Selected quad for the lemma: soul_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
soul_n adam_n original_a sin_n 4,215 5 5.6070 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A65629 A golden topaze, or, Heart-jewell namely, a conscience purified and pacified by the blood and spirit of Christ / written by Francis Whiddon ... Whiddon, Francis, d. 1656 or 7. 1656 (1656) Wing W1644; ESTC R10315 60,273 170

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

art to walke in it is the way of Gods statutes if therefore thou once get into this way take heed of going out of it let that resolution be in thee which was in David Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I will keep it unto the end Ps 119.33 Resolve to be constant without tripping or turning either to the right hand or to the left so shalt thou be assured that thy conscience is good 4. Character of a good conscience is sincerity the word in the Originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and our Translators read it honestly the word is very comprehensive and containes within it as much as any or all other Adverbs in Scripture namely worthily decently accurately circumspectly lively famously and praiseworthy It notes unto us the lustre of an action and tells us that a good conscience stands not so much in verbs as in adverbs not so much in doing as in Welldoing if a Magistrate he rules diligently if a Minister he preacheth willingly if a hearer he heareth attentively if a supplicant he prayeth fervently yea whatsoever he does in the worship of his God he doth it faithfully Rom. 12.8 Phil. 2.20 Use Consider this you carnall men and women who content your selves with the bare doing of a duty without respect to the manner of doing If you eare the word read pray and practise some good duty of piety or charity you thinke you have done all and all well Oh remember that if it be not done honestly that is syncerely in obedience to God both for matter and manner and end your conscience is not good Let me therefore advise you in every duty that you do performe observe an honourable decorum I speake to Jew and Gentile bond and free male and female of what ranke and condition soever rest not satisfied in your doing of any duty except it be done honestly faithfully and praise-worthily 1. Magistrates be you in the highest place of Judicature or in the lowest place of office minde your Oathes your places your trust Jer. 48.10 doe not Gods work negligently least a woe befall you and Gods curse seize upon you but have respect unto your owne conscience and unto the consciences of others that your owne may be preserved and the consciences of others rectified 2. Ministers I must speak to you as the Colossians were to speak to Archippus Take heed to the Ministry which you have received Gol. 4.17 that you fulfill it see you doe your whole worke in delivering the whole truth and in being an example in all holinesse unto your flock preach in season and out of season do the worke of an Evangelist so fully and honestly that you may appeare to be men allowed of God to preach the Gospell and that your preaching hath not been to please men but God which tryeth the heart 1 Thes 2.4 Thus shall you evidence a good conscience when you seek to satisfy your conscience in every duty of your calling 3. Governours of Families think it not enough that you have so many under your command and that you can say to this servant goe and he goeth and unto that servant come and he cometh see well unto it that your commands and countermands be all honest doe that which is just equall unto them Doe you first with Joshua serve God your selfe Josh 24. and then resolve that your Family shall doe the like If any be ignorant see with Abraham that you teach them If any be unteachable untractable see with David you exclude them let them not abide in your house so shall your houses be Bethels houses of God and your selves men of God and men of a good conscience 4. Private persons be you not Chams but Jonathans Be you carefull of your owne consciences then be carefull of the consciences of your Brethren hate not your brethren in your hearts but reprove them plainely suffer not sin to rest upon them Lev. 19 17. Yea thou must love thy neighbour as they selfe v. 18. there must be a conformity in quality though not a correspondence of equality thy love to thy brother and to thy selfe must be like in kind for sincerity without deceit and for efficacy without defect If thou do thus love thy neighbour as thy selfe 1 John 3.18 thou lovest thy God and thou lovest a good conscience 5. Lastly to every one of what sex or condition soever whether rich or poor let conscience be your Totum all that thou hast to do is to look well to conscience Art thou rich let conscience be thy bagg if poor let conscience by thy cruse if a wife let conscience be thy glasse if a wayd let conscience be thy attire whatsoever thou art submit to conscience let that command thee be ruled by it and it will not wrong thee be familiar with it and it will never deceive thee Thus you see what is to be done in the exercise of a good conscience 1. A willingnesse to please God 2. To please him in all things 3. To please him alwaies and 4. to do all this truly sincerely and honestly Thus to doe is the very life and soule of all practicall piety As thou lovest thy soule misse not one of these charecters they are so many golden linkes fastened by God himselfe that he that hath one of them hath all and if but one be wanting assure thy selfe the rest are missing Acknowledge a necessity of them all for as in a sound body there must be a due mixture and composition of all the 4 elements and Humors so in a sound conscience there must be a due composition of all these 4 characters 1. Use to such as have hold thus exercise a good conscience to proclaime Gods bounty that they with others may magnify God we read that the 4 Lepers in Samaria having found a sudden happy change from penury to plenty they blamed themselves for being silent and not divulging this great mercy 2 King 7.9 We doe not well say they this day is a day of good tydings and we hold our peace So shall I say unto you that have found this great and gracious change in your selves that your evill conscience is become a good conscience You shall not do well to be silent but with David it is your part and duty speedily to communicate unto others Come unto me all you that feare God and I will tell you what God hath done for my soule Ps 66.18 I say againe it s your duty and you are very faulty if you doe it not Acknowledge your misery by nature and likewise your happinesse by Grace say with all humility thankfulnesse I was by nature as vile as the worst as deeply guilty in Adams sin as any as fouly polluted with Originall sin as the veriest Reprobate and had in me the seed of all sin apt to be drawne unto the foulest and grossest transgressions and to run to the same excesse of riot with the worst tit 1.15 yea my very soule and
It is in every part or faculty of the soule 1. It hath the understanding for its Throne and Pallace where it is cheifly resident and keepeth a compleate Court in the whole soule commonly called forum conscientiae and there as a Judge sits determining and prescribing absolving and condemning de jure 2. It s in the memory and there it acteth as Register or Recorder readily minding and recording witnessing and testifying de facto 3. It s in the will and affections and there Conscience carries it selfe like a Jaylour or Executioner rendring rewarding plaguing and punishing every one sine respectu without partiality The 4 th thing in the definition of conscience is determination Conscience determineth what is good what evill what is to be done what not to be done and so excites or diswades accordingly If conscience say this must be done then must we do it for conscience sake If conscience tells us it is evill Rom. 13.5 then must we forbeare for conscience sake i.e. out of an holy feare of God whereby our conscience may be preserved pure before him 5. The rule by which conscience acteth namely the light of Gods law I do not say by the light of the word Gospell or written Law but more largely by the light of Gods law I meane the law of Nature written in mans heart before the word was written or Gospell revealed For as man had a conscience from the beginning so he had light from the beginning to regulate conscience which was the law of Nature written in his heart Rom. 2.15 6. The last thing in the desinition of conscience is her acting or working upon the light received which is twofold either acquitting or condemning when by her light she determines what is done that it is good or evill she accordingly doth excuse or accuse Rom. 2.15 And thus have you conscience in generall defined and explained Having shewed you what conscience is and in whom namely in the reasonable Creature now in so much as every man hath reason I may safely conclude that every man hath conscience The point of Doctrine is clearly this Doct. There is in every man a power or faculty called Conscience 1. That there is in man a conscience let our Apostle cleare up this truth in himselfe how often doth he call and appeale unto conscience upon all occasions when he was convented before the Coūsell greiveous things charged upō him he appeals to conscience Men and Brethren I have lived saith he in all good Conscience before God untill this day Againe when Ananias commanded them that stood by to smite Paul on the mouth Act. 23.1.2 and Tertullus with all his Rhetoricke before Foelix besmeares him calling him a pestilent fellow a mover of sedition a maintainer of the sect of the Pharisees a polluter of the Temple and what not He hath no way to cast off all this filth but by flying unto conscience shewing his enimies how far and free he was from these base aspersions that it was his constant practice to keep a Conscience void of offence toward God and toward men Act. 24.16 And that you may not think it to be Pauls peculiar but common to others with him we approve our selves to every mans Conscience in the sight of God 2 Cor. 4.2 Ob. Though good men have a conscience yet wicked men have not A. It is an usuall saying indeed amongst men here when they meet with such as are very hard in their dealings or very vitious in living to say this man hath no Conscience But you must understand their meaning when they say he hath no conscience they meane no good conscience or no working conscience Be you therefore assured that there is a Conscience in every man and woman be they good or bad not only in Paul but also in Pilate not only in John but likewise in Judas John 8.9 Rom. 2.15 The accursed Jewes wicked Pharisees and Heathenish Idolaters will all acknowledge the being and working of Conscience in them To hold therefore that some men have no Conscience is both dishonourable to God and injurious to man 1. A dishonour to God as if he had given man not a perfect but imperfect soule defective in its principall power or faculty we confesse that the body of man being generated may be maimed wanting a part or member Gen. 2.7 as an eye an eare a hand or foot Anima infundendo creatur creando infunditur Tho Aqu. 2. d. 3. q. 1.4.1 because it comes mediately from man but as for the foule being created and infused by God this cannot be defective but compleat in all this powers and faculties and therefore a great dishonour to God to question his workmanship as men do if they deny man to have a conscience Anima humana non eseminis traduce propagatur sed immediatè à Deo creatur which is a speciall power or faculty in the soule 2. An injury to man 1. Deny man conscience you deny him reason and so confound him with a beast but grant him a conscience and you grant him reason and set him in his proper place as a Lord or master over beasts Ps 8.7 2. Againe deny him Conscience you deny him a Soule one of his Essentials and so confound his manhood which were a great injury to him We acknowledge sin hath brought us to a great losse but not to such a losse as to loose our being we have by Adams sin lost our innocency but not our essence our Excellency but not our existence our soule is defiled not annìhilated our powers depraved not destroyed man is man still hath body and soule partes members powers and faculties all good quoad bonum naturale all naught quoad bonum morale The truth then still stands cleare that there is in every man a power or faculty called Conscience 2. The Reasons why God hath planted this power of conscience in man are two 1. R. To shew his Justice that he will judge righteously God commands judges here on earth to execute righteous judgment Deut. 1.16 to proceed secundum allegata probata to do nothing but upon good evidence and witnesse Now shall not the Judge of all the world do right God hath therefore set this power in man that when God comes to judge him he may have sufficient evidence in himselfe his owne Conscience witnessing for him or against him before Gods Tribunall For God will not condemne without a witnesse 2. R. Is to shew his mercy unto man He knowes man is very fraile labilis memoriae apt to forget his God and to forget himselfe Sometimes he goes forth and forgets to pray unto God for protection and direction sometimes he returnes home and neglects his duty of praise to God for his preservation therefore God hath placed in him this power of conscience as a remembrancer unto him Againe sometimes mens Passions are very high as in Jonah Jonah 4.9 who is
ready to quarrell with God and to fall out with him as if he had greatly wronged him God saith unto him doest thou well to be angry yea saith he I do well to be angry even unto death His words are very high words of a passionate spirit blinded with anger rather then with any expresse rebellion Very needfull therefore is it that such should have conscience as a Controuler to check them Againe others their Affections are disorderly placed on wrong objects likeing those whom they should dislike and loving those whom they should loath such was the blind Affection of Jehoshaphat to Ahab I am saith he as thou art 2 Chron. 18 3. 2 Chron. 19.2 my people as thy people its needfull therefore that conscience say to such as Jehn to Iehoshaphat shouldst then love them that hate the Lord Lastly many mens appetites are very wanton wholsome meates and drinkes content them not their meates must be mixed with hurtfull condiments and their drinke with noxious ingredients therefore it is very requisite that conscience play the Monitor and advise them not to looke on the wine when it sparkles Prov. 23.30 31. nor to seeke after mixt wine though it goe downe pleasantly yet at last it will bite like a Serpent and hurt like a Cockatrice And thus you see how just and how mercifull God is to plant such a power as conscience within us Vse 1 Is there such a power or faculty as conscience in every man then let every man learne to magnify his maker not barely for being his Creature but for being such a Creature as none is like him First look upon thy meanest part namely thy body view that well and thou shalt see such an exellency in it that no visible creature is comparable unto mans body If we look unto our first Creation we find them very excellent creatures 1. God made them with consultation and deliberation Gen. 1.26 let us make man His advice argueth a worke of great weight and moment and this word of plurality us intimates the Trinity (a) Galen though a meere Naturalist when he saw the admirable frame and structure of mans body was so taken with it that he could not but adiudge the honour of an Hymne to the wise Creator of it and mindes us of the mysterie of the three persons in one Godhead God the father seemeth to speak as communicating by way of consultation with God the Son and God the holy Ghost in the worke of Creation 2. The wonderfull endowments of the body in beauty strength nimblenesse activity without deformity or mortality 3. All other bodies made for the good of mans body the heavenly to give light unto it the earthly bodies to nourish cherish and comfort it Againe if we consider the recreation or regeneration of our bodies we find them more excellent 1. Purchased by Christs bloud 1 Cor. 6.20 2. Sanctified by Christs spirit 1 Cor. 6.19 3. Assumed by Christs person Phil. 2.7 When he took our nature he took our body and was made like unto us in all things sin only excepted so that we are as neer to Christ as our bodies to our soules Having thus viewed our meanest part namely the body let us in the next place consider our best part namely our soule What the soule is The soule of man is a spirit distinct invisible immortall infused by God 1. A spirit Thus much the Originall word declareth as in John 11. 33. and John 12. 27. we find soule and spirit promiscuously used by our Saviour my soule is troubled my spirit is troubled 2. A distinct spirit because it hath its being not only in the body but also out of the body Eccl. 12.7 as it had its time of entrance into the body so its time of returne out As it is in us so it can be without us and will be after us 3. Invisible Because no more to be seen then an Angel or God himselfe 4. An immortall spirit Eccl. 12.7 And Christ tells us that men may kill our bodies but not our soules which made Anaxzarchus bold to speak unto his Tormentors who did beat him with clubs laye on my Sachel meaning his body you cannot hurt Anaxzarchus meaning his soule 5. A spirit infused by God Gen. 2.7 How Adam came by his soule we all know namely by inspiration but as for our owne soules we are at a great stand Some think by participation (b) Chrysippus de natur â. lib. 3. as one Candle lighteth another Some thinke by generation (c) Tertullian l. de anim â ch 5. that a man begets a man compleat Others say it is by infusion (d) Thom. Aquin. 1 q. 75.6 1 m. by a peculiar inspiration when the child is first quickened in the womb Much is imagined little concluded concerning this question (e) St. Austin hath writ 4 bookes of the originall of the soule in which he leaveth this question undecided And his second booke of Retractions doth witnesse that he continued in that doubt unto his death cap. 56. and no marvell for who knoweth the way of the spirit Eccl. 11.5 The Scripture seems to warrant the last opinion calling God the Creator of the Spirit Zach. 12.1 The giver of the Spirit Eccl. 12.7 The Father of our spirits Heb. 12.9 It is not without consideration if God by a peculiar elegy and stile is called the father of spirits that he might be opposed to the father of the flesh for if the soule be by traduction then those that are the fathers of the flesh would also be the fathers of the spirits neither would God by this title be distinguished from the father of the flesh if he wrought alike in both and did not forme mens soules otherwise then their bodies So then consider well your bodies soules and you may safely conclude that of all the creatures that ever God made there is more to be seen of God in man then in them all and in man much in his body more in his soule but most of all in his conscience as one saith this smelleth more of God then the heavens the Sun the Stars or all the glorious things of the earth gold precious stones Rubies or sweetest herbs roses or lillies Oh how should we magnifie our maker Ps 139.14 and with David say I will praise thee O Lord for I am fearfully and wonderfully made marvelous are thy workes and that my soule knoweth right well Object Ob. Our conscience were at first very pure and excellent but now like our selves they are most sinfull yea our Soules and Consciences are defiled Tit. 1.15 therefore nothing worthy praise in them Answ A. It s very true that our consciences which were pure and excellent at first are by Adam's sin become defiled and uncleane But let me tell you there is no part power or faculty in the whole man that retaines so much of its excellency in it as conscience doth though the
A Golden Topaze OR Heart-jewell Namely A Conscience purified and pacified by the Blood and Spirit of CHRIST Written by FRANCIS WHIDDON Pastor of Morton-Hampsted in Devon Unicnique liber esse propria Conscientia ad hunc librum discutiendum emendandum omnes alii inventi sunt S. Bernard OXFORD Printed by Henry Hall 1656. TO MY FAITHFULL Flock who love the Lord Jesus Christ in Sincerity Mercy unto you and peace and love be multiplied MY Deare Children for so I am bold to call you though you have had many teachers yet not many fathers if I may credit your owne tongues there is a number of you will say that in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the Gospell 1 Cor. 4.15 Let God have the glory for what is Paul or what is Apollos or what am I But the weake Instrument by whom the all-sufficient God hath wrought faith in your hearts I therefore according unto my Duty do here present unto you a tender of my true Affection towards you in this plaine and short Tract of Conscience The subject is worthy of all Acceptation Though the Author bee the meanest of all his Brethren You may consider it as an Object both to your eare and eye your eare hath heard it preached and your eye may see and read it and if your heart Affect it the Jewell is your owne And I who am your Pastor may take the Boldnesse and say I need no Epistle of Commendation to you or Epistle of Commendation from you you are mine Epistle knowne and read of all that have spirituall eyes and are acquainted with you yea you are the Epistle of Christ written not with Inke but with the spirit Not in Tables of stone but in the fleshy Tables of the heart I hope I shall not be ashamed of this my foolish Boasting But that when I am gone from you this pretious Jewell which now I present unto you will then be found still to abide within you and if at any time through carelesnesse this Jewell of a good Conscience with in you shall gather Dust and lose it's lustre Let this little Tract if better be wanting be Assumed by you Read it once and againe humbly and advisedly so may you have hope that your Dull and Dusky Consciences will Recover it 's former lustre with more peace and Purity And Now my deare children knowing that shortly I must put off this my tabernacle of Flesh 2 Pet. 1.14 and be brought to the house appointed for all living Job 30.23 I shall endeavour to give you some few Advertismēts before I goe hence and be seene no more Know Deare soules we are the people on whom the ends of the world are Come and our daies very perilous and Dangerous as saith the Apostle 2 Tim. 3.1 2 3 4. In which we find Iniquite to Abound and Damnable Errors Heresies to Superabound What Enthusiasticall fancy what Anti-Scripturall opinions What Immaginary Raptures and Revelations have we now Amongst us so that now to Refraine from their evill opinion and practises is to make our selves a prey Never were the times more Contagious Opinions more Infectious practises more Dangerous So that every pious soule had need to be a Spirituall Physician and still to have Cordials to fortifie his soule within and Repercussives to beate back the Infectious Venome of Sin and Error without Preservatives I. Be constant and sincere in the preformance of all holy Duties both publike and private in the Congregation and the Family Let your holinesse appeare unto all Be holy abroad and at home Despise not ordinances neither in whole or part But receive them with all thankfulnesse as Love-tokens from your Father and acknowledg a Necessitie of them all and that as long as you are Below Temptations you cannot be above Ordinances which will be as long as you carry your Fraile Tabernacles about you They are more necessary then your Appointed food More to be Desired then Gold yea then fine Gold And sincere milke sweeter then the hony or hony Comb without which you cannot be nourished up unto everlasting Life 2. Keepe close to your God in a way of Prayer and prayses Be Constant in Both pray alwaies and in all things give thankes What Grace you want get it by Prayer and what good you enjoy weare it By Prayse If you thus draw neare to God in a way of Duty God will be still neare unto you in a way of Mercy The least Dropp of the wine of mercy should Inflame your hearts with true thankfulnesse and fill your Mouths with constant prayses So that you lay new Ingagement on the god of mercy to bestow more mercies Not only to preserve you from the evill of evils But ever to Inrich you with the blessing of blessings 3. Give not way to a customary Dulnesse in Duty but performe every Duty with all your power with sincere Intention with heate of Affection and with Diligence and Delight Especially be not slight in secret prayer meditation and reading Doe not the worke of the Lord deceitfully or negligently least the curse of God fall on you Jer 48.10 Mal 1.14 but zealously and heartily watch to these duties Eph. 6.18 Keep your hearts in a good frame for them undefiled with sin untainted with the world Endeavour to feele all Duties at your hearts inlivening inlarging and inflaming your affections Lay not out the chiefe of your zeale on Externals opinions and the smaller things of Religion but let soule-saving worke be your maine and daily imployment Exercise your selves in selfe-examination looke daiely into your owne bosomes by a serious scrutiny and spare not those beloved Dalilah's and cursed Achans which are the troublers of our Israel 4. Get true light in your Understandings not only a speculative but spirituall light not a notionall but experimentall light the light of the knowledge of God in the face of Jesus Such a light whereby you may be inabled to see sin to be the greatest evill and God himselfe to be the cheifest good Such a light that melts the soule that humbles the soule that enlivens the soule that quickens the soule and that quiets the soule Nourish not an head-light but an heart-light Let the word of truth dwell in you plenteously Weake judgments are easily misled both in opinion and practice but a sound judgement will preserve you in both So fly one error that you do not fall into another it is easy to run into extreames but very difficult to keep the golden Meane 5. Keep your hearts with all diligence 4. Pro. Watch daily to prevent him which watcheth ever to mischeife you I Pet. 5.8 And let yours praiers be frequent and fervent Lord lead us not into temptation Your enemies are many mighty and malicious which still lye in waite to breake your peace wound your consciences lessen your comforts impaire your graces blurre your evidences and dampe your assurances and unlesse you stand upon your Guard set your selves
conscience then consider the workings of conscience in others what makes Adam to run into the thicket sarah to stand behind the Tent door Jonah to lurke downe in the side of the ship Cain to feare a mortall blow from every man he meets 1 King 20 1 King 22 25. and Benhadad and Zedekiah to be a terror unto themselves and to run from chamber to chamber to hide themselves It was their conscience and nothing but conscience accusing and testifying unto God against them Againe consider how is it that when God is pleased to give out unto us a notable signe of is power and majesty as in thunder and lightning that the very sound of the one and the very sight of the other though these be but from Naturall causes should make a Barbarian a contemner of God to shake and tremble Againe whence is it that there is a Religions Adoration and propension to the worship of a Deity even in those Heathens themselves who sacrifice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the unknown God There being no nation under heaven that does not do divine worship to some thing or other and in it to God as they conceive So that they worship many of them but stocks and stones and some particular piece of nature as the Sun Moone or Stars knowing that there is somewhat to whom worship belongs Therefore according to the ordinary naturall light that is in all men there is a God Oh therefore blush and bewaile thy damnable Atheisme Consider well these things know and understand see and say verily there is a God that judgeth the earth thus far of conscience in generall Having spoken of the faculty namely conscience we now proceed unto the Qualitie namely a good conscience Had Paul onely said I have or I am assured I have a conscience he had said no more then a Reprobate or Devill might have said But in that he saith he hath a good conscience and that he is fully perswaded of the same in this he goes beyond all reprobates and Devils who neither have nor ever shall have such a bosome friend within them We must now distinguish conscience into two species namely good and evill 1. Honestè bona pacatè bona A good Conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Holding faith and a good Conscience This good Conscience is sometimes quiet sometimes unquiet 2. Vitiosè mala molestè mala Bern Ames An evill Conscience Heb. 10.22 having our hearts sprinkled from an evill Conscience This is likewise peaceable or turbulent Now how these two do differ both in their peace and their trouble I shall hereafter shew you I am now to speak of the first namely a good conscience and more especially of Pauls good Conscience 1. What a good conscience is I answer 1. A good conscience is a Conscience rightly informed and principled by the word so that it can truly judge and determine evill to be evill and good to be good 2. By a good conscience I understand a conscience sanctified by the holy Spirit of God whereby we are incited to good and diswaded from evill and doth readily excuse us for doing well but accuse us for doing evill 3. By Pauls good conscience in the Text I understand a conscience both purified and pacifyed by the blood and spirit of Christ so that upon a true sight and sorrow for sin and a full perswasion of the remission of the same in and for Christ he enjoyed that peace which passeth all understanding Phil 4.7 2 Cor. 1.12 i. e. a true spirituall and incomprehensible rest and quietnesse of mind wrought by Gods spirit in his heart and so preserving him from terror anxiety and trouble But to draw unto some profitable point of Doctrine you heare Paul glorying in a good conscience not as his peculiar as if he only were the man thus blessed of God but doth acknowledge the like mercy to be shewed by God unto others and therefore mentioning those that laboured with him in the Gospell speaketh in the plurall number we are assured we have a good conscience So that we may safely conlude that as all men have a conscience so there are some that have a good conscience Some there are who have not only a Conscience but also a good Conscience Of this some I find Noah a just man and perfect in his generation Gen. 6.9 and one that walked with God i. e. sincerely in his profession of Religion without hypocrisy Moses the meekest on the earth Numb 12.3 one that despised the vaine and vanishing honour riches pleasures of the world choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God Heb. 11.25 then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season Job a none-such none like him on the earth Job 1. so perfect so upright that feared God and eschewed evill David a man after Gods owne heart Nathaniel a true Israelite indeed in whom is no guile i. e. a man of simple integrity 1 John Paul a continuall practitioner of a good Conscience making it his daiely practice to keep a conscience void of offence both towards God towards man Act. 24.16 Thus might I tire you out with a long Catalogue of blessed Saints who lived in all good conscience from their conversion unto their dissolution Act. 23.1 Q. How came these to have a good conscience seeing all by nature have their consciences defiled A. 1. They had the bloud of Christ applied unto their consciences whereby they were purged from the impurity of dead workes Heb. 9.14 it being the fountaine for sin and for uncleannesse Zach. 13.1 in which poor loathsome leperous soules wash and are cleansed they were put into this poole of Bethesda and came out cleane being made white in the blood of the Lamb. 2. They had the righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto them whereby they were discharged from the debt of sin all hand-writings of accusations being cancel'd and they esteemed holy and unblameable in the sight of God Rom. 5.1 Not for any thing wrought in them and done by them but for Christs sake alone Not by imputing faith it selfe or any other Evangelicall obedience but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ as their righteousnesse received and rested on by faith 3. They by diligence in Christian watchfulnesse do maintaine their Covenant with God and if casually by any slip they seemed to break the peace they were carefull to renue their Covenant by true humiliation and reformation earnestly doing their first works and redeeming their former negligence with double diligence Rev. 2.5 2. Q. Whether a man may not have a good conscience yet the same to be very unquiet and much troubled Answ You must know that there is a 4 fold conscience 1. Good and quiet Purifyed and pacifyed which rests in a sweet feeling of the mercies of God in Christ Such a conscience had Paul that testifyed unto him that in simplicity and Godly sincerity he had his
they are strangers to a good conscience so are they strangers to a most good God who will be so far from blessing them that he will surely curse them and give such timerous and fearfull persons which want the fire of zeale their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimestone which is the second death Rev. 21.8 Rev. 21.8 A Childlike heart can never be patient under Gods dishonour though he is alwaies silent under his displeasure Moses was coole in his owne cause but hot when Gods credit lay at stake When the children of Israel had wrought folly in the golden Calfe the zeale of God did so eat him up that he could as well containe fire in his bosome as be patient when Gods glory suffer'd Oh therefore try your selves upon this Note and before you find your selves more bold for God be not so bold as to boast of a good conscience 4. Note of a good Conscience is to love a Conscientious Teacher and Instructer he desires not to live under a cold man-pleasing ministry which preaches liberty not strictnesse of conscience which soweth pillowes under mens armeholes and cryeth peace peace so that none departeth from his evill way The good conscience desireth such a Preacher who is not shaken with feare nor seduced with flattery whose voice is the voice of a cryer his sound as the sound of a trumpet Vsai 58.1 his words like sharp nailes and piercing goads Eccl. 12.11 Heb. 4.12 his preaching an heart-pricking his dividing of his Text and matter the dividing asunder of soule and spirit of the joints and marrow Such we find amongst the Prophets that cryed aloud and did not spare to tell the people of their transgressions and the house of Judah of their sins Such were amongst the Apostles who were sons of Thunder and threatned judgments against the wicked and rebellious Yea Christ himselfe who had the tongue of the learned to speake the word in season to him that was weary Isai 54.4 was also as a polished shaft Isai 49.2 and his mouth as a sharp sword his eyes as a flame of fire and his comming into the Temple none was able to abide he was as a Refiners fire and Fullers soap Mal. 3.2 Isa 11.4 and with the breath of his lips he did slay the wicked Is 11.4 Such are the Teachers that a good conscience loveth and delights in But our age can no more endure this kind of preaching then the Israelites could endure the shrill sound of the Trumpet sounding louder and louder He. 12.19 and that terrible fire and that voice of words which they desired they might heare no more Christs Ministers now are become Antichristian say they their doctrine only legall though indeed they trace Christ and his Apostles and observe their method who first commanded Repentance to be preached Lu. 24.47 and then remission of sins to be promised and Paul drawes all his doctrine unto these 2 heads first repentance towards God the second faith in Jesus Christ Act. 20.21 Yet men are now become so tender that they will not have their Dalilahs toucht you may not come unto them as the good Samaritan with wine to search and cleanse but only with smooth oyle to heale and comfort it must be all the riches of Christ and a naked faith in Christ If you touch with Obedience you are legall and Phisitions of no value But let me tell such as follow such Doctors their cause is dangerous when the blind lead the blind Isa 9.16 you can easily conclude what will follow The leaders of this people cause them to erre and they that are lead of them are destroied Wherefore would you be assured that your conscience is a good conscience do not with Ahab hate Micaiah nor with Ananias smite Paul do not vilify those whom God doth honour I meane zealous honest and consciencious ministers who labour in the word and doctrine and are examples to the flock in faith and love in spirit and purity if you do we are bold to challenge you for men of an evill conscience but on the other side if you honour them as men sent of God and highly esteeme them for their workes sake and readily obey their wholsome doctrine following them as they follow Christ you may then safely conclude we are assured we have a good conscience Last Note of good Conscience is universall Obedience This is an excellent distinguishing note between truth and error a good and an evill conscience God calls for this saying in all things that I have commanded you be circumspect Exod. 23.13 Caute estote 1. magna God will have conscience to be good to all persons Act. 24.16 and good in all things Heb. 13.18 and to be good at all times attentione servate vatabl It must be our exercise daily to keep a conscience void of offence both towards God and towards man He that hath a good conscience his heart is moulded into obedience his will is cast into Gods will He is ready to do what God commands and to leave undone what God forbids Like the slower that opens and shuts with the Sun So it opens to God and shuts to sin He desires to do Gods will on earth as the Angels do it in heaven readily sincerely constantly Let us now try our selves by this note and we shall find a good conscience to be very rare we may run with Jeremie to and fro to find such a man Jer. 5.1 we may goe into many families townes parishes perchance misse him at the last The prophane and vitious will not owne such good conscience and the Civill Justitia and formall Hyprocrite care not These two last have high conceits of themselves but yet upon tryall will be found too light First the civill man thinks well of himselfe because he is kind unto his neighbour defrauds no man but payes every man to a penny and as for the poor needy he is open handed ready to supply their wants at all times and therefore doubts not but his conscience is very good but let me tell thee thou civill man thou art much deceived if thy Conscience were good thou wouldest be holy to God as well as upright to man how is it that thou art so ignorant in the things of God and of thine own salvation that thou makest no conscience of prayer in thy Familie of reading the Word of hearing it preached unto thee no conscience of an Oath of a lie and of keeping the Sabbath day surelie if thy conscience be not good to God as well as to man it is void of goodnesse Secondly The formall Hypocrite is as high if not higher in his conceits of self worthinesse He is one that labours to know God and to serve him both publikely in the Congregation privately in his Familie hee is a professed onimie unto Ignorance and prophanes and prayseth God that he is not as other men and
as Ten. So conscience may be past feeling Ephes 4 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Remorselesse Stupid like a member that is benumm'd and hath no sense in it as the word signifies like a dead man that feeles not the heaviest Burden that is laid on him But when it is awakned Oh that Infinite unexpressable torments that will surround thy pretious soule At thy Right hand thy sins will be accusing thee At thy Left hand Infinite Devills expecting thee Vnder thee the fulnesse of hell burning Above thee an Angry Judg and within thee hty Conscience tormenting So that to live will be a torment to dye will be an Hell Yea God himselfe will rowse it up if not by his word as he did Ahabs Conscience or by his rod as he did Pharaohs yet by his terrible presence when thou shalt stand before his Tribunall then shalt thou call unto the mountaines to fall upon thee and the Hills to cover thee from the presence of the Lord Yea then shall thy conscience like a vulture gnaw upon thy heart and like a Scorpion sting thy very soule and that rigorouslie without Commsseration constantly without intermission and continually without cessation then shalt thou feele that worme that never dyeth and that fire that never goeth out Oh therefore do not content thy selfe which a false peace but labour for the peace which God approveth give no rest to thine eyes or slumber unto thine eye lids before thou hast gotten a good conscience namely A Conscience both purified and pacified by the bloud and spirit of Christ 1 Cor. 6.11 3. Use for Comfort to such as have tried and upon a truetryall have found themselves to be enriched with this precious Iewel namely a good conscience let such magnifie God say the Lord hath dealt most bountifullie with me praised be his great Name for his uuspeakable gift Elkanah could say to Hannah that he was better unto her then ten sonnes But thy good conscience may truly say to the that she is better then ten thousand sonnes then a world of earthlie freinds for under God and his Christ conscience is the friend of friends the truest sweetest constanst and most faithfull friend 1. The truest Friend which will deale most truly with thee earthly Frinds come short both in reproofes and comforts they doe what they do by halfe speak a little to thy face but more behind thy back and many times deale untruly with thee when thou doest good they will say thou doest evill and when thou doest evill They will say well done but thy good conscience will not do so will not daub with untempered morter nor call good evill nor evill good but will deal very plainly with thee accusing thee when thou doest ill and so excusing thee when thou doest well 2. The sweetest friend Phil. 4. that will make thee ever merry and alwaies rejoyce to laugh under the whip to sing in the stocks to joy even then when thy goods are spoyled yea in the sharpe tryalls to rejoyce that thou art accounted worthy to suffer for Christ and to Compleat thy Joy thy Conscience will feast thee nor once or twise but every day it will be a continuall feast unto thee 3. The constanst friend In time of distresse when carnall friends fayle thee this will abide with thee Art thou in disgrace which men hated traduced accused condemned do the Abjects mock thee the drunkards make songs upon thee do Beliaste charge thee with lies and Falsities doth Tertullus withall his Art render thee an odious and pestilent fellow Againe do thy own friends account thee an hypocrite as Iobs friends did him and the world value thee as the filth and of-scouring of all things Job 16.19 yet comfort thy selfe in this that thy testimony is on high and thy witnesse in heaven yea thy witnesse is on earth in thine owne conscience say with Job not with standing all their spite and lies against me I will hold fast my righteousnesse and will not let it go Job 27.6 my conscience shal not reproach me whilst I live 4. The faithfull'st friend that will help at a pinch and when thou art in greatest need Job tells us that he had friends but they were unfaithfull They deceived him as a brook deceiveth the wearie and thirstie Traveller he comes unto it in Summer to quench his thirst and then behold it is dried up againe he seeks unto it in the Winter season and then behold it is frozen so that he is still disappointed of his hope Thus deale my unfaithfull friends with me saith Job when I have most need of their help then they faile me Job 6.15 Solomon compares such to a broken Tooth Prov. 25.19 and a foot out of joynt which will surely deceive such as trust unto them for when they go to eate their tooth will hinder them or when to walke their foot will paine them and so to be of no use or profit unto them But a good Conscience is no such false friend no thou mayest trust unto it in the greatest pressures in times of disgrace poverty sicknesse death and judgment when all forsake thee then will thy conscience like a faithfull Jonathan stand by thee Ruth 1.17 Ruth's resolution to stick to Naomi in all changes was more then ordinary to tell her that nothing but death should part them But here behold a better freind death shall not part thee and thy Conscience she will be with thee in sicknesse and in health in life and death in judgment and before Gods Tribunall Therefore rejoice and let thy God be ever magnified 4. Use is to exhort all such as have not this Heartejewell of a good conscience to labour above all things for the enjoyment of it This is that unum necessarium though generally neglected Every man voluntarily of himselfe desires a good Wife good Children good Servants good Cloathes good houses yea all good but as for a good conscience which is worth all and without which all these outward blessings will be but so many curses unto us yet alas how carelesse are most in the getting of the one how earnest and laborious in the other Let me therefore advise you in the first place to labour for a good conscience so shall all these outward blessings be sweetned unto you Now that you may not be deceived in this rich commodity I will briefly shew you what it is A good conscience is a conscience both purified and pacisied What a good Conscience is mistake me not I deny not but that Conscience may be good if only purified but it cannot be well compleated except it be also pacified for without this latter there is many a sad soule so troubled that they will not beleive they have what indeed they have viz. a good Conscience They are so far from Pauls assurance of a good conscience that they rather beleive their consciences to be very evill and defiled Therefore strive to get
them both namely a conscience truely parified and truly pacified Meanes Now followes the meanes both to purify and pacify conscience 1. For the purifying of conscience it is the part of every one professing Christ to consider that his conscience naturally is defiled Tit. 1.15 and that there is a necessity of taking off this defilement if we would be saved namely the ignorance error and hardnesse of conscience wherewith it is polluted The principall meanes are two 1. The first means to effect it Principall meanes is the bloud of Christ by this bloud we must have our hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience Heb. 10.22 9.14 This is a singular way to have our Consciences purged from dead works to serve the living God 2. Meanes is the Spirit of Christ This is that mundifying water mentioned Ezek. 36.25 I will sprinkle cleane water upon you and ye shall be cleant from all your filthinesse These two Christs bloud and Christs spirit will cleanse the foulest sinner and the most defiledst conscience Paul writing unto the Corinthians tells them what filthy creatures they were 1 Cor. 6.9.10 namely Fornicators Idolaters effeminate abusers of themselves with mankind Theeves Covetous Drunkards Railers Extortioners and then shewed them by what meanes they were cured and cleansed namely by the blood and spirit of Christ v. 11. But ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God This is the refiners fire and fullers sope Mal. 3.2 this is that hysope which will make us as white as snow yea more white then snow Ps 51.7 Other meanes there are which though not comparable to the first yet as subservient are likewise requisite to this purifying of Conscience namely the Word Faith Repentance Lesse principal meanes 1. The Word Now are ye cleane saith Christ through the word that I have spoken unto you John 15.3 That is to say the word accompanied with the power of my Spirit 2. So Faith is of a cleansing nature it will purge the heart and cleanse the conversation Act. 15.9 3. And as for repentance we find that when Judah had defiled her selfe with sin God calls her to repentance as a way of cleansing Wash ye make you cleane put away the evill of your doings from before mine eyes cease to do evill learne to do well and then though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow Is 1.16 Thus you see how a defiled conscience may be purified 2. Next followes how conscience may be pacified Consider first of all what it is that troubles conscience Meanes It must be one of these three either sin or Sathan or Gods anger It was sin that so troubled Paul the law in his members that warred against the law of his mind that so disquieted him that it made him to cry out Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me 2. It was Sathan that winnowed Peter and withstood Jehoshus 3. Gods anger that so molested David as to make him cry out Lord rebuke me not in thy wrath neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure there is no soundnesse in my flesh because of thine anger Therefore unto such as are troubled with the sight of their sin the assaults of Sathan or sence of Gods displeasure if their consciences be unquiet because of these either one or all be carefull in the use of such meanes as God hath ordained for pacifying conscience Now that I may not be tedious remember what were the meanes to purifie conscience and thou shalt find the very same meanes will pacify conscience I told thee before that the bloud of Christ and the Spirit of Christ as principall 2. The word faith and repentance as lesse principall These would make a defiled conscience to become pure So now I must tell thee againe to make thy conscience quiet thou must have 1. The bloud of Christ Paul tels us that Christ by the bloud of his Crosse Col. 2.20 i. e. by his bloudy oblation made upon the crosse hath made peace and reconciled all things Now rightly to understand this Text you must know that by sin heaven and earth were set at variance and the creatures in them but by Christ there is unity set not only betwixt God and man but also betwixt men and the Angels that are in heaven as also the creatures that are upon the earth now if Christs bloud be such a Catholicon to take off all enmity beween God and man between men and Angels in heaven men and creatures on earth and to make peace then let us acknowledge it an excellent means to pacify conscience This was typified in the bloud of the Pascall lamb where this bloud was sprinkled upon any door-post there was peace and security against the destroyer So where the bloud of Christ is sprinkled upon the soule their conscience is at peace and hath security against all the remaining guilt and corruption of sin the rage of Sathan danger of Gods displeasure This bloud givves the soule all boldnesse to enter in into the holiest of all by a new and living way Heb. 10.19 and gives us assurance before God 2. Meanes to pacify conscience is the spirit of Christ As his bloud is the procuring cause so his spirit the producing cause For this cause Christ and the holy Ghost are called by one and the same name because their end and businesse is the same namely to procure peace to the soule They both are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Advocates Christ is our Advocate and and the spirit is Gods Advocate Christ is our Advocate to the father to procure us peace The spirit againe is Gods advocate to us to produce peace As the one prevailes with God for granting peace so the other prevailes with us to entertaine peace See this cleared in 1 Joh 2.1 If any man sin we have a Paraclete with the father Jesus Christ the righteous Here Christ is our advocate againe Joh. 14.16 I will pray the father and he shall give you another Paraclete In this place the holy Ghost is Gods advocate so you plainly see how the bloud and spirit of Christ must make up this true and full peace Now for the causes or meanes lesse principall and subservient as the word faith repentance First the word it is a word of reconciliation and pacification Thus Peter to Cornelius and his company tells them ye know saith he the word which God hath sent to the children of Israel Act. 10.36 preaching peace by Jesus Christ which is Lord of all Now as the Scripture in generall may be said to be a word of peace so more especially the Gospell This is called the word of peace The Author of it the Prince of peace The minister the Messenger of peace Rom. 10.15 and his preaching the gospell the ministry of reconcitiation 2
are to adde light to light i. e. the light of Scripture unto the light of Nature without knowledge the conscience cannot be good but as a blind man drinke poison as soon as wholsome liquor and stand as securely upon the brinke of a deep dungeon as upon a broad pavement and why because he seeth not the venome of the one nor yet the danger of the other Even so the blind conscience drinks iniquity as water and stands fearelesly upon the brinke of hell without any fear of falling into it and all because he seeth not the vilenesse of the one nor yet the mischeife of the other into which he runneth therefore adde I say unto the light of nature the light of scripture 2. Adde bloud to bloud i. e. the bloud of Christ to thy sin-bleeding soule this is that bloud which must cure thee and no other bloud can do it 1. Beasts bloud will nto heale thy conscience the bloud of buls and goats cannot purge away sin 2. Mans bloud will not as the bloud of Abel or the bloud of Martyrs 3. Thine owne bloud will not cure thee Saul having an evill conscience might thinke to ease him selfe by falling on his owne sword and shedding his owne bloud but alas this will not cure but kill Ther 's nothing can cure our sick polluted consciences but only bathing in the poole of Bethesda There is nothing can make us white but the bloud of the lamb It is Christs bloud only Zach. 13. this is that fountaine for sin and for uncleanesse this is the bloud that must cleanse thee from all sin 1 John 1.7 8. See therefore thou adde unto thy bleeding soule this precious blood 3. Adde spirit unto spirit i. e. unto thy spirit Gods spirit When Gods spirit comes into thy spirit it will not only regenerate thy spirit but witnesse with thy spirits that thou art healed and make thee with a joyfull voice to cry out Abba father Rom. 8.16 4. Adde faith to faith unto thy generall faith an applicative faith thou then wilt not only beleive that these former simples and ingredients thus compounded and as it were mixed will cure an evill conscience but will boldly say my evill conscience by these meanes is purged and quieted Where these principles and simples are thus compounded and happily joined together there is a perfect cure the evill conscience is become a good consceence the defiled conscience a purged conscience the troubled conscience a peaceable conscience thou art made whole therfore as our Saviour unto the Adulteresse when she had received merecy gave her this caveat to sin no more so say I to thee that hast a pure and peaceable conscience go sin no more but observe thy Physitians rules in keeping a good diet be holy to God upright to man sober in thy selfe if not thou wilt fall back into thine old disease so thy condition will be more desperate then ever Now for preservatives that conscience may keep its purity and peace 1. Abstaine from all appearances of evill Account no sin little but remember that a little leake may sinke a ship and one spark of fire may burne a city it was but a wanton glance at first in David when he looked on Bathsheba but if you mark it many sins and many sorrowes followed upon that glance of his so that which James speaketh is here most true behold how great a flame a little fire kindleth therefore abstame from the appearance of sin 2. Beware of intimacy with any ungodly person take heed whom thou makest thy companion the sweetest dispositions are soonest sowred by evill society wicked Ahab is no fit companion for godly Jehoshaphat nor Cerinthus the Heretick for John the Divine Take heed of such as are either erroneous in judgment or vitious in conversation wilt thou joine with those that are enimies unto God doest thou not know that one diseased sheep may infect an whole flock so on corrupt man may corrupt a multitude as we find in Alexander 2 Tim. 2.17 Hymeneus Philetus Phigellus Hermogines and others whose word did eat as doth a Canker which if not seasonably prevented will grow incurable The Originall word is gangrene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to eate as the disease called a wolfe or a canker doth which consumeth not only the part where it is but spreadeth farther in the flesh Such is the Nature of Hereticall doctrine if it be not stopt in the beginning cured by solid confutations and Ecclesiasticall censures upon those that are obstinate it will spread far and run over the whole body of the Church Beware of such a man that is an Heretick Tit. 3.10 11. after the first and second admonition reject knowing that he that is such is subverted and sinneth being condemned of himselfe i. e. convinced in his owne conscience that he shuts his eyes against the light and resisteth and opposeth the known truth The like I say for prophane and vitious persons though they entice thee consent thou not and if they say come with us or be one of us oh come not into the way of sinners Prov. 1.10 nor enter into the counsell of the ungodly Prov. 3.34 lest thou sit in the seat of the scorner and at last become a scorne and a derision unto God and the godly 3. In doubtfull things take the surest and safest way All men have flesh and so consequently error in them Great differences arise in things practicall one holds recreations on the Lords day and another denies it This man for usury that man against it some say Faith and Troth are no Oathes others will tell thee that they are more then yea and nay The Multitude are for Cards Dice drinking of healths Math. 5.37 long haire in men and naked backs and breasts in women but the fewest and wisest are against all these Judge thou therefore which is the safest way to use all these or to refuse them heare what the Spirit tells thee abstaine from all appearance of evill have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darknesse but rather reprove them Doubtlesse it will be safer for thee to deny thy selfe in forbearing Eph. 5.11 then to take liberty in using them Give no offence to tender consciences but follow Paul who was so wary of giving offence to Gods people that even in things lawfull he would deny himselfe resolving to eate no flesh while the world standeth rather then to make his brother to offend i. e. to put a stumbling block before him 1 Cor. 8.13 or give an occasion of sin unto him Wherefore walke on sure ground and be warranted from God for what thou doest Whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just pure lovely whatsoever things are of good report if there be any vertue Phil. 4.8 if any praise thinke on these things 4. Take heed of false and phantasticall Teachers who boast of the spirit of
God when it is only their owne proud and lying spirit Ezek. 13.3 They are foolish prophets that follow their owne spirit and have seen nothing i. e. they do medle with prophecying of their owne proper motion being driven thereunto by their owne carnall affection and declare nothing but their owne vaine imagination and frothy inventions They would be accounted Physicians for sick soules and wounded consciences but as Job saith they are Physicians of no value For they heale the hurt of Gods people slightly saying peace Jer. 8.11 when there is no peace they preach generally freedome and liberty as freedome from confession of sin and freedome to the commission of sin but whilst they thus preach liberty unto others they themselves are the servants of corruption beware of such And beg of God Pastors according to his owne heart that may feed you with wisdome and true understanding whose lips may preserve knowledge Jere. 3.15 and ye may sack it at their mouth who may be ensamples unto the flock in life and doctrine faith and love spirit and purity England could glory she had such Prophets such Pastors and blesed be God she can yet say she hath such still true it is they lie under a cloud but it is not many yeares since that they were highly esteemed thought worthy of double honour and consulted with upon matters of greatest importment both in Church and State yea Parliament and People invited them to come into Macedonia namely London to help on the great worke of Reformation but now are cast aside as of no value and by many accounted Antichristian and enimies to the Kingdome of Christ and to the power and purity of the Gospel A sudden and strange change but we will lay it upon that envious one whose rage is specially against Gods faithfull Ministers You therefore that love a good conscience make much of such and have them in high esteeme for their works sake because it is the Lords Thus far of having 2. Holding now followes the holding of a good conscience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thes 5.2 The Spirit of God doth frequently presse us to this holding Try all things and hold fast that which is good i. e. try exactly all doctrines concerning faith or manners and as thou findest them sound and saving so hold them Tit. 1.8 9 Againe hold fast the faithfull word Heb. 4.14 hold fast your Profession hold fast till I come hold fast lest another take thy crowne Rev. 3.11 i. e. the honour and glory promised to such as shall persevere So say I ye not I but the spirit of God hold faith and a good conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 yea above all hold these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hold against all adversaries that would withhold Reasons 1. R. Because the labour is as great in holding as having non minor est virtus quàm quaerere parta tueri It cost Paul deare to get a good conscience and so it did to hold it T was his daiely exercise to keep a good conscience void of offence toward God and man Act. 24.16 2. R. Because many have made shipwrack of conscience as Hymeneus and Alexander who giving the reines to a licentious course of life against the dictates of their owne conscience God punished them accordingly by taking away the light of his spirit that in the middest of their course they should lose their most precious spiritual merchandise and be drowned in error and heresy 1 Tim. 1.19 20. as those who in a sea-tempest suffer ship-wrack 3. R. Because the world cannot abide a good conscience as we may see in Zedekiah his behaviour toward Micaiah and Pashur toward Ieremie how uncivilly and rudely do these men carry themselves 1 King 22 24. Zedekiah he smites Michaiah on the cheeke impudently and reproachfully before the King and whole assembly saying unto him which way went the spirit of the Lord from me to speake to thee pretending that himselfe had the spirit of God and thereupon inferres that Micaiah had it not because it could not be shewed how it should passe from the one unto the other So Pashur smites Ieremie and puts him in the stocks and herein shewes himselfe a prime instrument of Sathan perpetrating that against the Lords Prophet which neither King nor Princes nor people durst formerly attempt Jer. 20.2 Thus Amaziah the priest with Amos and Ananias with Paul commands them that stood by to smite Paul on the mouth Am. 7.10 what was the cause of this their rage and fury had these men cōmitted any grosse offence surely no it was only the goodnesse of their conscience that did thus exasperate their rage against them These were the faithfull servants of the Lord that boldly declared the mind and will of God unto them as in conscience they were bound and therefore could not endure them There is an irreconcileable Antipathy between the men of the world and the Saints of God they can no sooner mingle then oyle and water nor better agree then light and darknesse The Spirit that is in you the world cannot receive saith Christ John 14.17 they are convinced that they are conscientious men but as they were wont to say in former times CAIUS SEIUS was a good man but he was a Christian So now Caius Seius bonus virsed Christianus such are good men but they are too strict too conscientious and therefore cannot away with them Thus you see how the men of this world cannot endure a good conscience 4. R. Because the Devill doth more envie a good conscience then any other thing Let men be never so high in honour great in wealth abound in wit and policy the Devil dislikes it not he knowes the better how to make use of them to serve his turne as we sind in Pharaoh Zenacherib Achitophel Herod and others who in their Pomp and power were higher then their brethren by head and shoulders and accordingly more active and ready to do his work That man I say have abundance of these outward things it doth not disquiet but please Satan But when any have a good a pure and a tender conscience this madds the Divel and makes him to set all his instruments on worke to bereave such of their Heartjswell namely a good conscience we may see this in Luther his pure conscience did vex both Pope and Devill Melchior Adam in vitâ Luth. what would not they have done to have strangled his conscience if honour wealth preferment or any outward thing could have prevailed the Pope would have collated all these upon him but one tells the Pope that all these would not doe for saith he Germana illa bestia aurum non curat that German beast meaning Luther will not be won by any or all of these And at another time when great gifts were sent to him he refused them with this most brave and excellent speech Valdè protestatus sum me nolle sic
whole soule were defiled and every part and power depraved yet conscience had so much life left in it as with Iobs messengers to tell sad tydings of mans great losse There remaines in it scintilla rectae rationis a little spark to shew what great light hath been extinguisht but now this also through affected blindnesse and wilfull malice is so smothered and suffocated through a daiely custome of sinning that I may say of conscience in many as the Psalmist of an Idol it hath an eye and cannot see an eare and cannot heare a mouth and cannot speak Thus stands the cause whith many a hardned sinner The eye of their conscience is as the eye of a mole which serves only to decore the body but not to guide the way Their eares but as the eares of an Addar wilfully stopt at the best counsell that the messenger of Christ can bring unto it and the mouth of it as the mouth of a viper that sucks in and sends out nothing but poison and poisonous expressions Yet notwithstanding the naturall Conscience will hold an excellency beyond all other powers faculties in the soule So that thy Maker still deserveth praise from thee Use 2 Have all a conscience then let all acknowledge it and not dare to conceale what God hath given them It s very dangerous to hide any Talent that God gives us in a Napkin Luk. 19. what God bestowes on man man is to imploy and use it to the honour of him that gives it therefore let conscience appeare in a conscientious walking before him be holy to thy God Tit. 1.12 upright to thy neighbour and sober in thy selfe walke so circumspectly in thy place and calling that all may say thou art a man of conscience But woe unto us we sojourne in Mesech our habitations are in Kedar we live among such as are enimies to conscience yea open and professed enimies unto it yea the very naming of conscience is very hatefull unto them aske them where their conscience is and they will desperately answer what tell you me of conscience Conscience say they was hanged long ago But let me tell thee thou wretched Belialist that saiest that conscience is hang'd wast thou the Hangman If so then know God will be avenged on thee for this cruell act he will one day revive conscience and then assure thy selfe thy conscience will hang thee But hear me thou foolish man that thus talkest of hanging conscience thou speakest not only prophanely but most ignorantly thinkest thou it is in the power of any man to hang conscience know thou it is impossible the worke is too hard for all the hangmen in the world The Hangman may hang thee as he did Haman or thou mayest hang thy selfe as did Judas but neither he nor thou art able to offer such violence to conscience Wer'st thou to live as long as Methusalem it will outlive thee go where thou wilt it will go with thee nec fugere nec fugare poteris go up to Heaven or go downe to Hell 't will never leave thee nor forsake thee Againe I find some who are so maliciously bent against conscience that they resolve if they cannot hang conscience they will beat out her teeth and pluck out her tongue so that she shall neither bite nor barke if the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes the pride of life if all the pleasures of sin will do it they will surely effect it They will call for the harp with Saul for their Cup with Nabal and their Harlot with Herod and all to drowne the cryes and complaints of conscience but let me tell such that thus labour to make conscience dumb possible it is that by a long custome in sin or greedy practice of it men may prevaile so far as to silence her for the present so that she shall not speak but know this though you keep conscience from speaking yet not from writing she will act the part of a Recorder and Register put downe exactly every daies deviations and aberrations and when shee sees her time will produce her Bill and read it aloud making thine eares to tingle now a lie and then an oath this time drunkennesse that time uncleanesse such a day thou tookest away thy Brothers goods by oppression and theevery another day his good name by slaunder and calumny In fine the Bill will be so bigg so black that thou wilt not be able to endure to heare it read And then thy conscience whom thou hast thus wronged will be avenged for all her wrongs and act the part of a Judge a Jaylour and a Tormentour and joine with her God in that black and most just sentence take him bind him hand and foot and cast him into utter darknesse where there shall be nothing but weeping wailing gnashing of teeth and that for ever Oh consider this ye that abuse Conscience lest she teare you in pieces when none shall deliver you 3. Use of Conviction unto all Atheisticall persons that dare say with their tongue or in their heart there is no God Tell me thou Atheist hast thou a conscience in thee and yet no God over thee how can this be if thou wilt suffer thy selfe to be lead by common reason thou then wilt be forced to say there is a God Consider the operation of thy conscience if it be not seared and thou shalt find that upon some grosse sin it will be a witnesse and give testimony against thee but to whom to men or Angels that cannot be for they cannot heare the voice of conscience nor receive consciences testimony neither can they see what is in the heart of man It remains therefore that there is a spirituall substance most wise most holy most mighty that sees knows all things to whom conscience beares record and that is God himselfe Let Atheists bark against this as long as they will they have that in them that will convince them of the truth of the Godhead will they nill they either in life or death Let the dreaming Atheist consider the great affliction that that severe Governesse of the life of man brings upon their soules by affrighting horrors of Conscience by puzzeling and befooling them in the free use of their Reason by curbing them in their naturall and kindly injoyments in the life present and making bitter all the pleasures and contentment of it by some checks of Conscience by anxious cares and disquieting feares concerning their state in the life to come Besides those ineffable agonies of mind dampes and deadnesse of spirit that they sometimes undergoe so that to be buried quick were lesse torture by far then such dark heart-sinking privations of all the joyes of life And they cannot chuse did they not shut their eyes against the light but see that there is a superintendent principle over nature which is all one as to confesse that there is a God If thou be not convinced by the working of thine owne