Conscience
			
			Introduction 
			In 1994, professional golfer Davis Love III called a one-stroke 
			penalty on himself because he could not remember whether he had 
			replaced his ball to its exact spot. The extra stroke eliminated him 
			from the tournament and ultimately cost him automatic qualification 
			to the next year’s Masters. When asked if he regretted the decision, 
			he replied, “How would I feel if I won the Masters and wondered the 
			rest of my life if I cheated to get in?” The happiest ending arrived 
			only after he acted with integrity. The only satisfying reward is 
			one gained honestly, for a guilty conscience can spoil any gain. 
			Scripture speaks often about the conscience because God cares about 
			what we know within and how we live before Him. 
			
			What Is the Conscience? 
			The New Testament word translated “conscience” speaks of shared 
			knowledge within the self—an inner awareness formed by instruction 
			and experience. In the Old Testament this function is frequently 
			expressed by the word “heart.” Paul describes the conscience as a 
			faculty that testifies inside a person about right and wrong: “their 
			conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their 
			thoughts accusing or else excusing them” (Romans 2:13–16). The 
			conscience, then, observes, testifies, and renders a verdict. 
			Because it operates with information, it must be taught what is true 
			if it is to guide us well. 
			
			What the Conscience Can Do 
			David learned that the conscience can strike and condemn when we 
			sin. After numbering Israel without divine authority, “David’s heart 
			condemned him,” and he confessed his folly to the Lord (2 Samuel 
			24:10). Job shows that a well-taught conscience can rest without 
			reproach when a man clings to righteousness: “My righteousness I 
			hold fast… my heart shall not reproach me” (Job 27:6). The 
			conscience can also be stained. Paul warns that unbelief and moral 
			impurity defile “both mind and conscience” (Titus 1:15). Neglect is 
			dangerous; some reject a good conscience and suffer shipwreck 
			regarding the faith (1 Timothy 1:18–20). A misinformed conscience 
			may even approve evil. Paul once persecuted the church “in all good 
			conscience” (Acts 23:1; Acts 26:9–11; 1 Timothy 1:13). The lesson is 
			plain: conscience must be educated by God’s truth. Since issues of 
			life flow from the heart, we must guard it diligently (Proverbs 
			4:23). When people delight in unrighteousness, they place themselves 
			under judgment (2 Thessalonians 2:12). If iniquity is cherished in 
			the heart, prayer is hindered (Psalm 66:18). 
			
			Determined to Keep a Clear 
			Conscience 
			A clear conscience is not accidental. Paul told Felix, “I myself 
			always strive to have a conscience without offense toward God and 
			men” (Acts 24:14–16). He took pains to keep it clear. Such integrity 
			is tethered to truth. “I tell the truth in Christ… my conscience 
			also bearing me witness in the Holy Spirit” (Romans 9:1–2). It is 
			also joined to simplicity and godly sincerity in daily conduct (2 
			Corinthians 1:12). Scripture ties a good conscience to obedient 
			faith. Baptism is “the answer of a good conscience toward God 
			through the resurrection of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 3:21). God grants 
			a clear conscience as we walk in the light He has revealed and 
			practice what He commands. 
			
			Developing a Good 
			Conscience 
			Because the conscience works with what it has learned, it must be 
			trained by the Word of God. The mature learn to “discern both good 
			and evil” through constant practice in the Scriptures (Hebrews 
			5:13–14). Where knowledge is thin, the conscience is weak. In 
			Corinth, some believers, lacking instruction, were troubled by meat 
			associated with idols; their “conscience, being weak, is defiled” (1 
			Corinthians 8:4–13). Love therefore acts gently toward the weak 
			while also teaching them so that their conscience grows strong. This 
			training belongs in our homes and congregations. We read, meditate, 
			pray, and apply the Word until God’s perspective on right and wrong 
			becomes our own. Then, when temptation approaches, the 
			conscience—formed by truth—sounds a faithful alarm and steers us 
			back to the narrow way. 
			
			Conclusion 
			A tender, truthful conscience is a gift from God and a 
			responsibility for every disciple. When it accuses, we confess and 
			turn. When it commends, we continue in the good path. The Lord 
			desires a people whose hearts agree with His Word and whose ways 
			display integrity before God and men. May He grant us consciences 
			made clear by the blood of Christ and kept clear by obedient lives. 
			Conscience Sermon Outline:
			
			Title: Conscience 
			Text: Romans 2:13–16 
			Theme: God designed 
			the conscience to witness to truth inside the heart; it must be 
			taught, guarded, and exercised by Scripture so that it accuses when 
			we sin and assures when we obey. 
			
			Introduction 
			
				- 
				
Integrity illustration: Davis 
				Love III and the costly, honest penalty; the peace of a clean 
				heart outweighs immediate gain.  
				- 
				
Working definition: 
				“Conscience” as inner shared-knowledge that evaluates conduct in 
				the sight of God (Romans 2:13–16).  
				- 
				
Aim: Understand what 
				conscience is, what it can become, and how to keep it good and 
				clear before God and men (Acts 24:16).  
			 
			
			I. What Is the Conscience? 
			Its Nature and Office 
			
				- 
				
				Biblical terms 
					- 
					
New Testament:
					suneidēsis—“knowing 
					with oneself” (Romans 2:15; 1 Corinthians 8:7,10,12).  
					- 
					
Old Testament: often 
					expressed as the “heart” (2 Samuel 24:10; Proverbs 4:23).  
				 
				 
				- 
				
				Functions inside the 
				soul (Romans 2:13–16) 
				 
				- 
				
				Conscience works with 
				learned information 
				 
			 
			
			II. What the Conscience 
			Can Do 
			
				- 
				
				Condemn the sinner—David’s 
				heart smote him (2 Samuel 24:10).  
				- 
				
				Assure the obedient—Job 
				holds fast righteousness; his heart does not reproach him (Job 
				27:6).  
				- 
				
				Be defiled by 
				unbelief and impurity (Titus 1:15).  
				- 
				
				Be seared 
				through persistent hypocrisy and error (1 Timothy 4:2).  
				- 
				
				Be neglected 
				leading to shipwreck of faith (1 Timothy 1:18–20).  
				- 
				
				Approve error 
				when misinformed—Saul persecuted “in all good conscience” (Acts 
				23:1; 26:9–11; 1 Timothy 1:13).  
				- 
				
				Affect prayer and 
				worship 
				 
			 
			
			III. Keeping a Clear 
			Conscience Requires Holy Resolve 
			
				- 
				
				Deliberate striving—“I 
				myself always strive to have a conscience without offense toward 
				God and men” (Acts 24:14–16).  
				- 
				
				Anchored in truth—conscience 
				bearing witness “in the Holy Spirit” (Romans 9:1–2).  
				- 
				
				Shaped by sincerity—conduct 
				marked by simplicity and godly sincerity (2 Corinthians 1:12).  
				- 
				
				Joined to obedient 
				faith—the appeal of a good conscience in baptism 
				through Christ’s resurrection (1 Peter 3:21).  
			 
			
			IV. Developing a Good and 
			Wise Conscience 
			
				- 
				
				Feed on the Word 
				until discernment matures (Hebrews 5:13–14; Psalm 119:9–11).  
				- 
				
				Practice immediate 
				confession and forsaking of sin (Psalm 32:3–5; 1 John 
				1:7–9).  
				- 
				
				Walk in the light with 
				accountability (Hebrews 3:12–13; James 5:16).  
				- 
				
				Pray for a searched 
				heart (Psalm 139:23–24).  
				- 
				
				Train the will toward 
				prompt obedience (James 1:22–25).  
				- 
				
				Cultivate tenderness—stay 
				responsive to conviction; avoid rationalizations (Ephesians 
				4:17–24).  
			 
			
			V. Weak, Wounded, and 
			Growing Consciences 
			
				- 
				
				The weak conscience—uninstructed 
				and easily defiled (1 Corinthians 8:4–13). 
				 
				- 
				
				The strong conscience—instructed 
				and free (Romans 14:1–6, 19). 
				 
				- 
				
Applications 
					- 
					
Refuse practices that 
					embolden another to violate conscience (1 Corinthians 
					8:12–13).  
					- 
					
Aim to strengthen, not 
					merely to permit; teach toward maturity (Colossians 1:28).  
				 
				 
			 
			
			VI. Diagnostics: Examining 
			the Heart 
			
				- 
				
				Content test—Is 
				my conscience stocked with Scripture or with custom? (Colossians 
				3:16).  
				- 
				
				Sensitivity test—Do 
				I feel godly sorrow leading to repentance? (2 Corinthians 
				7:10–11).  
				- 
				
				Integrity test—Does 
				my inner witness match my outward walk? (2 Corinthians 1:12).  
				- 
				
				Peace test—Do 
				I enjoy the quiet assurance of a clean heart? (Hebrews 10:22; 
				Romans 5:1).  
			 
			
			VII. Practical Habits That 
			Guard Conscience 
			
				- 
				
Daily Scripture intake with 
				self-application (Joshua 1:8; Hebrews 5:14).  
				- 
				
Regular self-examination 
				before the Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:28).  
				- 
				
Quick reconciliation with 
				others (Matthew 5:23–24; Romans 12:18).  
				- 
				
Honest speech and 
				transparent dealings (Ephesians 4:25; Proverbs 11:1).  
				- 
				
Training children in truth 
				and integrity (Ephesians 6:4; Proverbs 22:6).  
			 
			
			VIII. Blessings of a Good 
			Conscience 
			
				- 
				
				Boldness before God—a 
				heart sprinkled from an evil conscience (Hebrews 10:22).  
				- 
				
				Stability in trials—a 
				testimony maintained with grace (1 Peter 3:16–17).  
				- 
				
				Joy in service—freedom 
				from gnawing guilt; energy for good works (Hebrews 9:14).  
			 
			
			Conclusion 
			
				- 
				
God gave the conscience as 
				a guardian inside the soul. It must be taught by Scripture, kept 
				tender through confession, and exercised by obedience.  
				- 
				
The church flourishes where 
				hearts are honest, teachable, and clean before God.  
			 
			
			Invitation 
			
				- 
				
If the inner witness has 
				accused, come to Christ for cleansing and a good conscience 
				through His blood (1 Peter 3:21; 1 John 1:7–9). If you need help 
				to walk uprightly, ask for prayer and guidance today.  
			 
			Call to Action
			Ask the Lord today to search 
			your heart and show you where your conscience needs teaching or 
			cleansing. Set a simple plan for the week: read Romans 2:13–16 each 
			morning, pray Psalm 139:23–24 at noon, and practice one concrete act 
			of integrity each evening. If your conscience has accused you, 
			confess to God and seek wise help to walk uprightly. 
			Key Takeaways
			
				- 
				
Conscience is an inner 
				witness that accuses or excuses in light of known truth (Romans 
				2:13–16).  
				- 
				
A trained conscience brings 
				quick conviction when we sin and quiet assurance when we do 
				right (2 Samuel 24:10; Job 27:6).  
				- 
				
Conscience can be defiled, 
				neglected, or misinformed; it must be educated by Scripture 
				(Titus 1:15; 1 Timothy 1:18–20; Acts 23:1).  
				- 
				
A clear conscience requires 
				effort, truth, sincerity, and obedient faith in Christ (Acts 
				24:16; Romans 9:1–2; 2 Corinthians 1:12; 1 Peter 3:21).  
				- 
				
Regular intake of God’s 
				Word strengthens discernment and steadies daily decisions 
				(Hebrews 5:13–14; 1 Corinthians 8:4–13).  
			 
			Scripture Reference List
			
				- 
				
				Romans 2:13–16 
				— Conscience bears witness; thoughts accuse or excuse.  
				- 
				
				2 Samuel 24:10 
				— David’s heart condemns him after numbering Israel.  
				- 
				
				Job 27:6 — 
				Holding fast to righteousness keeps the heart from reproach.  
				- 
				
				Titus 1:15 — 
				Unbelief and impurity defile mind and conscience.  
				- 
				
				1 Timothy 1:18–20 
				— Rejecting a good conscience leads to shipwrecked faith.  
				- 
				
				Acts 23:1; Acts 
				26:9–11; 1 Timothy 1:13 — Paul’s earlier actions done 
				in “good conscience” show the need for informed conscience.  
				- 
				
				Proverbs 4:23 
				— Guard the heart; it is the well-spring of life.  
				- 
				
				Psalm 66:18 — 
				Harboring iniquity in the heart hinders prayer.  
				- 
				
				2 Thessalonians 2:12 
				— Pleasure in unrighteousness brings condemnation.  
				- 
				
				Acts 24:14–16 
				— Striving to maintain a conscience without offense.  
				- 
				
				Romans 9:1–2 
				— Conscience bearing witness in the Holy Spirit.  
				- 
				
				2 Corinthians 1:12 
				— Simplicity and godly sincerity in conduct.  
				- 
				
				1 Peter 3:21 
				— Baptism and the good conscience through Christ’s resurrection.  
				- 
				
				Hebrews 5:13–14 
				— Mature discernment trained by the Word.  
				- 
				
				1 Corinthians 8:4–13 
				— The weak conscience and the need for knowledge and love.  
			 
			
			Prepared by Bobby Stafford of the church of Christ at Granby, MO.  |