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Cremation (vanity question)
freerepublic.com ^
| 12/26/2011
| Me.
Posted on 12/26/2011 11:52:08 AM PST by Dallas59
Question on Cremation. Does the Bible say anything about it? Is it forbidden?
TOPICS: Moral Issues
KEYWORDS: bigbucksfunerals; cremation; funerals; interment; inurnment
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To: fso301
Let's say you'd like to be laid to rest in the enormous veterans cemetery in San Diego overlooking the Pacific ~ you can be cremated and go into a columbarium (that big wall around the place) or you can go somewhere else.
Then, there's ordinary whole body burial ~ where you decompose somewhat slowly ~ maybe over centuries, but in the end, combustion does take place and you end up as dust.
My wife and I are both veterans. We choose to NOT be buried near those who didn't serve ~
41
posted on
12/26/2011 12:18:56 PM PST
by
muawiyah
To: WorkingClassFilth
42
posted on
12/26/2011 12:19:57 PM PST
by
mylife
(The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
To: battlecry
43
posted on
12/26/2011 12:20:44 PM PST
by
mylife
(The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
To: Dallas59
For me, the idea of my body rotting in a box 6 feet under is repulsive. I would rather be “ashified” and those ashes spread all over the Appalachian mountains in Tennessee and Kentucky. The dead know nothing I realize, but to my earthly flesh brain....It comforts me to know where my body will be until the Earth is renewed.
44
posted on
12/26/2011 12:21:35 PM PST
by
Dallas59
(President Robert Gibbs 2009-2011)
To: muawiyah; mylife
We choose to NOT be buried near those who didn't serveWhat about those who want to get served???
To: Dallas59
No commandment against it in Scripture. I personally wouldn’t do it. Jesus was buried (in a tomb), so for us that’s the example that was set that should be followed.
I had a nightmare after my mil was cremated. I dreamed that we got dressed up and went to a building (I didn’t know it was the crematorium). She climbed into a box on a conveyor belt and then traveled into the flames, still alive. I was screaming trying to get the conveyor belt to stop, and woke up. It’s obvious I don’t like cremation :(
46
posted on
12/26/2011 12:22:08 PM PST
by
Reddy
(B.O. stinks)
To: God luvs America
47
posted on
12/26/2011 12:22:08 PM PST
by
mylife
(The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
To: ozaukeemom
48
posted on
12/26/2011 12:23:12 PM PST
by
mylife
(The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
To: Dallas59
49
posted on
12/26/2011 12:24:13 PM PST
by
Keith in Iowa
(No Mit Sherlock. No Mit, not now, not ever. | FR Class of 1998 |)
To: Dallas59
Dust is the natural state of the universe.
200 trillion years ago our solar system was interstellar dust.
200 trillion years from now our solar system will be interstellar dust again.
This period in time is a very brief existence in eternity that we are formed dust.
50
posted on
12/26/2011 12:24:49 PM PST
by
rawcatslyentist
(It is necessary that a person be born of a father who is a citizen; ~Vattel's Law of Nations)
To: Dallas59
Funeral arrangements are to comfort the living.
The dead don't care.
I say, whatever works for the survivors ought to be good enough for the rest of the world.
51
posted on
12/26/2011 12:26:12 PM PST
by
E. Pluribus Unum
(FOREIGN AID: A transfer of money from poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries)
To: RaceBannon
This is a gross question, but what about people who were eaten by wild animals?
52
posted on
12/26/2011 12:26:55 PM PST
by
LucyT
To: muawiyah
Let's say you'd like to be laid to rest in the enormous veterans cemetery in San Diego overlooking the Pacific ~ you can be cremated and go into a columbarium (that big wall around the place) or you can go somewhere else. Then, there's ordinary whole body burial ~ where you decompose somewhat slowly ~ maybe over centuries, but in the end, combustion does take place and you end up as dust. My wife and I are both veterans. We choose to NOT be buried near those who didn't serve ~ Neither old nor new testament scripture places any unique requirements on burials. Over the centuries, traditions have arisen but they are just traditions. Scripture doesn't care as to whether a person wishes to have their body deposited in a composting machine, incinerated or stuffed, mounted and placed on display in a museum.
53
posted on
12/26/2011 12:27:48 PM PST
by
fso301
To: Dallas59
The bible is a book of fables, written by people who had nothing to do with Christ.
Follow your heart, and do what suits you.
54
posted on
12/26/2011 12:28:55 PM PST
by
baltodog
(R.I.P. Balto: 2001(?) - 2005)
To: lacrew
Being a Catholic, I researched this. Apparently the Church is alright with the practice as long as the remains are held together. So, so much for my plans of being scattered over Venice Beach...
55
posted on
12/26/2011 12:30:07 PM PST
by
tanuki
(O-voters: wanted Uberman, got Underdog....)
To: mylife
My smart ex-wife had a novel idea for the ashes of the departed: have a bust fashioned of the person cremated, using the ashes of the deceased. They would make great ‘garden companions’ don’tchaknow. Never talking back, good listeners, too.
56
posted on
12/26/2011 12:30:37 PM PST
by
MHGinTN
(Some, believing they cannot be deceived, it's impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
To: baltodog; thesaleboat; Sick of Lefties; Chainmail; StrongandPround; lilyramone; crusadersoldier; ...
baltodog wrote:
The bible is a book of fables, written by people who had nothing to do with Christ.
Really? Just wow.
57
posted on
12/26/2011 12:31:48 PM PST
by
narses
To: koraz; Yo-Yo; Dallas59
The Catholic Church is against cremation
IF the purpose of the cremation is to express contempt for the doctrine of the resurrection of the body (as was the case, I have heard, for atheists around the era of Voltaire and later, who insisted upon cremation for that purpose);
IF it's meant to express a non-Christian doctrine such as pantheism; or if it's meant to disrespect the body of some disfavored group (e.g. cremating the dead who are from some despised race, nationality, or class.)
If those motives do not apply, and there is a legitimate reason to want to cremate a body (like in Japan, where there is practically no land available for cemeteries), cremation is allowed if the remains are treated reverently.
58
posted on
12/26/2011 12:33:08 PM PST
by
Mrs. Don-o
("Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit? ... You are not your own.")
To: rawcatslyentist
“Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.”
Longfellow
To: tanuki; lacrew
Burial in sacred grounds is the correct choice, either as an intact body or ashes, iirc.
60
posted on
12/26/2011 12:33:45 PM PST
by
narses
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