten his conscience playing fast or loose for his owne aduantage for hee chuseth and picks out particular duties to obserue as best pleaseth his humour neglecting the rest This was the Conscience of Saul in his warfare 1. Sam. 15. 14. 34. 22. 17. 18. against Amalek who could spare the best and destroy what was vile and naught hee made conscience of the peoples eating of blood but it was nothing to hate Dauid to persecute him and to murther 1. Chro. 13. 3. the Lords Priests and to neglect the Arke of God This was Ioabs conscience he could abhorre Dauids command to number the people yet to kill treacherously Abner and Amasa it was no scruple Iehu could destroy the idol-seruice to Baal but hold vp the golden Calues in Dan and Bethel The Scribes and Pharises had their consciences straite to put Iudas Mat. 27. 6. wages into the Treasurie and to goe into the Iudgement Hall but it was Ioh. 18. 28. wide enough to giue money to betray Christ and to cause Pilate to put him to death causelesly Iewes would not haue Christs Ioh. 19. 31. body and the two with him to hang all night on the Crosse because of the Sabbath following but it troubled them not to consent to his death Such a conscience they had in 2. Cor. 11. 24. whipping the Apostle giuing one stripe lesse then forty but not what cause they had to whip him at all Scribes and Pharisies could tithe Mint Commin and Annise but yet let passe the weighty matters of the Law This is a Papists conscience that will eate no flesh on Friday but can seeke by Gunpowder to blow vp the Parliament The Cause of such a Cheuerill Conscience is First that a man makes the Rule of Conscience subiect to his owne will by false interpretations by subtill distinctions thereby weakning the power of the Rule that it hath not force vpon Conscience Secondly the secret and hypocriticall reseruations in his minde and heart in obeying the Rule to which hee neuer wholly can nor will submit himselfe Thirdly a deceitfull and very false imagination of minde that the Rule is alterable and may bee enlarged as may best serue their turne as Cardinall Cusanus once deliuered in a letter to the Bohemians The Remedy is to hold the Rule euer to bee one and the same impartiall constant vnalterable without varying as God himselfe also to be perswaded that we are to be wholly led by it and not it to be framed to our owne lusts CHAP. 31. Of the benumbed Conscience THe benumbed conscience is that which hath lost it mouing as dead for a time as a member benumbed This is the conscience of such as haue lost the feeling thereof by some foule offence lying therein without repentance This may happen sometime to the godly to Iosephs Brethren to a Dauid for a while The causes hereof may bee expressed by a similitude taken from a member benumbed First A member becomes so yea the whole body after violent heate and exercise by suddenly attracted cold So a man very forward in Religion and religious exercises growing cold by suddenly leauing them liuing where the word is not and companying with others of no Religion or with contemners of it Secondly By a dead Palsey So Conscience by some deadly sinne Thirdly by tying it hard so as the bloud wherein the life is can haue no passage till it be loosed So Conscience is benumbed when the mind is tyed to the world so as it cannot bee free to meditate vpon Gods word for the freedome of the minde for holy meditation is as the life and bloud to the Conscience Fourthly by some violent blow So Conscience by some violent suggestion of Satan which for the present may make a man senslesse of his sinning Fifthly by being put out of ioynt So Conscience which is put as I may say out of ioynt when memorie hath lost and forgotten what it should keep to carry it from the mind to the Conscience touching things past either of sin committed or of duty omitted In this case if memory faile the vnderstanding and Conscience are put out of ioynt Sixthly a member becomes deadish by lying still but crookedly vpon some hard thing and weight vpon it as the Arme will be in bearing vp the head and the elbow vpon some hard bord or other thing So Conscience is benumbed when the vnderstanding is crookedly bent to crooked paths the heart hardened and some heauie corruption pressing it downe The effect is that during this time that the Conscience lyeth as dead the partie is without remorse for sinne he cannot out of generall reproofes see his fall without a liuely and cleare application as appeares in Dauid when Nathan spake to him parabolically The Remedie is to haue the word applyed as a Nathan did it to Dauid and to bee content to bee rubbed vpon by wholsome reprofes priuat admonitions and mutuall exhortations that the heart be not hardened by the deceitfulnesse Heb. 3. 13. of sinne CHAP. 32. Of the cauterized Conscience THe last and worst
the Scribes and Pharisies Mat. 15. 2. 6. the following whereof is called by Saint Peter a vaine conuersation which Christ by his bloud came to deliuer vs from 1. Pet. 1. 18. Thirdly By the precepts and commandements of men Mat. 15. 9. Col. 2. 20. 22. Fourthly By custome which becomes as a law to the ruder sort to bind their Consciences Fifthly By the shew of wisdome and shadow of great humilitie in such a voluntary worship Col. 2. 18. 23. Sixthly By examples of Forefathers and Elders which strike a great stroak in many as formerly it hath done with such superstitious hipocrits as Christ calls them Mar. 7. 3. 4. 5. 6. Section 4. Of the remedie TO remoue this superstition from Conscience and to acquit it from such slauish feare and bondage is to settle iudgement in fiue things First wee must know that the doctrines and commandements of men binde not conscience of themselues but as they be grounded on Gods Word Secondly else the Scripture condemneth them Matth. 15. Mark 7. Col. 2. 20. 21. 22. 1. Pet. 1. 18. as vaine worship and vaine conuersation Thirdly That we must know our Christian libertie purchased by Christs blood from these yoakes of bondage 1. Pet. 1. 18. and that wee must stand fast in this libertie Gal. 5. 1. Fourthly we are to be resolued in this point that all will worship though neuer so wisely contriued by man and though it carry neuer so faire a shew is condemned of God as the forenamed scriptures doe shew Lastly we must be well assured that where God giueth no law himselfe there is no transgression Rom. 4. 15. and 5. 13. and so no bond to tye Conscience Section 5. Of the second thing about which the superstitions Conscience is exercised THe other thing about which the Conscience of the superstitious is troubled is about some works of Gods prouidence which men though falsly take to be Gods forwarnings and forbiddings and as signes and tokens frō him of some good or of some ill to befall them as a hare to crosse in a morning to stumble in going out salt falling burning of the right or left cheek or eare finding of siluer gold or old iron sudden bleeding at the nose and many such obseruations of superstitious people Section 6. Of the causes hereof THe causes of this feare in this superstitious conscience and the awing of it in respect of this prouidence are these First a strong conceit that there is here in a will of God forewarning people wherupon the conscience becomes bound and the heart made fearefull Secondly the obseruing of the euent which hapneth according to the conceited opinion to the more confirming therof and the further binding of the superstitious to credit the same Section 7. Of the remedy TO heale this and to free the Conscience from such a superstitious bond and the heart from this idle feare note these things 1. That God neither by his word foretels nor by his prouidence doth prognosticate either good or ill in the falling out of such things 2. That albeit such things happen according to mens vaine imaginations yet no credit is to bee giuen thereto nor any conscience to be made thereof First because the opinion in these things is Heathenish and from pagans which Christians are therefore to Ier. 10. 1. 2. detest and not feare their feare Secondly because Satan workes herein and seekes to weaken our faith in God Thirdly because these sometime haue been found false by religious mens true obseruations who contemne these fooleries Fourthly because if they proue true sometime that 's but to try vs whether we wil be wise or become vaine and superstitious Lastly because it is well obserued that the more naturall men be and ignorant of the Gospell the more foolishly superstitious are they the more fearefull and vaine in such obseruations and the more inthraled in their minds to such vanities On the contrary the more people increase in knowledge of the Gospell faith in Christ and be renewed in the inward man the lesse they regard yea the more they contemne these things and are lesse troubled with them as held altogether idle and vaine And thus much for the superstitious Conscience CHAP. 36. Of the scrupulous Conscience THis scrupulous Conscience is the stirring ill Conscience about vncertainties of which the iudgment is vnresolued and passeth neither this way nor that way Section 1. In whom THis is the Conscience of the Ignorant especially in particulars Of such as be Questionists in and about commonly things indifferent or disputable not necessary to life and saluation of such as be like Scribes and Pharisies straining at Gnats and swallowing Mat. 23. 24 Eccl. 7. 16. Camels Of such as will be ouer righteous iust ouermuch straining duties beyond the rule or making somethings which be indifferent necessary to be either done or left vndone These are troublers both of themselues and of others too very often Section 2. The causes hereof THe Conscience of a godly man may haue sometime a scruple in it through ignorance or errour in some particular but his Conscience for a scruple is not to be called a scrupulous Conscience for that which is scrupulous is commonly and for the most part so This happeneth first through the iudgment very vnsetled vnresolued ambiguous wauering this way and that way suspicious hauing no certaine ground to settle upon but onely running vpon coniectures disputing too and fro with and against so as Conscience is much troubled 2. This happeneth by misapplying generall rules about things indifferent according as they conceit to particular actions as to suppose that they edifie not that they be offensiue not decent not to Gods glory deciding within themselues sometimes positiuely that which an other makes disputable by conference with whom their former conclusion is shaken and so stand vnresolued in their iudgement 3. This scruple happeneth when a thing indifferent is needlesly questioned vpon which the Apostle laboured to preuent among the Corinthians saying aske no question for Conscience sake 1. Cor. 10. 27. For in truth there is nothing that more breedeth scruple than idle questioning of matters which might bee well passed ouer 4. By stretching a thing for want of knowledge beyond the nature of a thing indifferent so taking it to be worse than it is through some shew of euill in his apprehension as some did among the Corinthians 1. Cor. 8. 7. 5. By vncharitably expounding such things as be established and onely proposed as indifferent by authoritie beyond the intent of the Church Lastly by giuing way to doubts and to trouble themselues needlesly with vnprofitable disputations of things vndetermined Such peruerse disputes the Apostle liked not 1. Tim. 6. 5. Section 3. Of the effects FRom this scrupulositie ariseth inward trouble feare heart burning vncharitable censuring and iudging one an other and outward diuision sects vnwarrantable courses oppositions forcible impositions and much euil euery way for want of peaceablenesse both on
the one hand as also on the other Section 4. The Remedies TO take away this scrupulosity and to reforme the scrupulous Conscience First be stored with principles and grounds of truth for help to discerne betweene one thing and an other Secondly to be studied well in cases of Conscience or to seeke help of such as be Thirdly To know the Rules of indifference before named and Chap. 13. withall to vnderstand how to apply them aptly Fourthly to auoid needlesse questions about things indifferent Fifthly To hold this firme that what God neither commands nor forbids that 's indifferent and being no law there is no transgression so the Conscience is free Sixthly To know that the Kingdome of God stands not in things indifferent Rom. 15. 17. 18. neither in the doing nor in leauing of such things vndone but in matters of an higher nature Seuenthly and lastly beware of needlesse suspicions of euill of nice distinctions of weake conclusions from sound premises and so auoid what may worke scruple and insnare Conscience CHAP. 37. Of the terrifying Conscience THe Conscience terrifying is the ill-stirring Conscience forcibly accusing for the time with much feare Section 1. In whom THis was the Conscience of Cain of Felix which made him tremble and of Belshazzar making his ioynts to loose and his knees to knock together Section 2. Of the Causes THis terrifying Conscience commeth by some hainous sinnes committed and wherof a man knowes himselfe guilty vpon the preaching of iudgement for such sinnes as wee may see in Felix Act. 24. Secondly by apprehending some extraordinary signe of Gods wrath as Belshazzar did Dan. 5. 6. Thirdly some fearefull worke of God suddenly done as shaking of the earth which made the Gaoler tremble Act. 16. Fourthly the beliefe of the truth of Gods threats with an apprehension of deserued damnation will make Conscience to worke vpon Diuels to make them tremble Section 3. Of the effects THis terrifying Conscience workes feare a dreadfull sound is in his eare Iob 15. 21. He feareth ill newes as Adonijah and his Guests did 1. King 1. 49. 50. Secondly hee feareth mans power comming out against him when his Conscience tells him of his euils done So did Saul the host of the Philistims after hee had beene with the Witch 1. Sam. 28. Thirdly hee feareth death to him as a terrible Messenger as Cain did Fourthly hee feareth the last Iudgement Day as Felix did Hee will feare sometime where no feare is Prou. 28. 1. for God giueth the wicked and hypocrites a trembling heart Deut. 28. 65. It filleth him with troubled thoughts as it did Belshazzar and Nero after he had caused Agrippina his Mother to be murthered and Alexander to bee tormented when hee had slaine his friend Clytus It makes that hee cannot endure Gods presence but will flie from it as did Adam and Eue nor to endure a powerfull Ministery Felix could not suffer Pauls preaching he trembled so thereat Section 4. Of the remedies THe meanes to cure this terrour of Conscience is as Paul exhorted the Gaoler to beleeue in the Lord Iesus Act. 16. 31. to repent as Peter exhorted those in Acts Chap. 2. 38. to pray for the spirit of adoption which puts away seruile feare the spirit of bondage and witnesseth with our Spirit and Conscience that wee are the children of God Rom. 8. 15. CHAP. 38. Of the desperate Conscience THis desperate Conscience is the last and highest degree of an ill stirring Conscience It differs from the other which may be in one ordained to bee saued as in the Gaoler Act. 16. but this is the effect of the former in Abiects as in Achitophels and in Iudaslike persons This is the raging Conscience restlesse like the Sea or as a Deare shot with the arrow sticking in him or as a Band-Dog awakening and euer barking giuing no quiet or ease day nor night Section 1. Of the Causes THis desperation ariseth First vpon some sinne committed against God or man contrary to the cleare light of his reason as Saul did against Dauid by his owne confession 1. Sam. 24. 16. 17. 21. 25. 21. In like manner did Achitophel in taking part with Ahsalom against Dauid and Iudas against Christ whom hee acknowledged to bee innocent vpon the torture of his Conscience Matth. 27. 2. Secondly it commeth vpon the aggrauation of sinne as thinking it impardonable that for it God hath forsaken him that there is no mercy for him that he is damned as within themselues the desperate doe conclude and doe sometime vtter as much as a Sheriffes man did who mocked and abused one Iames Abbes a blessed Act and Monum Martyr and as I my selfe knew an Atturney who cryed aloud I am damned I am damned and dyed miserably 3. Satan helpeth on this by suggesting Gods wrath the externall shame also among men and that there is no hope to recouer out of so great a miserie By this and the former the soule is in a deuouring gulph of desperation ready to swallow him vp Section 2. Of the effects MOst lamentable is the state of any one in this Case and vnder the power of this desperate Conscience for first it makes a man restlesse and vnquiet he is full of feares his spirit perplexed and grieuously tormented with apprehension of Hell Death and Damnation 2. He can attaine to no spirituall comfort for he seeth God against him the Diuell he conceits is ready to take him to him he cannot beleeue any of the promises of life to belong at all to him he hath no part in heauen no hope to bee with Christ and his Saints but feareth desperately Hell and damnation No outward thing can comfort him the bag full cannot ioy a Iudas a Kingly state cannot afford solace to a Saul nor the deepenesse of wit and wisedome worke consolation in the heart of an Achitophel Thirdly hereupō this desperate Conscience makes men weary of their liues and at length causeth them to lay violent hands vpon themselues especially whē they be in any worldly distresse as Nero the Tyrant did and Pilat as Histories record and as Saul Iudas and Achitophel did So likewise one Clerke in King Edward the sixth dayes one Pauier Towne-Clerke of London one Leuar a husbandman and one Henry Smith a Lawyer Enemies to the Gospell and persecutors hanged themselues being desperate persons who through terrour of Conscience hastened their vntimely deaths Section 3. Of the Remedies TO cure this Conscience naturall gifts will not doe it no not an Achitophels wit and wisdome not worldly wealth Iudas bag of money could not ease him not Kingly nor Emperiall dignitie could relieue a Nero an Alexander not wine nor wanton women not mirth nor musick not feasting among Princes could quiet the Conscience of a Belshazzar much lesse can seeking to a Witch relieue the distressed and terrifying desperate Conscience of a Saul for no worldly naturall much lesse diuelish meanes can cure a spirituall malady but the true remedie is
vnder grace Rom. 6. 14. To this I answer first Because the law is better knowne then the Gospell the one being naturall the other spirituall Secondly for that the one is more pressed vpon Conscience and more often laid to heart then the other Thirdly because the remainder of seruile feare sooner apprehēdeth wrath by breach of the Law then filial feare the obseruance of dutie from Gods goodnesse and mercie Fourthly because of scandalls which are sooner taken when they are giuen and more marked of the worst when the regenerate doe fall in transgressing the law then omission of euangelical duties or euils against the gospell cōmitted which world lings and naturalists take no notice of Fifthly because of the more frequent vse of the law for morall vertues within for oeconomicall duties and offices of loue to be performed one to an other and in commerce with men daily abroad wherein a regenerate man findeth his often failings by reason hee knowes the law in a high and spirituall sense Sixthly because Euangelicall precepts of knowing Christ of belieuing in him of repenting for sinne of Christian loue do expresse themselues in obseruing the duties commanded in the law of which the regenerate failing Conscience will accuse him Seuenthly because the law more easily bindeth and worketh vpon the Conscience naturally when the Gospell though it bind yet it doth it supernaturally and that not without the speciall worke of grace euen in the regenerate man Eighthly because the regenerate in their failings to the law consider them only and that too often as sinning against the law without any apprehension of any their default therein towards the Gospell when in deed and truth their failing in obedience to the Gospell maketh them transgressours of the Law for let a man haue the vertue of Christ haue a liuely faith Euangelicall repentance and loue hee will not easily faile of his duty commanded in the law but if he doe he will quickly see by his sinning against the law that he hath been disobedient against the Gospell Section 6. Of the difference betweene the Conscience regenerate and vnregenerate SEing the regenerate Conscience vnder the Gospell will yet accuse and trouble a regenerate man for transgression of the law it may bee demanded how the same differs from the Conscience vnregenerate I answer they differ first in the binding power the vnregenerate onely by the law as a Naturalist but not by the Gospell for it hath no power nor command ouer his conscience to work in him obedience by reason First of their strong corruptions not abated Secondly for want of the spirit of illumination with sanctification Thirdly the vneffectuallnesse of the Gospell in them and lastly because they doe conceit the Gospell a law of liberty not requiring obedience at all But the Conscience of the Regenerate is bound both by the law and Gospell to obedience Secondly they differ in excusing and witnessing for one The vnregenerat mans Conscience though neuer so morally honest cannot excuse him nor witnesse his righteousnesse before God Rom. 3. 19. 23. But the regenerate Conscience will by vertue of the Gospell The vnregenerate Conscience cannot witnesse for the vnregenerate any one of these three things that he liueth in new obedience to God by Christ liuing in him as the regenerate conscience will Gal. 2. 20. That he hath the Spirit of adoption as the regenerate conscience doth with the aid of Gods spirit Rom. 8. 15. And that if he doe fearefully fall yet he loueth the Lord as the regenerate Conscience in Peter will Ioh. 21. 15. do after true and heartie repentance Thirdly they differ in accusing The vnregenerate Conscience in accusing may driue the vnregenerat from the meanes of saluation as it did the Pharisies make some tremble Ioh. 8. 9. Acts 24. as a Felix but not reforme them it fills them with legall sorrow as a Iudas to repent but not with Euangelical But now the conscience of the regenerate accusing neuer driueth them from the meanes the ministery of the word but it worketh reformation a godly sorrow in them as it 2. Sam. 12. 24. did in Dauid and also in Peter Mat. 27. and in the prodigall sonne Luk. 15. And thus much for the regenerate Conscience now follow the many differences thereof as the tender Conscience the wounded Conscience the quiet conscience the vpright the pure the iustifying and confident Conscience CHAP. 44. Of the tender Conscience THe tender conscience is the passible conscience easily touched with the least sin in thought word and deed as well in omission as commission Section 1. In whom it is THis is the Conscience of a Dauid whose heart smote him in cutting off but the lappe of Sauls garment This is the Conscience of a soft hearted Iosias which will tremble and melt at the word This is the Conscience of such as be easie to be intreated endued with wisedome from aboue gentle and mercifull This is the Conscience of all such as haue bin wounded in spirit such as haue felt the smart for sin anguish of heart and the burthen of Gods displeasure by former follies Section 2. Of the effects hereof THis tender conscience so rarely to bee found in these our daies hath singular effects First it makes a man humble in his owne eyes willing rather to condemne himselfe for euery sinne then to excuse colour or defend any sin Secondly it makes a man watchfull for it hath a quick sight and diligently attendeth vnto the rule carefully thereby to guide all his actions It is like the beasts in Reu. 4. full of eyes before to preuent sinne behind to recall our selues if any sinne hath of infirmity beene committed Thirdly it makes a man fearefull to offend and therefore moues him to auoid the very appearance 1. Thes 5. 22. of euill and to flie the occasions of sinning as Ioseph did who would not be in the roome with his Mistresse Fourthly It makes him vpon this feare to walke precisely not doing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 5. 15. Mat. 2. 8. any thing but vpon a diligent inquisition it will not permit a man to fall vpon a businesse rashly at an hap hazzard This causeth a man to be nice in that which other make a iest of This tendernesse made Daniel to refuse to eate of Dan. 1. 6. the Kings meat to pray three times a day when it indangered his life This made Dauid that he would 2. Sam. 23. 16. not drink of the water of the wel of Bethlehem this made the sons of Ionadab to Ier. 35. 14. dwel in Tents and to drink no wine this made Mordecai Ester 3. 2. not to bow his knee to Haman Naboth not to sell to Ahab his Garden and old Eleazer not to dissemble 2. Mach. 6. the eating of a little swines flesh Fifthly this will make a man carefull to auoid offence in things questionable whether good or ill if it be in a mans own power to doe or