Labor Day Sunday – September 3, 2023

people working

Celebrating Labor Day – September 3

Labor Day Sunday Worship and Meal

Worship at 10 a.m.

Meal at about 11:15 a.m.

Both in the Fellowship Hall

Note: The Saturday evening service at 6 p.m. will be held in the sanctuary as usual.

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Celebrating Labor Day

Sunday, September 3 (Labor Day Weekend), is a Holy Day of sorts for all of us.  We know that Labor Day is a civic holiday to celebrate the opportunity for work and the contribution of the Labor Movement to life in our nation.  As Lutheran Christians we go deeper with this and view all work as part of God’s calling and of his provision of our daily bread.  All Christians are doing the work of God, regardless of where or what they do in their honorable vocation in life.

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Wear What You Wear for Work or School

To celebrate this blessing of vocation we will be taking the Sunday of Labor Day weekend to give thanks for the blessings of daily bread, of work, of school, of family, etc.  To enhance our time together you are invited to wear the clothes or uniform of your current or pre-retirement vocation. Younger folks are encouraged to dress in the manner of those who work in your aspired for vocation or as the younger folks do for school in their current day.  On Sunday, September 3, we will take time to give thanks for all which God calls and equips us to do.

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Church Fellowship Meal – after Worship/about 11:15 a.m.

This meal will include Pulled Pork Sandwiches, with all the trimmings, including individual bags of chips.  Those attending the service and meal are invited to bring side dishes, salads, or desserts.

Blessing of Students and their Backpacks

Students and Pastor David Tinker at the blessing of backpacks some years ago.

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Lutherhill Sunday

and Blessings of Students and their Backpacks

By Pastor David Tinker The weekend of August 19-20 offers a combined special event for our congregation. We will offer our annual Lutherhill Sunday and our annual blessing of students and their backpacks. Both will be offered at our regular Saturday 6 p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m. services.

Lutherhill Sunday

We will welcome our longtime friend, Matt Kindsvatter, Executive Director of Lutherhill Ministries.  For most the past decade he has joined us in August to share about Lutherhill and to share the Good News of Jesus Christ with us.  We are thankful for our partnership with this area ministry.  Our cooperative work with our Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is a major part of our support and direction of this camping and retreat outdoor ministry. Pictured is Matt Kindsvatter at a Lutherhill Sunday some years ago.

Lutherhill Sunday 2015 Matt

Lutherhill Staff to Lead Sunday School Class

There will also be a special Sunday school class led by some of our staff friends from Lutherhill.  Get your children, grandchildren, and younger friends together for a fun time of learning, prayer, and play.  Sunday school is offered at 9:00 a.m. each Sunday. . .

Blessing of Backpacks

Blessing of Students and their Backpacks

At each of these services we will pray for students of all ages and situations. It is not required that the students bring a backpack, but, if the student has one, he or she is encouraged to bring it. This is an opportunity for students to be involved in their faith every day of the week. We connect their school life with how these students grow and learn as an extension of their connection with Jesus. We involve students of a wide variety of situations. Over the years we have involved students in preschool through various types of graduate school. We have involved students who are enrolled in public schools, private schools, and home school programs. We have involved students who are quite young through those well into their adult years. The important and joyful thing is that our students are present with us and God. We are also showing that we support them in their growing and learning.

Drought Prayer Service – August 16 at 7 p.m.

Aug1623 Drought flier

A Service of Prayer for Times of Drought

The four churches of the Lutheran Crossroads Ministry are partnering to offer a service of prayer for times of drought and heat.  The four churches are Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Round Top, Martin Luther Lutheran Church in Carmine, St. Paul Lutheran Church in Shelby, and Waldeck Lutheran Church.   The prayer service will be held Wednesday, August 16th at 7:00 pm at Martin Luther Lutheran Church, located at 211 Luther Lane in Carmine.  Pastor David Tinker and Pastor John David Nedbalek will be presiding.   The offering that will be collected that evening will be shared equally among the Volunteer Fire Departments serving this area – Carmine, Ledbetter, Round Top – Warrenton, and Shelby VFD’s.  Offerings by check should be made payable to Martin Luther Lutheran Church (MLLC), whose office will be distributing the funds.  Please indicate “drought service” in memo field to signal that the funds are for this purpose.   If you’d like to support this cause but aren’t able to attend, you can send a check to MLLC at P. O. Box 362 in Carmine 78932-0362.  All are welcome – please join us to pray for patience and relief.  

You may also give online at our secure link provided here: click link

Use the General Operating line.  Include the memo box, “Drought.”

 

Invite your family, friends, and neighbors as we gather together in Christ.

Otto L. Fuchs, Jr. Obituary

Otto L. Fuchs, Jr. photo

Remembering Otto L. Fuchs, Jr.

Otto Lorenz Fuchs, Jr., died on August 10.  We give thanks for his life and ministry among us at MLLC.

At the point of his death, Otto was the oldest living member of MLLC, at 97 5/6.

There will be a visitation at Memorial Oaks Funeral Home in Brenham on Thursday evening, August 17, with family present 5-7 p.m., and the funeral home open to sign the mourner book 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

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The funeral will be held in the Sanctuary at MLLC on Friday, August 18, 2022, at 10:00  a.m.

Committal at Oak Hill Cemetery in Burton.  All are invited to return to the church for a luncheon afterwards.

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Memorial Contributions

The family has requested memorial gifts for MLLC to use as needed.

You can send these by mail to the church, deliver in person, give at worship through an offering envelope, or give through the secure giving page of our web site.  Here is a link to that page:  click link.  On the page where you select where to give and how much, note there is a line for “Memorial Gifts.”  This is the 4th line down on the secure giving page.  Included is a memo box.  Note in that box, “Otto Fuchs,” and the gift will be passed along to the right account.

The church address for mailing memorial gifts is:

Martin Luther Lutheran Church

P O BOX 362

Carmine, TX 78932-0362

Telephone: 979-278-3388

THE OBITUARY

 

Otto Lorenz Fuchs, Jr.

October 25, 1925 – August 10, 2023

Otto Lorenz Fuchs, Jr., 97, of Carmine, widower of Carolyn Elizabeth Rothermel Fuchs passed away peacefully on August 10, 2023 in Brenham Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

Otto L. Fuchs, Jr. was born October 25, 1925 on the family homestead in Carmine to Otto Lorenz, Sr. and Elsie Hartstack Fuchs. He was baptized on February 21, 1926 by Pastor A. H. Falkenberg at Martin Luther Lutheran Church in Carmine and was confirmed at the same church on Palm Sunday, April 2, 1939 by Pastor Henry Brunotte. On July 28, 1951, he was united in marriage to Carolyn Elizabeth Rothermel at St. John’s Evangelical and Reformed Church in Burton by Pastor E. H. Schwengel. They were blessed with 61 years of married life.

He attended LaBahia and Carmine schools and was a 1943 graduate of La Grange High School. He was inducted into the United States Army on May 18, 1944, proudly serving his country during World War II, attaining the rank of Corporal in Company I, 222nd Infantry Regiment, 42nd Rainbow Infantry Division, 7th Army, for 26 months.  In addition to his infantry basic training, his military occupations included rifleman, armorer, and investigator/interpreter (due to being fluent in the German language).  He was awarded the European Theater Operation Ribbon with two Bronze Stars, Good Conduct Medal, Army Occupation Ribbon-Germany, Victory Ribbon, and three Overseas Service Bars.  In 2001, sixty years after the battle, he received a Presidential Unit Citation for participation in Operation Northwind, commonly referred to as the Battle of the Bulge. Defending their line from ice-filled foxholes, his unit assisted in holding off the German push to invade France.  His company also contributed to the liberation of the Dachau Concentration Camp.  While delivering a Veterans’ Day speech in 2017, Otto said, “I am honored to have been a member of the Greatest Generation and I would answer the call of duty again, if able.”

After his military service, he attended Blinn College for one year, during which he “fell” for his future bride, Carolyn, when the Blinn bus seat they were sharing broke as the driver took the railroad crossing too fast.  He graduated from the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, now known as Texas A&M University, in 1950 with a B. S. in Agricultural Education.  From 1950 to 1955 he taught Veterans Vocational Agriculture classes in Round Top and La Grange.  He served as the Round Top-Carmine Vocational Ag teacher beginning in 1955 until his retirement in 1984.  During this time, he organized the Round Top-Carmine Future Farmers of America Chapter, the Round Top-Carmine Young Farmers Chapter, and the Precinct #2 Fayette County Hay Insurance Group.  His love for teaching never stopped, as he sponsored 27 adult vocational classes.  Evidence of his teaching and guidance can be seen displayed throughout the area in the homes, farms, and ranches of his successful former students.

Otto was a faithful lifetime member of Martin Luther Lutheran Church in Carmine.  As a devoted member, he served several terms on the church council and various church committees, taught Sunday School for several years, was a church choir member for over forty years, and a member of the Men in Mission his entire adulthood.  He was a lifetime member of Quade-Werchan American Legion Post #338 of Round Top-Carmine for 80 years, serving as Commander, Adjutant, Finance Officer, and 30 years as Chaplain.  Other lifetime memberships included Texas Vocational Agriculture Teachers Association, Texas State Teachers Association, and 42nd Rainbow Division Veterans Foundation.  He was also a member of the Texas A&M Former Students Association, Fayette County Retired Teachers Association, Round Top-Carmine Young Farmers Chapter, Precinct #2 Fayette County Hay Insurance Group, Washington County Genealogical Society, Texas Rose Rustlers, German Texas Heritage Society, Carmine Chamber of Commerce, and was a volunteer member of the Carmine Fire Department since 1946.  He served on the Carmine State Bank Board of Directors, Fayette County Fair Board, Fayette County Junior Livestock Show Board, Round Top-Carmine School Board, Fayette County Appraisal District Review Board, Fayette County Recycling Committee, and Fayette County Independent Cattlemans’ Association Board.

Otto’s love for the smell of fresh plowed soil led to his dedicated work in his vegetable garden, producing an abundant harvest that he happily shared with family and friends. His livestock, especially his cattle, were always well taken care of, as he checked them daily, often joined by family members.  He delighted in spending time on his John Deere tractors to care for his farm.  Being a handyman with a level eye and excellent welder, if anything on the farm or in the house needed repair, he could usually fix it himself.  He was happy to share his knowledge and talents to help others as well.  Otto was known for his love for watching Texas Aggies, Astros, and game show.

He loved his family dearly and they all brought him much joy. He enjoyed attending their special occasions and other activities and hearing about things happening in their lives.  Family time was spent enjoying his barbequed pork ribs and his farm raised fried catfish.  Otto was a very patient man, especially while shopping with his wife, two daughters, and grandchildren.  He was a loving and devoted son, brother, husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather, uncle and great-uncle. He will be greatly missed but is now at peace in our Father’s heavenly home.

Otto is survived by daughters and sons-in-law, Carobeth and Bruce Bockhorn and Rebecca and Mark Kuecker, all of Carmine; grandchildren: Lucas and Chris Ann Stroech, Carolise and Benjamin Kelly, Dawn and Gary Bolcerek, and Clint and RaChelle Kuecker; great-grandchildren: Graceyn, Braelyn, and Kaleb Stroech, Caroleen and Zackary Kelly, Jessalynn and Jaseton Bolcerek, and Jax, Ripkyn, and Harley Kuecker; step-grandchildren, Lee Bockhorn and Laura Fiedler and their families; sister-in-law Joyce Fuchs; and numerous nieces and a nephew. He was preceded in death by his wife, Carolyn, his parents, father-in-law and mother-in-law, Carl and Erma Rothermel; his sisters and brothers-in-law, Dellora and Edison Manske and Shirley and J. D. Mueller, brother Howard Fuchs, and sister-in-law Nina Ellermann and her husband Henry Al. Serving as pallbearers are grandsons, Lucas Stroech, Clint Kuecker, Gary Bolcerek, and Benjamin Kelly; nephew, Stanley Manske, and great-nephew, Trent Teinert.  Honorary pallbearers are granddaughters, Dawn Bolcerek, Carolise Kelly, Chris Ann Stroech, and RaChelle Kuecker; great-nephew, Ryan Finke; members of Quade-Werchan American Legion Post #338, Carmine State Bank Board of Directors, and MLLC Men in Mission.

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Otto and friend Alvis Mueller participating in the Lutheran Men in Mission Seafarers Christmas Box service project some years ago.

Memorials may be made to:

Martin Luther Lutheran Church of Carmine

P O Box 362

Carmine TX 78932-0362

Online Giving

Pat McCanlies Obituary

Pat McCanlies Photo

Remembering Pat McCanlies

We give thanks for the life and ministry of MLLC member, Patricia “Pat” McCanlies.

The funeral for Pat will be on Saturday, August 12, 2023, at 10 a.m. at Memorial Oaks Chapel in Brenham.

Visitation on Saturday as well, 9-10 a.m. at the funeral home.

Burial will follow in Houston.

You are invited to attend the visitation and/or the funeral service to support her family and friends.

Pat McCanlies photo for web site

Here is the obituary.

Patricia McCanlies

January 27, 1937 — August 3, 2023

Patricia Anne Smith McCanlies, 86, passed away August 3, 2023.

She was born January 27, 1937 in Houston, Texas to Frederick Crocker Smith, Jr, and Carmae Massey Smith. Pat graduated from Lamar High School and from the University of Houston with a Master’s Degree in Education. She began teaching a Richmond Elementary in 1957. She was made principal at Grady Elementary, Helms Elementary and finally, Ed White Elementary. Pat served a term on the Harris County School Board. She received the Medal of Freedom Award for Education from the Freedom Foundation at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania in 1979.  This award honors teachers and administrators who go above and beyond the call of duty for their students and America’s youth. These educators instill in their students a sense of the importance of community involvement, responsible citizenship and patriotism.

Pat was baptized on July 3, 1938, at Trinity Episcopal Church in Houston, by Father Thomas Caruthers.  She was confirmed at Trinity Episcopal Church on May 10, 1953, by Father Arthur Knapp and Bishop Clinton S. Quin.  She joined Martin Luther Lutheran Church in 2016.  Over the years Pat served on the Church Council and chair of the Stewardship Committee.  She also served as the interim director of Martin Luther Lutheran School.

In her younger years, Pat enjoyed her bay home, where she loved to fish, water ski, and sail.  In 1987, Pat retired to her farm in Round Top Texas to pursue her hobby competing in Cutting Horse competitions, winning the 1994 NCHA Rookie of the Year. She loved her farm, ‘Hickory Stick’, her many horses, cows and assortment of dogs and cats.

Pat was preceded in death by her parents and is survived by her son John Michael McCanlies, Jr, daughter-in-law Laura Melchor McCanlies and granddaughter Alexandra Dayanela McCanlies.

Please consider a contribution to the following organizations:

Martin Luther Lutheran Church

P O Box 362

Carmine, TX 78932-0362

979-278-3388

To give a memorial donation online, go to the church web site:

Online Giving

Acara Hospice Foundation www.HeartofAcaraFoundation.com in lieu of flowers.

Pentecost 2023 – Wear Red to Worship

Holy Spirit Icon Pentecost

The Great Festival of Pentecost

On the weekend of May 27-28, 2023, we will be celebrating one of the central festivals of the Church Year.  This is the Day of Pentecost.  It is the celebration of the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the whole church.  We read about this dramatic giving of the Holy Spirit in Acts 2:1-42.  This giving of the Holy Spirit was a powerful kick-start of the mission and ministry of the Church following the Ascension of Jesus ten days earlier.

At MLLC we are offering two distinct worship opportunities for the celebration of Pentecost.

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Saturday, May 27 at 6 p.m. – The Vigil of Pentecost.

This is a time of waiting, listening, and praying as we prepare for the grand festival.

Readings, candles, Pentecost Sermon of St. John Chrysostom, Holy Communion

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Sunday, May 28, at 10 a.m. – The Day of Pentecost

Festival Worship Service for Pentecost

Reading of Acts 2, Pentecost Sermon of St. John Chrysostom, Holy Communion

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The Festival Vigils

At MLLC we offer both the Vigil and the Festival services for all three of the Major Festival celebrations:  Nativity (Christmas), Resurrection (Easter), and Pentecost.  Each of the Vigils is on the night before the grand festival day.  Each of the Vigils includes a special time using handheld candles. The Vigil of the Nativity is more commonly known as, “The Christmas Eve Candlelight Service.”  The other two use the titles, “The Vigil of Pentecost,” and, “The Great Vigil of Easter.”

Christmas Eve 2014 Candles

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Remember to Wear Red for Pentecost

red pentecost 2

It is happy tradition that people are encouraged to wear something Red to worship on Pentecost Weekend.  We follow this at MLLC as well.  It is not required, for it is simply a joyful way to celebrate the Holy Spirit and our life together in Jesus.  Look through your drawers and closets for red ties, red shirts, red dresses, red skirts, red suspenders, red coats, or whatever you could wear for this holy and joyful weekend of worship.

Worship Options due to MS150 – April 30

MS150 bikes

Plan for Worship this Weekend – April 29-30, 2023

This weekend is a busy one in our area due to the route of the Texas MS150 Charity Bike Ride route going through Carmine, Waldeck, Round Top, and Burton.  The bikes will be traveling in and near our towns on Sunday morning, April 30.  This could result in some traffic delays for those seeking to attend worship at either MLLC or our partner church, Waldeck Evangelical Lutheran Church, Ledbetter.

You are encouraged to think ahead about your weekend schedule to make sure you can make it to worship.  Here are some things to remember:

*We always offer three worship opportunities between our two churches.

Saturday at 6 p.m. at MLLC – this is a fantastic option for those wishing to totally avoid the Sunday traffic due to the MS150 bike event.

Sunday at 8 a.m. at Waldeck – it will be a bit busier at Waldeck as the ride has a rest stop at the church back parking lot.

Sunday at 10 a.m. at MLLC – the ride goes near, but not immediately past the church

*It is important that Christians participate in worship, hear the Word, receive Holy Communion, etc. on a regular and ongoing basis.  You are lovingly encouraged to strive to do all in your power to get to worship this weekend.  It might be different or mildly inconvenient to get to worship due to the MS150 bike event, but it is the joyful and Christ centered thing to do.

*Please do not make the MS150 bike event be the reason you miss out on worship, study, and fellowship at your church this weekend.

*Strive to be kind and welcoming to the riders.  They are riding to raise funds for and awareness of the fight against multiple sclerosis, a difficult and often debilitating disease.  See this link for more about this disease – Click Here.

We look forward to seeing you at worship this weekend.  With God’s love and help, do your best to get to worship.

Special Notice: Easter Sunrise Service

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Easter Sunrise – Special Notice

The Sunrise Service on Easter Sunday, April 9, will now be held at the Church sanctuary.  This is due to the significant rain we have experienced in recent days.  There is a notable amount of standing water and mud at the cemetery.  It has been more than 10 years since we have had to make this shift for the Easter Sunrise service.

We look forward to seeing you at the Easter Sunrise Service at 6:45 a.m., on Sunday, April 9,  at the sanctuary of MLLC.  Tell  your friends and relatives.

We will also offer the rest of the morning schedule:

Easter Reception in the Parlor, running 9:30-10:00 a.m.

Festival Worship Service, 10:00 a.m.

Easter Egg Hunt, about 11:15 a.m.

Introduction to the Vigil of Easter 2023

EasterVigilCandles

Saturday, April 8, 2023, is the date of the Great Vigil of Easter, Holy Saturday, at MLLC.  For many in the church around the world, this is the centerpiece of their year as followers of Jesus.

Click this link to view a blog post from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) regarding this service and its connections with Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.

Click this link to view a blog post by our own Jennifer Clark Tinker which tells about her experience and joy related to attending the Great Vigil of Easter each year.

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An Introduction to the Vigil of Easter

Like the children of Israel who watched and waited through the night for the Lord of the Exodus, we too come together this night to watch and wait for the Lord of the Resurrection. We come, as Christians have come since the first century, to keep vigil and to prepare ourselves for the arrival of the Bridegroom who is chief host and guest at the Resurrection feast to come.

First, we must break the darkness of the night.   Like the virgins in the parable, we must light our vigil lights. Our light will be a very special light, for it is the light of Christ which burns atop the Paschal candle and which dispels the darkness — of night, of sin, of death. Our light will be a constant reminder of the Resurrection victory during the coming season, at every baptism and at every funeral. But for now, it will burn in vigil as we await the Bridegroom.

When we have settled into our pews for the watch, we hear the storytellers among us sharing the stories of our faith — the stories of God’s salvation history and the covenants which he made with our people. These are our “family” stories. We listen. We sing. We watch. And we wait for the feast to come.

After hearing our stories, we make our last minute preparations to meet our Lord. All must be right for the feast. On some years those among us who have not yet joined us are brought into membership with us this night, making all who are here part of the Church family, known as the Bride of Christ.  Each year, so that the whole family is prepared, each of us reaffirms our faith through the Apostles Creed. As we interact with the water and the Lord, we hear and we feel that grace which was given to us through our baptism.

We are nearly ready. The time is close.  We prepare the room and set the table for the Feast of Victory, the First Holy Communion of this greatest festival day of all. And then at last He comes! The Resurrection victory is won! The Bridegroom has come through the darkness to claim his Bride, the Church, to be his own. This is the feast of victory!  In the end flowers and banners must adorn the space, for our time this evening and tomorrow will be a feast to remember.

Vigil cross symbols

Our Celebrations of the Resurrection of Jesus

The Great Vigil of Easter – 7 p.m. on Saturday, April 8 – see the introduction above. Shared with Waldeck Lutheran Church.

Easter Sunrise – 6:45 a.m. on Sunday, April 9, at the Carmine Cemetery. Bring a lawn or folding chair for seating.  Shared with Waldeck Lutheran Church.

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Easter Festival – Sunday April 9.  Opportunities at both MLLC and Waldeck

MLLC Schedule:

9:30-10:00 a.m. – Easter reception in the Parlor, near the sanctuary entrance and church offices.

10:00 a.m. – Festival Worship

~11:15 a.m. – Easter Egg Hunt

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Waldeck Schedule:

8:00 a.m. – Festival Worship

~9:00 a.m. – Pot-luck Easter Breakfast – bring an item to share

9:15/9:30 a.m. – After Breakfast – Easter Egg Hunt

Introduction to Good Friday 2023

Good Friday Bare Chancel

We will gather together on Friday, April 7, at 7 p.m. to remember the events of Good Friday.  This is our annual remembrance of the dramatic sacrifice of Jesus for the forgiveness of our sin.

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Introduction to Good Friday

We begin our liturgy as we ended the Maundy Thursday Liturgy: in silence. What was begun then continues this day as we journey with our Savior from the Last Supper, the stripping and humiliation, to the cross and tomb. Good Friday is the second day of the Triduum, the “Three Sacred Days” of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday with its Vigil of Easter.

The Good Friday Liturgy is marked with austerity, silence and reflection. The chancel itself is bare from the Maundy Thursday stripping. There is no organ music except to accompany the hymns. Everything focuses on our adoration of the crucified Christ, reigning from the throne of the cross.

The service of Tenebrae is an ancient Holy Week devotion which began in the 7th or 8th century, or possibly earlier.  The name “Tenebrae” means shadows.  The service takes its name from the ceremony of extinguishing in succession all the lights in the sanctuary, casting it into total darkness which is symbolic of the disciples’ desertion of our Lord, and of his death and burial.

The purpose of the Tenebrae Service is to aid us in realizing the total impact of the darkest day in the history of the world, the day Jesus died on the cross.

The opening portion of the liturgy includes no praise. It proceeds directly to the Invocation and Prayer of the Day. It is a simplified version of our Sunday Liturgy of the Word. The chief acts are the reading of the Passion of St. John and the Bidding Prayer for the needs of our world.

Following the final hymn is a meditation on the Seven Last Words of our Lord which he spoke from the cross.  After each word is read, there will be a prayer and silent meditation.  Lights and one candle will be extinguished after each meditation until the sanctuary is in darkness.

After the lights are all extinguished, the congregation will stand as the Paschal Candle is carried from the sanctuary reminding us of the burial of Jesus.  A loud noise, made by the closing of a Bible,will remind us of the closing of the tomb.  This announces the fulfilling of the Scriptures and the completion of our Lord’s work on the cross for us.

The Paschal Candle (called the Christ Candle during Advent/Christmas) will not return until the beginning of the Great Vigil of Easter on Saturday evening at 7 p.m.  On Good Friday we recognize that Jesus was fully dead and was placed in the borrowed tomb.

Note:  The return of the Paschal Candle moments after the loud noise is a form of the Good Friday service designed to be used in those congregations which do not have the Great Vigil of Easter.

All will leave in silence to return tomorrow as we wait in vigil and then celebrate our Lord’s Resurrection at the Great Vigil of Easter.  At the Vigil tomorrow evening we will have the first Holy Communion in celebration of the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ.

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Schedule for the rest of Holy Week:

Easter Vigil

– Saturday – 7:00 p.m. – in sanctuary

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Resurrection Sunday:

Resurrection Sunrise service at 6:45 a.m. at the Carmine Cemetery.

   (Bring your own chairs for seating at the cemetery)

Easter Reception in Parlor, near the sanctuary – 9:30-10:00 a.m.

Festival Resurrection Service at 10:00 a.m. in the sanctuary

Egg hunt for the children ~11:15 a.m

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Also available at our partner church, Waldeck Evangelical Lutheran Church near Ledbetter:

Festival Worship at 8:00 a.m.

Easter Pot-luck brunch at 9:00 a.m.

Egg Hunt at ~9:15-9:30 a.m.

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