Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Acts 24:16

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Acts 24:16

And herein do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of offense toward God, and [toward] men.

16. And herein do I exercise myself ] “Herein” i.e. in the worship, faith and hope spoken of in the two last verses. While holding this belief, and because I hold it, I try to keep my conscience clear. “I exercise myself” that I may, by constant training and striving, at length get near to what I aim after.

to have always a conscience void of offence, &c.] The Rev. Ver., to preserve the Greek order, puts “alway” at the end of the verse. A man who strove for such an object was neither likely to be a profaner of the Temple, nor a pestilent mover of sedition. His religion was worked into his life.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

And herein – In this, or for this purpose.

Do I exercise myself – asko. I accustom or employ myself; I make it my constant aim. Paul often appeals to his conscientiousness as the leading habit of his life. Even before his conversion he endeavored to act according to the dictates of conscience. See Act 26:9; compare Phi 3:5-6.

To have always a conscience … – To do what is right, so that my conscience shall never reproach me.

Void of offence – aproskopon. That which is inoffensive, or which does not cause one to stumble or fall. He means that he endeavored to keep his conscience so enlightened and pure in regard to duty, and that he acted according to its dictates in such a way that his conduct should not be displeasing to God or injurious to man. To have such a conscience implies two things:

  1. That it be enlightened or properly informed in regard to truth and duty; and,
  2. That what is made known to be right should be honestly and faithfully performed. Without these two things no man can have a conscience that will be inoffensive and harmless.

Toward God – In an honest endearour to discharge the duties of public and private worship, and to do constantly what he requires believing all that he has spoken; doing all that he requires; and offering to him the service which he approves.

Toward men – In endeavoring to meet all the demands of justice and mercy; to advance their knowledge, happiness, and salvation; living so that I may look back on my life with the reflection that I have done all that I ought to have done, and all that I could do to promote the welfare of the whole human family. What a noble principle of conduct was this! How elevated and how pure! How unlike the conduct of those who live to gratify debasing sensual appetites, or for gold or honor; of those who pass their lives in such a manner as to offer the grossest offence to God and to do the most injury to man. The great and noble aim of Paul was to be pure; and no slander of his enemies, no trials, persecutions, perils, or pains of dying could take away the approving voice of conscience. Alike in his travels and in his persecutions; among friends and foes; when preaching in the synal gogue, the city, or the desert; or when defending himself before governors and kings, he had this testimony of a self-approving mind. Happy they who thus frame their lives. And happy will be the end of a life where this has been the grand object of the journey through this world.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Act 24:16

Herein do I exercise myself to have a conscience void of offence.

A conscience void of offence


I.
There are certain states of mind which may be mistaken for a conscience void of offence. It has been wisely said that the office of conscience is to testify to every man the quality of his actions, and to enable him to regulate his conduct agreeably to some standard of right or wrong. Hence the importance of being acquainted with that code of morals which Almighty God has revealed to us, and of acknowledging His Word to be the sole standard of our faith and duty. Without this, we may mistake an unenlightened conscience for a conscience void of offence. Such a conscience may, indeed, faithfully testify against many things which are wrong: but, so long as its regulating principle is defective or erroneous; it cannot be depended on. We may also mistake a dormant conscience for a conscience void of offence. There are, unhappily, persons whose object seems to be to pass as smoothly as possible down the stream of life, and carefully avoid subjects which might awaken the conscience, and disturb their imaginary peace. We have often seen persons in this frame of mind visited by afflictive dispensations, which were obviously designed to lead them to reflection and prayer; but, alas! no such result has followed. Their trials have produced no other effect than to lead them to endeavour, by change of scene and other such means, to shake off as soon as possible the remembrance of their sorrows. There is also such a thing as a seared conscience, and even this may be mistaken for a conscience void of offence. It is said that there have been men who have persevered in stating falsehoods till they believed them to be true, and we must all have observed how certain persons will advocate an erroneous system of religion, with a measure of zeal and self-denial which seems to indicate a belief in its truth. To such St. Paul refers when he tells us that men shall arise speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their conscience seared with a hot iron. The expression was apparently intended to warn us that perseverance in error must produce a like effect upon the mind that cauterising does upon the body, and conscience, which was designed to be a faithful monitor, ceases to bear its testimony, and becomes seared as with a hot iron.


II.
We inquire wherein it is that a conscience void of offence may be said to consist. The Bible clearly teaches that the first step towards this is the awakening of the conscience. Conscience, says a distinguished writer, seems to hold a place among the moral powers, analogous to that which reason holds among the intellectual; and although in its natural condition its province appears to be to convey to us a certain conviction of what is morally right or wrong, independently of any acquired knowledge, yet viewed in connection with the great work of mans renewal in righteousness, it is needful that the conscience be awakened to perceive the infinite holiness of Almighty God, the spirituality of His law, and the fallen and sinful state of man. This can only be attained through the instrumentality of the Word, accompanied by the enlightening influences of the Holy Spirit. We must see the moral perfections of the Most High, and the exalted purity of His law; and we must acknowledge and confess that we have erred and strayed from His ways like lost sheep, and there is no health in us. But the conscience thus awakened must be cleansed from its sense of guilt in the presence of an infinitely pure and holy God. It is here that revelation comes to our aid. It makes known to us the great atonement, propitiation, and satisfaction which our blessed Redeemer has offered for us upon the Cross, and it invites us to Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world. A conscience thus cleansed St. Paul enjoyed. He knew that his sins were pardoned through the merit of his Lord, but he also knew his own shortcomings and infirmities, nay, he knew that when he would do good evil was present with him; and anxious to live near to God, and thirsting after pure and uninterrupted communion with Him, he exercised himself to have always a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men. He exercised himself. This expression implies that even an apostle found a continual effort to be needful. It was so with him and it is so with us all, so long as we are in the body. Our fallen wills and corrupt affections, the temptations that are in the world, and the fiery darts of our spiritual adversary–all unite to make the life of faith a constant struggle to maintain a good conscience. St. Pauls first concern was to have always a good conscience towards God. He knew that God hath not called us to uncleanness but to holiness, that He pardons that He may purify, and justifies in order that He may sanctify the soul. Nor did he forget what was due to his fellow men. The man who lives by faith must show his faith by his works; the man who professes to be constrained by love to God, must take heed that he love his brother also. On points such as these a truly enlightened conscience will admit of no compromise, and he who would have the Spirit bearing witness with his spirit that he is a child of God, and an heir of the kingdom of heaven, must exercise himself to have always a conscience void of offence, not only towards God, but also towards men. (Wm. Niven, B. D.)

The happiness of possessing a conscience void of offence


I.
What are we to understand by a conscience void of offence?

1. Not that it is void of offence merely because it does not accuse. There are many so immersed in cares or pleasures, that they never reflect on the state of their souls (Hos 7:2); and, if at any time their conscience be alarmed, they instantly endeavour to check its clamour and restore its tranquillity. Others persuade themselves that they have no cause for fear, and that they shall have peace, notwithstanding all their sins (Jer 8:11; Deu 29:19). Others have, by resisting, quenched the light within them; and thus have reduced themselves to a state of awful obduracy (1Ti 4:2). Such persons have no other than an evil conscience.

2. Nor is a conscience necessarily void of offence even though it should approve. Many propose to themselves a false standard of right and wrong: by conforming to their own principles, they may gain the approbation of their own minds; but it does not, therefore, follow that they are innocent. Error may extenuate, but cannot remove their guilt (cf. Act 8:3; Act 9:1, with 1Co 15:9, and 1Ti 1:13; 1Ti 1:15)

.

3. To be truly void of offence, conscience must have a clear discovery of the rule of duty. The rule of duty is concise and plain (Mat 22:37-40).

4. It should be able also to testify, upon good grounds, that there is a correspondence between that rule and our actions. It should be able to appeal to God for the truth of its testimony; that, after the strictest search, it can find no sin habitually indulged, or duty allowedly neglected.


II.
That every true Christian labours to maintain it.

1. This is certainly the character of one who feareth God. The Christian maketh but little account of mans judgment (1Co 4:3). He knoweth that the eye of God is upon his heart (Heb 4:13), he therefore studies to approve himself to God. He hath respect to every part of his duty, toward God and man (Jam 3:17), and this, not at certain seasons only, but always. Nor will he be deterred by any regard to ease, or interest, or fear; inquiring only, What is duty? (Act 21:39).

2. Nor can anyone be a true Christian who hath not attained it. Every pardoned sinner is supposed to be without guilt (Psa 32:2). All in the primitive Church are spoken of in this light (Php 1:10; Php 2:15; 1Th 5:23). St. Paul did not hesitate to affirm that this was his character (Act 23:1; 2Co 1:12); and the same is ascribed to one who was far inferior to him (Joh 1:47). Nor is anyone in a state of salvation who hath not attained it. Many things may conspire to rob a Christian of the comfort of such a conscience; but a just ground for such a conscience he cannot but possess. This is expressly asserted by David (Psa 66:18) and St. John (1Jn 3:8-10). (T. Hannam.)

St. Pauls exercise

That there is no cause so bad, but some will plead it; no man so good, but some will slander him; no case so clear, but some will question it; nothing so false, but some will swear it. Judges, then, had need to do as their ancients did, first sacrifice, then sentence. Thus the context: for the text, every man must chiefly look to this, that his conscience be not offended. Men, be they pleased or not pleased, conscience must not be displeased. This is the main, and for our briefer despatch of this point, this order will be taken, first, the terms must be unfolded, next the proposition confirmed, and then applied. In St. Pauls action and our proposition, three things come to be considered–the subject, object, end. For the first, no more but this: we infer from Pauls exercise each mans duty. It is true he was a preacher, but he is not now considered as a preacher, but as a man; and in my text his life is mentioned, not his faith or function. For the second it is conscience, a word of great latitude and infinite dispute. For the first, I take conscience to be both a faculty, and a distinct faculty, too, of the soul. The schools reject that, others this; but besides reason, the written Word bends most that way (1Ti 1:1-20). It is distinguished from the will (Tit 1:15), from the mind, and if we mark it, conscience is so far from being one of both, or both in one, as that there is between them first a jealousy, then an open faction; the other powers of the soul, taking conscience to be but a spy, do what they can first to hide themselves from it, next to deceive it, after to oppose it, and lastly to depose it. Conscience, on the other side, laboureth to hold its own, and, till it be blinded or bribed, proceeds in its office in despite of all oppositions, it cites all the powers of Nature, sits upon them, examines, witnesseth, judges, executes. Hereof come those self conferences, or reasonings, as St. Paul terms them (Rom 2:1-29.), thence those mutual apologies, and exceptions amongst themselves, when conscience sits. I know the words are otherwise carried; but will hardly brook any other bias that is set upon them. For the second, the common subject of conscience is the reasonable soul. The third thing is its end and office. It is set in man to make known to man in what terms he stands with God, thence its name; therefore fitly termed the souls glass, the understandings light. Conscience therefore is a prime faculty of the reasonable soul, there set to give notice of its spiritual estate, in what terms it stands with God. Now secondly, it is taken sometimes more generally, sometimes for the whole court and proceedings of conscience, by the fathers; sometime for the whole soul of man, either stooping to conscience, or reflecting upon itself. The third followeth, without offence. It is the conscience that carries the soul as the foot the body, through all ways and weather, therefore St. Paul would be as chary of this as the traveller of that. Conscience should not be offended lest it should offend in its fit constitution and working, or managing of its proper actions, which as Paul delivers them are–

1. Knowing.

2. Witnessing.

3. Comforting.

4. And now accidentally since the fall, accusing and tormenting.

And for its constitution it stands in clearness, tenderness, quietness, and when it is either so blinded or dazzled, feared, lamed, that it cannot do its office, then it is said to be offended. Every Christian must be carefully watchful that his soul, spirit, or conscience be no way grieved by sins. Now follows the proof, and that is most easy. First, from precept. Above all keepings keep thy heart, saith Solomon (Pro 4:23). Next, from example. We have a cloud of witnesses, prophets, apostles, martyrs, who would hazard themselves upon the angry seas, lions, flames, rather than upon a displeased conscience. Thirdly, from reason. First, for Gods cause we should make much of conscience, that being His officer, and therein standing the chiefest of His image and mans excellency. The perfection of man is his knowledge; the perfection of knowledge is the knowledge thereof, which is conscience. Secondly, for our peace sake, conscience being like a wife, the best of comforts if good, the worst of naughts if bad. For first deal friendly with conscience, and it proves the best of friends, next God. First the truest, that will never flatter, but make thee know thyself. Secondly, the surest, that will never start, it lies with thee, it sits with thee, it rides with thee, it sleeps with thee, it wakes with thee, it walks with thee in every place beyond all times. Thirdly, it is the sweetest friend in the world. If natural cheerfulness be so good a housekeeper to a good man, that it feasts daily, as Solomon saith, oh, then what be the banquets of conscience sanctified and purified! what joys those which will carry a man above ground, and make him forget the best of Natures comforts? Secondly, offend conscience, and it will prove as the inmost, so the utmost enemy. First, unavoidable; do what thou canst, thou canst not shake it off; when thou goest it goes, when thou fleest it runs. It meets thee in the dark, and makes thee leap; it meets thee in the day, and makes thee quake; it meets thee in thy dreams, and makes thee start, in every corner. Secondly, insufferable, it strips one of all comforts at one time; if a sick stomach will make one weary of chairs, beds, meats, drinks, friends, all, oh, what will a sick conscience do! Next, it puts one to intolerable pains, it racks the memory, and makes it run backward twenty years, as Josephs brethren; yea, it twinges for sins of youth, as Job complains, it racks the understanding, and carries it forward beyond the grave, and makes it feel the very bitterness of death and hell before it sees them; it racks the phantasy, and makes it see ghosts in men. And shall such a thing as this, so near, so great a neighbour be offended?

Use 1. We have done with proofs, we now apply. Wherein, first, shall we chide or weep, to see the wickedness of these times, and the infinite distance betwixt Paul and us? Oh, Paul, thou art almost alone; thou studiest conscience, we of this age craft; thou didst gauge thine own, we other mens; thy care was to please conscience, we the times; thine to walk evenly before God and man, ours to serve ourselves on both; thou everywhere was for conscience, we almost nowhere; thou wouldst see conscience take no wrong, now wit out reasons it, wealth outfaces it, money outbuys it, might overmatches it, all undervalue it.

Use 2. As for you present, be entreated to two things: First, talk with your hearts alone, and in case conscience be angry with you once, agree, else never safe; nor field, nor town, nor bed, nor board, nor life, nor death, nor depth, nor grave can render you secure. Secondly, be of Pauls mind. First, set conscience at a high price, consider what it will be worth in the day of trouble, of death, of judgment, and resolve to beg, starve, burn, die over a thousand deaths to save consciences life. Next, use Pauls means, look to God and man. For God; first, with Paul, we must believe what is written. Faith and conscience are embarked in the same ship (1Ti 1:5; 1Ti 3:9). Secondly, for man; if we have given our voice or hand against the innocent, with St. Paul, we must retract it.

Use 3. Now we have some special errands yet to deliver. First, to you of lower rank. Do you stand in the face of judgment this day with Pauls conscience? Though my house and land be yours, yet whilst I breathe, I will be none but mine own and Gods. But I cannot live without Him. But thou canst die without Him; and it is better to die a thousand deaths than to stab one conscience. Whatever becomes of your places or estates, so walk, so go, as may be for your peace. Next, to you of higher rank I have a double suit. First, that you will have some mercy on ether mens consciences; next, on your own. Secondly, we in the ministry are in places of trust, the gospel is committed to us, as to St. Paul. Oh happy we, if we can say after him, We preach not as pleasing men, but God which tries the heart. We are men of conscience, let conscience rule and master us. (Robert Harris, D. D.)

What we are to understand by a good conscience, and how it may be attained; with the blessing of it

A conscience is one of those terms which are common in the world, but of a very doubtful and uncertain, and sometimes of a dangerous signification. Some men understand nothing by it but a blind and hardy zeal for the opinion they espouse, which perhaps they have been confirmed in by the prejudice of education, or have taken up out of some motive of worldly interest or vanity. Others mean nothing by it but a scrupulous tenderness about things of little or no moment; things which, considered in themselves, are not of the substance, but only to be looked upon as decent circumstances of religion; which yet conscience is many times more nice and tender about, than the most weighty and important of religious duties. Thus we see conscience, according to the different tempers, passions, and prejudices of men, is made to signify very different things. And whereas it is the character of a good and well-informed conscience, to be void of offence towards God and towards man; as some persons understand conscience, nothing is more injurious or offensive, either to God or man.


I.
As to the first inquiry, what is meant by a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man? We may easily come to a resolution if we do but consider what is the rule of conscience, or how we ought to proceed in regulating the judgments we make of our own actions. For not only the reason of the thing, but the very word conscience, in its proper signification, imports that there ought to be some law by which our conduct is to be tried, and the error or rectitude of it determined. When we know that our actions have been conformable to such a rule, we have a good and well-informed and inoffensive conscience; but if we depart from our rule, how specious soever our pretences may be, of a good intention or zeal for Gods service and the interests of religion, in order to palliate or the better to set off a sinful action; yet the principle upon which we act cannot properly be called conscience; for conscience, in the proper sense of the word, always supposes a conformity between the rule and the action. It is therefore only private judgment or opinion upon which we proceed in such cases; and, strictly speaking, can no more be called conscience than I can be said to concur with another person in any design or action wherein I directly oppose him. Yet it must be granted that as men are willing to impose upon themselves by false names and appearances, and to call that conscience wherein they act in direct opposition to their rule; the apostle is sometimes pleased to express himself in compliance with this ordinary but improper way of speaking (1Ti 4:2; Tit 1:15). There is a necessity indeed of this distinction, concerning conscience in a strict and in a popular and a large sense, to account for that very plea of our apostle (Act 23:1). For it is evident, if we are to understand conscience according to its genuine signification, of a mans acting agreeably to a known and certain rule, the apostle, in this sense, could not be said to have had a good conscience in persecuting the Church of God, because in so doing his zeal was not according to knowledge, but he acted ignorantly, and beside his rule. By conscience, therefore, he could here intend no more than his private judgment or opinion, which, though in some measure, and in proportion to our weakness or ignorance, it may excuse an irregular or sinful action, yet will by no means justify it (1Co 15:6; Tit 1:13). Whatever pretensions men make to religion, how conscientious soever they apprehend themselves to be, or would appear to others, yet if they do not regulate their actions by the law of God, we may, notwithstanding, say of them, according to the fore-cited words of the apostle, that their very mind and conscience is defiled. Now this law of God, by which our actions are to be regulated, may be considered either as that natural law written on the table of our hearts; or else it may be understood of the revealed will of God discovered to us in the Holy Scriptures. In most cases, indeed, we need only put the question to our own hearts, and they will direct us what we are to do and what to forbear. The great lines of our duty towards God and man are so plain and visible to the eye of natural reason that those who do not see them must be sunk into the last degree of corruption or given up to a judicial blindness of mind. The apostle observes this concerning the heathens, who had no other light to direct them but that of their own minds (Rom 2:14-15). But because in this degenerate state of human nature the faculties of our souls are disordered, so that we do not always see the truths of religion in a clear light or reason justly concerning them, therefore God has been pleased to make a plain and standing revelation of His will to us in the Holy Scriptures. So that upon the whole matter, to have a conscience void of offence is to act conformably and knowingly according to that law which God has prescribed as the rule of our actions. If upon examining our conduct by this law we find there is a good agreement between them, then we may safely conclude we have done what we ought and that our own minds have no offence to reproach us for either towards God or towards men.


II.
Some rules and directions in order to our obtaining such a conscience.

1. The first thing I would recommend to this end is a careful and diligent reading of the Holy Scriptures. For if the Scriptures be the rule by which our judgments in matters of conscience are to be informed and directed, and from which we cannot depart, then the only way to have a conscience void of offence is to consult and apply this rule to our particular cases and circumstances. And they are not only a rule to instruct men in their duty, but a powerful means to persuade them to a conscientious discharge of it. As the saving truths and principles of religion are only to be learned from them, so they furnish us with the most strong and invincible arguments to enforce the practical duties we owe both to God and man (Psa 19:7-8). And this power of the Holy Scriptures to open the hearts as well as the understanding of men, discovers itself in the good effects it often has, even upon those persons who are the least disposed to comply with it. We cannot fail, if we do not shut our eyes against the light or wilfully reject the motions of Gods grace, to have, with St. Paul, always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men.

2. In the next place, if we take care of the very first motions and beginnings of sin. For in this corrupt state of human nature our innocence is so weakly guarded, that it is for the most part much safer to prevent a siege than to run the hazard of an attack. Or if we happen to be attacked, which is sometimes unavoidable, what we have to do is to repel the enemy with all the vigour we can. If we give way in the least to him, we know not what further advances he may make.

3. I shall but lay down one direction more in order to our having and preserving a conscience void of offence; and it is this: That we should frequently state accounts between God and our consciences, and inquire what sins we have committed and what duties we have done or omitted to do.


III.
Some proper motives and arguments.

1. With respect to this world there is nothing can afford us any true, solid, or lasting satisfaction without a good conscience. The pleasures of sin are always dashed with one impure bitter ingredient or other, besides that they are of a short duration, and go off with an ungrateful relish. But the pleasures, on the other hand, arising from the conscience of our having done what we ought, as they are pure and unmixed, so they last as long as the remembrance of those actions which occasioned them. Had we with this blessed apostle a conscience void of offence, it would be an unspeakable comfort to us under all the troublesome accidents and disappointments of this life. Whatever our condition might be in it, we might then say with him (2Co 1:12). And indeed if we can sincerely say this, we ought not to be much concerned at what befalls us in a life which is not designed for a perfect state of happiness, but only to prepare and train us up for it; and if God in His wisdom sees fit that through much tribulation we should enter into His kingdom, I am sure we shall at the last have no reason to complain.

2. But this leads me to represent to you in the next place the great blessing and advantage of a good conscience with respect to another world, and that both as it is a condition of our future happiness and a necessary qualification for it.

(1) As it is a condition, and an indispensable one too, of our future happiness. In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, we and the whole world must be tried before Him for our actions done in the body, whether good or evil, and be acquitted or condemned according as our consciences bear witness for or against us (Rom 2:15-16). But do we indeed duly consider what these two different sentences, which the Judge of the world will then pronounce, severally import? What it is to go away into everlasting punishment, and what into life eternal? Oh! most certainly such a reflection duly improved would never suffer us to take any ease or repose in our own mind till we had with the apostle exercised ourselves to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man. Especially–

(2) If we farther consider that to have a conscience void of offence is not only a condition, but a necessary qualification for heaven. What satisfaction would it be to a man in a violent fit of the gout or stone to be laid upon a bed of roses? As little satisfaction would a sinner take in the pure and spiritual joys of heaven without a heavenly temper and disposition of mind. (R. Fiddes, D. D.)

Conscience


I.
The facts of conscience.

1. We have a discernment of the difference between right and wrong.

2. We approve of the one, and disapprove of the other, as of good and bad laws.

3. We condemn ourselves for what conscience disapproves in our states and acts.

4. We are impelled by conscience to do what is right, and deterred by it from what is wrong. Conscience, therefore, is not a single faculty. It is a collective term for those exercises of our rational nature which concern moral good and evil. It includes cognition and judgment of approbation and disapprobation. And it is an impulse, as desires and affections are. It is not a mere decision as to truth.


II.
Its characteristics.

1. It is independent of the understanding and will. No man can force himself by a volition to approve of what he sees to be wrong. Nor can conscience be perverted by mere sophistry of the understanding. If a man honestly thinks a wrong thing to be right, his conscience will approve his doing it; but no man can argue his conscience out of its convictions. Nor can it be silenced.

2. It is authoritative. It asserts the right to rule our hearts and lives. We may disregard and rebel against this authority, but we must admit it to be legitimate.

3. It does not speak in its own name. It is the representative of God, and brings the soul before His bar.

4. It is avenging, and is made so by God. Remorse is a state produced by conscience.


III.
Our duty in regard to it.

1. To enlighten it. It is not infallible in its judgment. Men differ widely as to what is right or wrong, and our thinking a thing right does not make it right.

2. To obey it. No man is better than his conscience; no man is as good. Conscience is to be obeyed not only in particular eases, but in all as the ruling authority; i.e., we must act not from impulse, self interest, inclination, feeling, in matters small and great. The ground of this obligation to obey conscience is–

(1) The authority of God in whose name it speaks.

(2) Respect for our own dignity as rational and moral beings.

(3) The greatest happiness springs from an approving, the greatest misery from a wounded conscience. (C. Hodge, D. D.)

Conscience


I.
The keynote of the whole sentence is that word conscience.

1. What is conscience?

(1) A moral memory. Conscience has to do with the past chiefly. This is twice living, to enjoy life past. On the other hand, The first and foremost punishment of sinners is to have sinned.

(2) A fellow knowledge; a knowledge shared with another, and that other oneself; a mans privity to his own conduct, in thought and word and deed. I am so made that I cannot help this fellow knowledge.

2. The word occurs more than thirty times in the New Testament, and of these more than twenty are in St. Pauls unquestioned writings.

(1) It is to the conscience of man that he addresses his gospel. By manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every mans conscience in the sight of God. Let each mans fellow knowledge feel, as he listens to my gospel, that it is a word worthy of God, and wholesome for man. We are made manifest unto God, and I trust also are made manifest in your consciences.

(2) To his own conscience he appeals for testimony. My conscience also bearing me witness. His own fellow knowledge assures him of perfect truthfulness.

(3) He speaks more than once of a good conscience.

(4) He speaks of a weak conscience; of one whose self-judgment is timid, over scrupulous, unenlightened as to the extent of his Christian freedom, but who yet must respect and follow it.

(5) He tells of an evil or bad conscience, of a self-knowledge which is a knowledge of evil, creating a discord within, and raising an impassable barrier between man and God.

(6) He refers to a defiled conscience; a self-knowledge which is privy not only to particular acts of transgression, but to a thorough choice and love of evil.

(7) From these there is but a step, if one, to the conscience seared with a hot iron; cauterised with an indelible mark and stain of evil.


II.
The conscience after which St. Paul strove was an unstumbling one, not striking against stumbling stones.

1. He does not speak here of preserving his life from stumbling, but his conscience. He is determined that his perpetual judgment upon himself shall not find itself embarrassed in its course by evil done and the good left undone; shall not trip here over a hasty or uncharitable word, and there over a neglected duty, and there over an injured soul, and there over a corrupt imagination: its course shall be clear as it judges: the straight and smooth and unstained surface of the life and soul shall present nothing for the self-cognisance to dash against as a condemning object.

2. There are two chief departments of this unstumbling conscience; corresponding to the two great divisions of human duty. When the thought of God is presented, the self-judgment is not staggered: and when the thought of man is presented, still the self-cognisance is not beset by monuments of reproach or evil. Some men are not afraid of the second table. Like the rich young ruler they can say, All these commandments have I observed from my youth. But when the attention of the inward judge is turned to the first table, then surely the self-deceiver will be unmasked to himself: the conscience is not void of offence: its course, as it hears the case, is not smooth but stumbling.


III.
St. Pauls effort after the attainment of this conscience. Herein, on the strength of the hope of the resurrection. I exercise or train myself as an athlete. We are apt to think that, whatever other difficulties the apostles had to contend with, they had none within. How strongly does St. Paul combat this error! So fight I, as not beating the air: but I keep under my body. It did not come naturally to him to have a conscience void of offence. He had to train himself for it, by daily buffetings of his own body, mortifications of his own inclination, and crucifixions of his own will. The hope of a glorious resurrection bore him up, and in Christs strength he went forward conquering and to conquer. The subject is its own application.

(1) The Christian life is not easy. St. Paul found it severe. But what then? Brave men are only roused by difficulties: if the gospel demands courage, it is all the more a gospel for men.

(2) Learn the place of conscience in the Christian scheme. It is not enough for a man to be what is commonly called a conscientious man. Cornelius was that, and more, and so was Paul before conversion. Yet the one must send men to Joppa for one who should tell him words of salvation. And the other must see Christ showing him to his own heart as the chief of sinners, and then disclosing to him a more excellent way. But though obedience to conscience (apart from Christ) is not salvation, yet there is thus much of connection and continuity between a life before and a life after conversion, that it is still conscience which guides, only conscience itself has widened its field of vision and gained a new criterion of judgment. A man is not a conscientious man now, unless Christ, as well as God, is in all his thoughts. (Dean Vaughan.)

Conscience


I.
What is conscience? There are certain phenomena of our moral nature of which all men are conscious.

1. The perception of moral distinctions.

2. A sense of moral obligation.

3. A feeling of approbation and disapprobation in regard to self and others. Whether and how far these exercises belong to the cognitive faculties, and how far to the susceptibilities–reason or feeling–is hard to determine. They are rational in so far as they suppose a rational nature and involve the exercise of reason. But every cognition when its object, moral or aesthetic, is not an act of the pure reason, involves feeling as well as knowledge.


II.
Its attributes. It is–

1. Universal.

2. Innate.

3. Representative.

4. Independent.

5. Authoritative.

6. Indestructible.


III.
Conditions of a healthy conscience.

1. Knowledge, which is light. Conscience needs this just as taste needs correct principles. Some knowledge is original and intuitive, other is acquired.

2. Due susceptibility. Men differ much as to this point. It may be excessive or deficient, but for a healthful conscience due susceptibility is necessary. So that moral distinctions do not concern light matters, or trifles give as much concern as serious matters.

3. Strength to constrain obedience. Sickly sentimentality is very different from a sound healthful conscience.


IV.
Its diseases.

1. Perversion. This is due either to wrong principles, or to prejudices and passion. The cure is to be found in knowledge, objective and subjective.

2. Obduracy. Cause–ignorance and crime; cure–knowledge, regeneration, sanctification.

3. Scrupulosity. Cause–either weakness of conviction or undue sensibility, not really moral, but a sensitiveness analogous to false shame, bashfulness, etc. Cure–growth in strength. Be strong in faith.

4. Wounded conscience. The only cure is, the blood of Jesus, confession, restitution, reformation.


V.
The immense importance of the subject. On it depend–

1. Our excellence.

2. Our happiness.

3. Our usefulness. (C. Hodge, D. D.)

A conscience void of offence


I.
What is conscience?

1. The name. It is called–

(1) Heart (1Sa 24:5; Ecc 7:22; 1Jn 3:21).

(2) Spirit (Pro 18:14; 1Co 2:11).

(3) Conscience (Tit 1:15), which implies–

(a) The knowledge that several have of the same thing, so God knows with us (Job 16:20).

(b) The knowledge we have of several things (1Sa 24:5; 1Co 4:4).

2. The thing conscience is a habit of the practical understanding, whereby the mind of man applies the knowledge it hath to its own particular actions, by discourse of reason.


II.
Its offices.

1. To apply general truths to ourselves (2Sa 12:7; Jer 8:6).

2. To bear witness (Rom 2:15) of–

(1) Gods law.

(2) Our actions.

3. To comfort us in our obedience (Isa 38:3).

4. To accuse us of sin (Rom 2:15; Rev 20:12).

5. To judge (Psa 4:4)–

(1) Our actions (Rom 14:22-23, Lam 3:40).

(2) Our persons (1Co 11:31).


III.
The conscience void of offence.

1. Conscience is Gods vicegerent in the soul.

2. Rightly enlightened it dictates nothing but Gods commands.

3. All Gods commands concern Himself or our neighbour (Mat 22:37-38).

4. When we do what it commands our conscience excuses and comforts us (2Co 1:12).

5. It accuses for nothing but sin.

6. Therefore when we do nothing offensive to God or man our conscience is void of offence (Act 23:1).


IV.
How we must carry ourselves towards God and man so as to have a conscience void of offence.

1. To God.

(1) Love Him (Deu 6:5).

(2) Desire Him above all creatures (Php 3:8).

(3) Seek Him before all treasures (Mat 6:33).

(4) Believe Him in all His assertions.

(5) Fear Him above all powers (Jer 5:22).

(6) Trust Him in all conditions (Psa 62:8).

(7) Rejoice in Him more than in all enjoyment (Php 4:4; Hab 3:17-19).

(8) Meditate on Him on all occasions (Psa 139:18).

(9) Pray to Him all your days (1Th 5:18).

(10) Praise Him for all your mercies (1Th 5:18).

(11) Perform all His commands. (Ecc 12:13).

(12) Aim at His glory in all your actions (1Co 10:31; Rom 14:6).

2. To man.

(1) To all.

(a) Love all (Mat 5:44; Heb 10:24).

(b) Pray for all (1Ti 2:1).

(c) Do good to all (Gal 6:10).

(d) Forgive all the injuries they do us (Col 3:13; Luk 11:4).

(e) Be courteous to all (1Pe 2:17; 1Pe 3:8; Rom 12:10).

(f) Be just to all.

(2) To good men.

(a) Love them above others.

(b) Do good to them especially.

(3) To evil men.

(a) Pity them (Son 8:8).

(b) Reprove their sins (Lev 19:17; Mat 18:15).

(c) Use all means to bring them to Christ.


V.
Directions.

1. Get your conscience regulated by Gods Word (Psa 119:105).

2. Directed by His Spirit (Psa 119:133; Joh 16:13).

3. Well grounded and settled (Rom 14:5; 2Pe 1:12).

4. Do nothing against conscience (Rom 14:22-23).

5. Do everything from conscience (Rom 13:5).

6. Avoid secret as well as open sins (1Jn 3:20).

7. Choose the greatest sufferings rather than do the least sin.

8. Balk no duty.


VI.
Motives.

1. A good conscience will be a comfort in all troubles (Pro 15:15; 2Co 1:12).

2. An evil conscience will be a trouble in all comforts (Pro 18:14).

3. Unless we keep a good conscience it will be a witness against us hereafter, and be our tormentor forever (Mar 9:43-44), but a good conscience will be our eternal joy. (Bp. Beveridge.)

A conscience void of offence


I.
That we may rightly understand this matter, we must consider a little what it is to have a conscience void of offence, which was the ground of the apostles plea. The office of conscience is two fold: to direct one in acting, and then to pass a censure upon his actions. Before the thing is done, conscience serves as a tutor to advise and teach; and after the fact is over it serves as a judge, either to acquit or to condemn him for it. So that to have a conscience void of offence is, in the apostles sense, to be powerfully governed by ones conscience in the faithful discharge of his duty, and so to follow the light which is in his understanding, as not to fall into any known sin, nor to act anything which will wound his mind in the consequence. This the apostle protested now in open court was his constant exercise. But this must be understood chiefly of the time after his conversion to Christianity. For while he was yet a Jew and a zealous Pharisee his conscience was not void of all offence. We know what his sins were, and with what penitence and freedom he lamented them afterwards. But when he came to be thoroughly enlightened by the Sun of Righteousness, and his conscience was set to rights, it was his fixed endeavour to keep it more charity than the apple of his eye. As a man that has once broken his bones by chance is very careful lest he slip again, so was the apostle, after his conversion, industriously bent upon keeping his conscience from the least wound or blow. He valued no stripes as long as they did not touch that tender part. And this shows us all what ought to be the great care and business of our whole life; for whether conscience be well or ill kept, a man shall be sure to hear of it at last; he will certainly find the effects of it at home; let him take what course he pleases, his conscience will bear him company, and in the end prove his comfort or his plague. Tis true a mans conscience may not accuse him or fly upon him presently. How evil soever it be, it may lie quiet for a time. For a time it may be still and quiet, like a clock that stands when the weights are down, but one time or other the hand of God will wind it up again, and then every wheel and movement will stir to purpose. We should not trust, no, not our own hearts, because in the end our worst enemy will be that in our own bosom.


II.
But there are three cases especially wherein it highly concerns men to have a conscience void of offence.

1. First, in case of public dangers, when the face of the world looks uncomfortable and dismal. Seldom do the things of this life continue at a stay. However, some are so hardy as to scoff at religion, and strive to wear out of their minds the sense of God, yet nothing can carry a man out in the day of trial but holy principles. And whoever he be that relieth upon these principles, and upon examining his actions, finds good reasons to believe that his heart is sincere and upright, he must needs be danger proof in a very high degree. You have an instance here in St. Paul, though the Jews had bound themselves under a curse that they would kill him; though Ananias used his authority and Tertullus his eloquence against him; though men and devils conspired to destroy him; yet his rejoicing was this, that his constant exercise was to have a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward man. Such evil days and times of danger every one of us is very apt to put far off from himself by reason of the uncertainty of them.

2. Secondly, there is another case which every day occurs against which a wise man will be well provided–the case of sickness, when we should have little else to do but to trim up our lamps and exercise our graces, and so to repose ourselves in the bosom of a faithful God and a merciful Redeemer. Now, he that makes a conscience of his ways, and studies to carry himself without offence toward God and man, will at that time have nothing in comparison to do but to wait Gods pleasure, for as he foresees that such a day will come, so he prepares for it beforehand.

3. There is another case yet which I must mention, because from the highest to the lowest we must every one of us come to it in our order, for it is appointed unto all men once to die, and after death to go to judgment. What is it to die? Of what infinite importance is it to die well? What will become of us when we are dead and gone? Such religious meditations would prove very powerful restraints to keep men within the compass of their duty; for how slightly soever some have spoken of morality, I am confident no man ever yet repented of it on his death bed, nor can anything be a greater comfort to a man at the last than to consider that the care of his life has been to keep a conscience void of offence. It is a comfort that will stick to him to endless ages.


II.
To offer briefly these few things, the point being altogether practical.

1. That we give all moral diligence to inform our consciences rightly of the lawfulness of all we do. This was the fault of St. Paul before his conversion, that he took things upon trust and went upon presumptions. Therefore to have a conscience void of offence, it is absolutely necessary to use all proper means for the removing and curing of mistakes, such as unprejudiced meditation, reading of good books, conference with skilful and upright teachers, and the like.

2. Our endeavours being thus honestly employed, the next way to have a conscience void of offence is to follow its dictates. Great is the power which everyones conscience hath over him. It hath by the appointment of God Himself the immediate government of us, so that the very Word of God doth not otherwise guide us than by the light which it affords the conscience. Though the Divine will be the supreme rule, yet conscience is the inward and immediate measure of our actions; and on that account the command is so peremptory that everyone is to be fully persuaded in his own mind, and the determination is so positive that whatsoever is not of faith is sin.

3. To despise the world when it stands in competition with our duty is another sure way to keep ones conscience void of offence, because nothing is more apt to corrupt mens minds and to rifle them of their integrity than the lust of the eyes and the pride of life.

4. And so to resist the first temptations unto Bin; to get such a mastery over our own wills as to arm ourselves with firm purposes against it; to pray daily and heartily unto God not to lead us into temptation; and, above all, to have God always before our eyes. (E. Pelling, D. D.)

A conscience void of offence

Conscience is that within us which pronounces upon the moral character of our actions, and which justifies or condemns us accordingly. It is the Holy of holies in human nature–the majestic shrine in which God Himself is enthroned.


I.
A conscience void of offence. Such–

1. Must be enlightened. The sin of man has darkened his mind, and to have his conscience void of offence he must labour to obtain the fullest information about all moral questions. He must be on his guard against ignorance of the teaching of the moral law itself, and error as to the way in which that law is to be applied to the life. Micah the Ephraimite (Jdg 17:1-13; Jdg 18:1-31) had an ignorant conscience. Saul of Tarsus (Act 26:9) had an erring conscience. And how many Christians in our time need to have their consciences instructed about many important matters of morals? How many, for example, about the use of minced oaths, the petty falsehoods of trade, the use of the means of grace?

2. Must be purified. Man, being guilty, endures the misery of an evil conscience. There is no torment comparable to the pangs of remorse. Even the sin-hardened are made cowards by it, and confess that conscience is a thousand swords. This disease is beyond the practice of Lady Macbeths physician. (These quotations remind us that our greatest poet is emphatically the poet of the conscience.) But the same necessity exists for all, even for those who are not far from the kingdom of God.

3. Must be kept sensitive and tender. A healthy conscience will allow its possessor no peace so long as sin is indulged in or duty neglected. But how many there are, who, instead of cherishing a sensitive, vigilant conscience, prefer rather to lull the monitor into a state of coma! They say with the murderer in the tragedy, Theres few or none will entertain it. Ill not meddle with it. It is a dangerous thing. It makes a man a coward. Tis a blushing shamefaced spirit that mutinies in a mans bosom. It fills one full of obstacles, etc. And even a believer may sometimes allow his conscience to sink into a stupor. Lot did so when he went to live in Sodom, and David after his great transgression, and Peter until his Masters look of loving reproach awoke it. Thank God, there is such an awakening for every gracious soul. But the Bible speaks of those who have their conscience seared with a hot iron, as the effect of persistent unbelief and sin. Such seems to have been the case with Pharaoh, Saul, Caiaphas, and Judas.

4. Must receive its rightful place of supreme authority in the soul. The intuitions of men in all ages have convinced them practically of this truth. Our nature tells us that conscience is a magistrate from whose decisions there should be no earthly appeal; and that these anticipate a still more effectual sentence, which shall proceed from the Judgment throne. To shape ones course according to another mans conscience is the very spirit of Popery. Paul was preeminently a conscientious man all his life through (Act 23:1; 2Co 1:12). And the noble avowal of our text we can parallel with the brave words of Luther, My conscience is a captive to Gods Word: and it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. The man who makes this the law of his life will succeed in having a conscience void of offence. It will be so toward God (Psa 26:1-12.) and toward men (1Sa 12:3; Act 20:33).


II.
The exercise necessary in order to have such a conscience. The word exercise applied to the body denotes severe and bracing physical training; applied to the mind suggests assiduous intellectual drill and discipline. Pauls assertion, therefore, is that he makes the gymnastics of conscience his daily study and care. Let us inquire by what means this exercise is to be prosecuted.

1. To enlighten conscience, we must exercise ourselves with the study of Divine truth. The only rule of conscience which the heathen have is the law written on their hearts; but the Christian rule of right and wrong is the Word of God. Gods Word lays bare to us our half-buried and forgotten moral convictions. It is the chisel which restores the defaced and worn inscriptions upon gravestones of our sin-dead hearts. We must therefore search the Scriptures.

2. To purify conscience we must exercise ourselves with the application of the blood of Christ, which purges the conscience from dead works and sprinkles the heart from an evil conscience.

3. To keep conscience tender, we must exercise ourselves with constant watching and prayer (Psa 139:23-24). To give conscience its place of supreme authority we must exercise ourselves with the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. His grace is the one power which can make conscience regnant. (C. Jerden, M. A.)

A conscience void of offence


I.
What is implied in a conscience void of offence?

1. Conscience is the secret testimony of the soul, whereby it approves things that are good and condemns those that are evil. A good conscience is purified by the blood of Christ (1Ti 1:5; Heb 9:14). An evil conscience is loaded with guilt (Heb 10:22); and a hardened conscience does not feel the evil of sin (1Ti 4:2).

2. To have a conscience void of offence three things are necessary. First, a good rule of conduct; secondly, an impartial comparison of our conduct with that rule; and thirdly, a conviction that there has been a conformity of conduct to our rule.

3. That man who has a conscience void of offence towards God is inwardly pious, and practises all the duties of piety.

4. He who has a conscience void of offence towards men carefully follows two rules. First, he injures no man, either in his person, in his property, or in his character; and, secondly, he does all the good which is in his power to every man with whom he is connected, both in word and deed.


II.
How should we exercise ourselves to have a conscience void of offence?

1. Let us use those means by which we may obtain an enlightened conscience, that we may understand our duty both to God and men.

2. It should be an invariable rule with us to do nothing at any time, or under any circumstances, contrary to the dictates of conscience. When we act contrary to our views of things we are self-condemned.

3. In this holy exercise we should abstain from the appearance of evil; for if we yield to anything which our own mind condemns, or to anything which appears evil in the eyes of wise and good men, we shall soon fall into great and gross sins (1Th 5:22).

4. That we may keep a conscience void of offence, let us be careful not to enter into temptation.

5. As a farther help in this important work, let us be vigilant.

6. To watchfulness let us add prayer. Let us pray for wisdom to conduct us safely through difficult circumstances (Jam 1:5).

7. It is essentially necessary, in this blessed exercise, to avoid secret sins. These are fully known to God (Psa 90:8).

8. While we set God before us, in His justice and purity, and in His awful majesty and glory, we shall be careful to keep a conscience void of offence.

9. Let us be conversant with death and judgment. (Theological Sketchbook.)

Freedom from self-condemnation

There is nothing that men so often mistake as what we call conscience. With a Scotchman it is frequently obstinacy; with an English man, snobbishness; with a Yankee, prejudice. Conscience is not the thing that guides men, but the thing by which men justify themselves when they have made up their minds! They set their watches and then look at the time of day. It is difficult for some people to find their own pulse–that which marks the ebb and flow of that red tide of life which surges back and forth within them. So hard it often is for a man to put his finger on the real motive of his conduct. Men clip coin and then try to pass it for the genuine currency of the realm. The difference between men as good and bad is the difference in their treatment of conscience. A self-knowledge that is void of self-condemnation: this is the subject I shall discuss.


I.
I remark that there is nothing more wonderful in man than his power to know himself. It is the most fearful and wonderful thing in him. If he wants to get the temperature of his own body he must use a thermometer; if he wants to count his own pulse he must hold his watch in his hand. But the temperature of the man within, the pulse beat of the man within, he must find from a standard within. Conscience is the self-registering thermometer of the soul. Josephs brethren never had lost their self-consciousness, their self-recognition–never, day or night, year in, year out. They knew themselves. It is a thing which cannot be lost, this conscience of self. But let them do the deed; let conscience make its registry respecting that deed, and they may wake and sleep; they may change their place of residence and traverse seas and deserts; years may pass over their heads, but they never can be rid of their own self-recognition. It is no longer like the mists of the morning. It is like the sin of Judah; it is written with a pen of iron and the point of a diamond upon the tables of the heart. It will carry its own deep self-knowledge throughout all eternity.


II.
There is no higher aim for a man made in Gods image than to keep this self-consciousness the source of comfort and support to himself. It is like keeping the prow of the vessel pointed to the polar star. If a man maintains his self-respect it makes little difference what are his outward surroundings. They cannot affect his inward worth any more than the setting of a jewel affects its intrinsic value. Joseph was just as near to God and to the throne of God in Egypt as in the house of his father. His feet was hurt with fetters, but he could still run in the way of Gods commandments.


III.
This keeping of self-consciousness serene and undisturbed is never the result of a happy accident, but of a settled purpose and masterly aim. The apostles phraseology in the text is very strong: And herein do I exercise myself to have always a conscience void of offence toward God and toward man. If a man means to make his living by the use of his arms he trains the muscles of his arms; if he means to make his living by the use of his voice he exercises his lungs so that he can produce voice; and so of his ears and his eyes, as his calling may require. In other words, he takes gymnastics which are suited to his necessities. Peace of conscience is not an accident, but an acquisition; is not a matter of temperament, but of attainment. I suppose the popular conception of the life of such men as St. Paul is that being so eminent in spiritual endowments, the Christian life in a sense takes care of itself. But I do not get any such conception of the apostles language. It is not a Sabbath day experience. Notice that one word–always! It was his habitual method, the habit of his life. The conscience is the vision of the spiritual man. It determines duty for him. And the Saviour says, If thine eye be single thy whole body shall be full of light. But if thine eye be evil or divided thy whole body shall be full of darkness. There is no darkness like the darkness which springs from a benighted conscience. There are no blunders like the blunders committed in the name of conscience. This is what the apostle means by a conscience void of offence, a conscience which does not make him stumble, because it has a clear vision for the inward man.


IV.
Every mans conscience has to do with his carriage toward God and toward man. It is like the eye–two organs and one sight. Some people think conscience has mainly to do with the inward walk, with regularity in the exercise of the spirit in what would be called worship and service. It was just this kind of conscience that Saul of Tarsus had when, like a bloodthirsty beast of prey, he was putting to death the members of the little flock of the Good Shepherd at Jerusalem. Then he exercised himself to have a conscience void of offence toward God, and stopped there. I do not think there can be a more merciless condition of the soul than for a man to try and keep a conscience void of offence toward God without reference to his fellow men. It accounts for all the awful things done in the way of persecution, done in the name of God and for the glory of God. Piety and humanity are the two necessary poles in all Christianity. The truth is that the highest Christian development is not possible if we do not have a warm side in us–the side where the heart is–toward humanity. If you think of it a moment, the Son of God was also the Son of man. A man cannot keep his conscience void of offence toward his fellow man by adopting another mans conscience as his standard–sinning under cover of another mans shield. This is the temptation which comes from improper intimacies in business and in social life. Since the death of Christ every man living has a new valuation. He is one for whom Christ has died. If a man be dishonest, he is dishonest toward one for whom Christ died. (J. E. Rankin.)

A good conscience


I.
The determination and persistence of the apostle to keep his conscience void of offence. It is all in that word exercise. The word literally means to go into training. This is what he really says, I am not careless in this great matter; I do not live in any heedless fashion; I fight stains from my conscience as gladiators fight weakness; what my conscience cannot approve that I away with.


II.
The apostle, thus exercising himself to keep a conscience void of offence toward God and man, would not trifle with his conscience. Remember what he tells King Agrippa: Immediately I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision.


III.
This delicacy of conscience in the apostle led him necessarily to a thoughtful and generous regard of the consciences of others. A mans first duty is never to trifle with his own conscience; his second duty is never to trifle with the consciences of those who, like himself, are in a world of responsibility and trial. Pauls manner of managing the matter of eating meat offered to idols (2Co 10:25-33).


IV.
As conscientious as Paul was he did not believe his conscientiousness could save him. For salvation there must be trust in the atoning Christ, and such shining conscientiousness is but the test that one has really trusted. (Homiletic Review.)

A conscience void of offence

Here is–


I.
The extent of a good mans practice as it respects God and man. And this distribution is frequent in Scripture (Exo 20:1-26; Mat 22:38).


II.
His constancy and perseverance in this course. Paul exercised himself at all times. We must not only make conscience of our ways by fits and starts. There are some that will be very strict at some seasons, and perhaps for a little while after, then let themselves loose again to their former vicious course: but religion should be a constant frame of mind, discovering itself in the habitual course of our lives and actions.


III.
A very earnest care and endeavour to this purpose. Herein do I exercise myself. He applied himself to this business with all his care and might, and so we must take great care to understand our duty, and when we know it, we must be very careful in the performance of it.


IV.
The principle and immediate guide of our actions, which St. Paul here tells us was his conscience. Conscience is the great principle of moral actions, and our guide in matter of sin and duty. It is not the law and rule of our actions; that the law of God only is. Now, in common speech, every man is represented as having a tribunal in his own breast, where he tries himself and all his actions: and conscience, under one notion or other, sustains all parts in this trial; the court is called the court of a mans conscience, and the bar at which the sinner stands impleaded is called the bar of conscience; conscience is also the accuser; it is the record and register of our crimes, in which the memory of them is preserved; it is the witness which gives testimony for or against us; and it is likewise the judge which declares the law and passes sentence. But I shall only consider conscience as the judgment of a mans own mind concerning the morality of his actions.


V.
Rules and directions for the keeping of a conscience void of offence.

1. Never in any case to act contrary to the persuasion and conviction of conscience.

2. Be very careful to inform conscience aright, that we may not mistake concerning our duty. And this rule is the more necessary because men are apt to think it a sufficient excuse for anything, that they did it according to their conscience. But this will appear to be a dangerous mistake.

(1) That men may be guilty of the most heinous sins in following an erroneous conscience (Joh 16:2; Luk 23:34; Act 3:17; Act 26:9).

(2) These sins may prove damnable without a particular repentance for them.

3. In all doubts of conscience endeavour to be impartial.

4. Suspect all pretences of conscience which are–

(1) Accompanied with turbulent passion and a furious zeal (Jam 1:12; Act 26:9).

(2) Not accompanied with modesty and humility, and a teachable temper and disposition, willing to learn and to be better informed.

5. Be sure to mind that which is our plain and unquestionable duty–the great things of religion, and the things which make for peace, and whereby we may edify one another, and let us not suffer our disputes about lesser matters to prejudice and hinder our main duty.


VI.
The great motive and encouragement to this (verse 15). If we believe the resurrection of the dead and a future judgment, we ought to be very careful to discharge a good conscience now, in order to the rendering of a good account hereafter. (Abp. Tillotson.)

St. Pauls self-exercise

It is not a trifle, this self-exercise: it is a strenuous matter of business, whenever it is carried on as it was carried on by the saintly Paul. It ought to be maintained in a similar way to that wherein earnest men strive after earthly objects. An artist, athirst for eminence in his pursuit, craving fellow fame with the great names that emblazon the history of painting and sculpture, will devote himself with affecting eagerness to the quiet of his studio: he will almost worship the glorious works of the master with whose style he would fain be imbued and ingrained; and, when the world is at rest, the light still burns in his room, and he still hangs over the canvas, the chill hand grudging to hold palette and brush at the fiat of the over-tasked brain. That he might but enroll his name among the Murillos and Correggios, oh, he would exercise himself day and night! And so the ambitious politician will spend daylight over statistics and tabular returns, and consume evening and midnight in exciting debate. And so the worshipper of Mammon will sit at the door of Mammons temple and worship its golden pavement through lifes prime and its decrepit age, by sunlight and by starlight a constant votary, intent on the lucre that a spiritual philosophy has defined to be the root of all evil. Well, the Christian must learn a lesson from all this self-exercise: he must walk by the same rule, though God forbid that he should mind the same thing! In devotion to the great object before him, that of a pure conscience, let him take a leaf from the book of the enthusiast in art, in public life, in money making: all whatsoever they teach, in reference to singleness and fervency of aim, let him observe and do; but let him not do after their works: let him rescue a splendid quality, that of earnestness in self-exercise, from the claims of the perishable, and consecrate it to the demands of heaven. The children of this world are, in this respect, more advanced than the children of light. These things ought not so to be, for there is no province so full of scope for earnestness as that tenanted by the believer in Christs New Testament. We are sadly apt to treat religion with stiff, formal courtesy, as some periodical visitor who must be entertained politely while present, and forgotten till next advent; whereas it is meant to be identified with ourselves, inwrought in our nature, part and parcel of our being. (F. Jacox, B. A.)

Conscience


I.
We will first make a few remarks on the meaning of the word conscience. It means, properly, the knowledge with ones own self. It is that power of the human mind which discerns between right and wrong, and decides for itself, independently of the opinion of others. It makes man his own judge. It is by the means of this that God as it were speaks directly to us. And when we have learned to perceive the use of conscience, we shall see also its power. If it is the agent or instrument used to accuse and convict us of what is wrong, it is indeed a powerful one. It is intended to be the engine for completely crushing a man; and if it does not always exercise its full sway while the sinner is upon earth, he will not have to wait long in his iniquity before he finds its awful tyranny, when it becomes the gnawing worm of conscious guilt, as he wears away a weary eternity. But behold the man under a deep conviction of sin. Look at the man who has hitherto been honest and truthful, see him after the first breach of his principles, when his tongue has uttered almost his first lie, then you will outwardly witness the effects of the accuser within. Witness the Scripture case of the jailer at Philippi, as he rushed before Paul and Silas, saying, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? Yes; none can properly tell, save those who have experienced, the great–I may say the mighty–power of conscience when the Holy Spirits influence has awakened it to a deep sense of hell-deserving guilt. Let us go on to observe the property of conscience. It is immortal: it will never be extinguished. It is not a member of your body, which will return to dust: it is a faculty of your soul, which is never to die. If, therefore, it is at the present time the judge and the accuser within, so it will continue to be; so will it be forever and ever. Thus, then, we are led on to notice the quality of conscience. When viewed in its full extent (i.e., as the judge of a mans whole life, not confining its use and power to any particular sins)

, it must be either what is commonly called good or bad.


II.
And now, passing on to another branch of our subject, we are led to inquire the nature of a good conscience; what is it? Does it mean, simply, that we are free from any great crimes or open wickedness? Does it mean that we are not murderers or drunkards or liars? This is only a very small part of its meaning. It must be void of offence both toward God and toward man. How often is this quite overlooked! People say, Oh, I have a good conscience; I am happy; I am safe; for I never do those great sins which I see others commit. I do not lie, nor swear, nor injure my neighbour in any way. In fact, I am anxious to do all the good I can towards my neighbour. They never care first to inquire how their conscience is towards God. They seem to think that conscience only relates to this world and those in it. They forget that, whatever their human virtues, while they are living away from the gospel of Christ they are guilty, before God, of the greatest of crimes, for they are wilfully despising His love and His mercy. Of what use, then, their flattery to themselves that their consciences are good? A good conscience toward God must be without offence. The word offence properly means stumbling block; when it is used, as in this place, with reference to God, it simply means sin–a conscience clear of wilful transgression. But when we come to notice the conscience void of offence also toward man, we see the full force of the word offence. We must not put the stumbling block in our neighbours way. We must not do those things which may be hindrances to his religion. We must not lead him astray; but do all we can for his temporal, but most particularly for his eternal, welfare. And the case of St. Paul, when he spoke the words of the text, shows this to be the meaning of his words. He was charged with the very crime of leading people astray by his preaching and his conduct. But he declared that the opposite was his object, and that his conscience was void of offence, quite clear of any design against mans good.


III.
But we must hasten on to a third consideration–the method of obtaining a good conscience.

1. And here, in the first place, we are reminded of the primary requisite, viz., that our sins be removed. We cannot possibly have a good conscience before God while our hearts remain blackened with the sins of our nature and the aggravated sins of our practice. How much more shall the blood of Christ, who, through the eternal Spirit, offered Himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God! Let us draw near with a true heart, in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience. The primary meaning, then, of a good conscience is that it has been cleansed by the Redeemers blood; that through the influence of the Spirit of God it has been convinced of sin, and shown the provision made for its cleansing; and that through grace it has been led to take full advantage of the great Fountain; has by faith washed and been made clean.

2. And in connection with obtaining a good conscience, we see in our text the method of keeping it viz., by exercise: Herein I exercise myself, saith the apostle. He thus teaches us that, when we have been renewed in the spirit of our minds, it remains for us to keep in exercise the new powers and graces given to us. The health and muscular strength of the body are maintained and improved by proper exercise; so are the gifts and graces of the religion of Christ Jesus. We have difficulties to overcome: they must be subdued by exercise. We have higher attainments to reach: they must be got at by exercise. We must be diligent in our exercise of prayer to the Author of all help, that we may be able to resist and overcome evil. We must be diligent in our exercise of watchfulness. Let the consideration of this word exercise stir us up, lest we get idle, too trustful in our privileges.


IV.
And now, lastly, the value of a good conscience.

1. Look at it, first, with regard to time, to the mere short-lived existence in this world. Just consider the blessings of that peace which it engenders. Thus you are enabled to feel God indeed as your Father in every need, in every sorrow. And is there not pleasure also in the exercise to keep the conscience void of offence towards those around us, by bringing into action our efforts for their present and eternal welfare.

2. And if a good conscience is of value in this life, conveying even here peace and comfort and rest, of how much greater value shall it be in that eternal existence where it is to spend its blissful immortality! If conscience, or consciousness, will be the ever-continuing torment of the future punishment, will not the same faculty be the agent of happiness in the future world of joy and glory? (R. H. Davies.)

Conscience deals only with personal actions

The moral sense, conscience, is the final arbiter. But of what is it that conscience does its arbitration? On what does it pass its exclusive judgments? On persons only. On things, never. The sea, the star, the hawk, the scorpion are as though they were not in the realm of morals. For them we have no condemnation; for them we have no claims. A pestilent fungus, a deadly microbe, seizes on your dear and only child, and by its dread vitality strikes it down to agony and death; but you cannot curse that microbe as base. There is no immorality in its act. The venomed fang of the cobra slays your friend, but you dare not call it wickedness. The stealthy tiger springs upon some loved one and rends him in the jungle, but you must not call it immorality. The liquid lustre of the sapphire–we do not count it virtue, nor do we count the sweet influence of the Pleiades as their character. We admire, we do not approve, the opals melting colour; we dislike, we do not condemn, the unexpected acidity of the fruit. In them there is no merit, and there can be no demerit. But with irresistible impulse we approve, we disapprove of human actions.
Why? Because we know that they are the self-directed acts of persons with a knowledge of right, with a perception of wrong, with a will free and with a perception of wrong, with the will free and with a deep and mighty sense within–I ought, I ought not. If men were living machines no power in heaven or earth could ever make them moral. There might be beauty in their lives, but there could not be virtue. A machine may produce benefit, it may produce mischief, but it cannot produce character. If men could not help being good, where would be the virtue of goodness? Because a machine produces a superb fabric in silk or in paper is it a virtuous machine? Has it character? Verily not. You do not praise a summer because it gives you the autumnal wealth of golden harvest. You do not blame. You do not blame the lightning flash because it rent your parish church tower. No. It is mans moral personality that has made him sovereign in this earth and throws upon him a responsibility that, is awful; not compelled obedience even to right, but in lifes unceasing conflict the choice of the good rather than the evil, the conscience before God and man unclouded. (W. H. Dallinger.)

Conscience implies freedom

Take an illustration. You are rich. Your wealth is imperilled. Hitherto your whole life has been honourable. You have preserved your conscience cloudless. Now you see you can by an act of dishonour which none can ever detect, which no earthly mind can ever know of–in that act you can save your wealth. Now conscience is the court of appeal. You alone deliver judgment. The solicitations to dishonour are subtle and siren-tongued. Nay, they are mighty, they are there. On the other hand, the moral instinct points to the grandeur of right, the horror of wrong. Conscience, with the blessedness of eternal duration in its mission, says, No. You ought. You owe it to your character and your God not to do this great wrong. Fellow men, in such a case you know that it is you, it is I, apart from all She forces of temptation, that determine which it is that we will yield to. It is you, it is I, that issue the mandate I will or I will not. The will is free for practical purposes, or moral judgment is impossible. It is when two incompatible impulses appear in our souls and contest the field that the strength and patience or the weakness and depravity of our manhood appear; for we are made aware of their difference, and are driven to judge between them. And the sensibility of the mind to the graduations of contrast between good and evil is what we mean by conscience. Conscience is a critical moral organ, and blessed is he that has trained his conscience under the companionship of the Cross of Christ, and who, with a brave heart like the great apostle, strives to keep it before God and before man, void of offence. (W. H. Dallinger.)

Reason for conscientiousness

A man was once asked why he was so very particular to give good measure–over good–and he replied, God has given me but one journey through this world; and when I am gone I cannot return to correct mistakes.

Conscience, a blameless


I.
What is included in it?

1. A conscience void of offence, not only toward men, who see what is before their eyes, but also before God, who looks at the heart.

2. Not only toward God, whose judgment Eternity only discloses, but also before men, who judge by fruits.


II.
How is it to be obtained?

1. By believing knowledge of the way of salvation from the word of God.

2. By walking in that way with a life of holiness. (K. Gerok.)

Conscience, a guilty

Bessus, a native of Pelonia, in Greece, being seen by his neighbours pulling down birds nests, and destroying their harmless young, was severely rebuked for his cruelty. His excuse was, that their notes were insufferable to him, as they never ceased twitting him for the murder of his father. Poor birds I they were innocent enough in the matter; but it was a guilty conscience which muttered its ceaseless reproaches in the ears of the wretched parricide. (J. N. Norton, D. D.)

Conscience, its office

This was beautifully set forth in the ring which the famous magician is related to have presented to his prince. The ring usually appeared like any other ornament of the sort, but so soon as its wearer formed an evil thought or desire, the golden circlet became a monitor, suddenly contracting, and by pinching the finger, warned him of sin. (J. N. Norton, D. D.)

Conscientiousness

There are three classes of men:

1. The conscientious, who always ask, What is right?

2. The mass of men, who do what is agreeable, or what promotes their interests.

3. Those who in great matters are conscientious, but not in small.


I.
The nature of conscientiousness. Acting from a sense of right, as opposed to acting from expediency or for self-indulgence.


II.
Its difficulty. Because of–

1. The strong opposing principles within.

2. The opposing influences without–those of friendship, party, example.

3. The moral courage and firmness of character it requires.


III.
Its sphere.

1. Personal religion.

2. Domestic life.

3. Business occupation.

4. Church activity.


IV.
Its aids.

1. A fixed purpose. The power of the will is great.

2. Living near to God.

3. Habit.

4. Prayer.


V.
Advantages.

1. We are doing right.

2. It purifies the heart.

3. It gives power, because it secures influence and respect. (C. Hodge, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 16. And herein do I exercise myself] And this very tenet is a pledge for my good behaviour; for as I believe there will be a resurrection, both of the just and unjust, and that every man shall be judged for the deeds done in the body, so I exercise myself day and night, that I may have a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men.

Toward God] In entertaining no opinion contrary to his truth; and in offering no worship contrary to his dignity, purity, and excellence.

Toward men.] In doing nothing to them that I would not, on a change of circumstances, they should do to me; and in withholding nothing by which I might comfort and serve them.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

And herein; or at this time, and in this business; or for this reason, to wit, because I believe the resurrection.

I exercise myself; I am altogether taken up with it; this is my one thing necessary, Luk 10:42.

To have always a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men; that I may not offend God or man in any thing; but that I may be without blame at the judgment seat of God or man. They only are blessed and happy, whose belief concerning another world makes them endeavour after holiness in this world.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

16. And hereinOn thisaccount, accordingly; that is, looking forward to that awful day(compare 2Co 5:10).

I exercise myselfThe”I” here is emphatic; “Whatever they do, this is mystudy.”

to have always a consciencevoid of offence, c.See Act 23:12Co 1:12; 2Co 2:17,c. that is, “These are the great principles of my life andconducthow different from turbulence and sectarianism!”

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

And herein do I exercise myself,…. Or because of this; on account of this doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, which is a doctrine according to godliness, and promotes and engages to a holy life and conversation, as the contrary tends to encourage a dissolute and sinful manner of living; see 1Co 15:32 The apostle studied, and laboured, and bent himself, and employed his thought, care, and time,

to have always a conscience void of offence toward God and toward man; that is, to discharge every duty which God requires, and to give to every man what is due to him; so as to please God, and not offend men, neither Jew nor Gentile, nor the church of God; and so as that conscience may be clear of guilt, and may not be defiled with sin, being purged and purified by the blood of Christ. By a “conscience void of offence”, is meant a good conversation; which as it respects God, lies in a carefulness not to offend him, but to do his will; and as it respects men, a shunning what may give offence, or be a stumbling to them; and though this cannot be perfectly attained to in each of its branches, yet there is in every good man a concern to have such a conscience; and the consideration of the resurrection of the dead, the general judgment, and a future state, induce him to it.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Herein ( ). His whole confession of belief in verses Acts 24:14; Acts 24:15.

Do I also exercise myself ( ). “Do I also myself take exercise,” take pains, labour, strive. Old word in Homer to work as raw materials, to adorn by art, then to drill. Our word ascetic comes from this root, one who seeks to gain piety by rules and severe hardship. Paul claims to be equal to his accusers in efforts to please God.

Void of offence (). This word belongs to the papyri and N.T. (only in Paul), not in the ancient writers. The papyri examples (Moulton Milligan, Vocabulary) use the word to mean “free from hurt or harm.” It is a privative and (to cut or stumble against). Page likes “void of offence” since that can be either active “not stumbling” as in Php 1:10 or passive “not stumbled against” as in 1Co 10:32 (the first toward God and the second toward men), the only other N.T. examples. Hence the word here appears in both senses (the first towards God, the second towards men). Paul adds “alway” ( ), a bold claim for a consistent aim in life. “Certainly his conscience acquitted him of having caused any offence to his countrymen” (Rackham). Furneaux thinks that it must have been wormwood and gall to Ananias to hear Paul repeat here the same words because of which he had ordered Paul to be smitten on the mouth (23:1f.).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Exercise myself [] . Originally, to work raw material, to form : hence, to practice, exercise, discipline; and so, in ecclesiastical language, to mortify the body. Of the kindred adjective ajskhtikov, our word ascetic is a transcript.

Void of offense [] . Lit., without stumbling; unshaken. The word is used thus in a passive sense here, as in Phi 1:10. In 1Co 10:32, it occurs in the active sense of giving offense to others, causing them to stumble.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “And herein do I exercise myself,” (en touto kai touto asko) “in this (hope) or expectation I also exercise myself.” on the grounds or in the light of the resurrection and accountability beyond the grave, 2Co 5:10-11; as also set forth Ecc 12:13-14; Rom 2:4-8. I strive, endeavor, work hard that I may stand before Him, unashamed in my resurrection body, at the hour of judgement, Php_1:20.

2) “To have always a conscience void of offence,” (aposkopon suneidesin echein) “To have, hold, or continually possess a blameless conscience,” Act 23:1. A conscience that I offend not other men or God, 1Co 10:32, Jew, Gentile, or members of the Lord’s church. Solomon calls the conscience “the candle of the Lord,” Pro 20:27. It is the memorex system or monitor of the soul, touched by the Spirit or God, causes men to remember good and evil, even beyond death, Luk 16:25.

3) “Toward God, and toward men.” (pros ton theon kai tous anthropous dia pantos) “Always toward God and toward all men;” Paul asserted that these were priority principles in his life, to respect the conscience of others, and to avoid offending both God and men, in what he said and did, 2Co 1:12; 2Co 2:17. Paul desired to have a conscience, that he was living and had lived, always in a manner that would avoid causing any person to stumble in spiritual matters, 1Ti 1:18-19; 1Ti 3:9. Such a conscience is called a “good conscience,” and a “pure conscience” in the latter passages, a goal, object, or priority that if continually sought by children of God, would keep so many from emotional, psychiatric, or nervous breakdown problems, and keep others from stumbling, or being offended.

SELF RESPECT

Before James A. Garfield became President of the United States he served for a number of years in Congress as Representative of an Ohio district. One day, as he reviewed his political career, he said to some friends: “I have for many years represented a district in Congress, whose approbation I greatly desired; but, though it may sound a little egotistical to say it, I desired still more the approbation of one person, and his name is Garfield. He is the only man I am compelled to sleep with, and eat with, and live with, and die with; and if I do not have his approbation I should have bad companionship.”

– William R. King, in “Motives for Christian Living,

Harper & Brothers, publishers

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

16. And herein do I study. There is no sharper prick to prick men forward, with all desire to lead a godly and holy life, than the hope of the last resurrection, as the Scripture teacheth in many places. Therefore, when Paul will effectually exhort the people anywhere, he calleth them back to remember the same ( Phi 3:20). Wherefore, it is not without cause that he saith in this place, that staying himself upon this faith, he hath endeavored to live purely before God, and righteously among men. And surely an evil conscience is as good as a thousand witnesses to accuse − (586) men of blockishness, that they may gather for a certainty that they do not earnestly and thoroughly believe eternal life, after which they never long. He calleth it a conscience, απροσκοπον, that is, without offense, where the servants of God labor to remove all lets which hinder their course. And he putteth two parts of the conscience. For there is a certain inward sense or feeling which beholdeth − (587) God alone, and thence cometh faithfulness and integrity which we use towards men. At length, when he saith that he hath constantly followed as well godliness in worshipping God, as just dealing among men, he signifieth unto us that those do indeed hope for the last resurrection who are never weary of well-doing. For this word always doth signify perseverance in a straight course. −

(586) −

Ad coarguendos,” to convict.

(587) −

Respicit,” has repect to.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(16) And herein do I exercise myself . . .The herein seems equivalent to in this belief. Because he held that doctrine of a resurrection as a stern and solemn reality, the one law of his life was to keep his conscience clear from wilful sin. (See Note on Act. 23:1.) The words must have been almost as bitter to Felix as to Ananias; but he has, at all events, the decency to listen in silence.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

“In this I also exercise myself to have a conscience void of offence toward God and men always.”

‘This’ either refers to ‘the Way’, or signifies a general ‘all this I am talking about’. Either way it is because of these things that he behaves according to his conscience, seeking to have a conscience void of offence towards God and men. That being so the claims of his opponents are ridiculous. This also emphasises that being a member of ‘the Way’ results in men living conscience controlled lives.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Act 24:16. And herein , that is, in this work do I employ myself; or, as others render it; “In the mean time, whilst I am in this world;” or as others, (I think most probably,) “for this cause, or on this account, because I believe a resurrection, therefore, I have a conscientious care of my life, and all the actions of it.” That the phrase sometimes signifies on this account, is shewn by Raphelius, Annot. ex Xen. p. 185.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Act 24:16 . ] on this account , as in Joh 16:30 . It refers to the whole contents of the confession just expressed in Act 24:14-15 , as that on which the moral striving, which Paul constantly ( .) has, has its causal basis.

] et ipse , like other true confessors of this faith and this hope.

] I exercise myself , i.e. in eo laboro, studeo (Stallb. ad Plat. Rep . p. 389 C); often also in classical writers with the infinitive. See Sturz, Lex. Xen . I. p. 439.

. . .] ethical reference (Rom 5:1 ). The good conscience (Act 23:1 ) is conceived as having suffered no offence ( ., here passive , comp. on Phi 1:10 ), i.e. as unshaken , preserved in its unimpaired equilibrium.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

DISCOURSE: 1808
A CONSCIENCE VOID OF OFFENCE

Act 24:16. Herein do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men.

THE Gospel of Christ has in all ages been stigmatized as having an unfriendly aspect on morality; and its professors have been accused as maintaining this position, that we may continue in sin that grace may abound. But, however the disgraceful conduct of hypocrites may have appeared to countenance such a charge, it is certain that every true Christian is a living witness for God, and a public monument of the sanctifying influence of the Gospel. St. Paul was not inferior in holiness to any human being, our blessed Lord alone excepted; yet was he inveighed against as a man that was not fit to live upon the earth. In the passage before us we have an account of the accusations brought against him by a certain orator, named Tertullus. He was represented as a pestilent fellow, a mover of sedition among all the Jews throughout the world, a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes, and, to complete the whole, an impious profaner of the temple [Note: ver. 5, 6.]. In other words, he was accused of sedition, heresy, and profaneness. In answer to these allegations he shews that, as to sedition, the reason of his coming to Jerusalem was to bring alms to his nation, and to present his offerings to God; and that his demeanour there had been peaceable and quiet, for they had not found him in the temple disputing with any man, nor raising up the people either in the synagogue, or in the city. As to the charge of heresy, he acknowledges, that after the way that they called heresy, he did worship the God of his fathers, believing those very Scriptures, and hoping for the accomplishment of that very resurrection, which his accusers themselves professed to believe and hope for. And lastly, as to the profaneness and impiety with which they charged him, he declares that his principles led him to a far different conduct: that that faith and hope, which he professed, stimulated him to the most scrupulous performance of every duty both to God and man: herein, says he, (or it might be translated, on this account, that is, on account of this faith and hope,) I exercise myself to have always a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men. We propose to shew,

I.

What is the attainment which every true Christian labours for.

II.

The vast importance of it to every child of man.

I.

What is the attainment, &c.

Without entering into any metaphysical inquiries concerning the nature of conscience, we may observe that its office is to testify to every man the quality of his past actions, and to regulate his conduct agreeably to some standard of right and wrong. It does not so properly judge respecting the truth or falsehood of any position: (that is rather the office of the understanding) it regards rather actions than sentiments; and the good or evil that is in them, rather than any prudential considerations respecting them. It is a monitor in every mans own bosom that may be called, in a qualified sense, the voice of God within him. It is not wholly subject to his own controul: for though much may be done to bribe, or silence it, yet sometimes it will speak out, and force the most obdurate sinner to listen to its voice.

The rules whereby it judges are various: where the light of revelation does not shine, it has no better rule than the law of nature, or the law of a mans own mind. It is then regulated by every mans own apprehensions of good or evil; and therefore must of necessity give a verdict more or less erroneous, as the persons mind is more or less instructed in moral truth. On this account, it would not be easy with respect to heathens to determine precisely what a conscience void of offence is; for certainly, allowances must be made for the different degrees of light which men enjoy. But with respect to us, who live under the clear dispensation of the Gospel, these difficulties in a great measure vanish. The following considerations may help to throw some light upon the subject.

The conscience is not to be judged void of offence merely because it does not accuse us. There are many so thoughtless and dissipated that they give themselves no time to reflect. They are engaged in a continual round of business or amusement; they shun all those scenes which would be likely to bring their sins to remembrance; they avoid all serious conversation; and thus they pass months and years without feeling any remonstrances of conscience: that faculty is lulled asleep; and, if by any means it be in the least degree awakened, every method is adopted to check its clamours, and restore its wonted tranquillity. Of such persons God speaks by the Prophet Hosea, when he says, They consider not in their hearts that I remember all their wickedness.

There are others who imbibe principles which are well calculated to weaken the influence of conscience. They take it for granted, that there is no great evil in sin; that God will never execute his threatenings against it; that they cannot be obnoxious to his wrath, because they have not committed any heinous sins, or, if they have, they were only such as the fashions of the world, and the frailties of their nature might well excuse. By such principles as these they persuade themselves that they have no ground for fear: like some of the Jews of old, they heal their wounds slightly, saying, Peace, peace, when there is no peace, or, like others of them, they affirm boldly, I shall have peace, though I walk in the imagination of my heart.

There is yet another description of persons who have at times been harassed with remorse of conscience; but they have so often resisted their convictions, sinned against the light, and done violence to all their own feelings, that they have, as the Apostle says, seared their consciences as with a hot iron, and rendered themselves past feeling.
Now it will be needless to prove that such persons have not a conscience void of offence; they may be rather said to have no conscience at all; or, if they have, it must be called, what the Apostle does call it, an evil conscience.

As a conscience is not void of offence merely because it does not accuse, so neither is it necessarily so, even if it should approve.

Many propose to themselves a false standard of right and wrong. Even among those who bear the Christian name, how many are there who think that religion consists in penances and pilgrimages, and in the observance of superstitious rites and ceremonies; yea, who would think, that the extirpation of heretics was the most meritorious work they could effect! Yet, if they were to abound in such works as these, and thereby gain the approbation of their own consciences, must we therefore say that their consciences were void of offence? Surely not. St. Paul has told us with respect to himself, that he verily thought he ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus: but does he assert his innocence upon that ground? No; he calls himself a blasphemer and injurious, and a persecutor, yea, the very chief of sinners. Our Lord tells his Disciples, that many would think, whosoever killed them would do God service: but could this conceit excuse their murderous acts? No. If we act upon wrong principles, our actions must be bad: nor can our error change the quality of our actions: it may indeed extenuate our guilt; but it can never render that good, which is in its own nature evil.
To speak then immediately to the pointThere are two things necessary to constitute a conscience void of offence; it must have a clear discovery of the rule of duty; and it must testify upon good grounds, that there is a correspondence between that rule and our actions.
It must have a clear discovery of the rule of duty. The rule of duty is concise and plain: we are to love God with all our heart and soul and strength, and our neighbour as ourselves: on these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets. Now this rule, in theory, is universally acknowledged; but, through the influence of our carnal interests and passions, we lose sight of it entirely, and imagine ourselves conforming to it, when we are violating it in every point of view. We suppose that the love of this present world will consist with a good conscience, though God himself has told us, that if any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. We think we may indulge pride, envy, selfishness, and a thousand other malignant passions, and yet conform to the law of love.
While the eyes of our understanding are thus blinded, we cannot be said to have a conscience void of offence; because the conscience being unenlightened with respect to the rule of judging, it cannot possibly give a just verdict on our case. It must be acquainted with the several relations in which we stand to God and man: it must see what is required of us as creatures, as sinners, as redeemed. It must know that God claims our entire dependence, supreme regard, unreserved obedience. It must feel the necessity of abasing ourselves before God in dust and ashes, and of fleeing for refuge to the hope set before us. In short, it must be convinced, that a life of faith on the Son of God, and a cleaving to him with full purpose of heart, are the distinguishing features of the true Christian. But besides this, it must be acquainted also with the several duties which we owe to our fellow-creatures, as superiors, equals, and inferiors; and that too not only in their civil capacity, but in their relation to us as members of Christs mystical body. When it is thus enlightened, then, and then only, is it capable of being void of offence toward God and man.
But it is yet further necessary that conscience should be able to testify, upon good grounds, that there is a correspondence between this rule of duty and our actions.
Its testimony must proceed from a watchful observation of all our motives and principles of action. It must be in the habit of bringing our conduct to the touchstone, and of discerning between the pure metal and the most specious counterfeits. It must be on its guard against the bias it receives from prejudice and passion; and must be able to appeal to the heart-searching God for the truth of its testimony. Not that it need testify, that there is no sin in us; for then who could ever receive a favourable verdict, seeing that in many things we all offend? But its testimony must be to this effect; that, after searching the sacred records, after praying for the teachings of Gods Spirit, after carefully investigating not only our actions, but our motives and principles, and after comparing these with the rule of duty, it cannot discern that there is any one sin habitually indulged, or any one duty allowedly neglected.

This is the true import of what is called in our text, a conscience void of offence: and this every true Christian labours to maintain.
We now come to shew,

II.

The vast importance of it to every child of man

Men in general are well pleased if they can secure the approbation of their fellowcreatures, and maintain a character for probity in the world. They are therefore chiefly attentive to their external conduct, and not very solicitous about the thoughts or desires of their hearts. But this will not satisfy the true Christian. He knows that the eye of God is upon his heart, and that the most secret thought is naked and open before him. Like the Apostle, he accounts it a small matter to be judged of mans judgment; he says, What good can the applause of men do me, if I be condemned of my Judge? Or, why need I regard the opinion of the world, if I am accepted and applauded by my God? Seeing how contemptible every testimony is in comparison of that of his Maker, he studies to approve himself to God, a servant that needeth not to be ashamed. In whatever relation of life he stand, he endeavours to fulfil the duties of it. Is he in authority? he conscientiously improves his influence for the good of men and for the glory of God. More especially, if he sustain that weighty office of a minister of Christ, he will not be a faithless steward, or a slothful servant, but will be instant in season and out of season, and will watch for souls as one that must give account. On the other hand, is he in an inferior station? he will perform his duties, not with eye-service, as a man-pleaser, but as unto God. He will not esteem himself at liberty to yield a partial obedience: he will not think that his observance of relative duties supersedes the necessity of delight in God: nor, on the other hand, will he imagine, that the devoutest exercise of prayer and praise can absolve him from his obligation to equity and mercy. Every duty both to God and man occupies his attention, and is performed in its season, without partiality and without hypocrisy. Nor is this strictness merely occasional: it does not exist only in a time of sickness, or during a season of preparation for the Lords supper: no: he is always engaged in the same exercise: the law of God is written in his heart; obedience to it is his delight; nor can any consideration whatever divert him from his purpose. He is not insensible how hard it is to flesh and blood to cut off a right hand, and to pluck out a right eye: but no regard to carnal ease will induce him to spare his idol. He expects not that the world should love or honour him, when he recollects how it treated his divine Master: he is well assured that, if he will live godly in Christ Jesus, he must suffer persecution. But so far from being terrified at the cross, he takes it up and glories in it. He reverences himself, his conscience I mean, more than he does the whole world. He studies by meditation and prayer to get his conscience well informed; and then he confers not with flesh and blood: he asks only, What is duty? How shall I maintain a good conscience? How shall I please my God? These questions satisfactorily determined, he can say with the Apostle, I am ready not only to be bound, but also to die in the path of duty, for the name of the Lord Jesus.

That this is no exaggerated statement, but really the character of every true Christian, will appear from the clearest declarations of Holy Writ.
St. Paul repeatedly speaks of Christians in this light: he represents them as being blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation, among whom they shine as lights in the world: and he prays for them that they may be sincere and without offence until the day of Christ; yea, that their whole spirit, soul, and body, may be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. And David, giving the character of those who are accepted of God, expressly declares that they are without guile. Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, and whose sin is covered; blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile.

If it would afford us any additional satisfaction to find men of like passions with ourselves who have attained to this character, the Scriptures afford us many striking instances. St. Paul himself could testify before the Jewish Sanhedrim, that he had lived in all good conscience before God until that day. And in another place he speaks of the testimony which his own conscience bore to his character in these respects, as a source of most exalted pleasure to his soul: our rejoicing, says he, is this, the testimony of our conscience, that in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of God, we have had our conversation in the world. A similar testimony was given by our Lord himself to a man of far Jess attainments than St. Paul: of Nathanael he said, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile.
But it may be said, We acknowledge that Christians are so described, and that some eminent persons have attained to that character: but still the question recurs, Cannot a man be a true Christian, without having such a conscience as has been described? Before we give a precise answer to this, we should observe, that it is possible a man may be a Christian, and yet not enjoy the comfort of such a conscience; the corruptions of his heart, the temptations of Satan, an occasional commission of sin, and even certain disorders of the body, may prevent his conscience from yielding such a testimony; yea, may cause it to accuse and condemn him, notwithstanding he be a real Christian. But if any ask, whether any one can be a true Christian without having a just ground for such a testimony, or in other words, whether he can be in a state of salvation without possessing real integrity of heart? we answer, that, if there be any truth in the word of God, he cannot. What says David with respect to this? If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me. This cannot mean that if he have iniquity in his heart, God will not hear him: but that if he harbour it, or allow it in any instance, it will be in vain for him to hope for any mercy from God. St. John speaks yet more strongly to the same effect: He that committeth sin is of the devil: whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin, for his seed remaineth in him; and he cannot sin, because he is born of God: in this the children of God are manifest, and the children of the devil: whosoever doeth not righteousness, is not of God. Now what can be the import of this passage? To interpret it rigorously according to the strict letter of the words, would certainly render it inconsistent with other passages of Scripture, which declare that there is no man that liveth and sinneth not: but to reconcile it with any allowed sin, is absolutely impossible.

Here then we trust we may satisfactorily close the discussion of our text. Seeing that the conscience has been shewn to be without offence only when it can testify of our unreserved conformity to Gods law; and that no one can be a true Christian, unless it be his chief labour to maintain such a conscience.

It only remains that we

Improve the subject.

And now may God in infinite mercy send down upon us his Holy Spirit, to impress our minds with conviction, if we have not yet attained the Christian character, and to fill us with consolation if we have!
We all profess to be Christians in reality, as well as in name. We all feel averse to acknowledge that we have no part or lot in the Gospel salvation: and surely it is a painful task to rob any one of a hope so comfortable, so delightful. It will be far more congenial with our feelings, if we take for granted, that, in this Christian assembly, we all deserve the Christian name. Let us then indulge the pleasing thought: let us now consider ourselves as genuine Disciples of Christ; let us give him the glory of what he has wrought in us; and let us, for the confusion of all the adversaries of the Gospel, and for the confirmation of our own souls, unite in making our acknowledgments to God.
Thou Searcher of all hearts, who at this instant observest the state of every soul here before thee, we would not approach thee with any pharisaical boasting, pretending to give the glory to thee, while we are indeed taking it to ourselves: no, Lord, let that be far from us: we know, that, if we had done all that had been commanded us, we should have been only unprofitable servants: but instead of being merely unprofitable, we feel that we are vile and miserable sinners. Nevertheless, we trust that we are monuments of thy grace; and we desire now to join in humble adorations and thanksgivings for what thou hast done for our souls. Through thy grace and mercy we enjoy a conscience void of offence toward thee and toward man. We feel at this time, that, notwithstanding all our short-comings and defects, we have an unfeigned and uniform desire to please thee. Our consciences testify that there is no one instance wherein we knowingly do to others, what we should not think it right for them, in a change of circumstances, to do to us. Nor are we contented with doing to men as we would be done unto: no, Lord: Thou, who seest in secret, knowest what longing desires we have after thee: thou beholdest us daily approaching thy footstool with deepest humiliation and contrition; and hourly, as it were, washing in the fountain of Christs blood, which alone can purge our consciences from dead works. Nor does our hope of forgiveness embolden us to sin; but rather, thou knowest, animate us to obedience. As for sin, we can appeal to thee, we hate and abhor it. If at any time we commit it, even in thought, thou knowest how much our souls are pained, and how we renew our applications to thee for pardon and strength. We say the truth in Christ, and lie not, our consciences also bearing us witness in the Holy Ghost, that we have great heaviness and continual sorrow in our hearts for the corruptions that yet remain within us; and that, if we could have the desire of our hearts, we would bid an eternal farewell to sin, and be holy as thou art holy, and perfect as thou art perfect. Dear brethren, have you such an evidence of your sincerity before God? Do you not now feel any misgivings in your consciences respecting these things? If you can thus appeal to the heart-searching God, then earnestly pray that he would perfect his good work in your hearts; and be utterly purposed that from this moment you will no more offend.

Glad should we be if all were acting thus agreeably to their profession, and walking thus in the paths of peace. But have the consciences of all approved these acknowledgments? Have none felt any misgivings? Has not conscience whispered to any one This is not thy state? If this be the case with any one, let him hearken to the friendly intimation, the faithful remonstrance: for if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things: but if our heart condemn us not, then, and then only, have we confidence towards God.


Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)

DISCOURSE: 1809
A CONSCIENCE VOID OF OFFENCE
[Note: This Analysis of the foregoing Sermon is added, in order that the reader may see how easily a Skeleton may be turned into an entire Sermon.]

Act 24:16. Herein do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men.

THE Gospel is often represented as unfavourable to morality, but true believers are living monuments of its sanctifying influence. St. Paul was deemed a fellow not worthy to live upon the earth; he was accused of sedition, heresy, and profaneness [Note: ver. 5, 6.], but he distinctly and satisfactorily disproved the allegations [Note: Respecting Sedition, ver. 12. Heresy, ver. 14, 15. Profaneness, in general, ver. 16; in the particular that had been specified, ver. 17, 18.], and boldly affirmed that his principles had quite an opposite effect [Note: If were translated on this account (as it might be), the connexion between his principles and conduct would he more clearly marked.]

We shall endeavour to shew,

I.

What is that attainment which every true Christian labours for

A metaphysical inquiry into the nature of conscience would be to little profit. Its office is to testify the quality of our actions, and to regulate our conduct agreeably to some standard of right and wrong [Note: It regards actions rather than sentiments, and the good or evil that is in them rather than any prudential considerations respecting them.]. The rule whereby it should judge, is, the word of God, and it is considered as good or evil, according to the verdict it gives.

Not that it is void of offence merely because it does not accuse

[There are many so immersed in cares or pleasures that they never reflect on the state of their souls [Note: Hos 7:2.]; and, if at any time their conscience be alarmed, they instantly endeavour to check its clamours, and restore its tranquillity. Others persuade themselves that they have no cause for fear, and that they shall have peace notwithstanding all their sins [Note: Jer 8:11. Deu 29:19.]: others have, by resisting, quenched the light within them, and thus have reduced themselves to a state of awful obduracy [Note: 1Ti 4:2.]. Such persons have no other than an evil conscience.]

Nor is a conscience necessarily void of offence, even though it should approve

[Many propose to themselves a false standard of right and wrong. By conforming to their own principles they may gain the approbation of their own minds: but it does not therefore follow that they are innocent. Their mistakes cannot change the quality of their actions: error may extenuate, but cannot remove their guilt [Note: Would those who think it meritorious to extirpate heretics, or those, of whom our Lord speaks, Joh 16:2. be justified in following the dictates of their deluded consciences? St. Paul determines this in his own ease, compare Act 26:9-11. with 1Co 15:9 and 1Ti 1:13; 1Ti 1:15.].]

To be truly void of offence, conscience must have a clear discovery of the rule of duty

[The rule of duty is concise and plain [Note: Mat 22:37-40.]; this however, though allowed in theory, is practically denied. Men persuade themselves that the love of the world will consist with their duty to God [Note: 1Jn 2:15.]; and that pride, envy, selfishness, &c. may accord with love to man [Note: 1Co 13:4-7.]. How should conscience, thus blinded, give a just verdict? or how should its blindness cause that to be good which is in itself evil?]

It should be able also to testify upon good grounds that there is a correspondence between that rule and our actions

[It should be in the habit of examining our principles and motives, and be on its guard against any bias from prejudice or passion: it should be able to appeal to God for the truth of its testimony; not that it need to testify of sinless perfection [Note: That is not possessed by any, Jam 3:2.]; but it must testify, that, after the strictest search, it can find no sin habitually indulged, or duty allowedly neglected.]

A good conscience being that which every true Christian labours to maintain, I proceed to mark,

II.

The vast importance of it to every child of man

To labour for it is certainly the character of all who fear God
[The world are satisfied with gaining the applause of men; but the Christian makes but little account of mans judgment [Note: 1Co 4:3.]. He knows that the eye of God is upon his heart [Note: Heb 4:13.]: he therefore studies to approve himself to God: he has respect to every part of his duty toward God and man [Note: He does not think that his observance of relative duties supersedes the necessity of delight in God; nor, on the other hand, that the devoutest exercise of prayer and praise can absolve him from his obligations to equity and mercy. Jam 3:17.]: and this, not at certain seasons only, but always: nor will he be deterred by any regard to ease, or interest, or fear. Inquiring only, What is duty? he will say with the Apostle [Note: Act 21:13.].]

Nor can any one be a true Christian who has not attained it
[Every pardoned sinner is supposed to be without guile [Note: Psa 32:2.]. All in the primitive Church are spoken of in this light [Note: Php 1:10; Php 2:15. See also 1Th 5:23.]. St. Paul did not hesitate to affirm that such was his character [Note: Act 23:1. 2Co 1:12.]. And the same is ascribed to one who, in point of experience, was far inferior to him [Note: Joh 1:47.]: nor is any one in a state of salvation who has not attained it [Note: Many things may conspire to rob a Christian of the comfort of such a conscience, (the corruptions of his heart, the temptations of Satan, and even bodily disorders, may cause him to despond for a season) but a just ground for such a conscience he cannot but possess.]. This is expressly asserted by David [Note: Psa 66:18.], and St. John [Note: 1Jn 3:8-10. If this were rigorously interpreted, it would contradict other passages of scripture, 1Ki 8:46. But to reconcile it with allowed sin is impossible.].]

Application

[We all are willing to believe ourselves real Christians, and it is painful to rob any one of so comfortable a hope. Let us then, as Christians, unite our acknowledgments to God [Note: Rom 9:1-2.]. Let us adore him for that grace, whereby he enables us to maintain, always, and in all things, a conscience void of offence. But if, in this appeal to him, we feel misgivings, or conscience suggest an opposite testimony, let us remember that admonition [Note: 1Jn 3:20-21.].]


Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)

16 And herein do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men.

Ver. 16. And herein ] Or, meanwhile ( , i.e. , ), for this cause do I exercise myself: or, I use diligence, skill, and conscience; I lay my policy, or bend my wit, I discipline and inure myself.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

16. ] Accordingly , i.e. ‘having and cherishing this hope;’ see reff.

] also , ‘ as well as they .’

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Act 24:16 . : “herein” is rather ambiguous, A. and R.V.; the expression may be used as = propterea , as the result of the confession of faith in Act 24:14-15 , cf. Joh 16:30 (Xen., Cyr. , i., 3, 14). Rendall takes it = meanwhile (so apparently Wetstein), sc. , i.e. , in this earthly life; “hanc spem dum habeo,” Bengel. If we read , not , perhaps best explained “non minus quam illi,” Blass, “I also exercise myself,” R.V., , cf. 2Ma 15:4 ; , 4Ma 13:22 ; , 4Ma 12:11 ; so in classical Greek, laborare, studere , Soph., Elect. , 1024. : only by Paul in N. T., cf. 1Co 10:32 , where used actively, and cf. Sirach 32(35):21, Mal 3:8Mal 3:8 . In Phi 1:10 Lightfoot points out that the word may be taken either transitively or intransitively, although he prefers the latter. Mr. Page in his note on the word in this passage commends A.V. “void of offence” as including the two images, not offending, upright, . ; not causing offence, . . “ Ad Deum et homines congruit quod sequitur eleemosynas et oblationes ,” Bengel. , see Plummer on Luk 24:53 , cf. Act 2:25 ; Act 10:2 , Mat 18:10 , Mar 5:5 , Heb 2:15 , emphatic here at the end of sentence, implying that the Apostle’s whole aim in life should free him from the suspicion of such charges as had been brought against him.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

herein = in (Greek. en. App-104.) this.

exercise. Greek. eskeo, to practise as an art, used of the healing art in medical writings. Only here.

conscience. Compare Act 23:1.

void of offence. Greek. aproskopos. The verb proskopto means to stumble, and this adjective here means “without stumbling”, while in the other two ooc, 1Co 10:32. Php 1:1, Php 1:10, it means “not causing to stumble”.

toward. Greek. pros. App-104.

men. Greek. anthropos. App-123.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

16. ] Accordingly, i.e. having and cherishing this hope; see reff.

] also, as well as they.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Act 24:16. , herein) whilst I have this hope.-, I myself) whatever others do.-, I exercise myself, I aim) This verb forms an allegory, with the word , sect. Both words occur in the history of philosophical sects.- , toward God and men) What follows accord with this, viz. alms and offerings.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Act 23:1, Rom 2:15, Rom 9:1, 1Co 4:4, 2Co 1:12, 2Co 4:2, 1Th 2:10, 1Ti 1:5, 1Ti 1:19, 1Ti 3:9, 2Ti 1:3, Tit 1:15, Tit 2:11-13, Heb 9:14, Heb 10:22, Heb 13:18, 1Pe 2:19, 1Pe 3:16, 1Pe 3:21

Reciprocal: Gen 17:1 – walk Deu 26:13 – I have not 1Sa 12:5 – ye have 1Ch 29:17 – in the uprightness 2Ch 31:20 – wrought Job 22:3 – thou makest Job 27:6 – my heart Psa 18:21 – For I Psa 19:13 – upright Psa 25:21 – General Psa 103:18 – remember Psa 106:3 – doeth Psa 119:1 – undefiled Pro 16:17 – highway Jer 37:18 – General Eze 18:9 – walked Dan 6:22 – forasmuch Luk 1:6 – walking Luk 2:25 – just Act 11:24 – he was Rom 13:5 – conscience Rom 14:22 – Happy Phi 1:10 – that ye may be 1Ti 2:2 – all godliness 1Ti 4:7 – exercise Tit 2:12 – live

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

6

Act 24:16. Conscience is from SUNEI-DESIS and Thayer’s main definition is, “The soul as distinguishing between what is morally good and bad, prompting to do the former and shun the latter, commending the one, condemning the other.” This definition states the action of the conscience, but it can act on improper information as well as proper. When Paul was persecuting Christians his conscience commended him for it, because his information (which was erroneous) was to the effect that the disciples of Christ were evildoers. In our present verse he means he had always exercised himself in a way that he thought would be right regarding both God and man. His good conscience while persecuting Christians was due to the improper information that he had received. The popular idea is not true that the conscience is “A creature of education,” for it is a part of every human being. However, it is true that the conscience may be educated, and it depends on the character of that education whether it will commend or condemn what it should.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Act 24:16. And herein do I exercise myself to have always a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men. Herein; that is, for this reason, because of his belief in the future resurrection; or, in other words, because he held the doctrine of the resurrection of the just and unjust, not as a mere speculative doctrine, but as a grave and awful reality. The rule of his life was to struggle to keep himself from sin. Plumptre strikingly notices here that these words of Paul must have been almost as bitter to Felix as to Ananias, but he has at all events the decency to listen in silence.

Pauls beliefthis is above all things most noteworthywas anything but a merely speculative, it was a real and living faith. He lived, or rather tried to live, as though he believed, and taught others to do the same. The Greek word rendered do I exercise myself (), tells us of the restless, ceaseless warfare within waged by this true gallant soldier of Christ to keep his conscience, not only in the sight of men, but before the unseen majesty of God, white and pure.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

See notes on verse 10

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

16-20. Paul proceeds simply to tell Felix about his arrival at Jerusalem only twelve days ago on the philanthropic errand of bringing the benefactions of the Gentile churches to the poor saints at Jerusalem, and his participation in the simple ceremonies of temporary Nazaritish vows and sacrifices peculiar to his people since the days of Moses, during which they assaulted him in the temple, on accusation of stirring up sedition, which was utterly untrue, and they had signally failed to prove their charges when he stood before the Sanhedrim in Jerusalem in the custody of Lysias, and he now challenges them to prove their charges.

Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament

Since Paul believed God would resurrect him, he sought to maintain a clear conscience as he lived. Conscience is the capacity to feel guilt.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)