Career
Because of his great involvement in fighting drunkenness and in establishing a rescue mission for indigents, he had to resign from the church. He then became the pastor at Saint Peter’s Evangelical Church, also in Knoxville, where he worked until his pastoral retirement. Among other social ministries, he worked with poor children of Knoxville, including tutoring them in school subjects.
He also spent much of his time for 35 years working with prisoners in the jail.
lieutenant appears that his close contact with the uneducated and unchurched led him to begin a translation of the New Testament. His translation of the New Testament into English was published in Knoxville in 1917, the 400th anniversary of the start of the Lutheran Reformation.
The translation did not differ significantly from the King James Version. A committee of other Lutheran pastors revised his work and published The Capitalized and Revised American Lutheran Translation New Testament and Psalms in 1920.
In two years, the Lutheran Bible Society of Knoxville had distributed 7,500 copies of this New Testament.
A further thousand were sent to English prisoners during World War I and others were sent to United States soldiers. Nonetheless, copies of this translation are relatively rare and Lauritzen is barely remembered for his Bible translation work.