21 May 2013

There are times...

...when I cannot get over the silliness inherent in the chopping up of our great spiritual treasures and offering only bits and pieces.

TLH 598 is a case in point. Only three stanzas survive in LSB (also 598, of all things!). But the WHOLE is needed, I think. Most especially in trying times such as these. Read them and see if you agree:


        1. Who knows when death may overtake me!
Time passes on, my end draws near.
How swiftly can my breath forsake me!
How soon can life's last hour appear!
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

2. The world that smiled when morn was breaking
May change for me ere close of day;
For while on earth my home I'm making,
Death's threat is never far away.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

3. My end to ponder teach me ever
And, ere the hour of death appears,
To cast my soul on Christ, my Savior,
Nor spare repentant sighs and tears.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

4. Help me now set my house in order
That always ready I may be
To say in meekness on death's border:
Lord, as Thou wilt, deal Thou with me.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

5. Reveal the sweetness of Thy heaven,
Earth's galling bitterness unfold;
May I, amid this turmoil riven,
Thy blest eternity behold.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

6. My many sins blot out forever
Since Jesus has my pardon won;
In mercy robed I then shall never
Fear death, but trust in Thee alone.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

7. Naught shall my soul from Jesus sever;
In faith I touch His wounded side
And hail Him as my Lord forever.
Nor life nor death shall us divide.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

8. Once in the blest baptismal waters
I put on Christ and made Him mine;
Now numbered with God's sons and daughters,
I share His peace and love divine.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

9. His body and His blood I've taken
In His blest Supper, feast divine;
Now I shall never be forsaken,
For I am His, and He is mine.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

10. Then may death come today, tomorrow,
I know in Christ I perish not;
He grants the peace that stills all sorrow,
Gives me a robe without a spot.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

11. And thus I live in God contented
And die without a thought of fear;
My soul has to God's plans consented,
For through His Son my faith is clear.
My God, for Jesus' sake I pray
Thy peace may bless my dying day.

6 comments:

Tapani Simojoki said...

Jinx!

Brian P Westgate said...

I wonder why hymns like this and "Like the Golden Sun Ascending" got chopped up so horribly? Maybe we need a supplement just for that very reason . . .

Pastor Peters said...

I have long suggested that Lutheran Service Builder makes a digital hymnal supplement so easy it is scary. Take a gander at Matthew Carver's stuff to add to this electronic supplement.

Tapani Simojoki said...

The ELCE is working on a hymnal supplement, which will (I hope) include many of these truncated hymns in their entirety, as well as hymn sections that have been done away with, such as 'Death and Burial' and 'Catechism Hymns'.

Watch this space.

Mr. O said...

I am grateful that our congregation had the prudence to stick with the TLH.

Rev. Joshua Hayes said...

I am very thankful for LSB.

Still, you speak the truth. What sort of license is this that presumes to decimate the works of great poets? And is it really so hard to include all 150 psalms, or must we truncate the poetic works of the Holy Spirit too?

That said, I am still very appreciative of LSB.