Matins Service

How Do You Prepare For Death?

How Do You Prepare For Death?

How Do You Prepare For Death?

How do you prepare for death?? Ok. This question is not common. However, it was a common question in the 16th century when war and/or disease could strike more quickly than it does for us today. And yet it is good for us to hear this today as well. Listen to the whole service (not that long) or read the devotion below. Pastor Pautz

The Order of Matins

Lutheran Service Book (LSB) hymnal

You may purchase a hymnal from CPH here.

or ask Pastor Pautz if you may borrow a hymnal from church

The Order of Matins p. 219

The Psalmody p.220

The Reading  

The Responsory p. 221

The Catechetical Instruction

I regard it useful to add some brief instructions on how one should care and provide for the soul in time of death. We have done this orally from the pulpit, and still do so every day in fulfilment of the ministry to which we have been called as pastors.

First, one must admonish the people to attend church and listen to the sermon so that they learn through God’s word how to live and how to die. It must be noted that those who are so uncouth and wicked as to despise God’s word while they are in good health should be left unattended when they are sick unless they demonstrate their remorse and repentance with great earnestness, tears, and lamentation. A person who wants to live like a heathen or a dog and does not publicly repent should not expect us to administer the sacrament to him or have us count him a Christian. Let him die as he has lived because we shall not throw pearls before swine nor give to dogs what is holy [Matt. 7:6]. Sad to say, there are many churlish, hardened ruffians who do not care for their souls when they live or when they die. They simply lie down and die like unthinking hulks.

Second, everyone should prepare in time and get ready for death by going to confession and taking the sacrament once every week or fortnight. He should become reconciled with his neighbor and make his will so that if the Lord knocks and he departs before a pastor or chaplain can arrive, he has provided for his soul, has left nothing undone, and has committed himself to God. When there are many fatalities and only two or three pastors on duty, it is impossible to visit everyone, to give instruction, and to teach each one what a Christian ought to know in the anguish of death. Those who have been careless and negligent in these matters must account for themselves. That is their own fault. After all, we cannot set up a private pulpit and altar daily at their bedside simply because they have despised the public pulpit and altar to which God has summoned and called them.

Third, if someone wants the chaplain or pastor to come, let the sick person send word in time to call him and let him do so early enough while he is still in his right mind before the illness overwhelms the patient. The reason I say this is that some are so negligent that they make no request and send no message until the soul is perched for flight on the tip of their tongues and they are no longer rational or able to speak. Then we are told, “Dear Sir, say the very best you can to him,” etc. But earlier, when the illness first began, they wanted no visit from the pastor, but would say, “Oh, there’s no need. I hope he’ll get better.” What should a diligent pastor do with such people who neglect both body and soul? They live and die like beasts in the field. They want us to teach them the gospel at the last minute and administer the sacrament to them as they were accustomed to it under the papacy when nobody asked whether they believed or understood the gospel but just stuffed the sacrament down their throats as if into a bread bag.

This won’t do. If someone cannot talk or indicate by a sign that he believes, understands, and desires the sacrament—particularly if he has wilfully neglected it—we will not give it to him just anytime he asks for it. We have been commanded not to offer the holy sacrament to unbelievers but rather to believers who can state and confess their faith. Let the others alone in their unbelief; we are guiltless because we have not been slothful in preaching, teaching, exhortation, consolation, visitation, or in anything else that pertains to our ministry and office. This, in brief, is our instruction and what we practice here. We do not write this for you in Breslau, because Christ is with you and without our aid he will amply instruct you and supply your needs with his own ointment. To him be praise and honor together with God the Father and the Holy Spirit, world without end. Amen.

Martin Luther, Luther’s Works, Vol. 43: Devotional Writings II, ed. Jaroslav Jan Pelikan, Hilton C. Oswald, and Helmut T. Lehmann, vol. 43 (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1999), 134–135.

The Canticle - Te Deum p.223

The Prayer p. 227

Benedicamus p. 228

Benediction         


Commemoration of Wilhelm Loehe

Commemoration of J.K.Wilhelm Loehe

Commemoration of J.K.Wilhelm Loehe

Hi everyone. In this morning’s Matins Service we heard Luke 2:1-20 and also commemorated J.K. Wilhelm Loehe. Loehe played a large role in the formation of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod. More importantly, he was a faithful pastor who focused his attention on teaching God’s Word to both young and old. He also revived reverent and liturgical worship services. Hear more while listening to the service.

The Order of Matins

Lutheran Service Book (LSB) hymnal

You may purchase a copy here.

The Order of Matins       

p. 219

The Psalmody

p.220

The Reading  

The Responsory               

p. 221

The Catechetical Instruction

The Canticle - Te Deum  

p.223

The Prayer                      

 p. 227

Benedicamus      

p. 228

Benediction         


Adam & Eve

Adam & Eve  -  Day of Commemoration

Adam & Eve - Day of Commemoration

Adam & Eve - A Day of Commemoration

The Order of Matins

Lutheran Service Book (LSB) hymnal

You may purchase a copy here.

Or ask to borrow a copy from us.

The Order of Matins p. 219

The Psalmody  p.220

The Reading  

The Responsory p. 221

The Catechetical Instruction

The Te Deum p.223

The Prayer p. 227

Benedicamus  p. 228

Benediction

Justification Is Clear

Matins.jpg

The Order of Matins

Lutheran Service Book (LSB)

The Order of Matins p. 219

The Psalmody p.220

The Reading Jude 1-25  

The Responsory p. 221

The Catechetical Instruction

The doctrine of the goals and effects of justification is clear and easy, but it is useful and necessary to repeat it at this point in our study of justification, for several important reasons. 1. That justification is received by faith should serve as a constant warning regarding the end or goal of the doctrine of justification, so that we do not misuse this teaching in order to cultivate or confirm licentiousness, as the Epistle of Jude admonishes in v. 4: “transposing or transferring or perverting the grace of God into licentiousness.” 2. Just as we have a uniting of causes and effects in nature, so when we have the causes for our justification, we should have no doubt concerning the effects, namely salvation and eternal life. 3. That believers might know how to perform good works; and so that they will not seek a pretext to avoid doing them, Scripture says that renewal is an effect or result of justification. 4. Christ says in Matt. 7:16–20 that we are to judge a tree by its fruits. Paul in 2 Cor. 13:5 says: “Examine yourselves to see whether you are holding to your faith”; cf. 2 Peter 1:10: “Make your calling sure.” We judge the cause by the effects. 5. This distinction between causes and effects is also useful for showing that sanctification or renewal is to be distinguished from justification, and that the new obedience is not a cause or an essential part of our justification, because it is an effect or a result. 6. By means of this distinction we can also answer the difficult question: When the believing heart in its trials feels no joy, peace, or happiness, is faith at that time, when it lays hold on Christ in the promise and tries to sustain itself with comfort, able to determine that it has the true righteousness unto life eternal? There is a difference between the causes, or the form of our righteousness before God and its effects. When the form or formal cause of our righteousness has been established, as described above, then faith ought to be assured of the acceptance of our person before God, unless it wants to make Him a liar. Indeed, the effects show the cause, and when the effects cease, then we may conclude that the cause does not actually exist either.

In the case of our justification, which is the full and perfect acceptance of the believer unto eternal life, certain effects in our life, such as the new obedience, follow rather slowly because of the weakness of our flesh. Some effects follow the way Scripture says, 2 Cor. 5:7: “We walk by faith and not by sight.” Likewise Rom. 4:18: “In hope he believed against hope.” Col. 3:3: “Our life is hidden with Christ in God”; Ps. 31:19: “You have laid up good things for those who fear You.”

Martin Chemnitz and Jacob A. O. Preus, Loci Theologici, electronic ed. (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1999), 555.

The Canticle - Te Deum  p.223

The Prayer p. 227

Benedicamus p. 228

Benediction