Thread: Purgatory: Against Cremation Board: Limbo / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
The Orthodox Church is, as far as I know, the only church left that forbids cremation, (except where the law forbids burial, eg., Japan).

This was the historic position in Judaism and Christianity until the 19th Century. The only exceptions were the use of cremation for criminals or those who had seriously infringed the Law in the Old Testament.

So indefatigible was Christian opposition to cremation that it had been rendered extinct in Rome by the 4th century. In times when pagan Romans left the bodies of outcasts and criminals to rot by the roadside, Christians made a huge impact not only by burying their own dead but ALL the dead where they could.

This remained the position until the 19th century when agnostics, atheists and other freethinkers promoted cremation. Protestant Christians acquiesced first ... indeed PECUSA (as it was then) built the first crematorium to be used by a church.

Rome condemned the practice no less than 5 times in the 1890's only to relent in 1963 with precious little theological justification. The Orthodox alone have remained opposed for various reasons:-

(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.

There are other reasons but that will do for now.

Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

[ 02. January 2007, 19:46: Message edited by: RuthW ]
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

Perhaps it affirms our faith in the spiritual context of the resurrection. I don't see that it symbolically denies the resurrection promise unless one really believes the corpse being interred is a sacrament of sorts.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.

I wouldn't characterise it as violence - any more than building a house promotes violence against trees or eating promotes violence against animals and plants.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.

Some people might find a graveside an unhealthy devotion. This strikes me as a horses for courses situation.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.

So are cars, plane flights and praying in English. As for Christ's own example... well, I'm sure you can guess the obvious objections to that argument.

What were the other reasons? [Biased]
 
Posted by mr_ricarno (# 6064) on :
 
I guess it's something I never really thought about. When I first encountered it, as a child, it seemed a bit odd but I didn't think much of it.

At the moment, I think I sympathise with the Orthodox position on cremation, but a few years ago I would have said something like: 'God is big enough to cope with cremated bodies on the Day of Resurrection'.

And I still think that's true - it doesn't make it an acceptable practice though.

My parents have put in special requests to be buried rather than cremated, and my mother has reservations about organ transplants (ostensibly because she thinks God will have problems putting all the organs back in the right places).

Would it be fair to say that, on a practical level, cremation saves space and if we buried every corpse we'd struggle to find land to bury them under?
 
Posted by Nunc Dimittis (# 848) on :
 
quote:
Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

I think the very nature of crematoria is an argument against cremation. Crematoria are soulless, godless places. Impersonal, inhuman. *shudder*

I have requested burial and not cremation, largely for the reasons you cited, Fr G. I'd rather decompose naturally (just as in life I composed naturally [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin] ok, sick pun).
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
I remember reading about the history of burial and cremation, and some of the descriptions of noxious odours filling churches from the crypts are quite horrifying. It was a real problem in the 19th, as graveyards became full literally to overflowing, and became a serious health hazard.
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eigon:
I remember reading about the history of burial and cremation, and some of the descriptions of noxious odours filling churches from the crypts are quite horrifying. It was a real problem in the 19th, as graveyards became full literally to overflowing, and became a serious health hazard.

I think this is a key point: early advocates of modern cremation were mostly interested in finding a way of disposing of a huge number of dead bodies in a smaller, concentrated still living. Champions of cremation may have included "agnostics... and other free thinkers" but this group also included clergy.

To give my own responses

quote:
(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."
Obvious argument, used a lot in the early cremation movement (admittedly about physical resurrections Ezekiel) is that this alienates hundreds of thousands of Christian martyrs. Besides, dying remains "going to sleep".

And personally I'm not particularly bothered about denying symbols: you are free to differ and thus choose burial over cremation.

quote:
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.
The alternative to this is also violent: contemporary to the 19th century cremation movement were overstacked graves frequently robbed (and burnt) at night, shifting of bones. And I find the instant "burn" effect as violent as being crushed by several tonnes of earth.

quote:
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.
If the average grave is honoured for the lifetime of the next generation, this is only for 30,40 years. Honouring the dead after that point means battling for conservation powers or planning permission for overgrown sites. The vast majority of the rituals of grief are not associated with the grave, and a buried casket of ashes gives this same effect anyway.

quote:
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.
Couldn't put it better than mdijon [Biased]

As you have made clear, the remaining arguments against cremation are theologically symbolic or for the very short term. If you are a Christian who does not hold on to symbolic theological ideas, or even (gasp) a "freethinker", the present situation works fine. No one is forced into cremation - except in very particular circumstances - and 70% of Brits choose that way to go each year.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.

This is the only one I have some sympathy with, particularly the 'rituals of grief' bit. There's something about seeing a coffin lowered into the earth by human hands that just isn't there in the various mechanised forms of cremation, which, if you get to witness at all, is probably over CCTV. And my first and only look inside a cremation oven generated an immediate association with the Holocaust.

That said, I'm beginning to think all this is more cultural than anything else. And I hope the Orthodox have a fund to cover the spiralling cost of decent burial as opposed to cremation...
 
Posted by Gracious rebel (# 3523) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

It's not just the Orthodox who think in this way. This subject got a mention in a recent sermon in my Grace Baptist church, with the subtext being that burial was good and cremation was bad, for a Christian. I guess the reasons would be similar to those you mentioned.

I'm pretty sure I've never known an evangelical Christian who was cremated (but maybe I just haven't been to enough funerals). - its always a burial, following a funeral service at the church. Cremations I've been to have been of 'non-believers' (using a standard evo definition of a believer)

[ 21. August 2006, 14:04: Message edited by: Gracious rebel ]
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

No, for two reasons. Firstly the "space" issue - if everyone was buried then with today's population we'd very quickly need whole cities dedicated just to graves.

Secondly, I just don't see any theological problem with it other than the purely symbolic. If it doesn't actually matter, it shouldn't be required.

That said, I want to be buried when my time comes. I prefer the thought of there still being something of me on the planet, rather than a pile of ashes that could have been anyone (or anything). But that's just me...
 
Posted by Pyx_e (# 57) on :
 
5/ you might not be dead, at least with a grave you can use your mobile and get dug out.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
I prefer burial to cremation for myself and family, but that's more a sentimental thing--seems a bit more dignified. But then when I think of what's actually going on inside that coffin, well.... I could change my mind.

Actually, nothing about what happens after death is dignified. And I doubt the Lord minds one way or the other. But I do wish that we lived in a culture where we didn't have to place the bodies of our beloved in the hands of strangers to prepare them after death....
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No, for two reasons. Firstly the "space" issue - if everyone was buried then with today's population we'd very quickly need whole cities dedicated just to graves.

Secondly, I just don't see any theological problem with it other than the purely symbolic. If it doesn't actually matter, it shouldn't be required.


I'm with Marvin on this one. Though there are fairly good reasons for having somewhere to focus grief, there is nothing to stop ashes being buried in a churchyard. Or scattered to whatever winds the deceased might have fancied.

But the biggest argument is that of space. there really isn't any room for more buried bodies. I don't want the remains (such as they are) of somebody buried many years ago to be dug up to make room for me! And in any case, many headstones will be moved in the future for "ease of maintenance" as they say.

And really, are the serried ranks of graves, all with identical headstones (as permitted by the local council) any less soulless than a crematorium service? I've been to many services at crematoria, and whilst some might have left something to be desired, that was usually because the one who had died was totally unknown to the person who conducted the service, they not having set foot in a church since their wedding!

Incidentally, most of the funeral services I have attended recently have been for evangelical Christians, and there have been no problems with cremation. A good service in the church they attended, followed by a quiet, family service at the crematorium, conducted, of course, by the same Minister/Pastor.

If God can manage to create our vast, enormous universe, with thousands upon thousands of galaxies, I am sure he can arrange the resurrection of ashes as well as bones.
 
Posted by MaryO (# 161) on :
 
I am hoping to go quickly and relatively painlessly when I do so, and to be in a condition where lots of my organs may be donated to those in need.

Ideally there won't be much left to bury, and I would like to be cremated with my ashes put into my parish's columbarium.

I think intending to deny the bodily resurrection is sinful, but that has not been the case with the friends and acquaintances who have been cremated.

I agree with whomever said that God is perfectly capable of dealing with cremated bodies in the resurrection.

[ 21. August 2006, 15:26: Message edited by: MaryO ]
 
Posted by Bonaventura (# 1066) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eigon:
I remember reading about the history of burial and cremation, and some of the descriptions of noxious odours filling churches from the crypts are quite horrifying. It was a real problem in the 19th, as graveyards became full literally to overflowing, and became a serious health hazard.

No doubt inspired by the then fashionable miasma theory of disease which held that noxious odours and rotting matter itself was the cause of contagious disease.
 
Posted by Zealot en vacance (# 9795) on :
 
Whatever you do with the body, it eventually returns to the earth. Does orthodox doctrine have a problem with people whose bodies are consumed by fire due to accident or warfare, or even vapourised due to nuclear weapon assault (and is this a reason for the relaxation in Japan?). No, a God who can create from nothing, can resurrect the body likewise.

Biggest objection to the crem. must be the fuel consumption. At least in the UK we live not unadjacent to a large ocean. If the graveyards overflow and the crems are too expensive to run, we can all join Mr Maxwell, and go with a splash...
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Interesting piece in Saturday's Guardian on the widespread habit of scattering ashes - which seems to be taking over from the actual funeral as the emotional centre for the bereaved.

It's not as if you get lifelong (so to speak) tenure of a grave in any case. Round here it's 50 years (and there are housing developments on former graveyards to prove it).

So if it's a long-term choice between a loving friend or relative scattering me on the waters of the Shimna, or being part of Barrett's infill, I know which I would prefer.
 
Posted by Cedd (# 8436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
[qb] (1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

Perhaps it affirms our faith in the spiritual context of the resurrection. I don't see that it symbolically denies the resurrection promise unless one really believes the corpse being interred is a sacrament of sorts.
Except, of course IMHO, the Christian view of resurrection is both spiritual and physical. To paraphrase St Paul our current physcial body is the seed which falls into the ground and gives rise to the resurrection body. In the same way the new Jerusalem is a physical city not a metaphysical one. The Christian "afterlife" (as I view it)is of resurrected people living in a restored world - not disembodied spirits floating in an ethereal heaven. Of course I believe that God is more than capable of overcoming the damage caused to our bodies by cremation but I agree with Fr G. that in "burning the seeds" in this way society is symbolically denying the Christian promise of being physically resurrected.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zealot en vacance:
At least in the UK we live not unadjacent to a large ocean. If the graveyards overflow and the crems are too expensive to run, we can all join Mr Maxwell, and go with a splash...

I once poured a drink for a friend who'd just had an extremely unpleasant experience on a fishing boat... I think I'll make my arrangements so as to spare anyone that possibility.
 
Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
...
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.
...
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.

...

So, let's compare cremation with the predominant North American (specifically as practiced under the law of Ontario in my knowledge and experience) practices of embalming and burial.

2) a fair degree of violence is involved. The body is drained of fluids and a significant quantity of mostly formaldehyde is instilled. The resulting toxic item is sealed in a significantly large and heavy box, which is substantially airtight. In many places, ground water concerns require this box to be inside a concrete vault. Any return to earth will take a period of several centuries.

4) Sure is. Other than ancient Egyptian practice, anyway.

There are "earth-friendly" burials, but they are rare, and hard to arrange for - see "ground water concerns". In the classic form, the body goes in a hole in a shroud and you plant a tree on top. Then there's a "return to earth".

But cremation vs. modern commercial burial? There's more return to earth in the former!

(Personally, I opt for organ retrieval, then cremation, and burial of the cremains in a bio-degradable container - a cardboard box will do just fine.)
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
I just attended a Burial in which the ashes were interred in the church's courtyard. No difference there at all that I can see, except to me a far more respectful and intelligent use of space.

I will definitely be cremated. Whether ashes scattered or interred, I'm not sure, although I'm leaning to scattered.
 
Posted by PhilA (# 8792) on :
 
Yup, you can scatter, bury me, push me off a boat - I really don't care to be honest.

If you do scatter me though can I make a request? Leave me in the jar 'til winter then use me to grit the drive. I want to be useful at least.
 
Posted by Spiffy da WonderSheep (# 5267) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zealot en vacance:
Does orthodox doctrine have a problem with people whose bodies are consumed by fire due to accident or warfare, or even vapourised due to nuclear weapon assault (and is this a reason for the relaxation in Japan?).

The reason for the relaxation in Japan is severe lack of space. Japan is an area the size of California with a population equal to that of the entire United States, and that population is pretty much restricted by mountains to 25% of the land mass. There are cemetaries for cremains on top of office buildings in Japan.

As for myself, I have seen modern crematoriums up close and personal, with remains inside, and it doesn't squick me the way it seems to do with others. The ground water contamination aspect, however, is something that does bother me, both for myself and any descendents. I'd like to be cremated (after a good old-fashioned Mexican-Irish-Italian wake, y'all are invited) and interred somewhere with a nice view at my family's ranch.

[ 21. August 2006, 15:53: Message edited by: Spiffy da WonderSheep ]
 
Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:

(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.



But so, and far more effectively, does the practice of allowing harvesting of organs for transplants.

As for a time to mark the death (not quoting the actual words) -- someone talked about lowering the coffin into a grave -- I and those with me found it sufficiently moving when I lowered my Father's ashes into the earth as the priest said the appropriate part of the burial office. And again when we interred my Mother's ashes.

Please do not confuse "how it is done where I live" with the way it has to be, or even with how it is in other places.

John
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cedd:
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

Perhaps it affirms our faith in the spiritual context of the resurrection. I don't see that it symbolically denies the resurrection promise unless one really believes the corpse being interred is a sacrament of sorts.
Except, of course IMHO, the Christian view of resurrection is both spiritual and physical. To paraphrase St Paul our current physcial body is the seed which falls into the ground and gives rise to the resurrection body. In the same way the new Jerusalem is a physical city not a metaphysical one. The Christian "afterlife" (as I view it)is of resurrected people living in a restored world - not disembodied spirits floating in an ethereal heaven. Of course I believe that God is more than capable of overcoming the damage caused to our bodies by cremation but I agree with Fr G. that in "burning the seeds" in this way society is symbolically denying the Christian promise of being physically resurrected.
This is a symbolic meaning you're assigning to cremation; it's not naturally and necessarily tied to it. One could just as easily say that the fire of cremation symbolizes the purgation some believe will happen after death, or one could relate the fire of cremation and the ashes that remain to incense burnt during church services. It seems silly to me to say that burning a body that is sooner or later going to decompose entirely anyway is a symbolic denial of resurrection; why not by the same argument advocate preservation of the bodies of all Christians along the lines of Lenin's tomb?
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
Cryogenics anyone?

(PS, JH raises another point I'd not thought of - what's the Orthodox take on organ transplants?)
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
So where do people stand on this sort of thing? (work safe link)
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
The problem of graveyards filling up is an old one. Hamlet was playing with Yorick's skull because they had to dig him up to make room for Ophelia! Although I prefer burial because of tradition, I don't really see how digging up old graves and stuffing the bones in the corner of the church basement is any less violent than a cremation.

Zach
 
Posted by KenWritez (# 3238) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

Not at all. It assumes God, being God, is perfectly capable of bringing the dead back to life and clothing them with a body, just as Ezekiel saw in his "valley of bones." In the case of cremation, the bones He has to work with are considerably smaller, that's all, merely a degree of scale--not something God need worry about.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.

It absolutely does not. Violence? How in the world? What about victims of fires and certain other disasters that result in bodily destruction? I'd say these poor people suffer a pretty damn conclusive "natural return to the earth" (and certainly violence) and yet I've not heard of their eternal state or state of their remains labeled "unnatural" in the sense you're using.

Cremation promotes no violence whatsoever. It promotes a method of disposal of human remains that is clean, quick, saving of space, and in modern times returns to the grieving friends or family the ashy remains of the deceased for them to dispose of however they wish. It's a more emotionally wholesome method than burying, with its horrific claustrophic connotations and pop culture of zombies and grave robbers and all sorts of graveyard uncleanliness.

Cremation no more promotes violence than medical amputation promotes torture.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.

Nope, not even close. It actually promotes honoring the dead, because the family can scatter the ashes almost wherever they like, whereas burial can only occur in a few select areas, and requires purchase of burial lots, coffins, the services of mortuary professionals, etc.

In my father's case, he had joined the Neptune Society so after the initial joining payment, there was no further necessary expenditures to process his body, which we as a grieving family were grateful.

We scattered his ashes (per his request) in a secluded valley on some property he had loved. We can visit him whenever we like, just as those who bury their dead can visit the gravesite. To counter your assertion, there was *no* lessening of ability to process through our rituals of grief. He had wanted to be cremated, and we were glad we could honor his request.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.

A "clear violation" of whose practice? Which culture? I would imagine there are cultures which cremate their dead and have done so for "millenia."

Nope, an unjustified association with your reference to Christ's example. AFAIK, cremation was not part of Jewish culture at the time of Christ, so it would make sense He would not engage in it. Neither did He eat pork or shellfish, so are we to use the cultural template of his time as our own? I don't think you mean that, but that's what you're saying: "Jesus didn't do it so we shouldn't do it." When it comes to moral/spiritual/religious behavior, then Jesus is our template for all things, but for non-essentials, we are not constrained to mimic Him in all things, otherwise no man would ever be anything than an unmarried Jewish carpenter and itinerant preacher.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I wouldn't have much of a problem with this thread if Fr greg had stuck with the tradition argument. Instead he decided to imply that Episcopalians, and everyone else that allows cremation, don't believe in the resurrection and that we don't respect or honor the dead and are violent to their bodies. Not the most sensitive of arguments if you ask me.

Zach
 
Posted by Nicolemrw (# 28) on :
 
My father was cremated. After the funeral we all went to the crematorium the same as we would have gone to the cemetary if he were buried. The military ceremony (because he was a veteran, you know, honor guard, flag folding and presentation, playing taps and firing salute) was done there, and my mother's cousin who's a minister lead some prayers (the actual funeral was a Jewish ceremony, but we let Cliff slip some Christian stuff in there just to make him happy). Hardly what I would call cold or inhuman.

After we got the ashes back, my mother put them on top of a cabinate in her TV room, along with a phot and some objects, and I visit whenever I'm in her house. Far more frequently than I would visit a cemetary, in fact I've _never_ visted a grave in a cemetary, not even my granparents.

When my mother dies, my brother and I will find somewhere to have their ashes intered where they can be together, which is what my father wanted.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
According to this website, the Greek Orthodox are okay with organ donation (mostly), but not donating one's body to science.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
I suspect Fr. Gregory is making a stronger statement than he actually believes in order to foster debate. However, count me as a major supporter of cremation. I hope to be cremated and interred in my church's columbarium, which is a lovely garden courtyard next to the playground. I don't think for a minute that my church's position on this is at odds with respect for bodily resurrection. I'm sure God will be able to raise up whomever he wants, no matter what form their body is in. Matter can neither br created or destroyed, so it's all out there somewhere, wherever it is.
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
According to this website, the Greek Orthodox are okay with organ donation (mostly), but not donating one's body to science.

Wow, Laura. Piecemealing a body out sounds rather violent and unnatural compared to keeping it all in one place.

[ 21. August 2006, 17:36: Message edited by: Scot ]
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
I've come across some very unnatural and violent transplant surgeons.

Vicious brutes, the lot of them.
 
Posted by babybear (# 34) on :
 
I have no objection to cremation on theological grounds. My Mum wants to be cremated because she doesn't want to find herself waking up in a box under all of that earth (she can't work out how to call people on her mobile phone).

I don't fancy it for myself based on ecological reasons; it take a lot of power. My desire is to be wrapped in a white sheet, buried in a cardboard coffin and have a tree planted on top of me. My decomposoition would fertilise the tree. woodland burial

Others have already given a very clear outline of the counter arguments. I don't feel any need to repeat them.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

No.

I understand revulsion to what I gather is the common British practice of having services at crematoria while the body slides into the flames (it all sounds very off-putting), but in the United States, cremation isn't public and the ashes -- usually in an urn -- are brought to the church(or to an undertaker's) for an appropriate memorial service. Columbaria make it very easy to visit the grave, with less hiking.

Overcrowding in graveyards has always been a problem, as others have noted. It's going to get much worse now that graves aren't "recycled," as they were in centuries past. The sort of misplaced devotion to the physical body that leaves families spending small fortunes on embalming, expensive coffins, and small concrete bunkers to protect them from ever rotting leads to vast cities of the dead.

I don't have a problem with the idea of being returned to dust in the matter of a few minutes, after any usable parts are removed, rather than over the course of years. I know I won't be there to take it all in, but I don't just like the idea of rotting.

Most people don't like the idea of rotting, which helps to account for the fashion for embalming. What they don't realize is that the sealed coffins lead to anaerobic bacteria doing all the dirty work of putrefaction, and (according to an article in The Wall Street Journal some years back), the results are far more loathesome than those achieved by just sticking the box in the dirt. (It's not easy being green.)

And thank you, mdijon, for your comment about "Christ's own example." Brilliant!

Ross
 
Posted by Lord of all Llamas (# 11665) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The Orthodox Church is, as far as I know, the only church left that forbids cremation, (except where the law forbids burial, eg., Japan).

This was the historic position in Judaism and Christianity until the 19th Century. The only exceptions were the use of cremation for criminals or those who had seriously infringed the Law in the Old Testament.

So indefatigible was Christian opposition to cremation that it had been rendered extinct in Rome by the 4th century. In times when pagan Romans left the bodies of outcasts and criminals to rot by the roadside, Christians made a huge impact not only by burying their own dead but ALL the dead where they could.

This remained the position until the 19th century when agnostics, atheists and other freethinkers promoted cremation. Protestant Christians acquiesced first ... indeed PECUSA (as it was then) built the first crematorium to be used by a church.

Rome condemned the practice no less than 5 times in the 1890's only to relent in 1963 with precious little theological justification. The Orthodox alone have remained opposed for various reasons:-

(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.

There are other reasons but that will do for now.

Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

I should have thought the church would be better to concern itself with helping stop the needless killing of each other, rather than worrying about what happens to the remains of the departed...
Just a perspective thing I guess.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by babybear:
woodland burial

I quite fancy this, but there's no sign of it happening over here. It's virtually impossible to be buried anywhere other than in a municipal cemetery.
 
Posted by sharkshooter (# 1589) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by John Holding:
...
As for a time to mark the death (not quoting the actual words) -- someone talked about lowering the coffin into a grave -- I and those with me found it sufficiently moving when I lowered my Father's ashes into the earth as the priest said the appropriate part of the burial office. And again when we interred my Mother's ashes.
...

I have never been to a funeral where they actually lowered the casket.

The casket, in my experience, is placed over the grave by the poll-bearers and left there until after everyone has left. It is then that the workers lower the casket and fill the grave.

Is this not other people's experience?
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
I can't think of any particular reason myself to prefer burial over cremation. As Paul says the seed which is sown is not the plant that is harvested come resurrection, so we can be assured that our resurrection bodies are some form of new creation. Which is also reassurance, I'm sure, for those who have been killed and had their bodies disposed of by being burnt, or killed by fire, or blown apart by explosion or crash.

It could be a consideration when coming to scattering ashes that mourners might have nowhere to return to, or a physical monument marking the actual remains of a loved one. But that isn't quite the same thing, necessarily, as losing the body of the loved one - say through going missing, or accident at sea - where there couldn't be a funeral, and a choice over what to do with the remains.

And it could be argued that being safe from the elements of nature in a crem is a less significant realism of 'earth to earth, ashes to ashes etc'; as opposed to standing at the graveside in full face of the sun or rain.

But theologically I can't imagine there being a strong justification for restricting disposal of remains to burial. I can imagine that once upon a time people might have reasoned, in a literal-minded way, that for a raised body to be possible one had to be consigned whole to the grave. But I can't see that either as being a justifiable premise on which to base a continuing tradition.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:
Originally posted by John Holding:
...
As for a time to mark the death (not quoting the actual words) -- someone talked about lowering the coffin into a grave -- I and those with me found it sufficiently moving when I lowered my Father's ashes into the earth as the priest said the appropriate part of the burial office. And again when we interred my Mother's ashes.
...

I have never been to a funeral where they actually lowered the casket.

The casket, in my experience, is placed over the grave by the poll-bearers and left there until after everyone has left. It is then that the workers lower the casket and fill the grave.

Is this not other people's experience?

Maybe custom varies a lot? In every funeral involving a coffin or ashes casket I've attended, they box has always gone into the grave at the beginning of the ceremony. (Unless something different was requested by relatives.)

The general thing here seems to be that the coffin is walked to the graveside, the pall-bearers then removing the planks, and lowering the coffin into the grave-space on tapes. Some folks might wait until the actual committal prayer to do the lowering.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
I have never been to a funeral where they actually lowered the casket.

One of the interesting things emerging here is the variations between our various nations.

In France, the casket [GB: coffin] is usually placed on trestles for the committal, then everybody watches it being lowered into the tomb, after which they file past and make some sort of gesture which depends on their faith tradition - I usually get people to throw in petals or seeds.

Meanwhile, I've never been involved in a cremation service which wasn't focused around the coffin, rather than the urn.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

Tradition does not necessarily make a thing right or appropriate.
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

I'm not sure if cremation is a better idea. I don't see that it's necessarily worse just because it's 'new'. Perhaps if crematoria had existed back then, in the way they have for some years now, it might have affected their experience of theology in the way it does now. Just as our practice of science in today's world affects our theological approaches to other things, say, the creation accounts.
 
Posted by Melon (# 4038) on :
 
My favourite bit (if one is allowed to have a favourite bit) of French funerals is when the priest or pastor says the final prayers, everyone turns away, and, at that point, the pallbearers whip out bright green boiler suits from behind the nearest tombstone, slip them over their suits and start shovelling like there's no tomorrow before heading off to the next job. Maybe that's the way everyone does it, but I had always imagined that someone filled in the hole after all the mourners had left. As with most Christian rites, I find that for me the mechanics always get in the way of the transcendent.

I also attended one Laotian funeral, with an open casket, and a rather distressing moment (for Westerners) when the mother of the deceased picked up the corpse...
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Eutychus

No, but you better have a damn good justification if you are overturning 4000 years, at least from where I am standing.

Concerning crematoria back way back .... cremation was de rigeur in the Empire at the time of Christ .... amongst pagans (except Egyptians) but not Jews and Christians.

[ 21. August 2006, 18:51: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Newman's Own (# 420) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eigon:
I remember reading about the history of burial and cremation, and some of the descriptions of noxious odours filling churches from the crypts are quite horrifying. It was a real problem in the 19th, as graveyards became full literally to overflowing, and became a serious health hazard.

That was my understanding as well - and I can only imagine what that could be like today (if indeed we could find a place to bury people in the first place). I understand the points which Fr Gregory noted, and do greatly appreciate the symbolism, but I believe that purely practical concerns are why there is no opposition to cremation on the part of most sister churches.

I seldom give it much thought, but, now that the idea was stimulated, I'm not sure that 'being ashes' is more revolting than decomposition.

(I've said, in recent years, that, though I wish a dignified funeral service, I'd like to have my ashes scattered in one of the London parks. Whether that is legal I have no idea.) [Smile]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
No it isn't legal. They must be interred, stored in urns or committed to the sea.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

Probably for the same reason that they got electricity and flush toilets -- they beat the heck out of trying to read by candlelight and crapping in outhouses. Similarly, cremation is neater, cleaner and less of a pain in the ass.
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Dear Eutychus

No, but you better have a damn good justification if you are overturning 4000 years, at least from where I am standing.

Concerning crematoria back way back .... cremation was de rigeur in the Empire at the time of Christ .... amongst pagans (except Egyptians) but not Jews and Christians.

So it's not new after all and in coming to consider cremation a viable option for disposal the Jews and Christians came to the party late? I can understand why they mightn't want to do what the pagans did, as I said in my last post. But I would be reluctant to call that a 'damn good justification' for establishing a 4000 year old precedent
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

Yes, well, we ordain women now, too.

Stuff happens.
 
Posted by Pyx_e (# 57) on :
 
quote:
Concerning crematoria back way back .... cremation was de rigeur in the Empire at the time of Christ .... amongst pagans (except Egyptians) but not Jews and Christians.

At the time of Christ there were no Christians.

P
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
No it isn't legal. They must be interred, stored in urns or committed to the sea.

So what about the Guardian article I referred to earlier?

It claims there it is very little regulation.

[ 21. August 2006, 19:31: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

I take it you're in favour of slavery, then? I think a better case could be made for slavery in Scripture, and probably the Fathers, than for the theological necessity of burial.
 
Posted by The Wanderer (# 182) on :
 
Rossweisse:
quote:
I understand revulsion to what I gather is the common British practice of having services at crematoria while the body slides into the flames (it all sounds very off-putting), but in the United States, cremation isn't public and the ashes -- usually in an urn -- are brought to the church(or to an undertaker's) for an appropriate memorial service.
I have never taken, or seen, a cremation in the UK where flames were visible at all. However I had assumed this was common practice in the USA, due solely to the James Bond film (Diamonds Are Forever?) where the villains attempt to kill our hero by consigning him directly to the fire. Is this film the source of some confusion I wonder?

Equally, all the burials I have attended in the UK have included the coffin being lowered into the ground and then a handful of soil being thrown onto it at, "earth to earth, ashes to ashes" (sometimes just by the priest, at others by all the family, at others by all the mourners).

I have read that (again in the UK) attitudes to creamtion changed dramatically during WWI. WIth so many soldiers being blown apart, and there being no possibilty of burying all their fragments in one coffin, compassionate clergy had to do a major rethink about the presumtion that an intact corpse was needed for the Resurrection of the Dead. That sounds plausible to me; does anyone know if it is accurate?
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
I understand revulsion to what I gather is the common British practice of having services at crematoria while the body slides into the flames (it all sounds very off-putting)

Well, at my grandmother's funeral the coffin slid vertically down out of sight, and we never saw a hint of flame. Not off-putting at all, in fact it was quite touching.

I heard (forget where, one of those undercover documentaries probably) that some crematoriums "do" two or three coffins at a time, to save fuel. So the families could have bits of their relative mixed in with a couple of other folk. Now that's off-putting!

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

Why the hell should they have? Sometimes.Tradition.Is.Wrong. Deal.With.It.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Often Tradition is right. You.deal.with.it.
 
Posted by Pyx_e (# 57) on :
 
Never heard or seen "flames" anywhere near the chapel. Industrial cremators can only fit one coffin in at a time.

P
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Often Tradition is right. You.deal.with.it.

Who decides?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pyx_e:
Never heard or seen "flames" anywhere near the chapel. Industrial cremators can only fit one coffin in at a time.

Better watch your weight too.

quote:
Cremators are a standard size. Large cities will have access to an oversize cremator that can handle deceased in the 200+ kg range. However, the morbidly obese cannot be cremated and must be buried.
Source.
 
Posted by Melon (# 4038) on :
 
I'm beginning to wonder if the real reason Fr Gregory is so in favour of burial is so that previous generations of Orthodox believers can continue to turn in their graves whenever anyone suggests an innovation.
 
Posted by Laurence (# 9135) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
I have never been to a funeral where they actually lowered the casket.

The casket, in my experience, is placed over the grave by the poll-bearers and left there until after everyone has left. It is then that the workers lower the casket and fill the grave.

Is this not other people's experience?

On the contrary, sharkshooter- it's the custom in England as far as I know to have the actual burial at the heart of the service. I suppose the practice of seeing the coffin whisked away on mechanical rollers to be burned is a crematorial parallel to seeing it go beneath the earth.

Speaking personally, I found the experience of lowering my grandfather's body into the ground shattering, but ultimately cathartic. I was amazed at the sheer amount of effort it took (with 3 other cousins) to carry a coffin and a body- it really brought home the physicality of death, the sheer dead weight of a corpse.

But lowering the coffin into the ground meant that there was an absolute finality to the end of the service, with nothing hanging over it, and no attempts to "draw the curtains". There was a body. We buried it. I'm very glad we had that simplicity, rather than turning away while someone did the real work and felt the weight of the body on their shoulders.

L.
 
Posted by Pyx_e (# 57) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
quote:
Originally posted by Pyx_e:
Never heard or seen "flames" anywhere near the chapel. Industrial cremators can only fit one coffin in at a time.

Better watch your weight too.

quote:
Cremators are a standard size. Large cities will have access to an oversize cremator that can handle deceased in the 200+ kg range. However, the morbidly obese cannot be cremated and must be buried.
Source.

I know, the second funeral I ever did the deceased would not fit down the catafalque or in the cremator. Steep learning curve.

P
 
Posted by R.I.T.A (# 11706) on :
 
Whilst I want to be buried, with all the trimmings, I don't have a huge problem with cremation. After all, doesn't cremation just speed up the whole process of decay? I do have a problem though with these large US caskets which are designed to stop the decay of the body. Phrases such as Earth to Earth Ashes to Ashes and Remember man that though are dust, and to dust you shall return, spring to mind.
RITA
 
Posted by Nicolemrw (# 28) on :
 
Oh yeah, thats another thing in favor of crematon. Instead of being pressured into buying the monster casket, you can simply hold out for the crematable one... which is estenially some kind of pressboard I think. NOt as attractive as the big mahogany or whatever they're made of things, but when it's covered with flowers or draped with a flag, who knows anyway? And much less expensive.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Melon:
I'm beginning to wonder if the real reason Fr Gregory is so in favour of burial is so that previous generations of Orthodox believers can continue to turn in their graves whenever anyone suggests an innovation.

Good one!

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Often Tradition is right. You.deal.with.it.

Father Gregory... Putting the "O" into Orthodox.

Some of us are post-Reformation and happen to think that sometimes, tradition ain't the be-all and end-all.

Cremators tend to heat the body up very quickly - from what I understand by the time you'd get the 'flames through the coffin' thing witnessed in Mr Bond, you'd be way past it. There really wouldn't be time to deal with the 'is it hot in here' feeling.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Melon:
I'm beginning to wonder if the real reason Fr Gregory is so in favour of burial is so that previous generations of Orthodox believers can continue to turn in their graves whenever anyone suggests an innovation.

[Killing me] from me too.

But make sure you.deal.with.it, Melon.

No, really, have you dealt with it?
 
Posted by Pyx_e (# 57) on :
 
My third funeral was for a bloke who lived to be 103. He put his great age down to a glass of rum and a teaspoon of gunpowder everyday of his retired life. He left behind three children seven grandchildren and an eighteen foot hole in the crem wall.

P

[ 21. August 2006, 20:28: Message edited by: Pyx_e ]
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Um, that electricity/plumbing argument doesn't hold water. If cremation was an invention of the 19th century, then that argument might work but this thread has already established that cremation was the norm in the Roman empire.

If it was the norm then (and presumably better, cheaper, faster, less of a pain as well), then why did Christians and Jews not participate at that time?

If that can be answered clearly, then we'll have the original basis for the argument against cremation and then we can debate if that's still a valid argument or not.

Are Fr.G's OP points the basis for the original rejection of cremation or just the current reasons?

As for #2, embalming is a fairly invasive (violent?) process too, but we still do that if cremation's not chosen.
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

I thought I might tackle this directly... apart from pointing out that if 4000 years of unbroken tradition should be our guiding light, we're probably in the wrong society...

Cremation had been mentioned a couple of times before the 1874 article credited with starting the modern cremation movement: in 1658 "Hydriotaphia or Urne Burial" was written, advocating burning corpses, and Byron wrote (quite appalled) having witnessed his friend Shelley's body being burnt on an Italian beach.

However, the church responded to a new set of conditions in the 19thc - most obvious of these were the social problems - picture, if you will, a village church responding to the needs of a newly urbanised city which has developed around it - closely followed by health problems - incidences of plague and the surviving of anthrax spores had been attributed to graves.

But by the nineteenth century there were not only these problems in a time of huge population growth, but a solution proposed by science, which found a way in which <i>for the first time</i> a body could be disposed of quickly, with minimal smell or distressing sights (the only other 19th century experience of cremation tended to be that of Indian funeral pyres), and yes, with dignity.

Had there not been a need to find a new way to deal with bodies - and even the anti-cremationists realised that this was a problem - the cremationists would probably have been dismissed as crackpots. But they weren't and (as far as I'm concerned) the Anglican and free churches realised that this was a decent alternative to burial on land and at sea, which was choking the living. As long as you don't hold on to a physical resurrection taking the bones from the position they were buried in (and those living in urban England were all to aware how false the impression of an "eternal grave" was), cremation is a logical step to take.

[ 21. August 2006, 20:38: Message edited by: Ferijen ]
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nunc Dimittis:
quote:
Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?

I think the very nature of crematoria is an argument against cremation. Crematoria are soulless, godless places. Impersonal, inhuman. *shudder*


No place is Godless - especially when Christians come together to hallow it with worship and prayer.

Impersonal? It depends on the pastoral care and sensitivity of the minister.
 
Posted by Nicolemrw (# 28) on :
 
quote:
If it was the norm then (and presumably better, cheaper, faster, less of a pain as well), then why did Christians and Jews not participate at that time?

To distinguish themselves in yet another way from the pagans?
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
I understand revulsion to what I gather is the common British practice of having services at crematoria while the body slides into the flames (it all sounds very off-putting)

Well, at my grandmother's funeral the coffin slid vertically down out of sight, and we never saw a hint of flame. Not off-putting at all, in fact it was quite touching.

I heard (forget where, one of those undercover documentaries probably) that some crematoriums "do" two or three coffins at a time, to save fuel. So the families could have bits of their relative mixed in with a couple of other folk. Now that's off-putting!

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

Why the hell should they have? Sometimes.Tradition.Is.Wrong. Deal.With.It.

Never, ever does the coffin slide into the flames.

It is usually hidden from sight by curtains and often only goes into the rooms at the back for transference into the cremator once the mourners have left.

And as for two coffins in one cremator - NEVER.

The crmatorium worker calls each coffin a 'charge' and it is cared for with the highest care and dignity from the moment it leaves the service to the moment the funeral director or family collects the urn a few days later.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

I hadn't been under the impression that the manner of bodily disposal was a creedal issue such that changing it requires another 4000 years of meetings.

sharkshooter:

I've seen many caskets lowered into the ground. Sometimes only the family remains to see it, though.
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
One of the advantages of cremation is that it's cheaper than burial. Maybe in London that's more of a problem than in the suburbs or countryside?

We chose cremation for Mr d, which was surprising to his Asian-Christian part of the family - they come from Hinduism a while back and maybe that prejudices them against "burning"? I will be cremated eventually and the ashes of us both will be together, if the family are organised. [Biased]

There is more room in the burial places in the cemetries that belong to us for boxes of ashes than for any more coffins and bodies.

What about the tradition of putting bodies up high so that vultures and eagles can feed on them? Disposal of Pharsi bodies.. An important bit of that is to prevent pollution.
 
Posted by Nicolemrw (# 28) on :
 
quote:
What about the tradition of putting bodies up high so that vultures and eagles can feed on them? Disposal of Pharsi bodies.. An important bit of that is to prevent pollution.

I always rather liked the thought of that. I think there's some Native American tribes that do something similar, called "sky burial". The body is put attop a tall tree and lashed in place.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
And there was me thinking it was the Oglaroonians...
 
Posted by chemincreux (# 10635) on :
 
One method of cremation Christians haven't tried (so ar as I know) is the open fire, Hindu style. Pity. I think this rite has wonderful symbolism.

But perhaps it would remind us of the other sort of fires we used to use - with faggots - to deal with awkward people who didn't like the current tradition.

A propos of which, "..you better have a damn good justification if you are thinking of overturning 4000 years, at least from where I am standing..." Um, where ARe you standing, Father - next to Rameses III?

Most of my family like the Woodland Burial option - thanks to the person who gave us the link. On the motorway not far from here, a woodland site advertises funerals and weddings side by side - if you see what I mean. But suppose they did that literally? What a wonderful way to get a right perspective on life...
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

Probably for the same reason that they got electricity and flush toilets -- they beat the heck out of trying to read by candlelight and crapping in outhouses. Similarly, cremation is neater, cleaner and less of a pain in the ass.
Exactly! I don't see that one must provide a reason for every change of tradition. For instance, in my husband's family dinner tended to be a bland meal. In our household we work to make it interesting. Our reason for changing? Why not? Similarly with my feelings on cremation--it's better for space reasons and I can't see why not!

Really, why is tradition worth preserving? Just because it's tradition? That might what you would say, Fr. Gregory, but I strongly disagree. The way I see it, tradition is worth preserving as long as there are still good reasons for keeping it. If I wish to change the way someone else does things it takes a good reason, but if I want to change the way I do things (and no one else) then I need no excuse at all. After all, I don't think anyone here has said they'd like to forbid burial. Certainly burying one's dead is a very personal process. If those who are dying ar okay with how their relatives plan to handle their remains and those who are living are okay with it (and in my book, the opinions of the living should far outweigh those of the dead) then I can't see why we as a society (or a religious group) should want to have the same exact tradition.
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chemincreux:
One method of cremation Christians haven't tried (so ar as I know) is the open fire, Hindu style. Pity. I think this rite has wonderful symbolism.

I like Viking variant wherein the departed is placed in his ship and set ablaze.

I have a sailboat in my driveway, blocking the garage. Life has been busy and the boat hasn't seen water in a number of years, but I have stubbornly refused to put it up for sale. My wife says that, when I die, she's going to set my body atop the boat, dowse us with gasoline, and toss in a match.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
Also, modern burial, unless of the plain wooden box or woodland style, is extremely bad stewardship of money -- when my grandmother died, the funeral home tried to sell us a 15,000 coffin with a 5,000 grave liner. My father asked if the coffin was wired for internet and phone service. She would never have wanted us to spend 20,000 on such a set-up. Dad said what was especially hilarious was the way they advertised the premium options -- he would say, "a titanium grave liner" and I'd say, "and the purpose of this is to prevent ....?" I mean, really. Are we trying to pretend they look good when they're six feet under?? Who the heck cares whether the coffin lining is ruched silk?
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scot:
quote:
Originally posted by chemincreux:
One method of cremation Christians haven't tried (so ar as I know) is the open fire, Hindu style. Pity. I think this rite has wonderful symbolism.

I like Viking variant wherein the departed is placed in his ship and set ablaze.

I have a sailboat in my driveway, blocking the garage. Life has been busy and the boat hasn't seen water in a number of years, but I have stubbornly refused to put it up for sale. My wife says that, when I die, she's going to set my body atop the boat, dowse us with gasoline, and toss in a match.

I like it!
 
Posted by the Pookah (# 9186) on :
 
Fr. Gregory forgets a lot of that 'tradition' had to do with Religious Authority..try bucking that & you'd get an early cremation..;-

The Romans actually had burial but then the Emperors turned to cremation as it reminded the plebs of Hercules' death by fire & apotheosis into Olympus. You know intimations of divinity. So it became de rigueur....The older Etruscans had beautiful sarcophogi. So this is just cobblers.
The Jews of Jesus's time & Orthodox Jews today prohibit cremation for just Fr. Gregory's views. I'm sure he is really Jewish.
Zoroastrians in India opted for vultures & in Iran they were buried in niches in caves. Tibetans have sky burials too (the vulture thing)
I shall have organ donation, cremation & the nice columbarium in the church with the funeral service & the 1928 prayerbook.
Can one really contemplate the Resurrection of the Dead in 'modern contemporary language?'
the Pookah
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
No, they are incomplete Christians.

I doesn't matter whether you look at classical Judaism, Christianity or Islam ... inhumation is the norm.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
No, they are incomplete Christians.

To what post is that a response?

__AR (puzzled)
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
I have never been to a funeral where they actually lowered the casket.

The casket, in my experience, is placed over the grave by the poll-bearers and left there until after everyone has left. It is then that the workers lower the casket and fill the grave.

Is this not other people's experience?

The coffin of one of my great-aunts was lowered in while the assembled watched, and a fair amount of dirt was shoveled in as well. Since this was in Charleston, SC, where the water level is high anyway, and it had been raining, it was a bit like a burial at sea. My great-uncle, sitting in the front row, got splashed with mud.

There is a great deal to be said for cremation.

Ross
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Melon:
I'm beginning to wonder if the real reason Fr Gregory is so in favour of burial is so that previous generations of Orthodox believers can continue to turn in their graves whenever anyone suggests an innovation.

[Overused]

Thanks to all who corrected me on the into-the-flames thing. I still find the idea of the coffin sliding out of sight unappealing. And I think Christian funerals are better held in churches than in facilities.

Ross
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
I had never heard of a service at a crematorium until shipmates at the UK told me of them. We really don't do that here.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
A partly tongue in cheek response to this ...

quote:
The Jews of Jesus's time & Orthodox Jews today prohibit cremation for just Fr. Gregory's views. I'm sure he is really Jewish.
... to which I replied that they (the Jews) are incomplete Christians.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
I had never heard of a service at a crematorium until shipmates at the UK told me of them. We really don't do that here.

Nor had I, and I am VERY grateful that we don't do that here!
 
Posted by Newman's Own (# 420) on :
 
I have certainly attended funeral Masses (C of E or Roman Catholic), after which the body was removed quietly to the crematorium, perhaps with only the immediate family proceeding. There certainly is no reason that a service would have to be at a crematorium that I know of - and I do not care for that idea.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Autenrieth Road:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
No, they are incomplete Christians.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To what post is that a response?

__AR (puzzled)

I wondered that. I thought maybe I'd missed one about canopic jars...

I have officiated at probably not far off 1000 funerals, and the majority will have been cremations, but I still can't really reconcile myself to the artificiality of it. But the issues are complex. There is cremation where the ashes are buried in a small casket in a grave, where the "burial" acquires an interesting significance of its own. Almost always there is an officiating clergyman. There are scatterings, usually done by the family on their own, though I have officiated at such, but very rarely. they seem connected with a theology of death as a return to a oneness with nature, which isn't mine, but there is an accommodation with the need for a sense of place. And there's the preponderant practice, round here, anyway, where the ashes are scattered in the crematorium grounds. That I can't get my head round - not least because this is the fate that's noted down as "scattering" in the chitty in the crematorium office that asks for "Method of Disposal" (sic.) And I don't think I'm the only one who has problems with that.

A few years ago, on a lovely summer's day, I went up to our local crematorium after an oddly funeral-free period, and the air was full of tinkling - it turned out, from wind-chimes, festooning the trees round about. the attendants told me that this had started about six weeks previously, and the practice had spred like wildfire among people whose relatives had in some cases died many years ago. They seemed to be people whose loved one's remains had been scattered at the crematorium so that they only had the vaguest sense of place, and this seemed to have been an attempt to put that right by in some sense hallowing all the crematorium grounds.

I was struck by that because I've often found myself thinking that the reasons people offer for cremation are just that - reasons. They don't seem to connect with feelings, and I think that a lot of people's feelings actually run in the opposite direction. People will say how clean cremation is, how land-efficient, how final - none of that irritating well-they-were-a-bit-quick-off-the-mark-burying-me subterranean resuscitation business - but I still seem to detect in lots of people a rationalization of something that they don't really believe in, but is probably going to happen to them.

Worse, I often seem to pick up that for others, the whole thing is tied in to a death-phobic culture that really doesn't want to acknowledge the reality of our mortality.

In my last charge but one, the manse was way down behind the churchyard which separated us from teh village. It took us two years to work out why we never got any Halloween guisers - the kids were too scared to come down past the graveyard at twilight! I found this out when two of them came down earlier, and had to be escorted back up, because it was "spooky". They were in my Sunday School and I told them for shame! All these people had died in the Christian faith, and they'd been buried in land which had been hallowed for fourteen hundred years! I used to walk through the churchyard at midnight and go into the church to play the organ. And I still remember the sense of faithful waiting that seemed to attend that place,a nd the dimension of the communion of saints.

You don't get that from a crematorium!
And by the way, what's all this death-phobic "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" crap, people? I want to be buried. Properly. By somebody who knows what they're doing, like I did... [Angel]
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
And I still remember the sense of faithful waiting that seemed to attend that place,a nd the dimension of the communion of saints.

You don't get that from a crematorium!

No reason why you couldn't get it from a columbarium. The one at my church is lovely, and there's a little garden. It's where I want them to put my ashes, and I feel good about the idea that I won't be taking up a 6'x3' plot of land in an urban area. After all, in life I have an apartment, not a huge house.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Thanks for that Psyduck ... very insightful.

My mother had my dad burnt. She stuck his ashes under a tree in her garden. My mother and I do not get on very well ... never have. Occasionally I should like to visit my dad's resting place. I can't. There's nothing to see even if I could just pop in to see him which I don't. Moreover when the house gets sold ... no one will ever know. I am not happy about this at all. She ignored my requests before he died and now there is nothing to be done. Out of sight, out of mind. I remember him at the Liturgy of course. The truth is that she has never really grieved properly. She talks to the tree. Dad only belongs to her. Truly we live in a death phobic / minimalist culture.
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
But if you're used to it, Rossweisse, it "feels" perfectly fine.

And have a look at
Kensal Green Crematorium, and you can see that the chapels look just like churches. There are more crematorium chapels than shown on that website - our RC neighbours had a service recently, and the chapel has rows of pews like an arena, surrounding and looking down on to the centre where the coffin sits during the service.

There are well serviced organs in each chapel. You can bring your own minister, or if you are not connected to any church, they will provide one for you.
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
And by the way, what's all this death-phobic "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" crap, people? I want to be buried. Properly. By somebody who knows what they're doing, like I did... [Angel]

How does not having a preference equate to being "death-phobic"?
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
RuthW:
quote:
No reason why you couldn't get it from a columbarium.
I suppose there may be one or two columbaria fourteen hundred years old - and in fairness, I know of some churchyards - St Michael's in Aberystwyth, to name and shame one - where the churchyard has been converted into car parking and the gravestones moved to the walls. But columbaria can't give you that sense of temporary (just a few million millennia!) union with the earth that a churchyard can and does symbolize. It's the dry-land equivalent of the anticipation of that dread day when the sea shall give up its dead.

My position on this is not in any way absolute, but I do wonder what will happen when our bodies are finally totally processed from conception to consumption! One definition of the postmodern is that it is the end of nature. We're probably already there in many respects. How will we be doing our theology after a few centuries of this, though? These are the sorts of things that change meaning irrevocably. And I think it's happening. Obvoiously, we'll have to learn to cope. But what will it do to us?
 
Posted by Viola (# 20) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
I had never heard of a service at a crematorium until shipmates at the UK told me of them. We really don't do that here.

Nor had I, and I am VERY grateful that we don't do that here!
Just in case you guys are having nasty imaginings about an unfamiliar set up, I'd like to assure you that a funeral in a crematorium chapel is just like a funeral in church (I've been to one burial and a fair few cremations. All of them happened at the cemetery / crem chapels, which look exactly like churches, because that's what they are. You get a Christian funeral service. If you're not a regular churchgoer but want the 'proper' send off, you'll get the on duty priest, otherwise your own priest / vicar / minister comes in. You're then on hand to either lower the coffin (why does it always rain at funerals?) or else the coffin stays on its platform thing and curtains are drawn around it. After everyone has gone off to the sandwiches and sympathy party at a relative's house, the coffin takes the rest of its journey. I promise you that there are no flames, you don't see smoke, you don't smell anything funny or see anything you wouldn't normally see in a church or chapel.


This is where I've been to most funerals. The thing that looks a bit like a four poster bed a the end is where the coffin has curtains drawn around it.

Hope that removes some of the ick factor from the pond difference!

K.

[Edited to note the serious cross posting that went on whilst I was slowly looking for a picture of a crem chapel!]

[ 21. August 2006, 23:32: Message edited by: Viola ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
And by the way, what's all this death-phobic "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" crap, people? I want to be buried. Properly. By somebody who knows what they're doing, like I did... [Angel]

Why do you call that death-phobic? The people I've heard it from, it's more extremely realistic: "I'll be dead, I won't be around to care, the body is a husk." (Realistic in at least one way -- in another way IMHO it's unrealistic about most people's need for funeral rites as survivors. But not death-phobic or -avoiding. I do agree with the "I don't want you wasting lots of money on unnecessary trappings" sentiment usually involved; I just disagree that actually being able to gather and mourn, and caring about the body even if the soul is gone, are unneccesary.)

~ ~ ~
I don't have a problem with cremation. I do find it interesting the rites around funerals and what's done with the body, etc. Cremations IMHO create a different set of places/ways to meet certain needs. For example a coffin present at a funeral (ah, celebration of the life of N [Roll Eyes] ) is a different thing than a casket of ashes stuck in a corner, or nothing present at all.

FWIW, the most moving to me is coffin in the church (carried in for real, not rolled in), and graveside including lowering of the coffin into the grave.

But there are all sorts of logistical variations, which haven't got a lot with burial vs. cremation, and more to do with what to do with what's at hand. So it's not like you can say "burial is necessary for the proper rites to happen."

For example in Maine when the ground is frozen burials are held until spring. So there might be one service when someone dies, and a commital come spring. That's a real different pattern than for people who die in spring, boom, service and burial. And then there are people for whom the big memorial service with lots of people is organized for well after they've died for no apparent reason (well, there must be some reason, maybe simply logistics of getting everyone together or the family being up for it, but I haven't been close enough to any of these to be able to tell).

My church has a memorial garden, so cremated ashes are buried directly after the church service: we all troop outside for it. So everyone becomes part of that. In that sense, cremation coincidentally makes more immediate connections possible at my church.

People being buried, it's not so immediate because it will be a drive to the cemetery, and there's some variance in Maine anyway about who (on the scale of immediate family / close friends / everyone) goes to the graveside for coffin burials. So who gets access to the effects of a graveside service varies for all sorts of random reasons.

~ ~ ~
I would want there to be some sort of something at the crematorium, if someone in my family were to be cremated. I would find it wierd to just arrange for them to be taken away and then several days later I get the ashes; somehow it makes more sense to be able to go and wait the couple of hours (or whatever it takes) and then get the ashes right away. Wierd I suppose as that might seem to others. I wouldn't expect that to be the main service, or lots of people to be there though. It might even just be me, if noone in my family wanted to come. I don't know if people arrange ministers for these in Maine; I suppose if the minister felt they couldn't (but wouldn't they say "yes" if I asked them to come?) I would refer to my Quaker sojourn and say prayers myself. Though I guess the purpose of the minister for something like that is in some ways more support than specific sacramental efficacy.
 
Posted by jlg (# 98) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
And as for two coffins in one cremator - NEVER.

The crmatorium worker calls each coffin a 'charge' and it is cared for with the highest care and dignity from the moment it leaves the service to the moment the funeral director or family collects the urn a few days later.

You may hope. Scroll down to FACTUAL BACKGROUND, para. 17 to find this little nugget:
quote:
It was at all times represented to Doris Mae Tierney and her family that she would be cremated in a respectful and ethical manner in accordance with state laws. In fact, her body was not cremated and, as recent news events have detailed, numerous unburied bodies have been found at the site of the Tri-State Crematory in Northwest Georgia. The Governor of Georgia has declared Walker County a disaster area and has accused the crematory operator of "depravity."
I quoted this because a legal document seems a pretty reliable source. Anyone wanting more complete gruesome details can google for news articles.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
[cross-posted with everybody since Psyduck posted the post that I quoted.]

[ETA: and this one was cross-posted with jlg.]

[ 21. August 2006, 23:39: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Manx Taffy (# 301) on :
 
I don't think the Catholic Church permitted cremation lightly, as it was changed at the Vatican II Council.

The arguments for change were not principly theological because the tradition of burial did not arise from primarily theoligical reasons. The main reason seems to have been that Roman authorities burnt Christian Martyrs in a direct attempt to show the impossibility of the bodily resurrection.

I believe that the official RC position is that;
The Church earnestly recommends that the pious custom of burying the dead is observed, it does not however forbid cremation unless it has been chosen for reasons which are contrary to Christian belief.

So burial is recommended but reasons for cremation may be local custom, economic or health reasons (including wishing to transport the remains over long distances), real fear of burial. It was recognised that cremation is not normally now an anti-Christian statement.

The choice of cremation for a Catholic should for a positive reason and preferably made prior to death by the person themselves. Whether or not there is cremation the main rites including cremation should be made with the corpse present, though I believe this has been relaxed in America.

Personally I might fit into the (irrational) fear of burial category but hopefully I've got a few years to consider it!
 
Posted by Presleyterian (# 1915) on :
 
quote:
Scot wrote: My wife says that, when I die, she's going to set my body atop the boat, dowse us with gasoline, and toss in a match.
What makes you so confident she intends to wait until then?
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Scot:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Psyduck:
And by the way, what's all this death-phobic "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" crap, people? I want to be buried. Properly. By somebody who knows what they're doing, like I did...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

How does not having a preference equate to being "death-phobic"?

Well, when you don't have a preference because you're death-phobic, obviously. In other words, "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" is not the same as "I have no preference as to whether I'm buried or cremated."

In fact, "I won't be there" in relation to one's own death, is a fascinatingly evasive statement. If you don't believe that life is anything but a physical process, then you will indeed be there - but you'll be dead. So "I won't be there" is denial in a literal, not just a psychological, sense. If you do believe that life is a phenomenon that transcends corporeal existence, then it's likely that you hold that belief in a religious framework. And as Father G points out, religious framworks have always, until very recently, prescribed precisely what should happen to a dead body. To hold a religious framework is to want what that framework demands to happen to your body after death.

On the other hand, if you adhere to a religious framework which allows you a choice, as has become possible with modernity, then abdication of choice is also an abdication of the responsibility of using the freedom that that tradition entrusts you with regarding the treatment of your body after death. And that implies, surely, that it's something you don't want to look at or think about. Which to my mind pretty much fits the bill for "death-phobic".

Of course you might hold a non-religious belief in a trans-corporeal existence after death. I can't think of a purely scientific position that would allow you to hold such a viewpoint. therefore it would have to be a philosophical viewpoint (like, say, Tennant's, who believed if I remember correctly, that the mind, after death, with no more sensory inputs from the body, sort of closes in on itself in a solipsistic dream state.) But if you were a philosopher with no view as to what should happen to your body after death, you'd be a bit short on the usual philosopher's quota of opinions! Think of Jeremy Bentham. I suppose if you were a philosopher, you might possibly want to argue why one shouldn't be concerned about what happens to your body after you die. Anyone else - at least a measure of death-phobia. Which is understandable.
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Presleyterian:
What makes you so confident she intends to wait until then?

Only the fact that I'm a light sleeper.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
RuthW:
quote:
No reason why you couldn't get it from a columbarium.
I suppose there may be one or two columbaria fourteen hundred years old -
Where I live, nothing is 1400 years old. So this isn't exactly a consideration for me.

quote:
But columbaria can't give you that sense of temporary (just a few million millennia!) union with the earth that a churchyard can and does symbolize. It's the dry-land equivalent of the anticipation of that dread day when the sea shall give up its dead.
I guess not. Why this is important I don't see. Do you reject mausoleums for the same reason?
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
Psyduck, you seem to be awfully sure of other people's unstated motivations. You seem to think that preference, or lack of preference, that doesn't fit your expectations must somehow point to a fear.

At lunch today I had choice between the sandwich shop and the taco joint. I really didn't care what I had for lunch, so I let my co-worker choose. Am I lunch-phobic?
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
...And by the way, what's all this death-phobic "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" crap, people? I want to be buried. Properly. By somebody who knows what they're doing, like I did...

I'm not "death-phobic" -- I'm not eager to march off just yet, but I have a strong faith in God's grace and mercy. I just meant that once I leave this clay behind, whether it's allowed to burn or rot won't matter much to me.

Personally, I'd rather my family not waste a lot of money on a plot and a fancy box. I'd like them to spend some of it on good music and a good party afterward, instead, and treat themselves to something nice with whatever's left over.

Ross
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scot:
quote:
Originally posted by chemincreux:
One method of cremation Christians haven't tried (so ar as I know) is the open fire, Hindu style. Pity. I think this rite has wonderful symbolism.

I like Viking variant wherein the departed is placed in his ship and set ablaze.

I have a sailboat in my driveway, blocking the garage. Life has been busy and the boat hasn't seen water in a number of years, but I have stubbornly refused to put it up for sale. My wife says that, when I die, she's going to set my body atop the boat, dowse us with gasoline, and toss in a match.

Yeah, well, the Vikings generally put the boat to sea. I think it will be a mite unimpressive in the driveway. Or do you think she'll relent and tow your dead butt out to Lake Perris? [Snigger]
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
No crematorium for me. I want to go the way of the Plains People, so that the Great Spirit may take me away on the wings of an eagle.
 
Posted by KenWritez (# 3238) on :
 
Are you sure you wouldn't rather die on a Greyhound bus and just travel eternally?
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
I experienced something close to that once. I was lost in the NYC subway system and it took me nearly 5 hours to find my way out. So, no... my spirit yearns for the open skies.
 
Posted by PeteCanada (# 10422) on :
 
I'm not going to be there to see what happens to the remains of me, but I am certainly not death-phobic. Been close too many times to count. My funeral's prepaid and I'm going to burn, baby, burn. I have also left suggestions about what to do with my ashes, and I hope they'll be followed, but, again, I'm not likely to care am I?
 
Posted by the Pookah (# 9186) on :
 
Hey Father Gregory, I know you were joking - of course you are really almost a Muslim a revert!
The insistance on the burial of the body for the Resurrection as you pointed out - Christianity & Islam stems from Judaism.
In fact under Orthodox Jewish Law if you have any body bits removed (as in amputations -ugh) They must be buried with you. Don't ask I had a relative....
Anyway, let me point out that in China where cremation came to be the norm, there are family cemetaries, the ashes are buried in the family plot with marker & you visit. Funerals are big business in China & Japan.
I actually adore cemetaries in a whole Momento Mori sort of way. Death , Decay, Ruins.
the Pookah
 
Posted by Nicolemrw (# 28) on :
 
Why are people talking as if having a cremation somehow precludes having a funeral? My father was cremated, he certainly had a funeral and open coffin viewing beforehand. My uncle was cremated, he had a funeral and wake beforehand... the only difference was that after the funeral, instead of going to the cemetary, the body went to the crematorium. The funerals weren't held in the crematorium, they were held in the funeral home (in the case of my father) or the church (in the case of my uncle).
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Nicolemrw, are you meaning funeral specifically to mean a service with a coffin (and body inside) present? But not necessarily the graveside service?

I don't have a good grasp on which technical term should be used with which type of service.

And where are you seeing people talking as if cremation precludes funeral? (I confess, my post may be a case in point! I'm confused over the words at the moment.)
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
You might want to look at the outside of the cremtorium here in the city of Newcastle:

web page

Some crematoria I have conducted services in have been nicer than some churches!

They are usually consecrated by the clergy when they are opened as well - and the presence of daily prayer and worship must also go a long way in sanctifying these buildings.

Better these than those awful funeral homes you have in the US. (Six Feet Under).
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Scot:
quote:
Psyduck, you seem to be awfully sure of other people's unstated motivations. You seem to think that preference, or lack of preference, that doesn't fit your expectations must somehow point to a fear.

Hmmm. Two almost throwaway words, hyphenated, at the very end of a longish post... I'm not disavowing them, and I think this is an interesting question. I'm fascinated by your reaction - that's to say, the posts that this interaction have generated as texts.

Just for clarification, what I'm saying is that when professing atheists, professing theists, professing new-age persons and others with maybe less definite views say "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" it seems to me that there is an aspect of dying that they find it difficult to look at. What fascinates me is that it's the social aspect of dying - precisely the point at which our lives, at their ends, intersect with the lives of the people who knew us, and who will be marking what we meant to them. It's more than just a statement that we know that there are lots of irreconcilable beliefs about in our society on this matter. And it's precisely an abdication of the right to say what I want to happen to my body after I die. (It's illuminating that a decision to offer your body for medical research is, to my mind, a clear exception to this phenomenon - and one very rarely taken.) It seems to me to be to do with a social inability to cope with death, and an individual lack of confidence in socially generated meanings. In just the same way that people repress their dislike for the anonymity of crematoria, and tell the undertaker to just tick the "scatter" box re. disposal of ashes - but when one person puts up a wind-chime at the crematorium garden, tens of others, from years back, immediately follow suit, as though someone has given them the chance of saying "Actually, I don't buy into this crap that the basic issue is one of waste-disposal".

But in a sense - and I don't mean this at all personally - your very strong response to two words, and (I thought) a quite reasonable follow-up post, makes an important point in itself, eh no?

quote:
At lunch today I had choice between the sandwich shop and the taco joint. I really didn't care what I had for lunch, so I let my co-worker choose. Am I lunch-phobic?
I don't know. Did you tell your worker that it wouldn't matter what he chose because you wouldn't be there?
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jlg:
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
And as for two coffins in one cremator - NEVER.

The crmatorium worker calls each coffin a 'charge' and it is cared for with the highest care and dignity from the moment it leaves the service to the moment the funeral director or family collects the urn a few days later.

You may hope. Scroll down to FACTUAL BACKGROUND, para. 17 to find this little nugget:
quote:
It was at all times represented to Doris Mae Tierney and her family that she would be cremated in a respectful and ethical manner in accordance with state laws. In fact, her body was not cremated and, as recent news events have detailed, numerous unburied bodies have been found at the site of the Tri-State Crematory in Northwest Georgia. The Governor of Georgia has declared Walker County a disaster area and has accused the crematory operator of "depravity."
I quoted this because a legal document seems a pretty reliable source. Anyone wanting more complete gruesome details can google for news articles.

But that is an example of malpractice, not policy!
I am sure that there are those who could tell some equally hair-raising stories about interments too! That doesn't render burial a dreadful thing.
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
You might want to look at the outside of the cremtorium here in the city of Newcastle:

web page

Some crematoria I have conducted services in have been nicer than some churches!

They are usually consecrated by the clergy when they are opened as well - and the presence of daily prayer and worship must also go a long way in sanctifying these buildings.

Better these than those awful funeral homes you have in the US. (Six Feet Under).

Hmmm, try this:

Newcastle Crematorium
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicolemrw:
Why are people talking as if having a cremation somehow precludes having a funeral? My father was cremated, he certainly had a funeral and open coffin viewing beforehand.

For me, there is a difference between the visible finality of lowering the coffin into a tomb, and what you see in a cremation (in the case of our local crematorium, a 'now-you-see-it-now-you-dont' arrangement whereby curtains close, you hear various mechanical clanking sounds, the curtains open, and bingo! the coffin has disappeared.

I realise the entombment is not really permanent, but at least you see the coffin all the way to what looks like a resting place. I've yet to have a family member cremated, but I can see a niggle in my mind as to what actually happened to the coffin in the cremation I've described, which just 'disappeared'. Psychological rather than theological concerns.

Also, with a burial, once you're done, you're done, and people can relax. With a cremation, there's an awkward hanging around for a couple of hours to get the ashes, when people don't feel they have finished the process and find it difficult to unwind. Again, maybe a question of habit, and I'm sure this sort of thing will change over time, but that's my take.
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicolemrw:
Why are people talking as if having a cremation somehow precludes having a funeral? My father was cremated, he certainly had a funeral and open coffin viewing beforehand.

For me, there is a difference between the visible finality of lowering the coffin into a tomb, and what you see in a cremation (in the case of our local crematorium, a 'now-you-see-it-now-you-dont' arrangement whereby curtains close, you hear various mechanical clanking sounds, the curtains open, and bingo! the coffin has disappeared.

I realise the entombment is not really permanent, but at least you see the coffin all the way to what looks like a resting place. I've yet to have a family member cremated, but I can see a niggle in my mind as to what actually happened to the coffin in the cremation I've described, which just 'disappeared'. Psychological rather than theological concerns.

Also, with a burial, once you're done, you're done, and people can relax. With a cremation, there's an awkward hanging around for a couple of hours to get the ashes, when people don't feel they have finished the process and find it difficult to unwind. Again, maybe a question of habit, and I'm sure this sort of thing will change over time, but that's my take.

Eutychus, if I may, I would like to reassure you.

You say you have never had a family member cremated, but have you actually been to a cremation?

For a start, after the curtains close, that's it. The coffin stays where it is, out of sight, until the service is over and the mourners have left the chapel. It never gets winched down or slid through a door until then. And the curtains never open again to reveal an empty bier.

And as for waiting around for a couple of hours. Never happens. Sometimes the body isn't put into the cremator immediately, then it certainly takes a while. It is usual for a couple of days to pass before the processes are complete.

It's not, thankfully, as you suggest.
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
Ashes usually get delivered/collected sometime later here, perhaps that day, perhaps a few days later.

As a Vicarage child, we frequently had someone in my Dad's study overnight. And sometimes, joy of joys, the box was still warm on delivery...
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ferijen:
Ashes usually get delivered/collected sometime later here, perhaps that day, perhaps a few days later.

As a Vicarage child, we frequently had someone in my Dad's study overnight. And sometimes, joy of joys, the box was still warm on delivery...

*Shudder*
[Eek!]
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
quote:
Originally posted by Ferijen:
Ashes usually get delivered/collected sometime later here, perhaps that day, perhaps a few days later.

As a Vicarage child, we frequently had someone in my Dad's study overnight. And sometimes, joy of joys, the box was still warm on delivery...

*Shudder*
[Eek!]

Hey, there was a reason I chose cremation for my undergraduate dissertation topic [Biased]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
It's not, thankfully, as you suggest.

I may not have had any family members cremated, but I have lost count of how many cremations I have *taken* and I can assure you that here, they take place exactly as I have described.

Even if things don't happen quite that way where you are, your post does not address the issues I raise of the incompleteness of the funeral process or the lack of visual continuity in what happens to the body.
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
When my father died, about 8 years ago, we had a funeral in the village church (with the coffin) and then a short service in the crematorium (this is how most crematorium services that I have been to have worked, although some just have the service in the crematorium chapel).

The ashes were interred at the crem - mum went to see them once, because she felt she ought to. But I never bothered, I don't think my brothers have and mum's never gone back because after all, it's not dad there. Dad is in memories.

Not everyone needs a place to mourn.

M.
 
Posted by Zealot en vacance (# 9795) on :
 
Regarding the necessity of burying the complete body, is this not a tradition acquired by Mosaicism from ancient Egypt? From there come the most succesfully preserved corpses, extant long after the bodies of most who died since, (whatever means of bodily disposal was employed) have completely disintegrated, and been lost to all human recollection. Either God can resurrect, or he cannot. Since He brought us into being from nothing once, there is no reason that He cannot do so again: whether or no there is any physical evidence of our bodily existence recognisably remaining.

Or were the ancient rulers of Egypt correct, and their elaborate process the 'golden ticket'?
 
Posted by m.t-tomb (# 3012) on :
 
Posted by Ferijen:
quote:
Hey, there was a reason I chose cremation for my undergraduate dissertation topic.
That's interesting. So did I.
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
Something I've just remembered, about UK cremations (there certainly seems to be a difference of practice in different countries) is that anyone with a pace-maker etc has to have it removed so that there is no explosion. [Eek!]

Before the service which culminates in the cremation, we always have the body, in an open cofin, in our house so that people can come and say good-bye. It also feels like respect and love and care for the person who has just died.

And when Mr d's body arrived at our house, the two people who welcomed him were myself and my loving Muslim woman neighbour - she wasn't allowed to come to the funeral as apparently in her tradition, women have to stay away and the men go, like it was when I grew up in Scotland.

Viola and mudfrog, the three of us have advertised beautiful, appropriate, crematoriums!

Anyone got any pics of USA ones?
 
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on :
 
The norm for Christians round here (C of E, not too far from FG, little burial space) is public funeral in church (with coffin), private ceremony at crematorium, ashes often scattered or buried in large (and full) church graveyard, small memorial stone.

I quite like it - it seems to combine most of the good points from both sides. Personally, I'd probably prefer ultrasonic decomposition to cremation - it's tidier and more environnmentally friendly.
 
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on :
 
The rules about pacemakers are actually for a very very good reason. Pacemakers tend to have internal very long lasting power supplies, which are usually provided by having some radioactive material inside. They make sure it's properly shielded, and a lot safer than not having the pacemaker in, etc.

If the body is cremated with pacemaker, the radioactive stuff is then released into the atmosphere or the soil or wherever, which is a Bad Thing. It needs to be properly disposed of at a site that can cope with such things.
 
Posted by sharkshooter (# 1589) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
-- when my grandmother died, the funeral home tried to sell us a 15,000 coffin with a 5,000 grave liner. My father asked if the coffin was wired for internet and phone service. She would never have wanted us to spend 20,000 on such a set-up. ...

Perhaps you could have just rented it for a couple days.

I think it is abusive to sell such expensive coffins. Do you know if Costco still sells coffins?

Costco begins test marketing caskets from $800
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
Just for clarification, what I'm saying is that when professing atheists, professing theists, professing new-age persons and others with maybe less definite views say "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me" it seems to me that there is an aspect of dying that they find it difficult to look at. What fascinates me is that it's the social aspect of dying - precisely the point at which our lives, at their ends, intersect with the lives of the people who knew us, and who will be marking what we meant to them. It's more than just a statement that we know that there are lots of irreconcilable beliefs about in our society on this matter. And it's precisely an abdication of the right to say what I want to happen to my body after I die. (It's illuminating that a decision to offer your body for medical research is, to my mind, a clear exception to this phenomenon - and one very rarely taken.) It seems to me to be to do with a social inability to cope with death, and an individual lack of confidence in socially generated meanings.

Person: I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with my body.

Psyduck hears: "I abdicate of the right to say what I want to happen to my body after I die because I have an inability to cope with death, and an individual lack of confidence in socially generated meanings.

What if the person really means this?: I won't personally experience whatever happens to my body, so I'm not really concerned by it. It may, however, matter deeply to my loved ones, so they may do whatever they wish."

That's just one alternative interpretation. There may be many others. I don't see any reason to insist on the rather condescending interpretation that you have proposed, even if we are only talking about "professing atheists, professing theists, professing new-age persons and others with maybe less definite views."

I've known a number of people who, while indifferent about what is done with their body, have expressed specific and sometimes elaborate opinions about what sort of memorial service they'd like. It doesn't seem to me that they are at all unable to cope with the social aspects of death.
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
According to Orthodoxy, a person is a unity of body and soul. When a person dies, this unity is interrupted but not permanently effaced. Burial, preceded where possible by lying in the open casket, shows respect for the body and for the person. Cremation, on the other hand, seems to treat the body as if it were merely an appendage of the soul, to be destroyed as worthless (assuming you believe in the soul, of course). This body/soul dualism which lies at the heart of cremation may not be the chief objection from the Orthodox POV™, but it does strike me as important.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
We've already established that burial is merely a symbolic respect for the concept of the resurrection. Theologically everyone admits that cremation of even vaporization is no impediment to bodily resurrection.

Tradition merely for the sake of tradition is a fine thing, and that is why I want to be buried. But a symbol has power only as long as it has meaning for people. A cross is only two crossed sticks without people to associate with Jesus Christ or crucifixion or what have you. Likewise with burials, many atheists have the bodies of their loved ones buried without the least expectation that their loved ones will rise from those graves on the last day to greet the Savior. Many Christians have their loved ones cremated and have faith that they will indeed greet them again on the Last Day.

In the early days of the Church cremation was the norm among most people. The Church allowed only burials because new Christians needed to understand the nature of the resurrection. But, here we are 2000 years later and in 2000 years the needs of the people have changed. Christians today have grown up in the Church and have 2000 years of Christian history to give them faith in the bodily resurrection. Christians simply don't need an earth burial to believe in the resurrection. What's more, the needs of the people have changed and those needs often necessitate cremation.

Therefore cremation is morally permissible in the Church, does not impinge on our faith in the resurrection, and should be viewed as a perfectly respectful manner in which to give the body rest until the Last Day.

Zach
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scot:
Person: I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with my body.


What that sounds like to me is somebody who has really looked at and internalized what death does to your ability to make choices about the matter.

[ 22. August 2006, 14:57: Message edited by: Kelly Alves ]
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Isaac David:
According to Orthodoxy, a person is a unity of body and soul. When a person dies, this unity is interrupted but not permanently effaced.

I accept all of that.

quote:
Burial, preceded where possible by lying in the open casket, shows respect for the body and for the person. Cremation, on the other hand, seems to treat the body as if it were merely an appendage of the soul, to be destroyed as worthless (assuming you believe in the soul, of course).
The destruction happens anyway, whichever method is used. Cremation is just a lot quicker than decomposing, being consumed by worms, and/or having what little is left bashed to bits 1000 years later by the plough of some farmer who doesn't even know there are graves under his field.

From that I conclude that it's not our current bodies that we are resurrected in. Or if it is, God can put them back together no matter what state they're in by then (so cremation is no greater a bar to bodily resurrection than burial anyway). If not it's going to be one ugly afterlife [Ultra confused] .

I accept that some may feel cremation is symbolically ressurrection-denying, but it can logically never be more than that, and as I said before the purely symbolic should be a matter of conscience and not required of everyone.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
I really do want to be cremated. It creeps me out to imagine being left in one place, immovable, in a little box, forever.

I want the winds to scatter me, or else I want to become part of the earth itself, and to be part of the lifecycle. The world is forever changing - seasons, weather, tides - and I want to become an ordinary part of it.

BTW, people are often cremated before the funeral service, and then the ashes are interred at the Committal right afterwards. This is the way it's been at the last two funerals I've gone to, and the family does take part in casting earth and the "committal of his/her body to the ground." I can't really see why this is any different than doing the same thing with a casket; if anything, it makes you think more about death, since the loved one's body is not at all what you're familiar with anymore. Ashes to ashes.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scot:
Person: I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with my body.

Psyduck hears: "I abdicate of the right to say what I want to happen to my body after I die because I have an inability to cope with death, and an individual lack of confidence in socially generated meanings."

Actually, I have quite a strong preference for cremation. I don't like the idea of being left around rotting. I don't like the idea of people seeing a graveside and thinking "That's where he is" - because I won't be.

I wonder what that says about me? A self-destructive urge to do violence to myself after death? Sublimated inability to cope with my own corpse? A denial of the resurrection?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
Actually, I have quite a strong preference for cremation. I don't like the idea of being left around rotting. I don't like the idea of people seeing a graveside and thinking "That's where he is" - because I won't be.

I wonder what that says about me? A self-destructive urge to do violence to myself after death? Sublimated inability to cope with my own corpse? A denial of the resurrection?

I'm sure it means you're a repressed bisexual.

[Biased]
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Scot:
quote:
Person: I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with my body.
Interesting and significant rewording. What I actually said was:
quote:
"I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me"
I was being quite specific; that's the way I've heard it said.

quote:
Psyduck hears:
I quite understand why you put it like that. If you'd said "Psyduck interprets..." you would have had to deal with my interpretation.
quote:
"I abdicate of the right to say what I want to happen to my body after I die because I have an inability to cope with death, and an individual lack of confidence in socially generated meanings.
quote:
What if the person really means this?: I won't personally experience whatever happens to my body,
We've already established that you can only get this meaning if you change the wording.
quote:
so I'm not really concerned by it. It may, however, matter deeply to my loved ones, so they may do whatever they wish."
quote:
That's just one alternative interpretation. There may be many others. I don't see any reason to insist on the rather condescending interpretation that you have proposed, even if we are only talking about "professing atheists, professing theists, professing new-age persons and others with maybe less definite views."
Who's being "condescending?" Where's this "only" from? I'm a professing theist myself.

quote:
I've known a number of people who, while indifferent about what is done with their body, have expressed specific and sometimes elaborate opinions about what sort of memorial service they'd like. It doesn't seem to me that they are at all unable to cope with the social aspects of death.
Again, this only makes sense with that weasly litte interpolation of the word "body" into what I actually said.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
I'm sure it means you're a repressed bisexual.

[Biased]

My place or yours?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Kelly Alves:
quote:
Originally posted by Scot:
Person: I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with my body.


What that sounds like to me is somebody who has really looked at and internalized what death does to your ability to make choices about the matter.
I really couldn't give two hoots about what happens to my body, but I would like those dealing with it to have something happen that won't add to their distress unnecessarily. It's not just the deceased's personal comfort that's at issue here, it's what it's like for the mourners - the ceremony is primarily for their benefit.

[ 22. August 2006, 17:31: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
I'm sure it means you're a repressed bisexual.

[Biased]

My place or yours?
Sure. [Razz]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Eutychus

Just for the record ... I am "happy" to relate that I am not in agreement with one word of your last post. It's entire intent and underlying assumption constitutes I fear a completely different Christianity from mine. My Christianity:-

(1) Cares deeply about the body and the physical - whether I do or not.
(2) Accepts that death is both distressing and necessary to contemplate. Funerals are indeed a time for grief, quite overt grief actually.
(3) The funeral isn't of course about the deceased's "comfort." He / she is dead. But neither is it simply and only therapy for the mourners.

For the first read "Incarnation."
For the second read "The Passion."
For the third read "Resurrection."

[ 22. August 2006, 18:03: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
I'm always amazed how comforting it is to the families I prepare funerals with if there's something - anything - that they know is what the deceased wanted. Even just a hymn. And how at a loss they feel if they have no clue as to what the deceased wanted - in other words, if they have to guess, and "might have got it wrong." I think this probably goes for secular funerals as well. I think that a large part of the consolation that people have from the funeral of a loved one is the knowledge that "it's what s/he would have wanted..."
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
Not caring what happens to one's corpse=not caring about the physical? That seems a fairly large leap.

And I don't see where Eutychus says anything to minimise the grief or need for contemplation.

And as for saying his Christianity is quite different on the basis of his attitude to funeral rites ... breathtaking.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
I think that a large part of the consolation that people have from the funeral of a loved one is the knowledge that "it's what s/he would have wanted..."

I've often seen this being a large part of the consolation in allowing the relative a dignified death in hospital... another discussion, I know, but distinct parrallels.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Isaac David:
...Burial, preceded where possible by lying in the open casket, shows respect for the body and for the person....

Why the open coffin? I'm really curious, because I don't get this one At All.

I know it's important to a lot of people to have a "viewing." (One friend of mine got very upset when I said I had forbidden my family to put out my body for Show and Tell; she said, "But then we won't be able to say goodbye to you!") But all that pancake makeup and rose-colored light business, trying to make a dead person look merely asleep, with their hair unnaturally neat, really bothers me. I prefer my memories of the living person to remain intact, and not colored by the memory of the mannequin in the box.

Before we were married, I told my husband the same thing my mother told my father: "If you put my body on display, I'll haunt you for the rest of your life." I meant it, too. It's not a fear-of-death thing; I just don't like it. I especially don't like it when children are dragged along and subsequently suffer nightmares.

Ross
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:

(1) Cares deeply about the body and the physical - whether I do or not.

I resent your implication that I care about neither. I do. But I think my responsiblity for my body stops when I die (which does not exclude me making provisions for my funeral, but I'll be in no position to see they are carried out).

quote:

(2) Accepts that death is both distressing and necessary to contemplate. Funerals are indeed a time for grief, quite overt grief actually.

As above. I don't see how what I said contradicts this. If I were to dictate I'm to be buried surrounded by a troupé of topless chanting pom-pom girls to an accompaniment of fireworks and some unsuitably ribald soundtrack, I think any would-be mourners might find that distressing. There is plenty to be distressed about at a funeral apart from the death itself, and I would prefer all distress in that category to be minimised.

quote:

(3) The funeral isn't of course about the deceased's "comfort." He / she is dead. But neither is it simply and only therapy for the mourners.



You are misrepresenting me. I was careful in what I said (emphasis mine)

quote:
It's not just the deceased's personal comfort that's at issue here, it's what it's like for the mourners - the ceremony is primarily for their benefit.
In the mean time, since you're back on this thread, perhaps you'd like to respond to my earlier question about whether, on the basis of Scripture and, at a guess, the Fathers, and some 4000 years of tradition, you are in favour of slavery...

My christianity doesn't reject tradition, but it remembers that some have nullified the word of God for its sake.

[ 22. August 2006, 18:26: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
Psyduck, I think you are creating a meaning that doesn't really exist by drawing a significant distinction between "I don't care what they do with my body" versus "I don't care what they do with me." Yes, a philosphical difference can be read into the wording, but I doubt that there is any difference in the generally intended meaning.

Certainly there is no such difference when I have used those phrases. As an English-speaking embodied consciousness, when I say "me" I may be speaking of my body, my personality, my spirit, or the entire package. Without asking me, you must rely on context to know which is correct. In the context of a debate of what to do with dead bodies, I am most likely speaking of my physical body. Of course, everyone's intended meaning might not be the same as mine, so I would hesitate to make broad assumptions on the basis of such an ambiguous phrase.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
mdijon:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Psyduck:
I think that a large part of the consolation that people have from the funeral of a loved one is the knowledge that "it's what s/he would have wanted..."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I've often seen this being a large part of the consolation in allowing the relative a dignified death in hospital... another discussion, I know, but distinct parrallels.

I quite agree.

Maybe that's why this whole area affects me rather. From the perspective of a grief-stricken family and friends, who are desperate to do something to give meaning to the trauma of their specific loss of this person, and to do it in ways which have a continuity of meaning with what this person was, and meant to them, it is often crucial that they have a sense that what they are going to do has continuity with what that person really wanted.

From their point of view, a jolly "Oh, just flush me down the toilet like the goldfish!" may bring a wan chuckle at uncle Fred's pawky sense of humour - but it's not much help.

In fact - and this is related to my earlier point - it boils down to uncle Fred refusing to deal with what his family and friends are having to deal with. And I still think that there's a strong prima facie case that uncle Fred is basically refusing to look at one (at least!) of the implications of his own mortality.

It also means that he's cheating his family and friends of a way of coping with his death that only he could have given them. "I want this to happen. Because this is my death. It's your feelings - but it's your feelings because it's my death..."

Some of my family and friends are agnostics. What if every one of them were? I'm not. I've lived out my life in an understanding which frames it in the great Christian drama of redemption. They might very well want, when I'm gone, to "celebrate my life". Fair enough. But they won't be taking me seriously as the person they knew if that's how they decide my passing is to be marked. It's not for them. It's for me. And d'you know what? They know that. And in the end, that's what will help them in their grief. It's only if I were to be bloody stupid enough to tell them that I don't care what they do that they will be left without their own - not mine, but their own framework of grieving. Otherwise, when they "celebrate my life" in the pub, or the Indian, after the funeral, they will know that they didn't just wallow in their own sadness, but they took me seriously as who I was. That's what'll console them.

And it would be mutatis mutandiswith me for any one of them. I'll celebrate their life, and listen to their music, in the funeral they wanted. And I'll go home afterwards and pray for them on my own, knowing I respected them for what they were by doing what they wanted.
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
quote:
Originally posted by Isaac David:
...Burial, preceded where possible by lying in the open casket, shows respect for the body and for the person....

Why the open coffin? I'm really curious, because I don't get this one At All.

I know it's important to a lot of people to have a "viewing." (One friend of mine got very upset when I said I had forbidden my family to put out my body for Show and Tell; she said, "But then we won't be able to say goodbye to you!") But all that pancake makeup and rose-colored light business, trying to make a dead person look merely asleep, with their hair unnaturally neat, really bothers me. I prefer my memories of the living person to remain intact, and not colored by the memory of the mannequin in the box.

Before we were married, I told my husband the same thing my mother told my father: "If you put my body on display, I'll haunt you for the rest of your life." I meant it, too. It's not a fear-of-death thing; I just don't like it. I especially don't like it when children are dragged along and subsequently suffer nightmares.

Ross

I might be completely misinterpreting things... does mean that the majority of the funerals in the States open casket funerals then? But funerals where cremation is involved tends to be about burying the ashes, rather than disposing of a 'full' casket?
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
The destruction happens anyway, whichever method is used.

But human agency makes a difference. I assume you don't wish to be dispatched when you get old and begin to lose your marbles because you're going to die anyway.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ferijen:
I might be completely misinterpreting things... does mean that the majority of the funerals in the States open casket funerals then? But funerals where cremation is involved tends to be about burying the ashes, rather than disposing of a 'full' casket?

It's a regional thing, and it's a depends on your denomination thing. Orthodox funerals are often open casket. Southern funerals, at least in the tradition prevailing in the region my Dad's from, are often open casket, though it's not obligatory by any means. I didn't mind seeing several of those relatives posthumously, but I don't want it for myself. If you're used to it, it doesn't really upset older children (at least not in my experience).

[ 22. August 2006, 19:04: Message edited by: Laura ]
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Isaac David:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
The destruction happens anyway, whichever method is used.

But human agency makes a difference. I assume you don't wish to be dispatched when you get old and begin to lose your marbles because you're going to die anyway.
Hard to think that murder vs natural death are appropriate parrallels for cremation vs burial.
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
quote:
Originally posted by Isaac David:
...Burial, preceded where possible by lying in the open casket, shows respect for the body and for the person....

Why the open coffin? I'm really curious, because I don't get this one At All.

I know it's important to a lot of people to have a "viewing." (One friend of mine got very upset when I said I had forbidden my family to put out my body for Show and Tell; she said, "But then we won't be able to say goodbye to you!") But all that pancake makeup and rose-colored light business, trying to make a dead person look merely asleep, with their hair unnaturally neat, really bothers me. I prefer my memories of the living person to remain intact, and not colored by the memory of the mannequin in the box.

Before we were married, I told my husband the same thing my mother told my father: "If you put my body on display, I'll haunt you for the rest of your life." I meant it, too. It's not a fear-of-death thing; I just don't like it. I especially don't like it when children are dragged along and subsequently suffer nightmares.

Ross

I haven't seen any make-up on our family bodies, in open coffins either at home or in church, or even in the crem; the funeral director closes them at the appropriate time.

It's really a good part of grieving to be able to go up to the open coffin in church and say goodbye, give a final kiss to the person's body...

More and more, I am reading different ways of "treating" the body in different sides of the Atlantic. What about in Australasia?

And here in the UK, when we've been to West Indian type christian funerals, the coffin is always open in church, and the men go off to the cemetry and everyone joins in lowering the coffin and digging up the earth put there by the workers at the cemetry, and there is constant christian singing until it's all filled in. Does that happen in the USA?
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
"I want this to happen. Because this is my death. It's your feelings - but it's your feelings because it's my death..."

Although for me, that involves a fairly strong preference for cremation. If it just wasn't possible, or it would cause distress to relatives, I guess I could live the alternative... (wait for it)... but my own personal view is that I quite like the idea of being cremated and scattered. Somewhere open and without a clear landmark.

I don't think that is a nihilistic interpretation... or a denial of the resurrection... in fact for me, it symbolises my view of the life to come and my hope in it.

[ 22. August 2006, 19:13: Message edited by: mdijon ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Ferijen, I haven't seen an open-casket funeral (from my limited experience, in the northeast USA). What is common is open-casket visiting hours at a funeral home (parlor, institution). (Hmmm, except if the funeral is then conducted in the funeral home, oops, I can't remember if they normally close the casket first or not.)

quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
I'm always amazed how comforting it is to the families I prepare funerals with if there's something - anything - that they know is what the deceased wanted. Even just a hymn. And how at a loss they feel if they have no clue as to what the deceased wanted - in other words, if they have to guess, and "might have got it wrong." I think this probably goes for secular funerals as well. I think that a large part of the consolation that people have from the funeral of a loved one is the knowledge that "it's what s/he would have wanted..."

Yes, I think this is a very large aspect.

I think over-specification of funeral rites can be a denial of death as much as a refusal to specify. And either one (over- or under-specification) can be reflective of many other things instead.

Thinking more precisely about people I know in the "I don't care" set, they actually do care, and actually say something slightly different. What the people I know say is: don't put on a big show with the body and spend a lot of money on gussying it up with makeup and a fancy coffin. A positive assertion of where resources should be put.

Some people who say this also don't see the social value of funeral rites to the grieving survivors, or don't believe that they really will have anyone close who will be grieving. I wouldn't call that fear or lack of acknowledgement of their own death per se. Blindness about how other people handle emotions (in the first case), and blindness or disappointment about their connection to other people (in the second case), but not death-phobia or -avoidance.
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
as for saying his Christianity is quite different on the basis of his attitude to funeral rites ... breathtaking.

But not surprising. Debates between Orthodox and non-Orthodox sometimes put me in mind of the saying, that the UK and the USA are two nations divided by a common language. Similarities in the surface structures of different traditions can often mask deeper theological differences; superficial differences can also hide deeper commonalities. That is both the joy and the risk of ecumenical encounter.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
You are right, unsurprising, if breathtaking.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Thinking of the suggestion that burial gives more concrete representation the the survivors of the finality of death: not if the coffin is not lowered into the grave after the commital ceremony until after everyone has left. I'm not sure if this is a cemetery-insurance deal, a prettying-up of the "let's not distress the family with showing that it really is final and their loved one is gone" sort, simple local custom, or what.

But in my extensive graveside experience (two, irony meter on), I haven't seen a coffin lowered.

Also coffins are frequently rolled into the church on a wheeled stretcher, so there's no reality to what the pallbearers are doing.

So although certain kinds of symbolism might be available with a coffin, it's not always actually used.

It comes down for me simply to logistics, more than one way or the other is the better way to do it, and arranging what is needed within that to best support and represent our religious and cultural framework.

I don't find cremation to be innately disrespectful of the body, though. Pulling one's innards out through their nostrils for embalming, is where I'd start, if I were going to find anything about funeral rites problematic.

(Unfortunately, culturally for me the open casket visiting hours seem important, even if simply to acknowledge "this pancaked mannequin is no longer Beloved N, but merely their body which they have left" so innards-through-my-nostrils is probably going to be on order. Although, Father Gregory, is part of the incarnation supposed to be that the body still is Beloved N, even though their soul is elsewhere? I find the mystery of seeing a body without the soul present to be an enigma to me, but a common reaction does seem to be, "this is not N any more."

Ruminating...
Do you (general you) think it's possible to shop funeral homes for one that applies makeup tastefully and minimally? or even not at all? I wouldn't mind people seeing what a real dead body looked like, but I don't want them smitten with a decaying body. I think. Unless a real unmadeup dead body really does look too unnerving.)

I don't think one can make a blanket statement one way or the other about open caskets and viewings. Some people, including some adults, will find it unnerving; others, including some children, will find it helpful. Count me in the latter group -- although in a recent case, even having seen the body, while it wasn't unnerving, I still can't really believe he's dead.

[ 22. August 2006, 19:38: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
Hard to think that murder vs natural death are appropriate parallels for cremation vs burial.

Marvin the Martian has created the parallel by advancing an argument which can be applied equally to both cases; i.e. if something happens anyway, it is legitimate to quicken the process by intervening. The fact of human intervention can make a crucial, moral difference.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
It's a regional thing, and it's a depends on your denomination thing. Orthodox funerals are often open casket. Southern funerals, at least in the tradition prevailing in the region my Dad's from, are often open casket, though it's not obligatory by any means. I didn't mind seeing several of those relatives posthumously, but I don't want it for myself. If you're used to it, it doesn't really upset older children (at least not in my experience).

Most funerals I've attended have not had open coffins (except a couple I had to sing at, which took place at an undertaker's establishment), but the "wake" or "visitation" usually features the corpse lying in its box.

I think a lot of it's what you're used to. My family just doesn't do open coffins, period. Once going to a funeral when I was in my early 20s, I found myself clutching and being clutched by a Jewish colleague -- who was having a similar reaction of shocked surprise -- when we walked into the narthex of a Lutheran church and saw our dead colleague lying there with the lid up.

My husband's (East Coast RC) family does do open coffins at the visitation. We took some heat for declining to take our Senior Child, then aged 5, to her grandfather's funeral, since we knew of their custom. My sister-in-law and her husband took their son, then 7 1/2, and he had nightmares afterward.

I mostly stayed out of the room where the visitation was taking place and played with our two-year-old niece, thus freeing my sister-in-law to receive all the old friends. (The two-year-old kept talking about "that doll," by which she meant the body of her grandfather.) I WAS disturbed, on the morning of the funeral, when they called us by name to walk up next to the body and "pay our last respects" before they sealed it up. I was left wishing that the undertakers had put a better-quality rosary in the old man's hands. (And my sister-in-law and husband very kindly told the puzzled undertakers to let people go up on their own steam for my mother-in-law's funeral the next year.)

Ross
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by me:
It comes down for me simply to logistics, more than one way or the other is the better way to do it, and arranging what is needed within that to best support and represent our religious and cultural framework.

I was unclear a bit -- I meant I don't think non-cremation or cremation is ipso facto better.

If a coffin is present, I absolutely have very strong opinions about the logistics: at the funeral it ought to really be carried by the pallbearers, and at the committal it ought really to be lowered into the earth and have dirt put on it. But even there I recognize that logistics may intervene e.g. in terms of having people able to really carry the coffin up the aisle etc.

And since I haven't picked out a preferred final resting place for me (in particular, my church's memorial garden or not? and do my siblings have a preference?), at the moment I don't care whether I'm buried or cremated, nor, if I were cremated, what is done with my ashes. I think really the best thing to do is give my body to medical research, but so far that is the one thought I find unnerving. Even though I won't be there while I'm being dissected, having morgue-humor jokes made necessary to the survival of doctors-in-training, etc.

( [Big Grin] deconstruct that last sentence, Psyduck. Actually seriously, I'd be curious what your view is on that set of uses of "I", even if I'm not always convinced.)

OK, I'll shut up for a bit about funerals.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
Oh, sorry. I've never seen an open-casket funeral. The casket was open for the visitations, and closed for the service.

What was weird was all the people sliding up to give condolences and saying how great she looked. I kept wanting to say, "apart from the whole being dead thing". [Help]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Although (really, my last on funerals. For at least 15 minutes) I do have preferences about other funeral things besides my body, which I would express, not with a "you must do this" but a "this is what I like" precisely to help my family in the "what would AR have liked." And also because knowing my family, the less they have to argy-bargy about making decisions and just follow a preset plan, probably the better; although I know I can't alas guarantee there won't be any argy-bargy-ing either. [Frown] . I can only try to make them whatever gift I can.

And (to try to be analytical for the sake of the OP) is any of this denying the Christian hope of resurrection, acknowledgement of the incarnation, agony of the passion? I don't think so. (Sorry, that's as analytical as I get. But if someone thinks it is denying those aspects, I'd be curious to hear the reasoning. Seriously.)
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
...Do you (general you) think it's possible to shop funeral homes for one that applies makeup tastefully and minimally? or even not at all? I wouldn't mind people seeing what a real dead body looked like, but I don't want them smitten with a decaying body. I think. Unless a real unmadeup dead body really does look too unnerving.) ...

I think the amount of makeup required depends on the body and its condition. My in-laws had retired to Florida, but wanted to be buried in their native Baltimore, from a specific undertaker that always "did" that family. My husband took along a color photograph of his father, and he says that the undertaker almost melted with relief and gratitude when he pulled it out of his briefcase. AJ had been in cold storage for several days at that point, and that makes a difference. (See here for more details -- not for the weak of stomach, but mercifully unillustrated.)

You CAN shop ahead of time for an undertaking establishment that doesn't try to guilt survivors into spending a lot of money on the proceedings. You can also make "pre-need" arrangements with a cremation society.

(Apologies for the double post.)

Ross
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Laura:
Oh, sorry. I've never seen an open-casket funeral. The casket was open for the visitations, and closed for the service.

What was weird was all the people sliding up to give condolences and saying how great she looked. I kept wanting to say, "apart from the whole being dead thing". [Help]

That's standard.

Visitor: "I'm so sorry."
Bereaved: "Thank you for coming."
V: "She looks very good."
B: "Yes, doesn't she. Well, she's at peace now."
V: "Yes, she's at peace. She was a great woman."
B: "Yes, a great woman. She was suffering so, it's a comfort for her to be at peace."
V: "Yes, that's a comfort. She looks just like she's sleeping now."

Repeat ad infinitum times # of visitors times # of family.

[no need to apologize for double-posting Ross, as you can see a vast array of cross-posters have saved me from committing, oh, I don't know, a deca-post at least. hopefully this will distract from anyone noticing that I only held out for 6 minutes.]

[ 22. August 2006, 20:02: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
Thank you, AR, both for providing the standard script and for the absolution!

Ross
 
Posted by fabula rasa (# 11436) on :
 
Ross, I was interested to read your posts because I've had very different experience with children and corpses. I trained in a very "viewing-positive" (!) environment, where there was an open coffin in church (not the funeral home) generally the evening before the funeral, with a short, informal service of prayers. Children were encouraged to come, and say goodbye however they wanted--most chose to touch the corpse. (A lot liked to play with the hair!)

It was a very un-scary experience for them--in fact, most found it very reassuring, since it becomes so obvious that the corpse no longer, as it were, holds the person they knew. But I imagine that a child's reaction will depend very much on the general tenor of the event--in the cases I've cited, the adults all felt very comfortable, and allowed the children to find their own comfort level. It was also very much a communal experience--we were all there at the same time, which I imagine is different from being alone in a Viewing Room (or whatever they call them). In general, the children would then come to the funeral and the burial, and help throw dirt on the coffin. I only ever heard positive feedback from parents about this.

OTOH, I recently had a colleague who pretty much forced some teenagers to go in and look at their grandmother who had just died in her bed, which they found very traumatic. Apparently he implied that it was their "duty" to do it, and then aid some very formal prayers, all directed at keeping her hout of Hell. There was no one there to support the kids, and no prayers for the bereaved. I thought this sounded totally inappropriate was very angry indeed. (But said colleague comes from a very different background, so I suppose just needs to learn a bit more pastoral sensitivity!)
 
Posted by Rowen (# 1194) on :
 
As a clergy person in Australia, I would have done over 1500 funerals. My figures are well-educated guesses... applying to Protestant deaths.

About 85% were cremation. (Most common in Oz)
40% have a service in the church. Perhaps half of these may also have a short service at the grave-side or crem chapel to follow this, as the body finally goes away. (Neither of my parents wanted the second service).
60% would have a service in the crematorium chapel/funeral parlour chapel/cemetary chapel/graveside.
1% would have an open-casket during the service, at or public viewing before the service, although I know occasionaly family members may view the body at some stage.
At cremations, 0% would ever see any ovens... in other words, the coffin slides off on to a trolley, and all one would see is the coffin going backwards and be covered off by a curtain. Most ovens are at the back of the building anyway.
Only 1 body is burnt at a time.
Ashes are scrattered at a place determined by the family, or stored somewhere- maybe at a home or in a garden plot, or at a church, or in a cemetary wall. (We are intending to scatter my father's ashes from a light plane over the mountains near here. The plane will be piloted by my brother. All these things are symbolic of my Dad.)
I know some folk go and grieve at a plot, following burial, but I know lots of folk haven't.

Most Australians, in our population, have encountered the death of someone they care about.
Most have attended a cremation.
Most obviously have had a chance to work through their grief, despite the possible absence of a certain patch of earth in whichg a coffin is buried. Very few of us are overcome by grief forever because of this.
Most Australians would be disgusted by you, if you chose to tell us we treated our dead disrespectfully because of the way we chose to deal with the body after death.
Australian Funeral Homes are owned by individuals or companies based in the country. Owners talk disparagingly of the few USA companies who tried to muscle in in the 90s, with their "different ideas" of doing things, whatever they were. They are gone now.


I think it is a cultural thing- how death is "done". Several years ago, my Australian sister and her Hungarian/Canadian husband, who have lived in the USA for just over 30 years, were vacationing here in Oz. Back at home their only son died. They took the next flight back to the States.

Once there, they arranged the funeral according to what my sister said was the "Australian way" and not the USA Way. They got their minister to phone me, so I could explain about the non-viewing thing, the closed casket, the desire for simple services etc.

The Presbyterian minister seemed flummoxed. Finally I remembered how he had done missionary work in Africa earlier in his life. I reminded this man (whom I had never met in person) how tribal funerals were done differently, even if Christian- as they would reflect a certain culture. He agreed this was so. I asked him to imagine that my sister and b-in-law belonged to a different, and weird tribe - and he should act accordingly.
Apparently he did a good job, although he took it upon himself to welcome people to the service- and explain that he was doing things weirdly, because the family came from some strange cultural group....

I spent 8 years in the central part of my state, as a hospital chaplain. I did so many funerals, the locals called me the "Funeral Queen".

Earlier this month, I spent my birthday at a funeral home on our annual field trip with chaplaincy ministry students. We had a birthday cake and all.
Such is life!
 
Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
...Also coffins are frequently rolled into the church on a wheeled stretcher, so there's no reality to what the pallbearers are doing....

Based on my one experience as a pallbearer, we did do some significant lifting of the box. (500 lb of box, 90 lb of body, about!) IIRC, we lifted my friend's casket off the wheeled "carriage" at the funeral home, and into the hearse. At the church, the reverse, and back into the hearse. At the gravesite, we carried her about 30 metres from the hearse to the grave itself, and put the casket down on the lifting frame.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
mdijon:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Psyduck:
"I want this to happen. Because this is my death. It's your feelings - but it's your feelings because it's my death..."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Although for me, that involves a fairly strong preference for cremation. If it just wasn't possible, or it would cause distress to relatives, I guess I could live the alternative... (wait for it)... but my own personal view is that I quite like the idea of being cremated and scattered. Somewhere open and without a clear landmark.

I don't think that is a nihilistic interpretation... or a denial of the resurrection... in fact for me, it symbolises my view of the life to come and my hope in it.

I fear you may be conflating two things I said - or maybe three - and if you are, it's my fault. I do think that (1) certain ways of saying that one doesn't care what happens to one after one dies are perhaps expressive of a death-phobia, which is widely disseminated in our culture. (2) I also think that our death-phobic culture emphasizes the fate of the body after death as a waste-disposal problem, and basically just asks what the most efficient means of getting rid of the body is. (3) I also think that in many cases people are pressured into internalizing this demand of what Weber calls "instrumental" (i.e. means, rather than ends) rationality and reproducing it as a rather unconvincing acceptance of that rationality. "After all, it's only a body..." In other words, people are socially pressured into not resisting the ideology that funerals are elaborate bin-days. (I also need to make it clear that I don't think that many individuals personally embrace that view - but I do think that it is a widely-experienced circulating ideology in Western society that people feel they must conform to, rather like a form of political correctness.

I certainly do accept that for someone to say that they want their ashes scattered, and to articulate a deeply held meaning underlying this desire, is something to be respected.

I suspect that if you were to probe deeper, you would find that your understanding of the Resurrection is probably very closely related to your wish. It doesn't sound to me as though you can't think of any counter-arguments to offset the undeniable efficiency of the council's new crematorium, or that you see the fate of your body as a question on the same level as recycling or garden waste collection. You clearly have a thought-out preference grounded in an emotional logic and framed by an articulated belief.

But my broader point is that your loved ones would also surely find it a great comfort to know that these were your wishes. And that if, for example, Fr. G were one of your close friends, you wouldn't be thinking of making his obsequies conform to your wishes.
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
Cremation: If it was good enough for Caesar, it's good enough for me.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
Cremation: If it was good enough for Caesar, it's good enough for me.

It was good enough for Brunnhilde....

Ross
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Rowen:
quote:
Once there, they arranged the funeral according to what my sister said was the "Australian way" and not the USA Way. They got their minister to phone me, so I could explain about the non-viewing thing, the closed casket, the desire for simple services etc...

The Presbyterian minister seemed flummoxed...( [Roll Eyes] )

Well, apparently my American, Piskie family does things in the (mostly) Australian way. Non-viewing, closed casket, simple service- check, check, check- for my mom's service. The only major difference was that my mom was buried.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
I know that the buriers here are an endangered minority and that itself is significant for it reflects the lack of confidence in our own Christian tradition when, historically it confronted the cremation movement in the 19th century. Many are incredulous here that I see the differences as touching on major differences in Christian doctrine ... but I stand by that. I will try to explain again but this time using one key issue to which Psyduck has alluded .... Death as Waste Disposal, (all done in the best possible taste of course).

Have you heard these comments before?

(1) The body is only a temporary house for the soul. The body is only the envelope, the shell, the packaging.
(2) When I'm dead I won't care so toss me out with the garbage.
(3) I don't want to be cooped up ... I want to be free, spread on the wind.

(2) and (3) are mutually exclusive of course and (2) is strictly a non sequitur ... not caring / not knowing / not existing has no information content so the choice made cannot be construed from the starting point, (any choice).

What all three share though is a dismissal of the enduring quality of the physical which accords well of course with the utilitarian concept of efficiency and timely despatch. By "enduring quality of the physical" I do NOT mean the flesh of the deceased which is corruptible and earthbound whatever the mode of committal. No, the enduring quality of the physical concerns the living AND the resurrected. Human life is quintessentially physical. We are not ghosts in the machine or temporary housings for the more enduring soul. That is why cremation is more usual in Hinduism. Theologically the body is indeed of no account and so Hindus and over-spiritualised Christians cremate. Jews and Christians, however, at least until the modern age insist on the holiness of matter ... the physical realm is sacramental for it is the divinely imprinted stuff of the Creator's hand. No brain, no mind, no soul. The soul is not the spiritual bit crowning the physical ... it is the whole person. And the whole person was and will be in its renewal what you see in that open coffin and what is then reseeded symbolically to the earth.

Little of this doctrinal infrastructure (if any at all) operates at the conscious level for most. It is indicated by the ritual ... the physical disposition of the body, the kiss of farewell, the tears, the soil, the wind and rain by the grave. You have to atend to that, feel it, act under its weight but also strain toward the brightness of the glory of that very physical restatement of the person on the last day, the resurrection of the holy body with the soul shadow awakened from sleep in the heart of God. Burning trivilaises, sanitises all of this. It is a great sadness to me. Abortion is the holocaust of the living. Cremation is the holocaust of the dead.
 
Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
... Cremation is the holocaust of the dead.

So what's your take on the violence of modern embalming?

Rendering the body toxic seems as bad as burning it, to me.

[ 22. August 2006, 22:55: Message edited by: Henry Troup ]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
We discourage embalming as well. We reverently wash the body and bury it promptly.

There has been a lot of talk here about toxicity here but the boot is on the other foot, really. Remember when you see the smoke rise from that cleverly disguised chimney all the dioxins that are dispersed into the environment. Radioactivity in pacemakers is not the only issue. Anyway, this is a digression. My point was the physical.
 
Posted by KenWritez (# 3238) on :
 
When I die and am cremated, I want someone to fling a handful of my ashes onto Fr. Gregory. I'll put aside some money in my will to pay for this.

[ 22. August 2006, 23:29: Message edited by: KenWritez ]
 
Posted by Banner Lady (# 10505) on :
 
Interesting thread for me. My Catholic husband, a keen gardener, wants to be buried. In a cardboard box in his garden where he will return naturally to the earth. Unfortunately, the law prohibits this, and he will not get his wishes. He is appalled at the thought of having bits taken from his body even for good purposes, and equally appalled at the thought of un-natural preserving. I would like to be cremated - it is just neater after the organ donations. My sense of connection with the universe is not threatened in any way by this. "Ashes to ashes" seems just as appropriate as "dust to dust" and I recall reading about a cemetary on the coast somewhere that suffered erosion and bodies tumbled into the sea before the graves were hastily bulldozed into a retaining wall. Distressing for many.

I don't expect to be remembered much after a generation or too - but I will live on (leave a legacy) in the gene pool of my family. And I certainly pray for a faith that will last a thousand generations. It seems to me that this is where the body connects with spirit and soul. This is what is important for me - not how my temporal remains are disposed, although I would prefer whatever is done is done respectfully. If I pre-decease my husband, he will have great difficulty agreeing to a cremation, or allowing any part of my body to be donated. So be it. He will do what comforts him, and I will not be there to protest. But I fully expect God to know me whatever happens to the earthly remains, just as I expect to recognize in the cloud of witnesses those burned for their faith, or immolated or dismembered accidentally or deliberately, etc, etc. Fr Gregory, I find it difficult to assent to the idea that burial is within the will and purpose of God for us and cremation cannot be.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
Cremation: If it was good enough for Caesar, it's good enough for me.

It was good enough for Brunnhilde....

Ross

I knew there was another good reason I was forgetting to mention....

[Biased]
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Banner Lady:
"Ashes to ashes" seems just as appropriate as "dust to dust"

Exactly. Fr Gregory's post is poetic, but I think what he's talking about is symbolism that has been attached after the fact to certain cultural practices, not symbolism that is naturally and necessarily tied to Christian doctrine.
 
Posted by jlg (# 98) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
I wouldn't mind people seeing what a real dead body looked like, but I don't want them smitten with a decaying body. I think. Unless a real unmadeup dead body really does look too unnerving.)

When my mother died, she was in New Mexico at my younger sister's house. Since we knew she wanted to be buried next to our Dad in Michigan, her body was embalmed (required for a body flying across state lines). On the day of the burial (no funeral) we kids trooped to the funeral home in the morning to wrap her in a shroud and put her in the coffin. So we all handled her naked body and spent some of time looking at her face and talking a bit about how it was her and yet it was sort of bland and so relaxed that it didn't have any personality anymore.

As far as I'm concerned, the whole make-up thing is totally unnecessary. Dead people look dead. It's not the coloring, it's the muscle slackness and well, obviously, the lack of "life".

Younger sister also took some photos of Mom immediately after she died. (Yeah, yeah, my family's weird.) They're a bit macabre, but nothing horrifying.

My Dad died in a commercial plane crash. The undertaker talked my brother out of letting us actually see the body (I'm still annoyed about that), but he did have us come in, helped us all feel the facial bones through the body bag and gave us time alone with the body-bag-in-a-casket. My mother wasn't up to it at the time, but at the gravesite (family only), just before the coffin was to be lowered into the grave, she suddenly wanted to. So the casket was opened there and then, the undertaker helped her feel the face and allowed her what time she wanted to say goodbye.

In my family, at least, dead bodies aren't unnerving. But then, we were the ones getting glared at in the airport "morgue" for laughing, and we are all pretty much "throw my body on the compost-heap"-saying people. And not Christians, either, so what would we know about death.
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
I think I've found the problem - a tradition of premodern science.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Jews and Christians, however, at least until the modern age insist on the holiness of matter

This is going to come as a shock to some, but matter is not destroyed by combustion. Sure, some small amount of matter is lost as various forms of energy, but a similar conversion process happens during organic decay. Most of that precious matter is still around post-cremation in the form of carbon dioxide, ash, bone fragments, or water vapor.
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
Quite. I have always found it fairly silly that some people think God wouldn't be able to resurrect them if they were cremated.

I can understand why people think burial is more respectful than creamation, but at the end of the day whether my body rots away or is burned away makes not one jot of difference to anything.

Sorry, Father Gregory, but I am firmly with No. 2. I don't care either way. It's not at all important.
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Cremation is the holocaust of the dead.

With the greatest possible respect, don't be absurd, Father.
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
In fact, "I won't be there" in relation to one's own death, is a fascinatingly evasive statement. If you don't believe that life is anything but a physical process, then you will indeed be there - but you'll be dead. So "I won't be there" is denial in a literal, not just a psychological, sense. If you do believe that life is a phenomenon that transcends corporeal existence, then it's likely that you hold that belief in a religious framework. And as Father G points out, religious framworks have always, until very recently, prescribed precisely what should happen to a dead body. To hold a religious framework is to want what that framework demands to happen to your body after death.

On the other hand, if you adhere to a religious framework which allows you a choice, as has become possible with modernity, then abdication of choice is also an abdication of the responsibility of using the freedom that that tradition entrusts you with regarding the treatment of your body after death. And that implies, surely, that it's something you don't want to look at or think about. Which to my mind pretty much fits the bill for "death-phobic".

I believe that when we die, we are dead and that is the end of the matter. Our last line has been written. There is no afterlife. No Heaven. No Hell. No purgatory. No reincarnation. Nothing.

However, I also believe that death is part of the natural cycle. From dust we are raised and to dust we return. We are here for a season and then we are no more. Death is natural. Death-phobia, it seems to me, is more to do with the rather unfortunate influence of Hellenistic philosophy upon Christianity than much else. The old pagans did not fear death.

However, I do wish to quibble with you when you say it is inconsistant to hold that there is no God and no afterlife and to say "I won't be there so I don't care". You seem to think that "I" could only refer to either A) one's body or B) one's alleged immortal soul.

But why can't there a C? C - mind, human consciousness that does not survive physical death. "Papio" is clearly not just a hunk of meat, although he is that too. But it is quite a leap in the dark to assume that therefore "Papio" must be an immortal soul. I see no strong evidence that "Papio" is an immortal soul but only supposition and guesswork.

I am quite happy to think at, and look at, my own death. In fact, I consider it impossible to lead a fully human, dignified life without fully and frankly facing the fact that one day I will be dead. So will you. So will everyone. That said, although I have a slight preference for burial, I really don't think it makes a heck of a lot of difference and I certainly can't see why it has such a deep spiritual dimension for some of you.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
...Have you heard these comments before?

(1) The body is only a temporary house for the soul. The body is only the envelope, the shell, the packaging.
(2) When I'm dead I won't care so toss me out with the garbage.
(3) I don't want to be cooped up ... I want to be free, spread on the wind. ...

This strikes me as a net full of red herrings, and an attempt to force the discussion to stay on your chosen track.

quote:
...Abortion is the holocaust of the living. Cremation is the holocaust of the dead.
And this strikes me as trivializing abortion. We all return to dust, whether quickly or slowly, in flames or through putrefaction. Deal with it. God does.

quote:
Originally posted by jlg:
... My Dad died in a commercial plane crash. The undertaker talked my brother out of letting us actually see the body (I'm still annoyed about that)...

Ummm....my suggestion on that would be "Don't be annoyed." My brother's nephew recently died in Iraq, when the Humvee in which he was riding (having volunteered to take another man's place) went over a bomb set under the pavement, and was, essentially, vaporized.

The Army sent a sealed coffin back to Alaska for the funeral. Shane's father, however, wanted to put a Bible into the coffin. The sergeant who accompanied the body tried to talk him out of it, but the father insisted. Accompanied by his brother and father, he opened the coffin -- and they were all utterly sickened. (I should mention that the father is a professional guide, accustomed to field-dressing large mammals, and the brother and father both served in combat.) Sometimes we really ARE better off remembering people as they were in life.

Ross
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scot:
I think I've found the problem - a tradition of premodern science.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Jews and Christians, however, at least until the modern age insist on the holiness of matter

This is going to come as a shock to some, but matter is not destroyed by combustion. Sure, some small amount of matter is lost as various forms of energy, but a similar conversion process happens during organic decay. Most of that precious matter is still around post-cremation in the form of carbon dioxide, ash, bone fragments, or water vapor.
Just wanted to point out that that's what I was inelegantly trying to get at with my assertion that "matter is neither created nor destroyed". That no matter what you do to it, it's still there until God does whatever He plans to do with it on the last day.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
This is absolutely fascinating. F

r.G (taking him as representative of the Orthodoxen) is - I hope I don't misrepresent him - categorically opposed to the practice of cremation on the grounds that it is fundamentally in conflict with the understanding of the meaning of human embodied existecne his tradition of Christianity represents.

I - and I don't misrepresent me - have no overwhelming objection to cremation but a clear personal preference for burial; I belong to a Christian tradition that has no problems with cremation and is neutral on the matter. My significant personal reservations about cremation are more psychological and sociological - but yes, if I had a say in the matter, they would feed into a marginal theoogical preference in my church for burial over cremation. I think that there are significant social pressures to conform to an urban norm, and to utilitarian attitudes to the disposal of bodies, which aren't, at the deepest level, what a lot of people really feel.

The pressures to cremate are, it seems to me, very much the pressures towayrds finding some way of continuing a fundamentally unsustainable Western lifestile, and ecological issues be buggered. Before some smartass deliberately misconstrues me, I'm not saying that cremation is another possible cause of global ecological catastrophe: I'm not even arguing that cremation is more ecologically damaging than burial. In fact, my argument is stronger if it's not - though it's not actually an argument about ecology. What I'm saying is that arguments that we're running out of land, that cremation is more efficient, cleaner, etc. etc. are a place where "quasi-ecological" arguments are allowed to register in ways they don't elsewhere. Cremation is representable as a modern, industrialized form of dealing with an aspect of human life - viz. death - which is actually better than the old, traditional ways and therefore should be used instead of them. Society isn't neutral as between cremation and burial. And as Scot points out – with the mysterious confidence of one who thinks that it’s enough to brand something as non-scientific in some quarters for it to be dismissed - it is often presented as a matter of scientific vs. pre-scientific views of matter. But it's really to do with scientific vs. other-than-purely-scientific views of human existence.


This is the point at which I have to state - yet again - that I have absolutely no problems with people who have a principled, or even a genuinely emotional, preference for cremation. My point is that the enormous social pressures in favour of the normalization of cremation are deeply linked to social pressures for the sanitization of the whole business of dying, and in favour of conforming our whole human existence to the demands of consumer capitalism. Even people whose deep personal preference is for burial find themselves carried along by the instrumental-rational logic of this. Because our society and culture isn’t about a tiny degree of extravagance in our expression of grief; it’s about colossal extravagance in conspicuous consumption and built-in obsolescence (now there’s a concept you could apply to modern views of death!) and the play of desire through advertising. Everything is commodified, including death. You get your twenty prettified minutes, and that’s it. After death comes closure.

The problem on this thread is that so many people are arguing “But I personally want cremation, and it’s not for any of these reasons.” Sure. I accept that. I respect it. What I’m saying is – it isn’t about any one of us. It’s about our culture.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
quote:
Originally posted by Banner Lady:
"Ashes to ashes" seems just as appropriate as "dust to dust"

Exactly. Fr Gregory's post is poetic, but I think what he's talking about is symbolism that has been attached after the fact to certain cultural practices, not symbolism that is naturally and necessarily tied to Christian doctrine.
I agree - and Fr G, your comments on "the holocaust of the dead" just show how ludicrous you are becoming. In your respect for the dead you are in danger of losing all respect for the living.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Cremation is the holocaust of the dead.

One can imagine rows of solemn Orthodoxen carrying placards, encamped outside crematoria.

Perhaps a website with a counter dial on it, clicking up the numbers of dead subjected to the holocaust as we speak.

There is, perhaps, yet time to galvanize the world against the holocaust that is in our midst.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
As for Christ's own example... well, I'm sure you can guess the obvious objections to that argument.

Well, the phoenix--which rises from its own ashes--is used as a symbol of Christ... [Smile]


I personally want to be cremated (ideally, in an outdoor funeral pyre) and have my ashes scattered at sea. The decay factor of death freaks me out. Cremation gets around that. If I'm going to have symbolism, I'd rather have myself set free in the ocean than be left to molder in a box in the ground.

And I think God can cope with cremation just fine. She has to deal with people who die in fires, after all.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Autenrieth Road:
quote:
And since I haven't picked out a preferred final resting place for me (in particular, my church's memorial garden or not? and do my siblings have a preference?), at the moment I don't care whether I'm buried or cremated, nor, if I were cremated, what is done with my ashes. I think really the best thing to do is give my body to medical research, but so far that is the one thought I find unnerving. Even though I won't be there while I'm being dissected, having morgue-humor jokes made necessary to the survival of doctors-in-training, etc.

( deconstruct that last sentence, Psyduck. Actually seriously, I'd be curious what your view is on that set of uses of "I", even if I'm not always convinced.)

Sorry - missed that one. OK - well, for starters, it's clearly not saying "I won't be there, so I don't care what they do with me". As to the pronoun - well, where am "I"? As of yesterday, I'm on a list to do a course in Perth in September. I'm also a telepresence (in the way Kenneth Gergen seems to use the word) in front of you as you read this - and when we converse about it we do so in "cyberspace", so I'm there too. Wherever that is. Who am I? Well - there you go! Who am I to whom? In a sense, the "skin-bound" self that is one referent of "I" is really just a part of something vastly more complex. And as Lacan points out, if I point into a mirror and say "There I am!", I'm actually indexing an illusory "self" that's been foisted on me since the day my mother held me up to another mirror and said "That's you, baby!" And that mirror image is what "I" think people think of "me". Small wonder that we lose our purchase on embodied selfhood! The body itself becomes a surface, then a text, as we write our identity messages on it in tattoos and piercings and changing fashions. And then we scrunch it up and throw it on the fire...


Psyduck; producing poetry from postmodern crap since 1999...
 
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on :
 
Isn't it amazing how much our own experience colours our view? For example, I don't think of cremations as impersonal or ugly at all, because the two crems I know best are beautiful buildings, full of light. One has a lovely stained glass window which you walk past on your way in, and when the light hits it, you are walking through pools of colour. Inside there are pews and a small chapel organ. The vicar usually robes. The services have been conducted with a mixture of simplicity, dignity and warmth. And in one of the crems, the (closed) coffin is not removed until afterwards, so you can walk past and 'say your goodbyes'. Far from the cold, impersonal, production-line experience which some have described.

My grandparents' ashes are buried together in the churchyard, and my mum puts fresh flowers on them every few weeks. Most visits to that church are concluded with a short look at the grave. I don't feel that cremation has altered the way I can do that.

Incidentally, at my grandad's service at the crem, the organist played 'To Be A Pilgrim'. No-one had requested this, and the organist didn't know him: but it was the perfect hymn to sum up my grandad's life of quiet, deep faith and untiring service to others. Of all the funerals I've attended (and I've played the organ for many), that is one of the most beautiful I remember.
 
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on :
 
What harm does it do those who are dead in the flesh but alive in Christ to have their flesh burnt?

I see there are psychological arguments in favour of burial, but FG seems to be saying there is more than that.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
(Need to master ETA)

If I were to give my body to medical science (Like they'd accept! [Killing me] - ooh, that was spooky, the smilie is called "killingme"!) I don't think I'd have or create problems in saying in one context that I was in heaven, or with God, or at least hoped so, and in another context that I was being dissected on a table. Any more than that people create problems for themselves or others say, virtually simultaneously, that grandpa is in heaven, "with me always", or "buried in Prestatyn".
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Ruth

I used poetic language but my reasons were theological. So, when I (deliberately) provoked with "holocaust of the dead" I wanted the crematers here to appreciate just a little perhaps the depth of visceral disgust I feel on account of the disrespect for the body and the desacralisation of the same that is involved for me as an Orthodox Christian when contemplating cremation. The theological issues of body - soul dualism are pertinent here and not later "add-ons" to a preconceived practice or cultural aspect. No one (yet) has addressed the theological issues I have raised. If you rule them inadmissible because (allegedly) committal is only about disposal then you have already proved my point about utilitarianism.

To all those who keep on repeating:- "God can resurrect the cremated" .... of course he can! That has never been part of my argument here. God can do anything he pleases. The issue is what WE should or should not do and the basis for that decision. The "more" to which Custard has alluded concerns our actual attitudes to the body and the nature of our Christian hope as expressed in those actions.

Neanderthal man buried his dead with flowers .. we know because archaeology has revealed the pollen residues. This goes back a long way!

[ 23. August 2006, 08:02: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
Quick question here: what should we do about burial at sea, when we know (assume) that the body may be eaten.

(Sorry if anyone has relatives buried this way).
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Burial at sea is as far as I can see entirely biblical (Revelation 20: 13)

There's the story that when Bishop Wand came to the west door of St Paul's to be enthroned as Bishop of London, he rapped on the door with his crozier and it swung open to reveal the clergy of the diocese assembled in the gloom. Some of them were exceedingly venerable, and Wand is supposed to have turned to his chaplain and said "Lo, the see gives up its dead..."
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Neanderthal man buried his dead with flowers .. we know because archaeology has revealed the pollen residues. This goes back a long way!

Just how Neanderthal man makes a christian theological point rather escapes me.

Your line of reasoning is beginning to sound like that of people who eschew modern medicine or psychiatric help on the basis that "supernatural" healing is "better".

I don't see why former generations working out cultural expressions of belief in one way is automatically superior to anything we might formulate today. (Hmm. Somebody said they thought Fr G was really into Judaism. They might be right).
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
No one (yet) has addressed the theological issues I have raised.

As far as I can make out the theological arguments are all in terms of symbolism.

I don't think it is possible to have a universal understanding of what an act means symbolically.

A white dress is considered the symbol of a bride in some cultures - but not in India. If someone was to arrive at an Indian wedding, and try to persuade everyone that having the mother-in-law wearing a white sari, and the bride wearing a red sari symbolically denied the act of marriage, they would clearly be in error.

It doesn't make sense to enforce one's own understanding of symbolism on anothers process, then announce to them what they are symbolizing.

One person may feel cremation symbolically denies the resurrection. Another may feel it affirms it. Who is right?

The normal approach to conflicts of symbolism is to interpret in the context of the doer.

However, here we have the Orthodox understanding of this symbolism enforced on other peoples actions. The only justification for such a strident position - the idea that a single viewpoint is the "correct" way to interpret symbolism - is the usual problem at the heart of all these discussions.

The overarching, a priori assumption that the Orthodox way is right, ordained by God, supported by Holy Tradition, and that all others are in error. Even symbolically.

[ 23. August 2006, 08:28: Message edited by: mdijon ]
 
Posted by Jane R (# 331) on :
 
Mudfrog asked:
quote:
Quick question here: what should we do about burial at sea, when we know (assume) that the body may be eaten.
This is also a problem with conventional burial, according to the Yorkshire folk song 'Ilkley Moor'

If the worms don't get you, the microorganisms will. So if you're worried about being eaten after you're dead, it's surely better to be cremated.

Jane R

(not bothered either way)

[ 23. August 2006, 08:34: Message edited by: Jane R ]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Here's another anti-cremation argument for you, Fr G: fire risk.
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
and I don't misrepresent me

Psyduck - thank you for your clarification.

I am still not sure that I agree with you, but I am sincerely sorry that I unintentionally misrepresented you.

[Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
So, when I (deliberately) provoked with "holocaust of the dead" I wanted the crematers here to appreciate just a little perhaps the depth of visceral disgust I feel on account of the disrespect for the body and the desacralisation of the same that is involved for me as an Orthodox Christian when contemplating cremation.

Fair enough, but I honestly don't understand your position. Truly. Sorry.
 
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on :
 
I agree that dead bodies of people should be treated with respect. So not hung out past sundown, etc. even if notorious criminals.

So medical student pranks are not on, neither is putting ashes in the bin (or worse, as in <i>The Shipping News</i>).

But I don't see what's disrespectful in a funeral, a solemn cremation and interment of ashes.
 
Posted by Linguo (# 7220) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I know that the buriers here are an endangered minority and that itself is significant for it reflects the lack of confidence in our own Christian tradition when, historically it confronted the cremation movement in the 19th century.

I really feel that the decline in burials in this country is more a reflection of the rising cost of grave space. My grandparents were both buried because there were two spaces in the six-grave layer bought to bury their grandparents. My own parents will almost certainly end up being cremated, because we haven't got any more 'family' grave space and I know neither of them would like me to spend lots of money on such a thing, although my mother has expressed interest in green burial. I think that in some parts of the country at least burial vs cremation is becoming a class thing, because of the cost of burial.

Regarding funerals in crematoria, I've been to some utterly horrific ones, mainly at this place (as an aside, the wall crosses are reversible to suit both Catholic and Church of Scotland sensibilities) and some really great ones, notably at the crematorium which featured in the TV series of The Crow Road, of which I can find no pictures. The worst have been those for non-church folks conducted by the duty minister, including one where the deceased was referred to by the wrong name throughout...
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Papio
quote:
Psyduck - thank you for your clarification.

I am still not sure that I agree with you, but I am sincerely sorry that I unintentionally misrepresented you.

I'm so sorry. I wasn't thinking of you! I simply meant that while I was unsure if I was representing Fr G accurately, I knew I wasn't misrepresenting me...
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
...the usual problem at the heart of all these discussions.

The overarching, a priori assumption that the Orthodox way is right, ordained by God, supported by Holy Tradition, and that all others are in error. Even symbolically.

That's what every single thread Fr G. starts is really about. He just keeps finding new hooks on which to hang the discussion...
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:


One person may feel cremation symbolically denies the resurrection. Another may feel it affirms it. Who is right?


You are of course right that cremation needn't deny thre Resurrection, which is why (for example) Anglicans and RCs allow it. But there does seem to be a pretty widespread association, in the UK, at least between cremation and some (generally ill-defined) concept of 'setting the spirit free from the body'. At least that's what I've found on funeral visits etc. as well as in reading the bumpf crematoria and funeral directors put out.

Personally I think burial is a better sign of resurrection hope. I also rather like the idea of the graveyard as a kind of physical extension (however distant) of the church building. It is where we can go to be with the Church Expectant. It is where we visit on All Souls Day etc. I also think contemporary religion needs reminding at every turn that we human beings are not really spirits who, accidentally, 'have' bodies. We are animals. Our bodies make us what we are. Which is why, is we are to be raised at all, it must be because we are given something like, what St Paul calls, 'spiritual bodies'.

That having been said, I don't think people should be denied (or even strongly discouraged from using) an option the Church allows them. The major reason many people don't go for burial is the sheer cost of the exercise, sadly.

[ 23. August 2006, 11:14: Message edited by: Divine Outlaw Dwarf ]
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
But there does seem to be a pretty widespread association, in the UK, at least between cremation and some (generally ill-defined) concept of 'setting the spirit free from the body'. At least that's what I've found on funeral visits etc. as well as in reading the bumpf crematoria and funeral directors put out.

I've never come across that - although I can imagine it existing, and I've only been to a handfull of funerals in the UK, and never read a crematorium brochure.

But one can imagine equally erroneous concepts being attached to burial, surely?

quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
That having been said, I don't think people should be denied (or even strongly discouraged from using) an option the Church allows them.

I guess most would consider this to be a bridge too far, then?
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
I guess most would consider this to be a bridge too far, then?

From the article:

quote:
The graveyards in the capital, Athens, are already full to overflowing. For many a burial plot is only rented for three years before the body has to be exhumed to make way for the next coffin.

It can be extremely distressing for relatives. Sometimes the exhumed bodies have not fully decomposed.

Yeah, I consider that to be a bad thing.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
I'd also consider the church denying funeral rites to anyone cremated a bad thing.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
Well, indeed.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
I am not a member of the Orthodox church, and do not feel entitled to criticise their local liturgical customs.

Problems with land for cemetries, in the UK, and probably in Greece, issue from land prices. These are the fault of capitalism, not of the practice of any particular Church!

Of course, however, I think that there should not be State bans on cremation, whatever the practice of any particular religious group.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
What happens to the exhumed bodies? Are they cremated at that point?
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
DOD:
quote:
These are the fault of capitalism,
At last! Yes!!! It's all the fault of capitalism!
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
Well, in this case I think it is. Other things are not. Even capitalism cannot be held fully responsible for either Jim Davidson or Pop Tarts.
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
Even capitalism cannot be held fully responsible for <snip> Pop Tarts.

I am afraid that I don't agree.....
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
What happens to the exhumed bodies? Are they cremated at that point?

Apparently not. If only the bones are left, they get stacked in ossuaries, which require less space to store the bones.

If they haven't properly decomposed (and I understand 3 years is cutting it a little fine), they get reburied in a shallowish grave, to decompose a bit further.

A relative is required to be present at the exhumation to confirm the process.
 
Posted by Aggie (# 4385) on :
 
In Spain the dead are usually "buried" in columbarium/burial niches. The niches are leased for a minimum of 10 years, although some are leased/rented for longer. After which, the remains are exhumed, and usually cremated. In the olden days, the remains would have put in an ossuary.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:

This is the point at which I have to state - yet again - that I have absolutely no problems with people who have a principled, or even a genuinely emotional, preference for cremation. My point is that the enormous social pressures in favour of the normalization of cremation are deeply linked to social pressures for the sanitization of the whole business of dying, and in favour of conforming our whole human existence to the demands of consumer capitalism. Even people whose deep personal preference is for burial find themselves carried along by the instrumental-rational logic of this. Because our society and culture isn’t about a tiny degree of extravagance in our expression of grief; it’s about colossal extravagance in conspicuous consumption and built-in obsolescence (now there’s a concept you could apply to modern views of death!) and the play of desire through advertising. Everything is commodified, including death. You get your twenty prettified minutes, and that’s it. After death comes closure.

Yes, yes, yes. We understand that; we just think you're wrong. You've made a mistake in your reasoning. We wonder why you're conflating "commodity" with "cremation." They have nothing to do with one another. As has been stated on this thread, many, many ancient cultures cremated their dead.

Burial vs. cremation isn't the point at which "the sanitization of the whole business of dying" occurs. Cremation is, as I've said before, even more intense than burial; it emphasizes death and destruction as burial does not. Even Gregory would agree with this, I suspect, since he compares it directly with abortion.

The cultural problem with death, IMO, comes before the burial/cremation; it comes in the fact that people don't see the bodies of their loved ones as they die, or after they're dead. And that happens because we don't have extended, local families anymore.

But people can certainly say goodbye to the body of their loved one, in the hospital where the death occurs, or at home (except, of course, in cases such as jlg and others have talked about here). They can kiss the body, speak to it, handle it in any way they wish; I did this with my father. I sat with my mother and held her hand as she died at home. What does burial vs. cremation have to do with any of this?

If you're suggesting that people are using cremation as a "quick-disposal" process, I again think you're very wrong. They are using it as a rational response to an urban environment where there isn't anywhere near as much room to bury people any longer. And since the outcome is the same - ashes to ashes, dust to dust - they say that cremation makes more sense.

Everybody suffers grief at the death of their loved ones - sometimes for the rest of their lives. To suggest otherwise is simply silly.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:


Everybody suffers grief at the death of their loved ones - sometimes for the rest of their lives. To suggest otherwise is simply silly.

That is simply not true, if by 'suffer' we mean a conscious process. People can, and, do repress grief , spending the rest of their lives in denial, to the detriment of their mental health.

[ 23. August 2006, 14:08: Message edited by: Divine Outlaw Dwarf ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
(What I'm really finding amazing about this thread is that Gregory is now literally following us to the grave in order to scold us about what we're doing wrong. Our Christianity is once again suspect, this time because we're not taking our leave of this world properly and according to spec.

Unbelievable!)
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:


Everybody suffers grief at the death of their loved ones - sometimes for the rest of their lives. To suggest otherwise is simply silly.

That is simply not true, if by 'suffer' we mean a conscious process. People can, and, do repress grief , spending the rest of their lives in denial, to the detriment of their mental health.
Yes. Q.E.D.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
If they haven't properly decomposed (and I understand 3 years is cutting it a little fine), they get reburied in a shallowish grave, to decompose a bit further.

A relative is required to be present at the exhumation to confirm the process.

That seems to me hideously distressing. What if, due to a lifetime of imbibing retsina, they refused to adequately biodegrade?

And 3 years! I remember listening to something about the excavation of the crypt under Christ Church, Spitalfields - where the last burial was something like 1853 - and even hardened archeologists found it tough going.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
If you fail completely to decompose, apparently that's one step on the way to getting canonized.

I guess you'll really need to go for it with the retsina, though.

I suppose if you only go halfway, falling between the two stools of ossuary and saintliness, as it were, then there's a succession of shallow graves to work through.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
[Q] Q.E.D.

Well, only if by 'everybody' you meant 'some people'.

I do think there is a problem with acknowledging death in Anglophone culture. I think it is probably theologically rooted. It is evident not only in the way some people deal, or fail to deal, with the death of loved ones but also in euphemistic talk about death, macho attitudes towards medicine (fighting for every day of life at any cost) and a more general disavowal of our embodiedness. I imagine that some people do view cremation as a 'quick way' through the experience of the death of a loved one, though I think it would be foolish to generalise.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
though I think it would be foolish to generalise.

Quite. I expect some people view burial as an inherently morally superior option, but, as you say, it would be foolish to generalise.

(PS, I expect that what TubaMirum means by "QED" is that "the detriment of their mental health" does sound rather like suffering". I suppose you could quibble as to whether it is grief...)

[ 23. August 2006, 15:07: Message edited by: mdijon ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
[Q] Q.E.D.

Well, only if by 'everybody' you meant 'some people'.
No, I meant that everybody suffers. You made the point that some suffer through repression, and I agreed.

Anyway, that has, again IMO, really nothing to do with cremation per se, either emotionally or theologically. I'm objecting to the linkage being made here, as I think it's faulty.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
You made the point that some suffer through repression, and I agreed.

Not I didn't. I explicitly said that we could only say that if we conceded that we need not be conscious of 'suffering', which I suggest is not the ordinary language use of the word. People can be in denial and/ or have resultant mental health issues without suffering at the conscious level one jot. Indeed it is arguable that repression is a tactic against certain types of suffering.
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Posted by Gregory:
No one (yet) has addressed the theological issues I have raised.

I've reviewed your posts, but I'm having trouble identifying any significant theological issues. All I find are some unsupported claims that incineration is somehow fundamentally more violent and disrespectful than putrefaction and some even more implied claims that your tradition is more correct than everyone else's traditions.

Perhaps you could help me by briefly restating the theological (as opposed to cultural or aesthetic) issues?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
You made the point that some suffer through repression, and I agreed.

Not I didn't. I explicitly said that we could only say that if we conceded that we need not be conscious of 'suffering', which I suggest is not the ordinary language use of the word. People can be in denial and/ or have resultant mental health issues without suffering at the conscious level one jot. Indeed it is arguable that repression is a tactic against certain types of suffering.
"To the detriment of their mental health" implies suffering, to me.

But this has nothing to do with cremation at all, so must we go on and on about it?
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
No it doesn't, I can be quite happy and absolutely insane.

But no, it doesn't, so we mustn't.
 
Posted by barrea (# 3211) on :
 
When I was young I think that some Christians were against cremation but I never hear of of it these days,in fact I have known several evangelicaL Christians who have chosen to be cremated in the last few years.
For myself I think both ways are horrible. i hate to think of perhaps waking up after burial or waking up in the coffin while being burnt.
I wish that there was some other way to go, but apart from donating your body to medical reasearch there dosn't seem much option.
I should have ignored this thread it just makes me feel morbid. I supose that is becaise I am older than most of you,
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Scot

Do I just have to accept from you that the theology is not "significant" or would you care to explain why you take that view?
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
I'm also having trouble identifying your insignificant theological issues, but I didn't want to waste your time by asking you to restate those. I thought we could stick to the big ticket items, whatever they might be. In the interest of clarity, I withdraw the qualification.

Please restate the theological (not cultural or aesthetic) issues that you are raising without regard to their relative significance.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Fr Gregory, I don't see that your theological issues are strongly connected to the burial practices you prefer. Symbolic meanings are not natural and necessary, and they can change, not to mention vary by culture (see mdijon's example of colors appropriate for weddings above). I'm not dismissing your theology; I'm saying we can change the symbolism and have the same theology.
 
Posted by Callan (# 525) on :
 
Herodotus tells us that King Darius of Persia called before him some Greeks who, in those days, cremated their dead, and asked them what they would accept to eat their dead. They got terribly upset. He then called before him some Callatians, who ate their dead, and asked them if they would consider burning their dead. They got terribly upset.

Herodotus concludes that impiety is in the eye of the beholder: "For if one were to offer men to choose out of all the customs in the world they would examine the whole number, and end by preferring their own; so convinced are they that their own usages far surpass those of all others".

I must say that there are moments when I think he has a point.

[ 23. August 2006, 18:00: Message edited by: Callan ]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Scot and Ruth

Cremation involves ACTIVE destruction of the deceased's body by humans. (It wouldn't matter for this argument whether this destruction was by fire, explosion or by a big mincing machine).

ACTIVE destruction of remains by humans assumes that the deceased's body is deserving of no special respect which, contrastingly, would be indicated by committal without HUMAN violence.

That the body of the deceased can be ACTIVELY destroyed does injury to the Christian doctrine that human physicality has permanent value in:-

(1) The creative purpose of God. (The "good" of Genesis).
(2) The assumption of our flesh in the Incarnation. The myrrh-bearing women were equippped to anoint the body of Jesus ... not burn it.
(3) The hope of resurrection.

This injury is a "denial by act" in relation to the body. I am not talking about soul or spirit since crematers seem to ascribe some preferential aspect to these - but this is not what I understand by the resurrection.

This denial-by-act is at best dualistic ... at worst, gnostic. In any event it would be wrong to characterise this as merely symbolic or cultural. It is an anti-theology by deed. The psychological and societal ramifications are pernicious but derivative.

The best way to roll back cremation is to present authentic Christianity as "with the body" - ALWAYS subsisting that is; in life, in death and after death - not in spite of it. God having take our flesh to himself forever enhanced status and character of that flesh (beyond even its existing high status in Judaism) whether or not it is now recognised by humans themselves.

That Christians should not now see this is, to me, most sad.

[ 23. August 2006, 18:24: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:

(1) The creative purpose of God. (The "good" of Genesis).
(2) The assumption of our flesh in the Incarnation. <snip>
(3) The hope of resurrection.

Of course other things Christians do deny these. Complicity in oppression and exploitation, for example.
 
Posted by Dan the Man (# 11768) on :
 
quote:
Apart from the Orthodox ... does anyone here think that there is anything to regret in the now widespread Christian acceptance of cremation?
Nope...resurection is that of the soul, and as for re-united with your body, if everyone returned to whats left of their body, many people wouldn't be best pleased (apart from the fact that their in heaven [Smile] )
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dan the Man:
Nope...resurection is that of the soul

Not in an orthodox Christian understanding, it's not*.

In any case, on a purely rational basis, I'm not sure I think that the idea of a non-embodied human being is coherent. It's a bit like talking about a non-mammalian horse, isn't it?
We do not, acidentally, have bodies. We are bodies. As Elizabeth Anscombe once put it, I can truthfully poke myself and say, 'this is me'.

*Incidentally, you list yourself as a 'Catholic' on your profile. The view you espouse is explicitly condemned as heresy by the Roman Catholic Church.

[ 23. August 2006, 18:46: Message edited by: Divine Outlaw Dwarf ]
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
Gregory, it seems a bit odd to say that burning a body is active while burying it is not. The more important point, however, is that you don't explain why activity or passivity is a theological issue. You state it as fact that "Active destruction of remains by humans assumes that the deceased's body is deserving of no special respect which, contrastingly, would be indicated by committal without HUMAN violence." This assumption is nothing more than a cultural preference. Cultures other than yours would say just the opposite.

You claim that active destruction of remains is somehow an offense against the creative purpose of God. I say that deliberately isolating human remains from the cycle of decay and growth is a a clear denial of God's will as expressed in nature.

You say that cremation denies the value of physicality as shown by the incarnation and the women's anointing of Jesus's body. I say that you are mistaking historical context for principle.

Your argument that cremation denies hope of resurrection runs counter either to science or the claim that God is omnipotent. If we understand that matter does not vanish and if we assume that God can resurrect whomever he chooses, then your argument is completely spurious.

Since none of your claimed injuries to doctrine have any substance, then your claim that cremation is "anti-theology by deed" is unfounded. It is nothing more than an attempt to rationalize a cultural or aesthetic preference by using a narrow set of traditions to tie the preference to broader theological themes.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
We are not going to agree Scot but I will make just one attempt to refute your arguments.

quote:
Gregory, it seems a bit odd to say that burning a body is active while burying it is not.
Destruction is the point. Nobody stands inert and says "beam it up / down Scotty." (pun intended).

quote:
you don't explain why activity or passivity is a theological issue.
In Orthodoxy ANYTHING humans do is by definition a theological issue. To talk of God is to talk of humankind. To talk of humankind is to talk of God.

quote:
This assumption is nothing more than a cultural preference. Cultures other than yours would say just the opposite.
It is a cultural preference with religious significance and, therefore, it is not "nothing more" than a cultural preference. The religious significance kicks in because certain acts-in-culture are not entirely relative to themselves. They have universal meaning. Humans destroying a body (or not) is one such act. However, you and I have crossed theological swords before on the significance of the cross in the "Red Cross." There was no resolution of that similar issue then so I doubt whether there will be any such closure here now either. You and I are working within radically different epistemologies.

quote:
I say that deliberately isolating human remains from the cycle of decay and growth is a a clear denial of God's will as expressed in nature.
Eh???!!! In the ground the body dissoves, coffin or no coffin. Personally I would prefer the shroud only method but even wood rots eventually and in any event is not sealed against the agents of decay.

I WANT to be eaten by worms rather than incinerated by my fellow humans ... NOT because it will make the slightest difference to "me" as a corpse but because it will be consistent with my Orthodox faith (ante).

quote:
I say that you are mistaking historical context for principle.
Back to my comments about "mere" culture.

quote:
If we understand that matter does not vanish and if we assume that God can resurrect whomever he chooses, then your argument is completely spurious.
It is not spurious because I have not based my argument about the resurrection on what God can do but rather on what we should do.

The fundamental problem here Scot is that I give more credence to human acts in relation to Christian belief than you do. Christ is not in contradistinction to culture but IN culture to transform it.

[ 23. August 2006, 19:08: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Callan:
Herodotus concludes that impiety is in the eye of the beholder: "For if one were to offer men to choose out of all the customs in the world they would examine the whole number, and end by preferring their own; so convinced are they that their own usages far surpass those of all others".

What's amusing, though, is that Fr Gregory has adopted the usages of another culture which he believes far surpasses the usages of his own.

And so he begins thread after thread on this board to prove to us that our post-Enlightenment culture is hideously gone astray.

Too bad some of us are happy to live in a post-Enlightenment culture.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
I don't see anything in these arguments that lifts them out of a particular symbolic interpretation.

I think I'd repeat what I said above.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Hooker's Trick

quote:
What's amusing, though, is that Fr Gregory has adopted the usages of another culture which he believes far surpasses the usages of his own.

Correct ... but the culture of which I speak is a Judaeo-Christian culture which in this matter remained in tact for 4000 years.

quote:
And so he begins thread after thread on this board to prove to us that our post-Enlightenment culture is hideously gone astray.
Not "thread after thread" but in this matter and in this OP you are correct as to the second half.

quote:
Too bad some of us are happy to live in a post-Enlightenment culture.
Yes, too bad indeed (with "post" in the sense of chronology not transcendence or negation).

Dear mdijon

quote:
I don't see anything in these arguments that lifts them out of a particular symbolic interpretation.
There is nothing symbolic about fire, the worm and the risen body of Christ; nothing symbolic about my flesh and yours, corruption and incorruption.
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
I'll take a stab at it, Father Gregory.

From the Old Testament post-Adam, the physical manifestation of God most often given in scripture is "wind" or "ruah (ruach)." God is not Earth in Christian scripture; God is Wind. Again, God is a spirit and those who worship Him must worship in Spirit and in Truth, two formless modes of interaction.

The scriptures speak over and over of subjugating Flesh to Spirit, notably in the writings of Paul. Any clinging to the flesh is depicted as wrong and sinful.

In death, we will be made into Wind by slow or rapid oxidation of our carbon. Fire does so rapidly; biological processes slowly.

Before the oxidation of carbon to carbon dioxide was known, our ultimate fate as Wind was not known. We now know and are free in Christ to choose slow or rapid oxidation to Wind. Christ did not have this choice because he had to rise physically from the dead to insure the weak of faith that we do in fact survive death. But he showed that he was Wind as well, blowing through the cracks in walls and ascending like smoke into Heaven.

The strong in faith have always known that we do indeed survive to fill the nostrils of those who come after. We can raise a stench, or a sweet smell. After we die, however, there is no hope of joining the sweet smell of the Ruah. Our chance has come and gone.

Is this more what you had in mind?
 
Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
...Correct ... but the culture of which I speak is a Judaeo-Christian culture which in this matter remained in tact for 4000 years....

Hmmmm.... ossuaries abound in the mid-east. But the practice of temporary burial and subsequent storage of the bones is not the current standard of burial. Nor is it particularly what you advocated.

Let's be clear:

What is the system of handling human remains that has "remained in tact[sic] for 4000 years"?
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
quote:
Posted by Gregory:
In Orthodoxy ANYTHING humans do is by definition a theological issue. To talk of God is to talk of humankind. To talk of humankind is to talk of God.

Now we come to the root of the thing, We are not discussing "in Orthodoxy". We are discussing the rest of Christendom. The OP even specified "apart from the Orthodox..." Your position is untenable without resort to Orthodox tradition to lend doctrinal weight to cultural preferences.

quote:
I WANT to be eaten by worms rather than incinerated by my fellow humans ... NOT because it will make the slightest difference to "me" as a corpse but because it will be consistent with my Orthodox faith (ante).
How wonderful for you! Your personal desires are in line with the teaching of your denomination. Good for you! Our disagreement begins when you suggest that baby Jesus is crying because the rest of us don't all see things the same way as you.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mdijon:
I don't see anything in these arguments that lifts them out of a particular symbolic interpretation.

Me neither. And I like Jim's symbolic interpretation better. The meaning of symbols depends in part upon their context, and his interpretation comes out of the cultural context in which I live. Gregory's belongs to some other culture.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
I know what and to whom I belong thank you Ruth.

Dear Jim

Au contraire. In the teaching of St. Paul flesh is contrasted with spirit in the dimension of carnal or wordly thinking ... most definitely not physicality.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I know what and to whom I belong thank you Ruth.

I said nothing about "what and to whom" you belong. I said your interpretation belongs to a culture which is not mine.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Indeed ... and that's how I responded nonetheless.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
In that case, I don't understand your response.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Never mind. It's not important. Just ignore it.
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
In that case, I don't understand your response.

Let me make a stab at it:

Ruth = bad secular modern western culture

Fr Gregory = good Christian Traditional eastern culture

Probably could throw in some "sads" and "deludeds" in there, too, but I'll let the fair reader decide into which cultural description those adjectives belong.
 
Posted by Laura (# 10) on :
 
I must be sad and deluded too, because I like JimT's theological standpoint as well.
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
Another question:

is cremation "bad" in a "too bad/ nostalgic longing for the past" sense (in the same way that I think it's bad that one can now have a drink at Simpson's without a jacket and tie)?

Or "bad" in the sense that people whose bodies are cremated are screwed out of the general resurrection and "bad" because the church lets this happen?

(if it's "bad" in the latter sense then Fr Gregory should actually be happy, since it means all the Protestants who got cremated won't be there to clutter up the Last Day, and the Orthodox can have the New Jerusalem all to themselves).
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Neither HT. Have you REALLY read all my posts here? If you had I don't see how you could have said all that.
 
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Cremation involves ACTIVE destruction of the deceased's body by humans. (It wouldn't matter for this argument whether this destruction was by fire, explosion or by a big mincing machine).

Agreed, but it will matter in a minute.

quote:
ACTIVE destruction of remains by humans assumes that the deceased's body is deserving of no special respect
unjustified assumption. I don't think anyone is arguing here that we should treat dead bodies with no special respect. We are discussing what treating dead bodies with special respect entails.

Here are two actions:
(A) removing a body from a chilled mortuary and placing it into an environment where it is surrounded by all kinds of bacteria, fungi and intertebrates which are very good at decomposing it
(B) removing a body from a chilled mortuary and placing it into an environment where it is surrounded by lots of heat, fire, etc which is very good at decomposing it

I don't see why (A) is less "active" than (B).

In either case, the action can be done with respect or without respect.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Custard

It's the agent of the action that is the matter of concern, not the means of dissolution. If in an alternative universe dead bodies automatically spontaneously combusted that would be fine.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
ACTIVE destruction of remains by humans assumes that the deceased's body is deserving of no special respect

I'm not sure this exceedingly commonplace treatment is particularly respectful.

JimT: Excellent points.

Ross
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
No, neither do I ... which is why we don't like it either. As I said before, embalming does not have to happen for burial to happen. Wash, present, inter promptly. It's quite straightforward really.

JimT's point is construed from a misunderstanding of St. Paul's flesh / spirit antithesis, (again, as I said before).

[ 23. August 2006, 23:04: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
Gregory, your response to Custard didn't address his point about your unjustified assumption regarding the degree of special inherent in cremation vs. burial.

It was a very good point. I'm sure that Custard and I aren't the only ones who will be interested to hear your response.
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
I'm not sure this exceedingly commonplace treatment is particularly respectful.

Ross

Following Ross' link, this jumped out at me:
quote:
10. The funeral industry promotes embalming and viewing as a means to show "proper respect for the body," and to establish the "clear identity" of the corpse so that the reality of death cannot be denied by those who view the body. Many funeral directors are convinced that seeing the body is a necessary part of the grieving process, even if the death was long anticipated.
And the funeral industry's reasons for promoting embalming aren't exactly theological:
quote:
12. Embalming gives funeral homes a sales opportunity to increase consumer spending (by as much as $3,000 or more) for additional body preparation, a more expensive casket with "protective" features perhaps, a more expensive outer burial container, and a more elaborate series of ceremonies.
OliviaG
ETA one more point

[ 23. August 2006, 23:15: Message edited by: OliviaG ]
 
Posted by Doublethink (# 1984) on :
 
From a purely practical point of view, burial has major implications for land use in heavily populated countries. What do you think would happen if, as of tomorrow, everyone who died was buried ?
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Oh yes I did answer it. Whether you are persuaded by it or not is another matter. Allow me to repeat.

It is the AGENCY of the destruction / dissolution that matters not the dissolution per se. In other words 'human burns human' or 'bug eats human.' I don't think that I can make that simpler.

Dear Doublethink

The oft quoted "no room, no room" has already been dealt with Divine Outlaw Dwarf. Please read his post.

[ 23. August 2006, 23:16: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Father Gregory, I'm trying to understand what you're saying. I'm even trying to comprehend how what you're saying could be a compelling argument. Either what you're saying is too complex for me or it's just mince.

Can you explain again in very simple terms so I can make my decision please?
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
I'm going to bed now. Goodnight.
 
Posted by lapsed heathen (# 4403) on :
 
Fr Gregory while I agree with you that the issue is respect for the corpse, isn't respect cultural and temporal. What is respectful in one culture may be insulting in another.
Trying to impose a theological value to what is in the end just a consequence of time and place is a bit pointless.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
Fr. G--

Is it proper, respectful, etc. when the Orthodox monks on Mt. Athos pile the skulls of their brethren in a room?

Pardon me if you've addressed this and I missed it.
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Dear Doublethink

The oft quoted "no room, no room" has already been dealt with Divine Outlaw Dwarf. Please read his post.

Father Gregory, is this the post you are referring to?
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
Problems with land for cemetries, in the UK, and probably in Greece, issue from land prices. These are the fault of capitalism, not of the practice of any particular Church!

I don't see how blaming capitalism deals with the problem. OliviaG
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
It is the AGENCY of the destruction / dissolution that matters not the dissolution per se. In other words 'human burns human' or 'bug eats human.' I don't think that I can make that simpler.

Ok, so "bug eats human" is natural and right, and "human burns human" is not?

Following that logic, should we do *anything* about a dead body? Doing anything disturbs the natural process in *some* way.
[Confused]
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
I don't see why the agency matters.
 
Posted by Doublethink (# 1984) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doublethink:
From a purely practical point of view, burial has major implications for land use in heavily populated countries. What do you think would happen if, as of tomorrow, everyone who died was buried ?

If you mean this post, no he didn't. I mean these kind of problems:
Overcrowded cemetaries
Chinese estimate of land use

Not financial problems. There are more detailed historical accounts, of bodies being buried on top of each other in victorian graveyards - the diggers simply stamping down on the coffin below to crush it and make more space. And the effects of U-turns on Chinese state funerary practice on the availability of farmland.

There are approximately 600,000 deaths per year in the UK. So imageine a 6 by 2 foot plot for each of the that's 12 square foot per person. That's 0.25 square miles in a year or 2.5 square miles in a decade. (I am not allowing for space around graves, fancy tombs or anything else - just going for the bear minimum here.) Britain as a whole is 94,251 square miles - about the size of Oregon - with a population density of 650 per square mile. 23% of that land is is arable, god only knows how much is under concrete, then there's the mountains and other unusable bits.

(Though OK I accept that between 2.5 and 5 square miles a decade is not a high speed take over - I would still argue that building cemetries on that scale would have a significant impact in the medium term.)

DT

(With thanks to MSN Encarta)
 
Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
No, neither do I ... which is why we don't like it either. As I said before, embalming does not have to happen for burial to happen. Wash, present, inter promptly. It's quite straightforward really.


So... you "don't like" embalming and -- by extension -- using a metal coffin that will ensure no contact between the body and earth, much less worms. Fair enough. I don't either. That that's what your version of burial means to tens of millions of people doesn't matter of course, because they aren't part of your personal experience.

You believe cremation to be theologically wrong -- not just misguided, but wrong -- even though there is ample evidence that most of your assumptions about what it implies (in terms of respect for the body, opportunity for grieving and so on) are demonstablly wrong. But of course, I forgot -- that's other peoples' experience, not yours, so it doesn't count.

But let me ask -- why is something far more disrespectful of what you value (embalming, metal coffins and so on) just something you dislike, but something that can be very respectful so egregious a theological error that it almost amounts to a sin?

Could it possibly be because for you culturally, burial and cremation mean something different than they mean to many of us?

Because, frankly, I don't recognize your picture of either burial or cremation. So I'll conclude we have different cultures and be happy (certainly I have no desire to force cremation on anyone). But you seem to want to force your cultural assumptions on the rest of us.

Don't see that happening, some how.

John
 
Posted by Mad Geo (# 2939) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
...you better have a damn good justification if you are overturning 4000 years, at least from where I am standing....

Scientology + 4000 years = Orthodox

Fascinating.
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
The Father Gregory opinion, if I understand.

The very thought of setting a human body on fire cannot but help to bring a feeling of desecration in the faithful, regardless of the ceremony or thoughts surrounding the act. When you burn something, you are saying it is trash and you want to get rid of it.

But we bury trash to get rid of it. We bury our own human waste to get rid of it sometimes. Burying a dead body reminds me as much of that as it does planting a seed or fertilizing the soil with compost. It is all about attitude, custom, and context. Burning and burying are not in themselves respectful or disrespectful. One could burn with respect and bury with disrespect I'm sure.

Perhaps your real objection is that cremation really doesn't have a ceremony like that. You kind of call up the cremation folks like calling garbage collectors? I could see that point. But the same would be said of calling up someone and asking them to please take the body away and bury it some where, who cares. After the dirty business of getting rid of the body, we can have a nice clean little ceremony with no body around.

So if the ceremony were right; if a human waps a dead human in cloth, gathers wood, places the body on the wood, and starts a fire with flint and steel, invites all those in attendence to light candles one from another, reads about us being the light of the world, letting our light shine before men, God fom God, Light from Light, we are the Light of the World, speaks of the Spirit being more important than the Flesh in proper metaphorical terms that do not misunderstand Paul (you pick the words; you know what I mean), couldn't it be possible to construct a respectful and theologically appropriate cremation?
 
Posted by jlg (# 98) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
In the ground the body dissoves, coffin or no coffin. Personally I would prefer the shroud only method but even wood rots eventually and in any event is not sealed against the agents of decay.

Am I correct that this means Orthodox burials never involve metal coffins, much less the concrete vaults which are the norm, if not actually required by law or cemetery covenants in much of the US and Canada.

It's going to be a long time before my mother's molecules (simple pine coffin, no vault, but she was rather full of embalming fluids) manage to comingle with my father's (body bag, heavy-duty cherry coffin, concrete vault, no embalming) even though they are buried side-by-side and my father has a fifteen year head start on natural bodily deterioration. He may or may not have "dissolved", but I'm quite sure that he is pretty welled "sealed" against the normal "agents of decay" - not to mention the pesky question of how even those anaerobic agents of decay which might try to operate inside the body bag are coping with all that jet fuel he got soaked with. At any rate, I suspect it's going to be a long time before his molecules make it past all those barriers and contact the actual dirt.

But you'll surely be happy to hear that they both are wrapped in very nice white silk shrouds (in accordance with an obscure Baha'i burial requirement that is probably observed less often than RC priests wear maniples).

If you're going to argue against cremation, Fr Gregory, you need to stop presenting a rose-tinted ideal version of burial.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
When does ... "This behaviour is not part of Christian tradition" as part of a forum debate become a "sin" or an attempt to "force your cultural assumptions on the rest of us?"

Others used the word "sin" not I. "You're oppressing us" isn't an argument.

There is a casuistry here that seeks to make something very simple essentially very complicated ... which is deeply ironic since some have accused me of being obscure!

The natural, non violent, reverent committal to the earth is but one argument in my list of objections. OK, so it doesn't persuade you. Fine. You think it's merely culture, a practice devoid of theological significance. Fine. But 4000 years of unbroken practice until now stands against you. So, you're Protestant and couldn't give two hoots about Tradition? Fine. But yours is not the only account of Christian praxis ... not even in the history of your Protestant forebears. So please do excuse me. I am deeply sorry for having a contrary position on the matter and going against the grain. I guess that makes me a Protestant too eh?

[Snigger]

[ 24. August 2006, 07:11: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Trouble is, though, Fr. Gregory, that your "having a contrary position on the matter and going against the grain" has basically let all your opposnents off the hook. Because they can represent you as an extremist, they don't actually have to look at the death-phobic aspects of the way in which the practice of cremation meshes with contemporary culture.

And for the record, I'm not terribly keen on having Protestantism misrepresented as not giving two hoots about tradition. The world may be full of Protestants who haven't a clue about how the Protestant tradition works, but that doesn't make that the definition of Protestantism. There are some of us with a workingt knowledge of what the Reformation stood for.
 
Posted by KenWritez (# 3238) on :
 
quote:
Fr. G:the depth of visceral disgust I feel on account of the disrespect for the body and the desacralisation of the same that is involved for me as an Orthodox Christian when contemplating cremation.
This is the crux of the issue. Cremation outrages your Orthodox sensibilities.
Since the Orthodox Church's traditions aren't wrong (according to your own doctrine) as the "One True Church", therefore all of Christendom ought to be equally outraged. When we aren't, rather than you examining your beliefs and realizing they're provincial to *you*, you judge believers who support cremation as either second-class or you infer they're not really Christians at all, and you call them names.

This entire thread isn't about cremation at all. It's about you getting your panties in a twist because people dare disagree with you, and by extension, your Church.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Psyduck

I am not unaware of course of that and indeed the Wee Frees have themselves opposed cremation from time to time. To be more accurate I should have said "liberal Protestant" but hey that would have unleashed another torrent of scorn.

I am well used to being labelled an extremist. As I said, 4000 years of unbroken tradition was once considered mainstream and cremation unthinkable THEOLOGICALLY. Once, therefore, everyone was an "extremist." I can live with that knowing my support from Christian history. I am well used to the tactic of some contributions here on the Ship being not reasoned theological arguments at all but rather thinly disguised attempts to traduce a theological opponent. The last few threads have exhibited that particularly. So be it.

Not one person has engaged with the biblical and theological data ... well, perhaps JimT but he misjudged the nature of Paul's antithesis between flesh and spirit. All the arguments have been utilitarian ... and therefore, predisposed to make my arguments (and yours for that matter) fall at the first hurdle. If this thread has done nothing else other than mark a voice or two of dissent, I shall be satisfied.

I am going out now for the day ... which is just as well since this is becoming a boring duelling session with me.

[ 24. August 2006, 07:31: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by JimT:
I'll take a stab at it, Father Gregory.

From the Old Testament post-Adam, the physical manifestation of God most often given in scripture is "wind" or "ruah (ruach)." God is not Earth in Christian scripture; God is Wind. Again, God is a spirit and those who worship Him must worship in Spirit and in Truth, two formless modes of interaction.

The scriptures speak over and over of subjugating Flesh to Spirit, notably in the writings of Paul. Any clinging to the flesh is depicted as wrong and sinful.

In death, we will be made into Wind by slow or rapid oxidation of our carbon. Fire does so rapidly; biological processes slowly.

Before the oxidation of carbon to carbon dioxide was known, our ultimate fate as Wind was not known. We now know and are free in Christ to choose slow or rapid oxidation to Wind. Christ did not have this choice because he had to rise physically from the dead to insure the weak of faith that we do in fact survive death. But he showed that he was Wind as well, blowing through the cracks in walls and ascending like smoke into Heaven.

The strong in faith have always known that we do indeed survive to fill the nostrils of those who come after. We can raise a stench, or a sweet smell. After we die, however, there is no hope of joining the sweet smell of the Ruah. Our chance has come and gone.

Is this more what you had in mind?

First of all, in a perfect and roomy world, burial may be preferable, but practically, as has been demonstrated, this is not really possible. I am prepared to be cremated - though I wouldn't mind burial - I like the 'drama'. I have no theological objections to cremation.

Can I address the above post?

It smacks heavily of the sort of thinking that actually the New Testament is dead against! i.e. the assumption that spirit = good, matter = bad.

This is why the Greeks were so hot on immortality as opposed to resurrecton because they couldn't wait to 'shuffle off this mortal coil' and leave this filthy body behind and be free of its taint - an evil that was inherant in it simply because it was 'created'.

This is why the Docetists couldn't bring themselves to believe that Jesus was fully human, flesh and blood, etc. Did I read that some believed that Jesus cast no shadow and left no footprints?

Anyhow. The view expressed:
The scriptures speak over and over of subjugating Flesh to Spirit, notably in the writings of Paul. Any clinging to the flesh is depicted as wrong and sinful.
is correct in one sense - and Fr Gregory has mentioned this - we are speaking 'carnaility' here. In the NT 'flesh' doesn't mean skin and bones, it refers to the entirety of human nature. 'The Word became flesh' doesn't mean that the Son of God jumped inside a skin and walked about, it means he took on the entire human 'thing' - body, soul and spirit (Hence the Swedenborgian error of divine soul, human body - tangent, sorry).

'Lo, he abhors not the Virgin's womb' is as much to do with fully accepting total humanity as it is a reference to Mary and her devotion.

So 'flesh' (in this context of total human nature) does need to be overcome by yielding to the Spirit of holiness - but it does not mean that physicality is evil, unimportant or irrelevant when looked at in the context of eternity. Don't forget that Paul tells us that our bodies (not flesh this time) are to be presented as living sacrifices, that our body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, and that our mortal bodies will be raised incorruptible. (Not left behind because they are filthy).

Finally, I would have to disagree with your opening point about 'the physical manifestation of God most often given in scripture is "wind" or "ruah (ruach)." God is not Earth in Christian scripture; God is Wind'

Way to go to destroy the entire theology of the Incarnation! The physical manifestation of God is Jesus of Nazareth, not the Holy Spirit. And even in the Old Testament there are times when the physical manifestation of YHWH is an actual physical being - the Angel of the Lord, as had dinner with Abraham and who tried to beat Jacob up.

There is nothing about physicality that is less holy, less divine, etc.

And Jesus is not the Ruach of God - and neither did he waft around entering rooms through cracks in the plaster.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
There is nothing symbolic about fire, the worm and the risen body of Christ; nothing symbolic about my flesh and yours, corruption and incorruption.

What a complete non-answer.

These are either elements of the funeral (eg fire) which may or may not be interpreted as symbolism of a sort... or things that don't seem to me to be directly involved. The concepts of corruption, incorruption... and the risen body of Christ don't feature except by symbolism in a funeral, surely?

Or is my partaking in the risen body of Christ actively and in real terms inhibited by cremation? And the promise of putting on the incorruptible inhibited by cremation?

Very Odd.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
There is a tradition in parts of India where the widow throws herself on the funeral pyre. With all the multi-culture and diversty stuff being bantered about is there anyway we could suggest this tradition to Tony and Cherie
 
Posted by Custard. (# 5402) on :
 
Gregory,

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
It's the agent of the action that is the matter of concern, not the means of dissolution. If in an alternative universe dead bodies automatically spontaneously combusted that would be fine.

I'm making sure I understand:

So if an area had been stripped of soil - say by a flash flood, and the soil had been artificially reconstituted and artificially repopulated with decomposers, burying someone there would be a Bad Thing, even if it could be shown there wouldn't be another flood.

On the other hand, leaving a body in the path of a forest fire would be fine?

Oh, and this 4000 years thing... I guess that's going back to Abraham? As far as I recall, he placed his wife Sarah in a cave, rather than in the soil...

And I'm evidently being really stupid today because I really can't see where you answered my point about burning as disrespectful being a cultural assumption.

[ 24. August 2006, 07:53: Message edited by: Custard. ]
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Fr. Gregory:
quote:
Not one person has engaged with the biblical and theological data ... <SNIP> All the arguments have been utilitarian ... and therefore, predisposed to make my arguments (and yours for that matter) fall at the first hurdle.
Actually,the point is that on those criteria yours do but mine - which are actually variously grounded in sociology and psychology, and represent an inner-modern counter-narrative to scientistic positivism - don't. Unless you take a John Milbank position that ultimately theology is the only game in town, in which case you are really hanging about in church, and not representing a churchly presence in the public square, it really is necessary to debate, and not just assert. Milbank, if I interpret him correctly, wanted to make theology back into the "queen of sciences" by subordinating all other narratives, especially social-scientific narratives, under theology as a "postmodern metanarrative". (!) That really gives you just one set of choices. Either you sieze power, and start burning heretics (and yes, I'd probably agree with you that that very Western mode of cremation does demonstrate a departure from tradition, though maybe someone will be along in a minute to argue for it) or you lock the church door and we talk amongst ourselves. (It seems to me that the Greek Orthodox Church has fallen precisely between these two stools on the issue of cremation in Greek society.)

If you don't want to construe theology like this - if you're seriously interested in talking to people who potentially disagree with you - then it's necessary to do theology with a little more humility, and to try to presuade people. And yes, I'll concede that you've been trying some of that, too, but it obviously strikes people as the velvet glove round the iron fist. Because ultimately for you this is a non-negotiable, surprise surprise, no debate is taking place. Because you are driving people back on their sundry non-negotiables, amny of them drawn from various modern metanarratives, some of them drawn from various conceptuions of freedom of choice, and some from religious traditions.

But that's why this thread, which is potentially so interesting with regard to contemporary understandings of what it means to be human beings who in some sense have and in some sense are and in some weird sense are not, their bodies, has turned so damnably boring.

So let me say it again. I'm not absolutely against cremation. I respect individual positive options for it, and some of the rationalizations of it I find interesting and moving, even if I could never espouse them. But I think that the generalized assumption that cremation is better than burial, and that it's irratonal to think differently, both proceed from something deeply wrong with our culture, and feed it.

For God's sake can't we talk about that...?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
As I said, 4000 years of unbroken tradition was once considered mainstream and cremation unthinkable THEOLOGICALLY.

I repeat my contention that the same could be said of slavery. Care to comment?
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
As I say, if we continue the discussion in the terms of the OP, we're not going to get anywhere. The OP embodies theological truth as Fr. Gregory understands it. It's a completely self-consistent statement of what he believes. Eutychus, you aren't going to overthrow his theological position, because he isn't going to step outside it to discuss with you on any other basis, and he's been completely consistent in this. We are trading, not in arguments of what's better or worse, but in statements of what's right and wrong. There isn't a debate going on here.
 
Posted by Callan (# 525) on :
 
Originally posted by OliviaG:

quote:
I don't see how blaming capitalism deals with the problem.
After the revolution, people like you will be put up against the wall and shot, before being buried in picturesque country churchyards. [Biased]
 
Posted by dorothea (# 4398) on :
 
I'm new to this thread, so sorry if repeating previous concerns.

Basically, whilst there are some sound practical reasons for burial, the whole concept of a bunch of bones being reanimated on the day of judgement doesn't carry much weight (no pun intended [Biased] ). Even if one takes the resurrection literally as 'the risen body', Jesus's physical body was three days not three years, thirty years or three centuries dead. And also, what about people whose bones have been destroyed in an explosion? Are they to be excluded from the 'kingdom'.

J

[ 24. August 2006, 08:28: Message edited by: dorothea ]
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
OloviaG: Frederic Jameson argues that postmodernism is the culture of late capitalism. Postmodernism is characterized by all sorts of death-phobic impulses - it's been suggested that the astronomical body-count of Schwarzenegger movies is death-phobic inasmuch as the whole point of the film is that after the slaughter, the only people guaranteed to be left alive are Arnie, the Linda Hamilton type person, the "her son who the evil terminator is after" type person, and me, the viewer. The worst thing you can be, or be called, in postmodern culture, is a "loser", and dying is the ultimate in being a loser. Ergo death is denied by making slaughter into a balletic carnival celebratory of the viewer's immortality.

Equally, death is denied by the profession of the "mortician", the privileging of youth, the consequent significance of cosmetic surgery and cosmetics generally (neither Cleoparea nor Marie Antoinette made up so as to appear youthful ) and even by such things as "Campaigns for real Beauty" which appear to affirm ageing. And all of this is a cultural imperative of the phase of capitalism which we have entered.

Relevance - of course there are other reasons for choosing cremation, but the prevalence of cremation and the horror of burial in our culture are plausibly attributable to a death-phoboia connected with what late "disorganized" capitalism makes of us as human beings.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
I have to say, Psyduck, that although cremation as part of a death-phobia cult might make sense... and be arguable... I suspect the reality is rather more stark.

I think that cremation has become acceptable simply because of the limitation of space in churchyards, and the expense of the funeral. The same forces that appear to be driving some in Greece to want cremations legalized.

Funerals are events where most people don't want to do anything different. Most people follow the default position that they'll do what their parents did burying the grandparents... and what Joe Bloggs next door does.

When that was burial, I suspect that's all anyone ever considered doing.

Until finance become such a serious pressure, it wasn't possible anymore. I expect cremation took some time in the UK before it was considered acceptable - until the critical mass of Joe Bloggses and parents built up enough.

You might be able to trace death-phobia developing among it, but I'd find it hard to believe that was the driving force. Similarly, I've seen just as death-phobic grief-phobic funerals using coffins - where no-one speaks of the "deceased" unless completely unavoidable, the service is held before a quick race to the graveside and huried departure...

I'd suggest the post-modern analysis is this;

That there are two seperate narratives, with a degree of cross-talk, which you are forcing into a single narrative.

[ 24. August 2006, 09:03: Message edited by: mdijon ]
 
Posted by Anselmina (# 3032) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Dear Scot and Ruth

ACTIVE destruction of remains by humans assumes that the deceased's body is deserving of no special respect which, contrastingly, would be indicated by committal without HUMAN violence.

There is of course the other side of the coin of those who use cremation as a committal process, reverently and prayerfully, in reducing to dust and ash what has already been given to God in love. To say that mourners and funeral takers who use cremation have no respect for the remains of the deceased is clearly untrue.

quote:
That the body of the deceased can be ACTIVELY destroyed does injury to the Christian doctrine that human physicality has permanent value in:-

(1) The creative purpose of God. (The "good" of Genesis).
(2) The assumption of our flesh in the Incarnation. The myrrh-bearing women were equippped to anoint the body of Jesus ... not burn it.
(3) The hope of resurrection.

While wishing to respect your preferred interpretation of the symbolism of the above, I can't see any clear connection at all of cremation being a denial of any Christian doctrine, least of all the hope of the resurrection which you yourself say has nothing to do with the state of the remains.

quote:
This injury is a "denial by act" in relation to the body. I am not talking about soul or spirit since crematers seem to ascribe some preferential aspect to these - but this is not what I understand by the resurrection.
You talk of 'injury' and 'denial' for a process that others understand as reverent and prayerful, and not at all disrespectful to the person who inhabited that body, or to their remains. Of course, people may in ignorance do something that is actually harmful, which I suppose is what you're implying, but cremation, imo, isn't an example of this.

quote:
The best way to roll back cremation is to present authentic Christianity as "with the body" - ALWAYS subsisting that is; in life, in death and after death - not in spite of it. God having take our flesh to himself forever enhanced status and character of that flesh (beyond even its existing high status in Judaism) whether or not it is now recognised by humans themselves.
'Authentic' Christianity being what you believe, naturally, and any divergence from that obviously must be in-authentic! Predictable. This just reminds me of the Corinthian passage where Paul has been questioned 'with what kind of body are the dead raised?' I wonder if Paul sensed that some might wish to make a kind of fetishist or cultic approach to the remains of the deceased (and I'm not saying this is what you're doing, Fr Gregory!) and therefore gave them the answer he did?

quote:
That Christians should not now see this is, to me, most sad.
Well, we know that you find it sad that everyone doesn't agree with you. I find it sad that you should assume all Christians should.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
As I say, if we continue the discussion in the terms of the OP, we're not going to get anywhere. The OP embodies theological truth as Fr. Gregory understands it. It's a completely self-consistent statement of what he believes. Eutychus, you aren't going to overthrow his theological position, because he isn't going to step outside it to discuss with you on any other basis, and he's been completely consistent in this. We are trading, not in arguments of what's better or worse, but in statements of what's right and wrong. There isn't a debate going on here.

Well, if all we are doing is proclaiming our respective positions, I guess you're right. Move along folks, there's nothing Purgatorial to see here...
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
mdijon:
quote:
I have to say, Psyduck, that although cremation as part of a death-phobia cult might make sense... and be arguable... I suspect the reality is rather more stark.

I think that cremation has become acceptable simply because of the limitation of space in churchyards, and the expense of the funeral. The same forces that appear to be driving some in Greece to want cremations legalized.

I wouldn't disagree with you, but I see these things as deeply interconnected. I think it's got to do with the way rationality works in modern societies. I think Max Weber is right when he suggests that in modernity, what increases is "instrumental" rationality, which is really about the most efficient means to achieve your ends. It's basically a value-free rationality that tells you the best way to do whatever you want to do. The trouble is that because of the decline of what he calls "substantive" rationality - that lets you work out what it is you want to do, and to evaluate your choices - we can't resist, because we have no grounds on which to resist - the argument that this is a better way to do something because more rational because more efficient. I think that marries quite well with Jameson's cultural logic of late capitalism argument. And also, if he wasn't so determined that theology can hold itself up by its own bootstraps, and is absolute with respect to culture, with something like Fr Gregory's position.

quote:
Funerals are events where most people don't want to do anything different. Most people follow the default position that they'll do what their parents did burying the grandparents... and what Joe Bloggs next door does.
Exactly why people who have deep misgivings about cremation go along with it because they can't rationalize their alternative. It seems to me that the situation in Greece may be a mirror image of this.

quote:
When that was burial, I suspect that's all anyone ever considered doing.

Until finance become such a serious pressure, it wasn't possible anymore. I expect cremation took some time in the UK before it was considered acceptable - until the critical mass of Joe Bloggses and parents built up enough.

Quite - and this is an economic argument, which brings us back to the implication of capitalism in all of this. Jameson, as a good ol' Marxist boy at heart, privileges the economic - i.e. the substructural - over the superstructural cultural and religious - dimensions, but simultaneously as a good little postmodernist he aserts that everything has collapsed into culture. He can't really have it both ways - but it's why his essay is so instructive.

quote:
You might be able to trace death-phobia developing among it, but I'd find it hard to believe that was the driving force. Similarly, I've seen just as death-phobic grief-phobic funerals using coffins - where no-one speaks of the "deceased" unless completely unavoidable, the service is held before a quick race to the graveside and huried departure...
If I were proposing causal explanations, I wouldn't be a postmodernist, now, would I? [Biased] What I'm proposing is a significant intertextuality - or congruence, if you will. This, all at once, is what's going on in contemporary culture. We are immersed in late-stage capitalism with its death-phobia, which is both inimical to, and threatened by, the Christian tradition. We have to be that paradoxical thing - postmodern Christians. Which Father Gregory is doing, as Hooker's Trick said:
quote:
What's amusing, though, is that Fr Gregory has adopted the usages of another culture which he believes far surpasses the usages of his own.

And so he begins thread after thread on this board to prove to us that our post-Enlightenment culture is hideously gone astray.

And he's quite right to do so. What is a bit weird is that he appears -and I'm open to his correction on this - to believe that theology gives him an archimedean point outside culture which will enable him to move the world. To that extent, he's as Enlightenment-modern as anyone. He wants theology to be the metanarrative.

quote:
I'd suggest the post-modern analysis is this;

That there are two seperate narratives, with a degree of cross-talk, which you are forcing into a single narrative.

Bingo! You see precisely what I'm doing! Just as longas you understand that I understand it too! The one word I have problems with is "force". I'm really just reading them together, and enjoying the intertextuality... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
And as long as you understand I understand you understand that...

I guess my interpretation of the inter-textuality is that it is almost accidental - that were cremation to be the expensive rite of old, invested with great meaning... and burial a johnny-come-lately method, cheaper and easier to organise, we could as very well have the same inter-textuality between modern grief-phobia and burial.
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
Absolu... Sorry, postmodernists aren't supposed to say that. So - yes...
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
Absolu... Sorry, postmodernists aren't supposed to say that.

That would be the übernarrative, you mean.
 
Posted by Callan (# 525) on :
 
Originally posted by Psyduck:

quote:
Postmodernism is characterized by all sorts of death-phobic impulses - it's been suggested that the astronomical body-count of Schwarzenegger movies is death-phobic inasmuch as the whole point of the film is that after the slaughter, the only people guaranteed to be left alive are Arnie, the Linda Hamilton type person, the "her son who the evil terminator is after" type person, and me, the viewer.
Have you ever seen Terminator II?
 
Posted by Psyduck (# 2270) on :
 
yup
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
As I said, 4000 years of unbroken tradition was once considered mainstream and cremation unthinkable THEOLOGICALLY.

I repeat my contention that the same could be said of slavery. Care to comment?
The christian attitude to slavery changed for theological reasons - i.e. it was seen to be immoral. As we've seen from this thread, the acceptance of cremation was largely pragmatic.

The 4,000 year tradition which Father Gregory mentions was not exclusively Orthodox. The tradition was grounded in shared theological considerations. Almost everybody except the Orthodox have changed the tradition for almost any reason except theology. And almost nobody is prepared to say why.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
It may not be that theology demanded a change (as in the case of slavery) - it may be a recognition that there was no sound theological reason for insisting on burial.

Other than symbolism (see above).
 
Posted by Callan (# 525) on :
 
Originally posted by Psyduck:

quote:
quote:
Have you ever seen Terminator II?
yup
So you've forgotten the bit when John Connor tells Arnie that he's not allowed to kill anyone?

I think there are six deaths in Terminator II. The two policemen killed by the T-1000, Connor's foster parents, the scientist who gets blown up with the prototype Skynet, and the chap caught in the cross fire between Arnie and the T-1000. Oh, and both Terminators end up being melted in a vat of molten metal.

So, not exactly a balletic carnival of slaughter with only Arnie, Linda Hamilton and the kid the terminator is after as the only survivor.

Now, if you'd talked about Commando you might have had a point but I'm not sure that it's any more Thanatophobic than the Song of Roland or the book of Joshua, for that matter. Good guys killing bad guys has been a staple of narrative since Homer smote his bloomin' lyre.

Callan
Postmodernity sceptic and bad movie buff. [Biased]
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Callan:
I think there are six deaths in Terminator II. The two policemen killed by the T-1000, Connor's foster parents, the scientist who gets blown up with the prototype Skynet, and the chap caught in the cross fire between Arnie and the T-1000. Oh, and both Terminators end up being melted in a vat of molten metal.

There are a few more than that - the T-1000 bumps off the driver of every vehicle it wants for a start. And there's the security guard at the hospital...

quote:
Now, if you'd talked about Commando you might have had a point
Or, indeed, Total Recall.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
Callan appears to have repressed his memory of some of the deaths.

Perhaps the memories were just subsumed in appreciation of the balletic carnage... perhaps this denial speaks volumes concerning his latent death-phobia.
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The Orthodox alone have remained opposed for various reasons:-

(1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."
(2) It promotes human violence against the body rather than a natural return to the earth.
(3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.
(4) It is in clear violation of millennia of practice and Christ's own example.

Let me try again.

The Orthodox are alone and wrong because

1) To some, burial denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) that the body is a means to the spirit and that spirit should rule the body. To some, cremation affirms this SYMBOLICALLY (not actually). Post Christ, Christians should have OPTIONS that are symbolically meaningful to them.
2) Burial can promote equation of a dead human form wrapped in a shroud with a turd wrapped in a piece of toilet paper to some people. For others, cremation equates the dead form with a candle that brings light into the world. Post Christ, Christians should have OPTIONS that are symbolically meaningful to them.
3) Burying makes honoring the dead, the body, and the rituals of grief associated with cremation much more problematic for those predisposed to cremation. For others, the problem is reversed. Post Christ, Christians should have OPTIONS that are symbolically meaningful to them.
4) The continuation of burial alone as the only option available denies Christ's example of freeing us from the inflexible Law. Post Christ, Christians should have OPTIONS that are symbolically meaningful to them.

Is that any better? Orthodox inflexibility on the issue is simply that. It is not a sign that it actually is the One True Church, but the Last Holdout in Error (Rome being second to last in 1963).

Two cheers for Rome! None for Orthodoxy!

[ 24. August 2006, 15:37: Message edited by: JimT ]
 
Posted by Callan (# 525) on :
 
Originally posted by Isaac David:

quote:
The christian attitude to slavery changed for theological reasons - i.e. it was seen to be immoral. As we've seen from this thread, the acceptance of cremation was largely pragmatic.
Cremation has always been tolerated on pragmatic grounds. Bodies were often burned in time of plague, for fairly obvious reasons. Given the choice between cremation and interment and the nineteenth century practice of chopping up bodies to make more room in graves, the decision to opt for cremation strikes me as being compassionate and humane. If everyone had a straight choice between being buried in an idyllic country churchyard and cremation, I'm sure most of us would choose the former but as, practically, that is rarely the case the introduction of cremation was the least worst option. I don't particularly mind being considered pragmatic in this instance. As no-one on this thread has yet suggested a means by which vast tracts of land on a crowded island could be converted into cemeteries, we're saddled with the current situation. Banging as if a pragmatic decision was some kind of horrific apostasy won't alter that in the slightest.

mdijon - it's a fair cop [Biased]
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Neither HT. Have you REALLY read all my posts here? If you had I don't see how you could have said all that.

I'm not as smart as you are. I don't understand your posts. So I asked a simple clarification.

It seems to me you only want to argue on your own terms, abiding by your own agenda, and do so in a way that doesn't ever quite come clean about that agenda.

But like I said, I'm not as smart as you are, so I've probably got it quite wrong.
 
Posted by Mad Geo (# 2939) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
It seems to me you only want to argue on your own terms, abiding by your own agenda, and do so in a way that doesn't ever quite come clean about that agenda.

No, say it isn't so HT!

[Biased]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Yes, I give up; it's true. I do believe that theology takes precedence over sociology when it comes to Christians considering their mortality and their hope in Christ. Why should I want to argue someone who isn't a Christian into my inhumation practice? Not at all. If, however, such a person was to leave a body by the roadside, as experienced by my predecessors in the early church, I would bury him / her.
 
Posted by Mad Geo (# 2939) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
If, however, such a person was to leave a body by the roadside, as experienced by my predecessors in the early church, I would bury him / her.

As would us Buddhists, thanks. But the fun here is watching you trying to use theology to beat other Christians up, with no theology apparent except "We've done this for 4000 years so we must be right".
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Yes, I give up; it's true. I do believe that theology takes precedence over sociology when it comes to Christians considering their mortality and their hope in Christ. Why should I want to argue someone who isn't a Christian into my inhumation practice? Not at all. If, however, such a person was to leave a body by the roadside, as experienced by my predecessors in the early church, I would bury him / her.

If you have advanced any explicity theological arguments whatsoever on this thread, then I am afraid my repeated readings of your posts have not helped me to realise to any extent at all what they may possibly be.

Here is what I see happening:

Father Gregory - "rotting is ok, but being burned is not ok".

Everyone else except DOD - "why?"

Father Gregory - "because they show a different attitude to the body and by extension God's creation"

Everyone else except DOD - "are you sure that you are not mistaking a personal preference for a theological argument?"

Father Gregory - "how many more times? being buried and rotting is ok, but being burned is not ok"

Everyone else except DOD - "why?"

and round and round and round and round and round.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
This is the game we play here ...

(1) I explain the theological rationale for inhumation against cremation.
(2) Those who take a utilitarian approach cover over one eye and declare "I see no theology."
(3) I say: "I am not going to repeat myself nor flog a dead horse."
(4) Others reply by traducing my theology into absurd vacuous sound bytes and then have the gall to challenge me to justify my position based on those garbled versions.

Sorry, not playing.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(1) I explain the theological rationale for inhumation against cremation.
(2) Those who take a utilitarian approach cover over one eye and declare "I see no theology."

Well, not in my case. I buy your theology of the human body, and like you I reject the dualism that sets spirit separate from and above flesh. I believe in the goodness of God's creation, in the Incarnation of Christ, and in the resurrection of the body.

I just don't buy the notion that burning the human body is inherently disrespectful of it. It depends on how you do it, just as burial being respectful depends on how you do it.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Thank you Ruth. [Angel] [Votive]
 
Posted by Mad Geo (# 2939) on :
 
FG,

Speaking as a semi-disinterested semi-objective observer that really doesn't care about how one gets buried or burned, I take umbrage at how you characterized Their theology:

Yours is as Utilitarian as Theirs.

Theirs is as Theological as yours.

The problem here is not Their gall, it is yours for thinking you have a corner on this truth with nothing more than your opinion and a bunch of people that did things a certain cultural way 4000 years ago, or so your people say. I had an ancestor 4000 years ago that crapped standing up, it doesn't mean I mean I want to now.

[ 24. August 2006, 18:11: Message edited by: Mad Geo ]
 
Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
...I just don't buy the notion that burning the human body is inherently disrespectful of it. It depends on how you do it, just as burial being respectful depends on how you do it.

Rather like the case of burning flags - there are respectful ways, and there are protests that use disrespectful ways.
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Sorry, not playing.

I told you I was not as smart as you.
 
Posted by the Pookah (# 9186) on :
 
Fr. Gregory;
now you've got me hooked. Do Orthodox insist that you bury body parts. Are you allowed in if the body is tatooed?
For sure, not in an Orthodox Jewish cemetary where for 4,000 unbroken years they've theologically speaking made sure that all your body parts are there for the Resurrection in an unblemished state.
So I hope the Orthodox Christians continue this 4,000 year tradition otherwise,theologically you don't make sense.
the Pookah
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
How is all the piety about burial reconciled with things like this, BTW?

How come these fellas didn't merit a decent burial, one wonders - or at least a decent cremation?
 
Posted by Horseman Bree (# 5290) on :
 
I have attended funerals where the show made by some of the (very) Christian mourners was an absolute denial anything that Christ taught - obsessive weeping (with one eye open to be sure people saw them doing it), clutching at the corpse in the coffin in a "last goodbye" that was positively creepy, large amounts of money spent on preserving the body and laying it in absolute finery in a steel box (presumably so that all the bits were "saved" forever)...

I have attended funerals where the ashes were in a tidy "decent" box, but were not held up so that the mourners could "worship" it, just as I have been at funerals where a pall covered a plain casket. In both styles, the funeral service was a reminder of our mortality in the flesh and our promise of the life to come.

It seems to me that "dust to dust, ashes to ashes" implies that the church (Church?) had decided long ago that ashes were OK. I haven't seen any argument that I find convincing that burial or cremation is inherently more dignified or "religious" or whatever. The attitude of those attending matters more than some statement about "we've always done it this way".

Some of the arguing does help me to determine which sects/denominations/One True Churches offer less attractive points of view!
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
I still see no theology.

Oh well.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Isaac David:
The christian attitude to slavery changed for theological reasons - i.e. it was seen to be immoral.

I think it found its theological defenders prior to that. And it's hard to see how even theology could change if continuity is your prevailing value.

quote:
As we've seen from this thread, the acceptance of cremation was largely pragmatic.


Since when were theology and pragmatism mutually exclusive? Paul has scarcely finished spreading the good news that no-one needs to be circumcised when he goes and does just that to Timothy 'for the sake of the Jews'. In fact "by all possible means save some" sounds like extremely pragmatic theology to me.

quote:
The tradition was grounded in shared theological considerations. Almost everybody except the Orthodox have changed the tradition for almost any reason except theology. And almost nobody is prepared to say why.
If you have a theology which allows for the concept of change of praxis with respect to social realities (and I think I've only just started on how one could find that in the NT without too much difficulty), the distinction you draw falls away.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
As I said, 4000 years of unbroken tradition was once considered mainstream and cremation unthinkable THEOLOGICALLY.

I repeat my contention that the same could be said of slavery. Care to comment?
The same could be said of the old view of women, who, in 4000 years of unbroken tradition were seen as spiritually, mentally, and physically inferior to men, and --

Oh, wait.

Never mind.

Father Gregory does seem to be using this issue as just another club with which to beat those who disagree with him. All the actual discussion is taking place among the latter group. He's just doing Theme & Variations, with no genuine interaction.

[Snore]

Ross
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Actually, I don't find this at all [Snore] . The thought I had while walking home this evening is that the requirement of specific burial practices reminds me of the Orthodox requirements of incense and icons; perhaps the comparison is not apt, but if so one of the Orthodox can let me know. I can see the theology these things are supposed to express, but I don't see that burying an unembalmed body, using incense in church or kissing/venerating icons are the only ways of expressing, communicating or embodying that theology.
 
Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
 
But Gregory's argument appears to be that the Orthodox have always said that it is the only way to expres that theologically, so it MUST be....

And anyone who challanges that is told that they are just a stupid heretic and that they have "gall" and that they are being wilfully ignorant.

And it is impossibly to argue with that. And that it is impossible to argue with says nothing about the validity or otherwise of Gregory's assertations. Because that is what they are: assertions, not arguments.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Fr. Gregory's further explanations of his position have got me thinking about "the resurrection of the body," and what that really means (or might mean), which I've never thought about much before.

It does make my head hurt pretty quickly and for once want to quickly prooftext with Paul about our resurrected bodies being different -- what I read behind that statement is that actually we don't really know what comes next.

Psyduck, thank you for the custom deconstruction. I have grasped onto
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
the "skin-bound" self that is one referent of "I" is really just a part of something vastly more complex.

to mull over.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
I'm hoping to find out why this particular burial practice is seen as being the only way to express the Orthodox theology of the human body at this point in life/death. Fr Gregory insists that there is a necessary connection between the two, and I'd like to take a shot at trying to understand how that could be.

quote:
Fr Gregory:
The tradition was grounded in shared theological considerations. Almost everybody except the Orthodox have changed the tradition for almost any reason except theology. And almost nobody is prepared to say why.

quote:
Eutychus:
If you have a theology which allows for the concept of change of praxis with respect to social realities (and I think I've only just started on how one could find that in the NT without too much difficulty), the distinction you draw falls away.

I'm interested in seeing how Fr Gregory responds to this.

It seems to me that all manner of things could be appropriate expressions of a theology that honors the human body as part of God's good creation and as the flesh honored and undertaken by Christ in the Incarnation. The showers offered at my parish to people living on the street, for instance. My admittedly quite incomplete understanding of the Orthodox approach to praxis makes me wonder why things like washing visitors' feet when they enter our homes wasn't enshrined in tradition as one of those things you gotta do.

[ 25. August 2006, 02:09: Message edited by: RuthW ]
 
Posted by Gort (# 6855) on :
 
As always, the physical symbolism of traditional ritual clouds the meaning of repeated practice till the original purpose is lost. Icons are meaningless in themselves and are only focal points for something deeper. And so it is with our bodies. They are physical manifestations, meaningless in themselves, and serve only as focal points for a greater purpose. Worrying about how the body is disposed is no more or less important than how you care for an icon. Is Simple Green, Windex or mild soapy water more venerable for its cleaning?
 
Posted by KenWritez (# 3238) on :
 
I have no theology of interment based on church tradition. The interment practices of Iron Age Jews, Moslems, or even of Neanderthal man are of no more than minor historical interest to me because IMO their interment practices have no significant connection to or impact on the Gospel and to the Christian faith.

What I do have is whatever knowledge of scripture I possess, direct experience of the issues involved in cremation (having been involved in the decision to cremate my parents after their deaths), and an ability (such as it is) to reason through this issue given the tools I have.

In my theology, tradition is a fine thing, honorable, but never, ever authoritative in the same fashion as scripture. I see tradition as a useful resource in my faith and my theology, as a means of continuity to my ancestors of faith, as a history of God's interaction with believers during a time, but not at all co-equal with what I see as the written, revealed, inerrant, inspired Word of God.

My view of scripture is a minority opinion on the Ship (or at least it feels like one), but it's one I've held for a long time and it's one I've examined and will continue to examine. I am open to the possibility I am wrong in my view of scripture, and that's one of the reasons I hang around the Ship--exposure to differing views. As a result, I examine my own beliefs against them, looking for where I might be wrong or where I might be right. To paraphrase Socrates, "The unexamined faith is not worth living" and I want an examined faith.

Thus, my stance on cremation. I don't agree with any of Fr. G's assertions against cremation, and I can offer arguments that interment offers more violence against the deceased and his soul than cremation, which offers none.

[ 25. August 2006, 06:09: Message edited by: KenWritez ]
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
This is the game we play here ...

(1) I explain the theological rationale for inhumation against cremation.
(2) Those who take a utilitarian approach cover over one eye and declare "I see no theology."
(3) I say: "I am not going to repeat myself nor flog a dead horse."
(4) Others reply by traducing my theology into absurd vacuous sound bytes and then have the gall to challenge me to justify my position based on those garbled versions.

Actually, I think that (2) is misinterpreted.

My position (and the position ruthW, JimT and others have articulated) was "I see that there is theology here - however, it all depends on symbolism. And in my/our hands, that symbolism doesn't necessarily carry the same meaning. It seems to be a mistake to impute the same theological meaning on anothers symbolism".

And I would submit that (3) is then inappropriate. (3) actually needs to be a cogent argument as to why one interpretation of the symbolism is to be universal. You did answer in terms of incorruptible, corruptible, risen Christ etc. - but to me those things are not materially influenced by the funeral - only symbolically.

Now it may be that I'm being obstinate in my refusal to see why that is not so - but I honestly don't see it, and you'll need to humour me with monosyllabic explanations if you want me to get it.

[ 25. August 2006, 08:02: Message edited by: mdijon ]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Ruth

(The quote was from Isaac David but of course I agree with it ...)

ANYTHING that we do to cherish the human, and that includes first and foremost the body, physical needs etc. etc. is God pleasing. So whether it's the Salvation Army's "you can't preach the gospel to an empty stomach" (St. John Chrysostom would have approved), a gay man tending to his lover dying of Aids or simply giving a hug to a lonely person; all of this is venerating and chershing God's handiwork.

The Orthodox have deeply rooted in their theology of the HUMAN a respect for physicality similar to the Jains who sweep the paths before their ascetics lest they tread on an insect, (although not as extreme as that of course!)

If, for example, I, as a driver, inadvertently killed a child who ran out into the road without warning, I could no longer from that moment serve as a priest. The Church only changed from her pacifistic stance in the early centuries as she became necessarily embroiled in the project of transforming earthly kingdoms. However, violence against the person, even when this fulfils the criteria of the so-called "Just War" or the legitimate use of deadly force by the State ... all of these remain sins needful of repentance.

Nothing remains covered in Orthodoxy. What I do or do not do, what I see or choose not to see, what I accept or rationalise away ... all these are as if I am doing themselves myselves without mediation. So, there is absolutely no difference in Orthodox thought between pressing a button for committal to the flames in a crematorium and, instead, wandering around with a blow touch for 3 hours personally incinerating the body. The finger that hovers over the nuclear button is no different in character from the personal active and individual prospect of vapourising (were it possible) each fatality of a nuclear strike, face to face by the assailant himself.

The modern funeral "industry" (actually whether by burial or burning) has succeeded in distancing us from the object of our fears. Let's just deal with burial for a moment for contemporary practice exhibits the same pathology.

Embalming, funeral homes as "parlours", pretending that the person is "not dead really ... just around the corner" and all that crap, coffins rather than shrouds (coffins only started to be used in a widespread manner in the 19th century), sentimental secularised eulogies rather than realistic gospel messages about mortality and hope ... all these have conspired to sanitise death and distance its reality from human experience. Even when pain and blood and mess have preceded a funeral, the funeral is all about extirpating that from the memory. In this context we can barely watch the crufixion of Jesus in Gibson's Passion ... we are far happier with mass slaughter a la Arnie where we THINK we have dealt with death, but not at all.

Now that this has happened, cremation is made to look no more objectiinable or praiseworthy than burial because the mourners' hands no longer often attend the lowering into the grave with hands full of dirt nor do they think of cremation as anything other than the disappearance behind a curtain and the almost magical appearance later of the ashes. I respect Hindus far, far more for insisting on going round the back to the actual furnace ... as many insist on doing in the UK. I would respect the cremation position here on this thread much more if proponents were henceforth only prepared to attend open pyres as in India, (not that this is legal of course ... just more aspects of The Great Cover Up).

I don't think I can add anything more right now. Again, I am out now the for the day so I will look at this later.

[ 25. August 2006, 08:14: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Now that this has happened, cremation is made to look no more objectiinable or praiseworthy than burial because the mourners' hands no longer often attend the lowering into the grave with hands full of dirt nor do they think of cremation as anything other than the disappearance behind a curtain and the almost magical appearance later of the ashes.

That's one heck of a claim. I know that when my grandmother was cremated none of us thought of it as "disappearing behind the curtain". And we knew damn well where the ashes came from and how they got there.

Your position seems to have evolved into some kind of bizarre "if you aren't actually there at the graveside shovelling in the soil on top of the body then you're denying the reality of death" idea. I call bullshit.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The Church only changed from her pacifistic stance in the early centuries as she became necessarily embroiled in the project of transforming earthly kingdoms.

Um... would this be an example of social reality affecting theology?

quote:
The modern funeral "industry" (actually whether by burial or burning) has succeeded in distancing us from the object of our fears.
"whether by burial or burning"...?!! You've moved a long way from your OP. The issue for you is no longer whether cremation is theologically inferior to burial, it's about the removal of the starker realities of death from society.

Me, I call moving the goalpoasts.
 
Posted by Demas (# 24) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
If, for example, I, as a driver, inadvertently killed a child who ran out into the road without warning, I could no longer from that moment serve as a priest.

Why not? [Confused]
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the coiled spring:
There is a tradition in parts of India where the widow throws herself on the funeral pyre. With all the multi-culture and diversty stuff being bantered about is there anyway we could suggest this tradition to Tony and Cherie

Raja Rammohun Roy campainged to end that in 1822 and Gandhi managed to get it made illegal in the Twentieth Century, though it may linger on in remote villages.
 
Posted by the Pookah (# 9186) on :
 
Tsk, tsk Father Gregory, never answered the leg question.hmm or that pesky tatoo issue.

Really the ancient Hebrews didn't even have a feel for the afterlife, all that dreary Sheol stuff.

It was after the Babylonian Exile & getting Zoroastrian ideas of heaven, hell & a resurrection that it came up.

So in truth Father Gregory should go with the vultures a la Parsi, but eheu they are not doing the job & parabolic mirrors are de rigueur in Bombay.
the Pookah
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
quote:
From Eutychus:
it's hard to see how even theology could change if continuity is your prevailing value.

Sure, but it isn't our prevailing value. Any attempt to reduce Orthodox theology in that way results in an oversimplification. I don't have time right now to tell you how to do Orthodox theology, but even if I did, I suspect I would fail. Explaining Orthodox theology is rather like explaining a poem or a piece of music. It may help, but the best explanation is the poem or piece of music itself. Maybe that's why repetition is such a strong feature of our contributions. [Roll Eyes]
quote:
Since when were theology and pragmatism mutually exclusive?
They aren't. The problem at hand is pragmatism divorced from theology or even pragmatism as a substitute for theology.
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
I'm still unclear what this theology is - except a particular interpretation of the symbolism of cremation that may or may not hold for all concerned.

FGs last post certainly doesn't contain any theology.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The modern funeral "industry" (actually whether by burial or burning) has succeeded in distancing us from the object of our fears. Let's just deal with burial for a moment for contemporary practice exhibits the same pathology.

Embalming, funeral homes as "parlours", pretending that the person is "not dead really ... just around the corner" and all that crap, coffins rather than shrouds (coffins only started to be used in a widespread manner in the 19th century), sentimental secularised eulogies rather than realistic gospel messages about mortality and hope ... all these have conspired to sanitise death and distance its reality from human experience. Even when pain and blood and mess have preceded a funeral, the funeral is all about extirpating that from the memory. In this context we can barely watch the crufixion of Jesus in Gibson's Passion ... we are far happier with mass slaughter a la Arnie where we THINK we have dealt with death, but not at all.

Actually, I think this is totally ridiculous.

All of this tremendous hoo-hah you're going on about revolves around a period of about 12-24 hours, according to you. If you don't embalm, you must bury within a day or so. So you're making a big federal deal out of a half day in most people's lives. As if somehow this half-day could or should have a outsized and monstrous effect on people's psyches - and as if the "theology" were able to penetrate the grief of losing people you love.

Please. To blame the "funeral industry" for "distancing people from death" is simply absurd, when the "funeral industry" deals with people for a couple of days, at most. What about all the days and months and years preceding the death? Any notion at all that they might be more important and more formative?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
What has "distanced people from death" is the fact that death has, lately, been put at a distance.

Excellent medicine; drastically lowered infant mortality; better standards of living, at least in the West; no lengthy periods of major war. All of these things have "distanced people from death." Cremation vs. burial is a big fat glaring red herring. There may indeed be a theology involved here, but we're not at all engaged in talking about it so far.

And, P.S.: anybody who's done any extended caretaking of elderly parents or sick loved ones does not feel "distanced from death."
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Actually, I don't find this at all [Snore] . The thought I had while walking home this evening is that the requirement of specific burial practices reminds me of the Orthodox requirements of incense and icons; perhaps the comparison is not apt, but if so one of the Orthodox can let me know. I can see the theology these things are supposed to express, but I don't see that burying an unembalmed body, using incense in church or kissing/venerating icons are the only ways of expressing, communicating or embodying that theology.

It's not the topic that's [Snore] ; it's Father Gregory's approach to (for want of a better word) discussion.

Ross
 
Posted by KenWritez (# 3238) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
ANYTHING that we do to cherish the human, and that includes first and foremost the body, physical needs etc. etc. is God pleasing.

And the people here who support cremation or have cremated loved ones have said over and over their actions were done in that vein of cherishing the deceased, the survivors and themselves.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The Orthodox have deeply rooted in their theology of the HUMAN a respect for physicality similar to the Jains who sweep the paths before their ascetics lest they tread on an insect, (although not as extreme as that of course!)

And that's fine for the Orthodox, as it is for the Jains and their practice. Each to his own. I can't see where Orthodox theology on this issue is binding on non-Orthodox or ought to be.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
If, for example, I, as a driver, inadvertently killed a child who ran out into the road without warning, I could no longer from that moment serve as a priest.

To echo leo, why? IMO this is incomprehensible. Is the Orthodox Church really that unforgiving? This paints a picture of your call to the priesthood as so fragile and so dependent on human standing that God's call to you to be a priest is trumped by Orthodox theology as irrelevant and subordinate to man-made, fallible church law.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
However, violence against the person... all of these remain sins needful of repentance.

I haven't seen anyone disagreeing with you on this thread that violence needs repentance. The point of disagreement is whether or not cremation is violence. So far only you and Isaac David, fellow Orthodox, claim it is.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
funeral homes as "parlours",

Here in the States the majority of funeral homes I've seen were set up in large old houses or built to resemble same. I would think this was done to make the mourning friends and family more comfortable and to have more a homey atmosphere and less a sterile business facade, like a shop.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
pretending that the person is "not dead really ... just around the corner" and all that crap,

I have never dealt with clergy or a funeral industry rep who pretended my deceased was "not dead really ... just around the corner". If a funeral industry rep or clergy did exhibit this attitude, then it is unprofessional, mawkish, silly and an example of true "violence against the human dead" and its spirit.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
sentimental secularised eulogies rather than realistic gospel messages about mortality and hope...

Here you must point the finger at your fellow clergy, not the funeral industry. The clergy are the ones preaching this bullshit, and yes, I have heard these plastic sermons before and they nauseated me.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Even when pain and blood and mess have preceded a funeral, the funeral is all about extirpating that from the memory.

No funerals in my experience have been about "extirpating" anything. The funerals I've attended have been about commemorating the life and relationships of the deceased and helping those who grieve come to terms with the death of their loved one and the hope of resurrection.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I would respect the cremation position here on this thread much more if proponents were henceforth only prepared to attend open pyres as in India,

I have no problem attending an open funeral pyre as long as I can stand far enough upwind so I'm not spattered by rendering fat. I plan on attending Scot's pyre in his sailboat.

Of course, open funeral pyres are still cremation and still violence against the human body and spirit according to your doctrine, so I'm not sure why you're bringing this up, unless as suggested by other posters you're changing your argument: "Cremation is bad. Always. Okay, it's not all bad, open funeral pyres are acceptable as long as there's no embalming, coffins or other Western funeral industry trappings."

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
(...just more aspects of The Great Cover Up).

{My head in my hands.) Don't you get tired of conspiracy theories? Do you find personal responsibility that unattractive or unreasonable? So many of your threads are about Them vs Us. Big Corporations vs Small Business. The US vs. Everyone Else. The Military-Industrial Complex vs. Peace-Loving Peoples. The Funeral Industry vs. God, the Orthodox, and People Who Don't Know Any Better.

quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
ANYTHING that we do to cherish the human, and that includes first and foremost the body, physical needs etc. etc. is God pleasing.

And when you paint those who disagree with you as lesser believers, is that God-pleasing, too?
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I respect Hindus far, far more for insisting on going round the back to the actual furnace ... as many insist on doing in the UK. I would respect the cremation position here on this thread much more if proponents were henceforth only prepared to attend open pyres as in India, (not that this is legal of course ... just more aspects of The Great Cover Up).

I actually see movement toward agreement with me here, that there are in fact ways to make a cremation ceremony that is both respectful and in line with proper Christian theological concepts. What Father Gregory is showing some sympathy for is something like the ceremony I mentioned, with a priest starting a fire with flint and steel, candles being lit one from another, and all the candles being applied to the funeral pyre by those in attendence. One might even incorporate the words of David that "you will not allow your holy one to see corruption," expressing hope that the dead person will experience resurrection the same way that Jesus did. I am of course speaking SYMBOLICALLY and not trying to equate the dead person with Jesus exactly, nor take Pslams literally as a commandment to cremate the dead. Work with me on this, will you?

But a practical problem does arise with current death rate. If the death is an unexpected tragedy and close family members are completely over-wrought it could be a dangerous situation.

So we have a controlled and "sanitary" cremation industry, keeping things safe, contained, and...distant. An acquaintence of mine was cremated without memorial service according to his wishes. He simply vanished without a word, which seemed inappropriate but very much like him. I would say that he wanted the cheapest option because he had almost no money left, and he bridled at the notion that others whom he did not especially like would be saying things that they did not expecially believe, all because tradition says that it is what is supposed to be done. For him, it felt like to me that he wanted his last words to be his last words without no one putting a postscript on them. He was not close to priests or family members and I suspect the thought of them talking about him with him dead was unsettling. I doubt he would have minded his old buddies from the war getting drunk, pretending to lose to him at cards while cursing a blue streak, then burying him with his .45, a six pack of his favoriate beer, and the keys to his new Chevy Impala. I'd like to believe that he would have let me preside as priest, to make sure the bastards did it exactly as agreed. And trust me, I would have. So this was his ceremony; I just did it in my head, which is all that matters to me and why I guess I am posting on this thread. Amen.
 
Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by JimT:
...But a practical problem does arise with current death rate. ...

As far as I know, the death rate is still that same as always - one per person.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear mdijon

quote:
FGs last post certainly doesn't contain any theology.

Oh yes it does! Maybe only the Orthodox think that theology is only about God and not about humanity and human culture. Surely not?! If that's true then we are alot further apart than I would either have judged or hoped for. But maybe that is whiy Orthodox cultures have never had something approaching non-theological humanism as in the west, (I am aware of course that there is such a thing as Christian humanism).
 
Posted by Grits (# 4169) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
ANYTHING that we do to cherish the human, and that includes first and foremost the body, physical needs etc. etc. is God pleasing. So whether it's the Salvation Army's "you can't preach the gospel to an empty stomach" (St. John Chrysostom would have approved), a gay man tending to his lover dying of Aids or simply giving a hug to a lonely person; all of this is venerating and chershing God's handiwork.

I think this is actually two different issues here. The first -- love of the human body -- I feel is actually very non-Christian in nature and unsupported by any scriptural teaching. We are told that "all flesh is grass". Jesus didn't seem to have much honor for the body, when He taught it was better to cut off part of it than for it all to go to hell and how we are not to worry about our bodies' needs, etc. Oh, I know we're too care for our bodies and that we're the temple of the Holy Spirit, etc., but I don't find any reference of "cherishing" them.

I do believe we are taught to care for the physical needs of others, but I believe it is the act of love and service involved which actually "pleases God", and not specifically because we're doing something which "venerates His handiwork".
 
Posted by Scot (# 2095) on :
 
Out of your last post, I can only find three sentences that seem to be about theology rather than cultural differences.

quote:
ANYTHING that we do to cherish the human, and that includes first and foremost the body, physical needs etc. etc. is God pleasing.
This statement is theological, but hardly controversial among most of the people posting here.
quote:
The Orthodox have deeply rooted in their theology of the HUMAN a respect for physicality...
Fair enough, but nobody ever said otherwise. The problem here is that the Orthodox seem to be denying that the rest of the wold has any respect for human physicality.
quote:
However, violence against the person, even when this fulfils the criteria of the so-called "Just War" or the legitimate use of deadly force by the State ... all of these remain sins needful of repentance.
This last stament is more debatable but, if it is to be applied to the current discussion, we must once again ask what theological basis there is for your claim that cremation is violence while burial is not.

You say that pressing the button on the crematory is morally the same as holding a blowtorch on the body. I agree. By the same reasoning, I say that burying a body for the worms is morally the same as throwing it to the wolves. We are equally responsible for any of these actions. Neither the mechanism of the crematory button nor the slow pace of the worm changes the fact that a human started the ball rolling. The difference is aesthetic, not moral or theological.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
I disagree about the violence issue Scot but I have only an interest here to TRY and make our position better understood. I don't anticipate that anyone will have in the least changed their own views on the matter by the time we have reached page 99.

Dear Grits

There are plenty of indications from Scripture about the sanctity of the physical aspect of our nature from the erotic poetry of the Song of Songs (NOT allegorised!) to the woman who wept at Jesus feet and who wiped the tears with her hair ... not to mention the disciple who lay close to Jesus' breast.

[ 25. August 2006, 18:52: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
quote:
Originally posted by JimT:
...But a practical problem does arise with current death rate. ...

As far as I know, the death rate is still that same as always - one per person.
Not according to many Pentecostals. See here for stories of many people who died and were raised from the dead, presumably to die again at some future date. Believers assume that Lazaurus died twice, right? Anyone know of anyone who died three times?
 
Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Maybe only the Orthodox think that theology is only about God and not about humanity and human culture. Surely not?!

On that interpretation I have profoundly theological reasons for wanting to be cremated.

We really are very far apart if you can't see that. This saddens me.

[ 25. August 2006, 18:57: Message edited by: mdijon ]
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
I don't anticipate that anyone will have in the least changed their own views on the matter by the time we have reached page 99.

But it appears that you have changed your views (albeit "in the least") by saying that you might have a shred of respect for cremation where the body is in view during the burning. This tiny and nearly insignificant softening of position is hugely significant coming from one who had been showing an absolute, iron-clad, no exceptions position that ANY burning of a body is automatic desecration. It is not beyond my imagination that you could, by page 99, be actually considering the theoretical possibility that a Orthodox Christian cremation ceremony could be proposed that would not violate Orthodox Christian theology.

Is it completely beyond your imagination to concoct a theoretically possible Orthodox cremation ceremony, or is it permanently settled in your mind that it is utterly impossible because it is completely impossible for anyone to ever come up with one? If say you were given the assignment to come up with one, could you do it, or do you believe it to be inherently impossible for some reason? We all understand that the current Orthodox position is as you say. But are you sure it will always be the Orthodox position, for eternity, and if so why must it stay that way for eternity?
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear JimT

No, you misunderstand me. I have respect for Hindus because they follow through on the logic of cremation. They are not squeamish. I still consider cremation to be beyond the pale. However, Orthodox cremation services do exist WHERE THEY HAVE TO LEGALLY ... eg., in Japan where that is the only option.

Dear mdijon

I am not sure if I understand your position. Are you saying that theology and human affairs / culture have nothing to say to each other ... that one is not an expression of the other? This, by the way is what prompted me to start the tangent thread on culture.
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
<death-phobic tangent>
quote:
Originally posted by Psyduck:
Relevance - of course there are other reasons for choosing cremation, but the prevalence of cremation and the horror of burial in our culture are plausibly attributable to a death-phoboia connected with what late "disorganized" capitalism makes of us as human beings.

Psyduck, I thought that the problem with capitalism in the context of this thread was that it leads to high land prices, which discourages burial. Boy, do I feel stupid now!

I agree that popular culture (whatever the heck that is) is phobic about death, getting old, superfluous hair, and basically anything that might reduce one's sex appeal. However, I don't think one can therefore assume that any individual who isn't religious is death-phobic. My purely anectodal experience has been the exact opposite.

And calling anyone or anything death-phobic is deliciously ironic when it comes from members of a religion whose central claim is to have defeated death. OliviaG
</death-phobic tangent>
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Some of the most pernicious death-phobias are generated by certain Christian traditions ... eg., you can't cry because you are a Christian and your love one is in the Lord.

(1) He/she may not be.
(2) Death hurts and is final in relation to this existence. Crrying is not weakness.
(3) The hope of eternal life is not the natural survival of a "spiritual bit."

These are not very welcome observations about death and the afterlife.
 
Posted by Mad Geo (# 2939) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
... I still consider cremation to be beyond the pale. However, Orthodox cremation services do exist WHERE THEY HAVE TO LEGALLY ... eg., in Japan where that is the only option.

I find this interesting. Have you explained how this exception is made "theologically"?
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mad Geo:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
... I still consider cremation to be beyond the pale. However, Orthodox cremation services do exist WHERE THEY HAVE TO LEGALLY ... eg., in Japan where that is the only option.

I find this interesting. Have you explained how this exception is made "theologically"?
My question exactly!
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
I got interested enough to do a little googling. It says here that the Orthodox Church in Japan holds a complete service with the body visible prior to turning the body over for cremation. I read elsewhere that the service ends with veneration of the body, since the body itself is viewed as sacred. So I would guess the position is, "We showed proper respect up until the very end; now we have to render the body to Ceasar because he demands it." Seems reasonable, especially in light of reports about the Orthodox sifting through the ashes of one of their cremated saints to venerate the remaining bone fragments.

I found a thoughtful commentary here by an Orthodox believer that the Church should routinely allow cremation when the cost is prohibitively expensive to the poor, who should not have to make a special appeal for an exemption. He quotes the Pharisees not lifting a finger to help the poor as justification for his criticism of the hard line on cremation.

But I also bumped into the bizarre situation in Greece, where the civil govt only allowed cremation starting in March of this year. It said that burial plots were over $100,000 and so owners rented them over and over for three years to give the flesh a chance to decompose. Then the body was dug up, the bones stacked neatly some place else, and the plot used over. Whoa! Did I miss that earlier in this thread? Apparently the church was fine with this?! I read one woman's statement that she was fine with it because if you saw lots of flesh after three years, it meant you were a good Christian. Reminded me of the whole scene in The Brothers Karamazov where the body of a priest didn't stink for a long time so they wondered if he might be a saint. Weird stuff. You just can't keep some people from superstition.

It seems like there is internal debate inside Orthodoxy to soften the church's offical stance, and some of it is being justified on grounds of Jesus' position that social justice overrides strict adherence to rules and tradition that become an unbearable burden.
 
Posted by Mudfrog (# 8116) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Grits:
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
ANYTHING that we do to cherish the human, and that includes first and foremost the body, physical needs etc. etc. is God pleasing. So whether it's the Salvation Army's "you can't preach the gospel to an empty stomach" (St. John Chrysostom would have approved), a gay man tending to his lover dying of Aids or simply giving a hug to a lonely person; all of this is venerating and chershing God's handiwork.

I think this is actually two different issues here. The first -- love of the human body -- I feel is actually very non-Christian in nature and unsupported by any scriptural teaching. We are told that "all flesh is grass". Jesus didn't seem to have much honor for the body, when He taught it was better to cut off part of it than for it all to go to hell and how we are not to worry about our bodies' needs, etc. Oh, I know we're too care for our bodies and that we're the temple of the Holy Spirit, etc., but I don't find any reference of "cherishing" them.

I do believe we are taught to care for the physical needs of others, but I believe it is the act of love and service involved which actually "pleases God", and not specifically because we're doing something which "venerates His handiwork".

The Salvation Army would say that filling the empty stomach is part of the process of preaching the Gosp;el. The physical act, done in Christ's name, is a sacrament - am means of grace.
 
Posted by Mad Geo (# 2939) on :
 
A Parable of Japanese Cremation.

A guy walks into a bar, sees an absolutely spectacularly gorgeous woman and sits down beside her. He turns to her and says "Would you sleep with me for a million dollars?".

She thinks real hard for a minute and then answers "Why yes I would."

He considers and then says "How about for 50 thousand dollars?"

She thinks a little harder and says "Sure".

He considers this again for a moment and then says "How about 50 dollars"?

She looks horrified and yells "What kind of girl do you think I am!!!!"

He answers "We have already established that. We are just negotiating the price".....

[ 25. August 2006, 21:21: Message edited by: Mad Geo ]
 
Posted by Demas (# 24) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Some of the most pernicious death-phobias are generated by certain Christian traditions ... eg., you can't cry because you are a Christian and your love one is in the Lord.

(1) He/she may not be.

Gather round, little children, and hear the good news of the love of God.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Oh dear, oh dear ... the point is that we don't disobey the law ... unless it calls us to worship something or someone other than God or violates human rights ... neither of which is the case here. The default position, when no law forbids it, is "no cremation." Don't get too excited please!
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
This is getting more and more interesting. It appears that the Orthodox Christian theology as it relates to the dead is the same as Orthodox Judaism, post Talmud. I read here that the Orthodox Jewish position on cremation, post Talmud, is:

1. It is pagan.
2. It shows lack of respect for the human body.
3. It denies the physical resurrection.

I also bumped into interesting history on the early Christian, Islamic, and Judaic belief that the coccyx bone was indestructible and would therefore be the bone from which a physical resurrection would take place at the end of time. Some things I read said that in the Middle Ages this was for a time taken for granted in Europe and the Middle East? I had no idea whatsoever.

So Islam, Orthodox Judaism, and Orthodox Christianity seem to be united on this issue theologically: God made the rule and left little room for exceptions. There are no modern exigencies that can justify reinterpreting or repealing the rule. End of discussion.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
You are right except for the last sentence JimT ... "End of discussion." There is always value in discussion even when positions are not going to change. You don't really think that I posdted this with the realistic intention of changing anyone's mind did you? I posted this to open up a debate. In the debate, greater clarity comes, even if positions do not change. There is always value in that.

You are correct on our congruity in this matter with Orthodox Judaism and Islam ... except as to the coccyx which is an exclusively Jewish matter. Of course this congruity was shared by all Christians until it started to erode in the 17th century, gathering pace in the 19th.

[ 26. August 2006, 10:32: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
Isn't this Orthodox 'default' position because we like collecting bones? And in this appears to be connected to pre-judaic forms of ancestor worship where the body is allowed to rot and then the bones gathered and placed with previous family/clan members.

The story told about burials on Mt Athos - the body is put under a light covering of soil for three days and then checked for signs of deterioration, if putrefaction has set in the body is buried deeper and if not, another enigma to ponder.

I want to be cremated and my ashes thrown into an active volcano on Hawaii.


Myrrh
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
Yes, I'm interested in bones and relics, too. For instance:

quote:
It is believed that one of the ways in the holiness (saintliness) of a person is revealed is through the condition of their relics (remains). In some Orthodox countries (such as Greece, but not in Russia) graves are often reused after 3 to 5 years because of limited space. Bones are washed and placed in an ossuary, often with the person's name written on the skull. Occasionally when a body is exhumed something miraculous is reported as having occurred; exhumed bones are claimed to have given off a fragrance, like flowers, or a body is reported as having remained free of decay, despite not having been embalmed (traditionally the Orthodox do not embalm the dead) and having been buried for some years in the earth.

The reason relics are considered sacred is because, for the Orthodox, the separation of body and soul is unnatural. Body and soul both comprise the person, and in the end, body and soul will be reunited; therefore, the body of a saint shares in the “Holiness” of the soul of the saint. As a general rule only clergy will touch relics in order to move them or carry them in procession, however, in veneration the faithful will kiss the relic to show love and respect toward the saint. Every altar in every Orthodox church contains relics, usually of martyrs. Church interiors are covered with the Icons of saints.

So it's not OK to cremate the dead, but it's OK to have mummies of saints to venerate, and to break up the bodies of holy people and keep their remains in altars?
The bones seem to travel great distances, too.
 
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
... I want to be cremated and my ashes thrown into an active volcano on Hawaii.

Isn't that sort of redundant?
 
Posted by Janine (# 3337) on :
 
(p.s.: meant also to ask --
for thoe who vehemently oppose cremation for all the big important reasons mentioned -- how do you reconcile yourself to the horror of someone's death by fire, and their body being all or mostly burned up in the fire?)
 
Posted by Jamac (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Yes, I'm interested in bones and relics, too. For instance:

quote:
It is believed that one of the ways in the holiness (saintliness) of a person is revealed is through the condition of their relics (remains). In some Orthodox countries (such as Greece, but not in Russia) graves are often reused after 3 to 5 years because of limited space. Bones are washed and placed in an ossuary, often with the person's name written on the skull. Occasionally when a body is exhumed something miraculous is reported as having occurred; exhumed bones are claimed to have given off a fragrance, like flowers, or a body is reported as having remained free of decay, despite not having been embalmed (traditionally the Orthodox do not embalm the dead) and having been buried for some years in the earth.

The reason relics are considered sacred is because, for the Orthodox, the separation of body and soul is unnatural. Body and soul both comprise the person, and in the end, body and soul will be reunited; therefore, the body of a saint shares in the “Holiness” of the soul of the saint. As a general rule only clergy will touch relics in order to move them or carry them in procession, however, in veneration the faithful will kiss the relic to show love and respect toward the saint. Every altar in every Orthodox church contains relics, usually of martyrs. Church interiors are covered with the Icons of saints.

So it's not OK to cremate the dead, but it's OK to have mummies of saints to venerate, and to break up the bodies of holy people and keep their remains in altars?
The bones seem to travel great distances, too.

There is one scriptural eg of a miracle taking place after contact with Elisha's bones.2Kings 13:21.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Janine:
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
... I want to be cremated and my ashes thrown into an active volcano on Hawaii.

Isn't that sort of redundant?
Yes.

Myrrh
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
So it's not OK to cremate the dead, but it's OK to have mummies of saints to venerate, and to break up the bodies of holy people and keep their remains in altars?

Well, I see no real harm in cremation myself, so long as it is reverently done, but where's the inconsistency in the Orthodox practice here, TubaM? It's all about reverence and cherishing, and I fail to see how that treatment of the mortal remains of those saints is not reverent - some may even say it's excessively reverent to cherish them thus (though not I).
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
In relation to our practice; thank you Chesterbelloc. That's it precisely.

[ 27. August 2006, 15:05: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
So it's not OK to cremate the dead, but it's OK to have mummies of saints to venerate, and to break up the bodies of holy people and keep their remains in altars?

Well, I see no real harm in cremation myself, so long as it is reverently done, but where's the inconsistency in the Orthodox practice here, TubaM? It's all about reverence and cherishing, and I fail to see how that treatment of the mortal remains of those saints is not reverent - some may even say it's excessively reverent to cherish them thus (though not I).
Call me crazy, but it seems fairly clear to me that raiding graves, dismembering skeletons, and distributing the bones in pieces all over the world is just a tad bit disrespectful to the dead. Not to mention fighting over them centuries later.

Far more disrespectful than cremating the body and scattering the ashes in a place dear to the deceased, or interring them in a church courtyard.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
But, TubaMirum I suspect that you know nothing by experience about how we venerate relics ... aside from what you have read ... venerate that is, not burn.
 
Posted by Josephine (# 3899) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Janine:
for thoe who vehemently oppose cremation for all the big important reasons mentioned -- how do you reconcile yourself to the horror of someone's death by fire, and their body being all or mostly burned up in the fire?

We see a huge difference between something that happens as the result of an accident and something that is done deliberately.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Call me crazy, but it seems fairly clear to me that raiding graves, dismembering skeletons, and distributing the bones in pieces all over the world is just a tad bit disrespectful to the dead. Not to mention fighting over them centuries later. ...

...not to mention that certain of the saints (Paul comes to mind) must have resembled centipedes, judging by the numbers of finger and toe bones of theirs that later ended up in reliquaries.

I don't know which is worse: distributing body bits of actual saints, or swiping body bits from other, unsaintly skeletons to meet demand. (Although I think Brother Cadfael dealt once with the question of whether the identity of the relic really mattered....)

[Note, please, that I'm not criticizing the practice of venerating relics, for those who find that meaningful.]

Ross
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
But, TubaMirum I suspect that you know nothing by experience about how we venerate relics ... aside from what you have read ... venerate that is, not burn.

Res, as they say, my dear Gregory, ipse loquitur.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear TubaMirum

Against the Idea that Facts Speak for Themselves
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Father Gregory, I'm still hoping for a response to this:

quote:
Originally posted by me:
The requirement of specific burial practices reminds me of the Orthodox requirements of incense and icons; perhaps the comparison is not apt, but if so one of the Orthodox can let me know. I can see the theology these things are supposed to express, but I don't see that burying an unembalmed body, using incense in church or kissing/venerating icons are the only ways of expressing, communicating or embodying that theology.


 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Sorry Ruth ... the comparison is indeed apt and of course there are other ways of showing that reverence through physicality.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Thanks, but I think I wasn't clear. Yes, there are other ways of showing that reverence, but what I meant is that burial of the unembalmed body seems to be required in much the way as incense and icons are required. My understanding is that you must have incense at Orthodox services, and while no one is required to venerate icons, you must have icons. Your feelings about cremation bring to mind my (admittedly somewhat dimmed) recollection of your feelings about iconoclasm.

So -- burial is not the only way to express that reverence, as obviously we may express reverence for the physical in a lot of ways. But in the Orthodox view burial is the only way that reverence may be expressed toward the dead human body.

Assuming that I'm getting all this business of requirements right, the Orthodox requirements of burial, of incense, of icons all seem to me like fossilizations of practices that were, in a time and culture that is now gone, the best and perhaps only way to show what those things show, to express the theology they express. To insist upon those practices now in a very different time and culture doesn't make sense to me. I can't see tieing meaning to action in the absolute way you seem to be doing.

And I don't see cremation as violent. To say that burning is always violent is to attribute qualities to fire that it doesn't necessarily have. Saying that fire is violent is metaphorical, not factual. The fact is that fire changes matter into energy. To say more than that is to imbue fire with inherent meaning, and meaning just doesn't work that way. Meaning is assigned; it's not organic.
 
Posted by Demas (# 24) on :
 
Another way to show reverence for the dead.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Ruth

quote:
Assuming that I'm getting all this business of requirements right, the Orthodox requirements of burial, of incense, of icons all seem to me like fossilizations of practices that were, in a time and culture that is now gone, ...
You have very clearly understood our position Ruth but this comment and everything that follows I reject.

The iconoclasm of the Reformation is a challenge in need of justification ... not the other way round if one takes the Vincentian canon seriously.

"Fossilisation" is a prejudicial piece of rhetoric that comes nowhere near theologising ... and, to my mind, undermines everything else you say after that.
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
"Fossilisation" is a prejudicial piece of rhetoric that comes nowhere near theologising

That's a very arbitrary judgement. Are you really saying that choices about cultural matters made by previous generations should automatically take priority over rationally considered alternatives grounded in current culture?

I guess you are, as that seems to be how Orthodoxy works. But I'd have thought fossilisation was a very apt and accurate analogy. Exactly the kind of application of language that creates useful, meaningful theologising.

[ 28. August 2006, 12:12: Message edited by: Dave Marshall ]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
That would be true Dave if icons were MERELY cultural artefacts ... they are that but in our tradition they are much, much more and can never be limited to one time or place ... and so, they are not. However, if one starts by assuming that they are, then they are ... simply because they are not used. The rationale for their use is not shared by iconoclasts. It is a matter of belief.
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
Yes, that's fair enough. But it illustrates that Ruth's use of fossilisation was not in fact prejudicial rhetoric but an accurate if unflattering piece of theologising.

It highlights Orthodoxy's belief in a quality in icons that to someone who doesn't share that belief can seem positively unhelpful. It locks Orthodoxy into the past, effectively I'd have thought at the expense of creatively reinventing the means by which the Church gives form to the reality of God for each generation.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
You say "that's fair enough" then you proceed to undo every word of that in your subsequent statements.

I'm sorry Dave but I don't look forward to your posts as illuminating to me at all. I am not being rude but I usually ignore them for that reason. I should have known better this time.
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
That's obviously up to you. But while you see debate here as simply a means for the dissemination of propaganda for your take on Orthodoxy, you'll still find me reminding you when your posts lack credibility.

Especially when you dismiss fair comment on the grounds of lack of understanding, then casually refuse to explain why.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Call me crazy, but it seems fairly clear to me that raiding graves, dismembering skeletons, and distributing the bones in pieces all over the world is just a tad bit disrespectful to the dead. Not to mention fighting over them centuries later.

Far more disrespectful than cremating the body and scattering the ashes in a place dear to the deceased, or interring them in a church courtyard.

I think I should stop short of questioning your sanity, TubaMirum, but the genuine veneration of the relics of the Saints is, well, veneration (usually involving the careful and elaborate housing of them in precious reliquaries, keeping them safe, offering them for the veneration (by kissing) of the faithful, praying before the shrines containing them, etc.) - and as such, it seems pretty respectful to me.

Of course, jumping on the bodies and ripping them apart in a tussle with others for the bits is not very respectful in itself, so of course the Church does not (and where it appears to have done, should not) condone that. But I should have thought that that abuse is perfectly conceptually seperable from the pious and holy veneration of such relics. In fact, I should think any neutral observer could make that distiction quite clearly, and I can't imagine any relicodule (don't bother looking it up - I've just made it up) defending such greedy violence.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
Still, the fact remains that the bodies are being taken out of the ground where they were interred, right? (Correct me if I'm wrong, I'm no expert in such things?) That does seem rather disrespectful to me and frankly if you wanted to disinter my loved one's body even to venerate it I think I'd object vociferously.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
I think I should stop short of questioning your sanity, TubaMirum, but the genuine veneration of the relics of the Saints is, well, veneration (usually involving the careful and elaborate housing of them in precious reliquaries, keeping them safe, offering them for the veneration (by kissing) of the faithful, praying before the shrines containing them, etc.) - and as such, it seems pretty respectful to me.

Of course, jumping on the bodies and ripping them apart in a tussle with others for the bits is not very respectful in itself, so of course the Church does not (and where it appears to have done, should not) condone that. But I should have thought that that abuse is perfectly conceptually seperable from the pious and holy veneration of such relics. In fact, I should think any neutral observer could make that distiction quite clearly, and I can't imagine any relicodule (don't bother looking it up - I've just made it up) defending such greedy violence.

Sorry, Chesterbelloc - I think we'll have to agree-to-disagree on this one. I honestly think this is about the most disrespectful thing I can imagine - particularly the idea of chopping up the bones to spread 'em around. Give the dead a decent [burial/cremation] and let them rest in peace. That's our request to God at the time of interment, anyway; one wonders why the people making it can't honor it themselves.

What's particularly amazing to me is to watch Gregory rail on "Against Cremation" - and then blithely defend this practice. I shouldn't be surprised, I suppose.
 
Posted by Ena (# 11545) on :
 
Yes, I agree with Gwai.
Father Gregory, does there seem a great difference to you between burying ashes and scattering them? Because it appears to me that burying ashes is merely speeding up the natural process of decay. What is wrong with that? It seems no less respectful than burying.

(I suppose that by that logic, preservation would be the most respectful, but clearly that's not practical on a large scale.)
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Dear Ruth

quote:
Assuming that I'm getting all this business of requirements right, the Orthodox requirements of burial, of incense, of icons all seem to me like fossilizations of practices that were, in a time and culture that is now gone, ...
You have very clearly understood our position Ruth but this comment and everything that follows I reject.

The iconoclasm of the Reformation is a challenge in need of justification ... not the other way round if one takes the Vincentian canon seriously.

"Fossilisation" is a prejudicial piece of rhetoric that comes nowhere near theologising ... and, to my mind, undermines everything else you say after that.

I'm not defending iconoclasm -- if you want to start a thread on the evils of that, I'd be interested. You've employed very emotional rhetoric about cremation and other burial practices used by people who post on these boards, so you really can't justifiably complain about my fossilization metaphor.

I'm just trying to understand why this particular burial practice is the only one acceptable according to Orthodox theology, the only way of disposing of a dead body that can express Orthodox theology. You have not addressed the question of how your theology (and mine, I remind you) can be intrinsically tied up in a particular burial practice; as I said before, meaning just doesn't work this way. Meaning is carried in cultural practices because we say it is; cultural practices may lose their meaning while other cultural practices take on that meaning.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Sorry, Chesterbelloc - I think we'll have to agree-to-disagree on this one. I honestly think this is about the most disrespectful thing I can imagine - particularly the idea of chopping up the bones to spread 'em around. Give the dead a decent [burial/cremation] and let them rest in peace. That's our request to God at the time of interment, anyway; one wonders why the people making it can't honor it themselves.

OK, but let's be sure we're doing so about the same thing. I'm talking about the veneration of body parts (and the personal effects, don't let's forget) of those whom the Church holds have already attained the beatific vision in Heaven - which is why their prayers are so much sought after, their being so much more freed from sinful shackles, and all that. They are with God now and forever. These folks are not "resting in peace" - they are fully alive and with their God.
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
What's particularly amazing to me is to watch Gregory rail on "Against Cremation" - and then blithely defend this practice. I shouldn't be surprised, I suppose.

I don't entirely agree with Fr Gregory about the general badness of cremation, but that sounds a bit personal - what do you mean by that?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Sorry, Chesterbelloc - I think we'll have to agree-to-disagree on this one. I honestly think this is about the most disrespectful thing I can imagine - particularly the idea of chopping up the bones to spread 'em around. Give the dead a decent [burial/cremation] and let them rest in peace. That's our request to God at the time of interment, anyway; one wonders why the people making it can't honor it themselves.

OK, but let's be sure we're doing so about the same thing. I'm talking about the veneration of body parts (and the personal effects, don't let's forget) of those whom the Church holds have already attained the beatific vision in Heaven - which is why their prayers are so much sought after, their being so much more freed from sinful shackles, and all that. They are with God now and forever. These folks are not "resting in peace" - they are fully alive and with their God
I actually find it quite difficult to understand why anybody doesn't find the dismemberment of bodies - particularly the bodies of people who are held in esteem - to be offensive, chesterbelloc. I don't think the details matter at all; IMO it's inherently disrespectful for the living to dig up and dismember the dead simply in order to indulge their own desires.

Further, I think it presumes quite a lot to imagine that the people favored by the Church are now "fully alive with their God." How can anybody possibly know this?

The idea, I thought anyway, was that the dead rest till the last day, when they are bodily resurrected. In that case, how can this practice possibly be defended while at the same time cremation is condemned?

I can't understand this as anything except pure selfishness, myself. (And actually, that's about the nicest way I can possibly think to put it.)
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Ruth

I am an overtly emotional person Ruth and I take the view that rhetoric is a much maligned art (to be distinguished from polemic and even that has its occasional uses).

Anyway ... to your question ...

quote:
You have not addressed the question of how your theology (and mine, I remind you) can be intrinsically tied up in a particular burial practice; as I said before, meaning just doesn't work this way. Meaning is carried in cultural practices because we say it is; cultural practices may lose their meaning while other cultural practices take on that meaning.
This analysis is based on a constructivist epistemology which, of course, since Kant has been in vogue in western culture. The idea basically is that meaning is always imparted and rarely if ever derived. It is a reaction of course against medieval essentialism which, for all its weaknessess had merit in providing a language of universal archetypes. Nominalism helped to erode that as well of course. These philiosophical trends in western thinking have now hardened into ideological givens. Anyone who challenges the constructivist hermeneutic is considered to have left his senses and humanity behind in favour of a static straight jacket of metaphysical and symbolical thinking. So, the swastika can both be a symbol of evil (Nazism) and spiritual maturity (Hinduism). It has no inherent meaning. Its only meaning is that we impart to it.

Surprisingly perhaps I am going to agree whole-heartedly with this constructivist interpretation of symbols and symbolic actions ... but only up to this point. The constructivist epistemology breaks down at the intrusion of the historical dimension which is not simply the legacy bequeathed to us from former times but a permanent and essentialist change in how the symbolic action imparts meaning rather than has meaning imparted to it.

So, bread and wine are now forever the antitypes before consecratioon of the Body and Blood of Christ. It matters not a jot what we may try and do to deconstruct that. The imbued quality of the element has essentially changed and permanently BUT ONLY IN A CHRISTIAN CONTEXT.

So, it is for a Christian who believes that Christ's 3 day burial sanctified the tomb as a portal of his resurrection that burial and not cremation becomes mandatory. The historical divine interventional changes archetypes into "real things." It is, essentialy, a sacramentalist approach. We should not be surprised, therefore, that constructivism has found a happier home in the Protestant rather than other Christian traditions.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
TubaMirum

As any reply I could make to your last would take this thread way into the side tracks, I think here is where we could usefully agree to differ.

CB
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Fr Gregory: Thanks very much -- that furthers my understanding of your position a great deal. A lot to chew on there ... I'll have to munch for a while before I respond.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
So, it is for a Christian who believes that Christ's 3 day burial sanctified the tomb as a portal of his resurrection that burial and not cremation becomes mandatory. The historical divine interventional changes archetypes into "real things." It is, essentialy, a sacramentalist approach.

Father Gregory, this is the first you have mentioned on this thread that it is Christ's burial that requires burial and excludes cremation. Why is that?

This seems like an essential reason about the Orthodox position about burial, and yet it only comes up this late in the discussion.

quote:
We should not be surprised, therefore, that constructivism has found a happier home in the Protestant rather than other Christian traditions.
Are there other similarly sacramentalized acts you see, perhaps that it appears that Protestantism finds easier throwing off? Or more specifically of interest to me, a seven-sacrament Episcopalian (who nevertheless is not convinced that cremation is problematic)?
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Autenreith Road

quote:
Father Gregory, this is the first you have mentioned on this thread that it is Christ's burial that requires burial and excludes cremation. Why is that?

This seems like an essential reason about the Orthodox position about burial, and yet it only comes up this late in the discussion.

You don't expect me to use up all my ammunition on the first salvo do you? [Snigger] I have enough here for at least another 9 pages but I might fall asleep by then.

By "why is that" I take you to mean "why have you not spoken of this before?" However, if you mean:- "what on earth do you mean by this?" then I suppose I would say that Joseph of Arimathea knew the mind of Christ. Of course there are those who would say I have simply back projected this onto the Jews. And who do they back project it onto? Well, that's the point isn't it? Nobody back projects anything. We receive these things from from God and that includes those aspects of culture that touch on ultimate things.

Constructivism makes all sorts of things problematic for a Christian who grasp on revelation is slipping. Since all becomes the Great Human Project ... the games we play with "God" ... actually NOTHING matters in the end, not just sacraments. Everything is up for grabs. Only the smile on the Cheshire Cat remains. Who can believe in a smile? Only non-realists.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Thanks, Father Gregory. Shall look forward to another 9 pages of varied ammunition. Unless you manage to sleep through the countershots [Biased] .

I did mean the first interpretation of my question. I am glad you provided the answers inspired by the other interpretation, they give me another window to try to understand what you are saying.
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Constructivism makes all sorts of things problematic for a Christian who[se] grasp on revelation is slipping.

I have been wondering recently specifically why one should believe the Christian revelation is true, and not any of the others. How would one know?

That goes way far afield beyond burial practices, though.

What I find most curious in me is that the example of Jesus did it catches my attention most as a reason most likely to justify something. I'm not saying that very clearly. What I mean is, 4000 years of tradition does not move me so very much; Jesus did it does.

Not that you should think I'm convinced at all yet, on the specific subject of burial practices. Rather, I have the question in my mind of,
"what things did Jesus do?" And of those things, which things should we do (even if we fail abysmally most of the time and ignore them).
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
That's very useful Autenreith Road. Tradition is meaningless without Jesus. The question is ... can Christianity do without Jesus? I aay, no.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Dear Autenreith Road

quote:
Father Gregory, this is the first you have mentioned on this thread that it is Christ's burial that requires burial and excludes cremation. Why is that?

This seems like an essential reason about the Orthodox position about burial, and yet it only comes up this late in the discussion.

You don't expect me to use up all my ammunition on the first salvo do you? [Snigger] I have enough here for at least another 9 pages but I might fall asleep by then.


I don't think there's any real reason for insisting that cremation is unOrthodox; a short search shows the arguments for are mainly 'tradition', the arguments against are full of 'cremation is practiced by the enemies of the Orthodox', and most offensive of all, to my way of thinking, is from those who insist that it's so because the canons forbid it.

And as for the association of burial with Christ's burial, it's burial which appears to be the motif here and those anti-cremation for whatever reason actually abuse this idea.

From the funeral service:

Come, O brethren, let us gaze into the grave upon the dust and ashes from which we are made. Whither go we now? What are we become? Who is poor, who rich? Who is the master? Who a freeman? Are not we all ashes? The beauty of the countenance is mouldered, and Death hath withered up all the flower of youth.


Myrrh
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
It seems to me that we'll need to choose between cemeteries and proliffers. There isn't room enough for both.

For what it's worth, I'd rather make a generous contribution to a great church for the privilege of having my ashes residing in its columbarium, next to others, where they will be awash in reverberations of sung mass and evensong, than my bones leaching and shivering out somewhere under a rural snowdrift. This is just a personal preference, but I think that it is just as defensible symbolically.

But why is the body not more often present at funeral or requiem? Expense? This is rather unfortunate, but perhaps it is reason enough, unless the mortuary industry has reformed considerably since the days of Jessica Mitford.

When I learned, around age 14, that cremation was common, I greeted it with the same kind of mild romantic disappointment as to learn at the same age that it had become far more common to travel to Europe by airliner than ocean liner. It never occurred to me that some would condemn it as heretical and I was amazed when a graduate-school friend went into a tirade over how creepy cremation was and how could anyone do that to a loved one. The question still looks like an adiaphoron.
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
This turned out to be one of the most breathtaking, unusual, and moving places I have seen in a long time:

Bruckner's Tomb at St. Florian's Abbey

Bruckner was a chorister in this abbey near Linz, and later a teacher. It remained his favorite place in the world. One day, as he was walking in the crypt below the chapel while someone was playing the organ in the gallery high above, he stepped into a spot upon which the vaulting focused the organ's sound. He requested that when he died, he might be entombed at that spot. In due course, this was done.

There aren't many such spots, nor many souls with whatever deserts or clout Bruckner had to be so favored, but what an ideal honor! This abbey is so blessed with outstanding beauty of so many kinds that it seems that God must be focusing it upon the site as with a magnifying glass, just as the vaulting focuses the sound of the organ to a rare intensity. We visitors flutter in like moths, and some of us fluttering out again wonder how it is possible to survive the incandescence we've just been in.

But I want especially to point out the background behind the iron bars: Whether before or after Bruckner's internment I'm not sure, but several thousand skulls are neatly piled up, brought from nearby cemetery graves into the church. Far from macabre, I found this sight very comforting and peaceful.

This scene brings up a question for the opponents of cremation: what do you think of this treatment of the six thousand skulls? If it is right that these remains should be brought into the church building, then why did they need to spend a few centuries in the ground first? Or if it is not right, what should have happened to them when the old cemeteries yielded to some other use?
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alogon:


This scene brings up a question for the opponents of cremation: what do you think of this treatment of the six thousand skulls? If it is right that these remains should be brought into the church building, then why did they need to spend a few centuries in the ground first? Or if it is not right, what should have happened to them when the old cemeteries yielded to some other use?

I'm often in an emotional dilemma brought on by fascination with bones discovered on archeological digs and their treatment outside of a religious context, display in museums and so on.

The feelings of pity for those robbed from their graves to be gawked at, including by me, in such collections became a definite contrast when I was able to compare this with the emotions I felt when looking at the collection of bones in the ossuary of St Catherine's on Mt Sinai, where, and I'm not sure I can describe this well enough, I felt nothing emotional in particular I think because they were 'at home' in the context of the Church. I was expecting to feel something dramatic seeing such a collection, but zilch, I think "acceptance" comes closest, no separation perhaps.

Bones have the power to move us because they are part and parcel of what we are and vestige of the form we can still relate to, could a collection of ashes be such a forcible reminder of our past and future? I think it can, I was watching a TimeTeam programme a few weeks ago in which they uncovered ancient burials by cremation. The remains collected in the pit in which the fire had been built, as the body burned the ash fell and this had been gathered into a pot and the pit covered over. I felt the same reaction as I always do on seeing bones and mummies displayed, so for me ash still has the power to move.

In India where cremation is the norm I was told sannyasis are an exception. They go through a ritual on becoming sannyasis which culminates in them renouncing attachment to their old life and symbolic cremation is included, when they die they're thrown uncremated into the Ganges, the holiest river of India.

Myrrh
 
Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The iconoclasm of the Reformation is a challenge in need of justification ... not the other way round if one takes the Vincentian canon seriously.

The Vincentian canon was made to perpetuate correct sameness. But “sameness” itself was shown by Christ to inevitably degrade into error in my opinion. Christ showed over and over that the scrupulous observance of uninterrupted millenea of exact observance to tradition eventually led to the veneration of the traditions themselves as holy and to the non-observant as unholy. The Good Samaritan parable specifically addressed this.

In my opinion the Christian church post resurrection immediately began the repetition of this error, which continues to this day. The institutional Christian errors that exactly parallel the instituional pre-Christian errors of Judaism are:


Other examples can be seen in RCC and "High Church" Anglican Protestants showing up just in time for communion, because the physical act of receiving consecrated host is perceived as the most important part of the ceremony. Pentecostals make it virtually required to regularly and publically speak in tongues in order been as part of the "true faithful."

It appears to me that if one assigns pre-eminence to the teachings of Christ over strict observance to the Vincentian canon, perpetual reform and reinvention along the lines of the original intent of the tradition is required to combat the inevitable ill effects of perpetual sameness in ceremony and practice. Religious practice must change and adapt to remain alive or it will indeed "fossilize" and mimic death and injustice rather than life and justice.

[ 29. August 2006, 18:07: Message edited by: JimT ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by JimT:

It appears to me that if one assigns pre-eminence to the teachings of Christ over strict observance to the Vincentian canon, perpetual reform and reinvention along the lines of the original intent of the tradition is required to combat the inevitable ill effects of perpetual sameness in ceremony and practice. Religious practice must change and adapt to remain alive or it will indeed "fossilize" and mimic death and injustice rather than life and justice.

I agree, JimT, that "perpetual reform" is crucial.

But I don't think, necessarily, that all practices must change; it doesn't follow from what you're saying that the practice itself is where fossilization occurs.

The approach to practice is where that happens, IMO. The Church needs to be continually renewed and refreshed, but interiorly.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
It's funny isn't it how often these debates degenerate into a rerun of the Reformation ... even stranger because the factors that led to a Reformation in the west never existed in the east. So, I won't be playing this game.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by JimT:


In my opinion the Christian church post resurrection immediately began the repetition of this error, which continues to this day. The institutional Christian errors that exactly parallel the instituional pre-Christian errors of Judaism are:

Didn't one of the OT patriarchs request cremation, but family decided otherwise? When the reasons against degenerate to this kind of argument it does become annoying.


quote:
  • Superstitions have emerged despite efforts by the institution to prevent this. The Orthodox faithful dig up bodies after three years and superstitiously attempt to equate the state of decay with the “level” of Christianity the departed must have had.
  • Not superstiously, incorruptible bodies is a reality in the Church like miraculous icons, they are special in that they have meaning for us, but they don't define us. Best described as doing work for the Church as reminders of our reality.


    quote:
  • Acts have taken precedence over intent and circumstance. A priest who accidentlly kills is somehow "unclean." Yet when the crowd went to stone the adulterous woman according to the Law, Christ asked if anyone else had broken any Laws? Are we not to do the same? Or are we to follow the New Laws of the institutional church?

  • Different concepts. A priest is the leading voice of the laity in worship and the prohibition against such acting with blood on his hands goes back to the building of the Temple, David wasn't allowed to build it for this reason.

    Christ's teaching against the stoning of adulterers is an example of getting back to basics. Christ continued to teach the commandments as given to Moses and not as they developed when extrapolation created a situation where punishment for breaking them broke an original commandment. Killing someone for adultery is breaking the commandment to not kill; the ritual law of korban would deny a priest's starving parents bread, breaking the commandment to honour father and mother; killing someone for working on the Sabbath violates the commandment to keep it holy because the commandment not to kill is broken, and so on.


    quote:
    Other examples can be seen in RCC and "High Church" Anglican Protestants showing up just in time for communion, because the physical act of receiving consecrated host is perceived as the most important part of the ceremony. Pentecostals make it virtually required to regularly and publically speak in tongues in order been as part of the "true faithful."
    I think that's common to any organisation, the main theme becoming a commodity of control, of acceptance. Many Orthodox Churches don't allow communion without prior confession which in effect is the priests taking control and exceeding their authority, breaking Christ's first canon in the Church's ecclesiology.

    quote:
    It appears to me that if one assigns pre-eminence to the teachings of Christ over strict observance to the Vincentian canon, perpetual reform and reinvention along the lines of the original intent of the tradition is required to combat the inevitable ill effects of perpetual sameness in ceremony and practice. Religious practice must change and adapt to remain alive or it will indeed "fossilize" and mimic death and injustice rather than life and justice.
    I don't think the Vincentian canon applies to local traditions, it was very much an argument for continuing belief in what was believed by all Christians in faith not in practices. The argument was against Augustine's idea of grace wasn't it?


    Myrrh
     
    Posted by eyeliner (# 4648) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:
    (3) It makes honouring the dead, the body and the rituals of grief associated with the grave much more problematic.

    In my opinion, the problem here is not with cremation itself but with crematoriams. Back in December I attended my partner's creamation and the process was rendered needlessly trumatic by the very corporate, production-line atmosphere-for example, the buliding looked very cheap and tacky, the service was less than half an hour long, and as we were leaving we saw the 'next' group of mourners awaiting the start of their service. They also didn't lower the curtain around the plinth, and watching the little doors open and a converyor belt slide the coffin away into a black abyss was...an experience that will stay with me for a very long time.

    However, I can't see any problems inherent in cremation itself. There is, I suppose, the lack of a gravestone-but there's always the ashes, which many people scatter in a place special to the deceased.
     
    Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
     
    Eyeliner --

    you make a good point.

    In North America the crematorium is never the site of the service. The whole British thing that has Fr. G so knotted simply doesn't happen here. WHich is why, I suppose, many of us simply cannot u nderstand what and why he is on about.

    NA custom would see either the cremation after a standard funeral, and a committal of ashes (usually to a grave) thereafter, or to have the cremation before the funeral and have the urn of ashes present instead of a coffin, with committal in the usual way after. Neither of which seems to me to be obviously disrespectful of the body, of the family, or proper mourning or anything else at all that Fr. G alleges. (A slight variation would be to have a private funeral service at the graveside followed by a public memorial service. But the general comment applies here as well.) I fear that once again Fr. G is assuming that his personal experience is an accurate predicator of a general practice -- and it quite clearly is not. WHich makes agreeing with the position he has based on his personal experience rather difficult for those of us whose experience directly contradicts his. (Though he routinely ignores statements that deny universality to his personal experience.)

    And by the way, certainly on this continent, there are no flames involved in cremation. Don't know about the UK. A very hot furnace will do what it has to so quickly that there is no time for flame.

    John
     
    Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on :
     
    quote:
    In North America the crematorium is never the site of the service.
    Yes and no. Some funeral homes have their own ovens. (if that's the right term). My grandmother's funeral was at the same funeral home where she was cremated.

    [ 30. August 2006, 03:52: Message edited by: Mousethief ]
     
    Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:
    It's funny isn't it how often these debates degenerate into a rerun of the Reformation ... even stranger because the factors that led to a Reformation in the west never existed in the east. So, I won't be playing this game.

    Respectfully, Fr. G, you set up the game that way. Then you seem to avoid questions that you don't want to answer. Then you make comments, like the one above, about the rest of us.
     
    Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Myrrh:
    quote:
    Originally posted by JimT:


    Acts have taken precedence over intent and circumstance. A priest who accidentlly kills is somehow "unclean." Yet when the crowd went to stone the adulterous woman according to the Law, Christ asked if anyone else had broken any Laws? Are we not to do the same? Or are we to follow the New Laws of the institutional church?


    Different concepts. A priest is the leading voice of the laity in worship and the prohibition against such acting with blood on his hands goes back to the building of the Temple, David wasn't allowed to build it for this reason.

    So there's no distinction between an accident and murder?
    [Confused]
     
    Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
     
    For someone of such wide sympathies Golden Key you don't seem to know much about Orthodoxy. The Reformation conflict matrix and the theological infrastructure that underpins it addresses issues that simply are not on our radar in Orthodoxy nor have they ever been. So, when we say "X" you think we mean "Y" because we are sharing a similar language. The ideas behind that disarmingly similar language are, however, radically different. For example, one Reformation challenge concerned the mediation of the Church between God and Man (or so it was alleged). In Orthodoxy we have never had such an ecclesiological deformation, so attempts to being us within that familar conflict matrix are entirely misconceived and certainly leave us stone dead cold.

    Dear John

    No, this isn't simply for us HOW cremation is done. It's the cremation itself.
     
    Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Golden Key:
    quote:
    Originally posted by Myrrh:
    quote:
    Originally posted by JimT:


    Acts have taken precedence over intent and circumstance. A priest who accidentlly kills is somehow "unclean." Yet when the crowd went to stone the adulterous woman according to the Law, Christ asked if anyone else had broken any Laws? Are we not to do the same? Or are we to follow the New Laws of the institutional church?


    Different concepts. A priest is the leading voice of the laity in worship and the prohibition against such acting with blood on his hands goes back to the building of the Temple, David wasn't allowed to build it for this reason.

    So there's no distinction between an accident and murder?
    [Confused]

    Any killing is a "shedding of blood" of another, in Judaism blood is synonymous with "life force". This idea is carried through in the prohibition against eating the blood of an animal, not kosher.

    Myrrh
     
    Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
     
    But Fr. Gregory -- most of your actual arguments are based on how it's done round your neighbourhood. The why it's done arguments seem to be later add-ons to your emotional reaction to what are, fair enough, some undesirable practices that you have experienced. And you still haven't bothered to acknowledge that many of us have experience contrary to yours -- perhaps because when the "how" changes, the "why" that is based on the "how" ceases to be tenable. And we couldn't have that.

    John
     
    Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
     
    I'm sorry John but that is not how I see it. There are 9 pages here and the vast majority of my posts have been about why, not how. "It's the issue of burning" isn't a "how" statement but a "why" statement ... burning isn't on, not because crematoria are often naff, clinical and secular ... it's what burning means in terms of human action and Christian hope ... but I am not going to repeat myself.
     
    Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Mousethief:
    quote:
    In North America the crematorium is never the site of the service.
    Yes and no. Some funeral homes have their own ovens.
    Sure, but they don't have funeral services within sight of them.

    quote:
    Originally posted by John Holding:
    The why it's done arguments seem to be later add-ons to your emotional reaction to what are, fair enough, some undesirable practices that you have experienced.

    Not true, actually. The most important (as far as I can see) and very clearly theological "why" was there in the OP:

    quote:
    Originally posted by Fr Gregory:
    (1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

    You gotta buy Fr Gregory's view that there has been "a permanent and essentialist change in how the symbolic action imparts meaning rather than has meaning imparted to it" to agree with his first "why" (and I'm not sure that I do), but he did put it forth from the very beginning.

    {edited to put in attribution and indicate cross-post with Fr Gregory}

    [ 30. August 2006, 15:22: Message edited by: RuthW ]
     
    Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
     
    Thanks Ruth. Oh dear, I'm getting weary. I do wish this thread could be quietly euthanased.
     
    Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:
    Thanks Ruth. Oh dear, I'm getting weary. I do wish this thread could be quietly euthanased.

    Perhaps it could be cremated?
     
    Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
     
    Nice one Chorister! [Killing me]

    Seriously though, this is now "doin' mi 'ead in" a bit so I will bow out gracefully now. Ta - ra!
     
    Posted by eyeliner (# 4648) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:
    Seriously though, this is now "doin' mi 'ead in" a bit so I will bow out gracefully now. Ta - ra!

    Damn-I obviously arrived too late. I ought to go back and read the other eight pages, really, but if I do so I'll probably get involved and not let it die a graceful death...

    [ 30. August 2006, 16:55: Message edited by: eyeliner ]
     
    Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:


    No, this isn't simply for us HOW cremation is done. It's the cremation itself.

    On further research I think the association of fire as a force for the destruction of evil as it plays out in examples from the OT has a part to play in the taboo against cremation which coupled with our predilection for collecting and venerating our ancestors' bones created a climate of antipathy to any other form of burial. This isn't found in India for example where fire itself is considered a god and sacrifice by fire seen as a good, as in purification by fire.

    I think the theology, jewish and ours, has been superimposed on tradition.

    Myrrh


    http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Rites%20of%20Passage/ancestors2.html

    http://www.aish.com/societywork/sciencenature/Cremation.asp

    http://www.saintbarbara.org/faith/society/cremation.cfm
     
    Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
     
    p.s.

    I also think this comes under the same category heading, whatever that's named, as circumcision - something which came from the 'fathers' (John 7:22), but rejected as necessary for Christians.

    Judging by the strength of feeling about this from Orthodox Jews and Orthodox Christians I think the following applies:


    Galatians 6:15
    For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature

    I can imagine circumcision woven into Orthodox teaching if that argument had never come up. If we're not circumcised even though Christ was I can see no reason why we should be buried as He was. And we wouldn't need to make excuses for those times when cremation is forced on us through circumstances.

    quote:
    Thus the Church, due to a pastoral concern for the preservation of right beliefs and right practice within the Tradition of the Fathers, and out of a sense of reverence for its departed, must continue its opposition to this practice. Each Orthodox Christian should know that since cremation is prohibited by the canons [rules of the Church], those who insist on their own cremation will not be permitted a funeral in the Church. Naturally, an exception occurs when the Church is confronted with the case of some accident or natural disaster where cremation is necessary to guard the health of the living. In these special situations, the Church allows cremation of Orthodox people with prior episcopal permission and only by "economia."
    It is neither a right belief or practice nor not a right belief or practice for a Christian. The Church has no right to impose this any more than it has a right to impose circumcision.

    Also, in Orthodox teaching the canons are not laws which must be obeyed, we don't have a juridical relationship with God or with the priests; rather a lot of them (canons) are an embarrassment showing as they do the failures in Tradition and "It shall not be so among you" is still the first rule (measure).


    Myrrh


    quote:
    Originally posted by Myrrh:
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:


    No, this isn't simply for us HOW cremation is done. It's the cremation itself.

    On further research I think the association of fire as a force for the destruction of evil as it plays out in examples from the OT has a part to play in the taboo against cremation which coupled with our predilection for collecting and venerating our ancestors' bones created a climate of antipathy to any other form of burial. This isn't found in India for example where fire itself is considered a god and sacrifice by fire seen as a good, as in purification by fire.

    I think the theology, jewish and ours, has been superimposed on tradition.

    Myrrh


    http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Rites%20of%20Passage/ancestors2.html

    http://www.aish.com/societywork/sciencenature/Cremation.asp

    http://www.saintbarbara.org/faith/society/cremation.cfm



    [ 31. August 2006, 03:53: Message edited by: Myrrh ]
     
    Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by RuthW:
    quote:
    Originally posted by Fr Gregory:
    (1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

    You gotta buy Fr Gregory's view that there has been "a permanent and essentialist change in how the symbolic action imparts meaning rather than has meaning imparted to it" to agree with his first "why" (and I'm not sure that I do), but he did put it forth from the very beginning.
    He did, and then he refused to engage with any of us that disagreed with that theological point, preferring to riff on how cremation denies the reality of death, or whatever it was he was on about.

    Suffice it to say that I do not agree that cremation "denies SYMBOLICALLY the resurrection promise". I do not agree with that symbolic interpretation, on the grounds that bodily destruction occurs anyway, whichever method is used. Thus the symbolism of cremation is - to me - exactly the same as that of burial.

    I also pointed out that the purely symbolic should never, in my opinion, be required of anyone. Because symbolism is very much on the eye of the beholder.

    The good Father has yet to respond to my disagreement with any argument other than "it does because we say it does, dammit". That and a bunch of crap about how the West is far inferior to the East because we don't kowtow to our religious masters any more seem to be all the arguments he has these days...
     
    Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
     
    Well, I have to say I think the question of how symbols work and whether the Incarnation permanently changed that for some of them is a whole discussion of its own.
     
    Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on :
     
    If you picture the resurrection as being something like the valley of dry bones in Ezekiel, then you want the bones to be intact. It seems a category error to me. But one entrenched in Tradition, so not likely to change any time soon. I don't see any harm in burying people intact, but don't see that the cremation=disrespect argument holds a lot of water, especially when for example a bit of rug that the consecrated communion elements dribble into is meant to be disposed of by ... you guessed it....
     
    Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Mousethief:
    If you picture the resurrection as being something like the valley of dry bones in Ezekiel, then you want the bones to be intact.

    Firstly, I don't. Not at all.

    Secondly, that would mean that only those who have been dead for a (relatively) short time will be resurrected, as after enough time even bones crumble and decay to nothing. Not to mention the fun they'll have in ossuaries (is that the word?) while all the skeletons attempt to get back into one piece - "Fred, you've got Mike's leg there! And I think that's Bill's third vertebra!"
     
    Posted by Mousethief (# 953) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
    quote:
    Originally posted by Mousethief:
    If you picture the resurrection as being something like the valley of dry bones in Ezekiel, then you want the bones to be intact.

    Firstly, I don't. Not at all.

    Perhaps you missed the point that I disagree with this also.
     
    Posted by R.D. Olivaw (# 9990) on :
     
    quote:
    Myrrh posted:
    In India where cremation is the norm I was told sannyasis are an exception.

    There are also the Zoroastrians who take their dead wrapped in linen to the Towers of Silence to be devoured by vultures and their bones bleached by the sun. They believe that rotting flesh pollutes nature.
     
    Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Mousethief:
    Perhaps you missed the point that I disagree with this also.

    Ah. Oops. [Hot and Hormonal]
     
    Posted by Papio (# 4201) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
    quote:
    Originally posted by RuthW:
    quote:
    Originally posted by Fr Gregory:
    (1) It denies SYMBOLICALLY (not actually) the resurrection promise in the context of death being "sleep."

    You gotta buy Fr Gregory's view that there has been "a permanent and essentialist change in how the symbolic action imparts meaning rather than has meaning imparted to it" to agree with his first "why" (and I'm not sure that I do), but he did put it forth from the very beginning.
    He did, and then he refused to engage with any of us that disagreed with that theological point, preferring to riff on how cremation denies the reality of death, or whatever it was he was on about.

    Suffice it to say that I do not agree that cremation "denies SYMBOLICALLY the resurrection promise". I do not agree with that symbolic interpretation, on the grounds that bodily destruction occurs anyway, whichever method is used. Thus the symbolism of cremation is - to me - exactly the same as that of burial.

    I also pointed out that the purely symbolic should never, in my opinion, be required of anyone. Because symbolism is very much on the eye of the beholder.

    The good Father has yet to respond to my disagreement with any argument other than "it does because we say it does, dammit". That and a bunch of crap about how the West is far inferior to the East because we don't kowtow to our religious masters any more seem to be all the arguments he has these days...

    I think many of us on the thread could have posted that, Marvin.

    I agree with you and it would be nice if the good Father actually resonded to us rather than asserting that we are playing games and the he would be repeating himself if he id. I don't see how an explanation would a be a repeat, since I am not sure that an explanation has ever been given.

    PS - I have just realised that the Ray Lamontagne track I am listening to is a cover of "Crazy" by Gnarls Berkley. How odd!
     
    Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by R.D. Olivaw:
    quote:
    Myrrh posted:
    In India where cremation is the norm I was told sannyasis are an exception.

    There are also the Zoroastrians who take their dead wrapped in linen to the Towers of Silence to be devoured by vultures and their bones bleached by the sun. They believe that rotting flesh pollutes nature.
    Sorry, I meant exception to the Hindu practice where fire is considered holy - in temples fire is passed around and participants "draw" it to themselves and over their heads as a blessing.

    An interesting exception because here fire is considered too sacred to be polluted with decaying flesh, as is water and earth, so the bodies are left to feed carrion birds.

    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/india/1870-monier-parsees.html

    The birds don't always have such good table manners, as the description in the above suggests, and often fly away with pieces of the body which in the past sometimes dropped into one of the city's resevoirs, after complaints the Parsis built a garden over it. Can't recall now the depth of soil, but not much, some 18"-2' holding an astonishing amount of vegetation. They too care about the bones of their dead.

    Aren't there some Native American tribes that do something similar? I've seen that in some old westerns, the body placed on a platform to be exposed to the elements and passing birds.

    Myrrh
     
    Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
     
    "There I was, sitting in the U-bend, thinking about death..." Well, no, actually, but I was thinking about cremation in the shower this morning.

    Leaving aside the spiritual realm for a moment, I find cremation very appealing because for me it means my body will continue to exist in relationship with everything else on this planet. All of my atoms were once part of the planet, and have been part of many, many living creatures. I want to feel that I am still part of many, many creatures and of this earth after my physical death. If my body were chemically preserved and isolated from the earth after death, that would me cut off from everything and everyone that I valued and enjoyed in life. If my body decays, my atoms can become part of the future.

    When I euthanized my beloved T.C., I had to choose a method of "disposal". My immediate response, even while I was bawling my eyes out, was, "She was a gift from the universe to me. Let her go back to the universe." [Tear] OliviaG
     
    Posted by ship's cat (# 11793) on :
     
    quote:
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Originally posted by sharkshooter:
    I have never been to a funeral where they actually lowered the casket.

    I was shocked at my first Canadian funeral when they left the casket sitting above ground as we all walkd away.
    But my main problem is with the west coast culture here in Vancouver that means there is seldom a coffin in church for a funeral - often not even ashes. There seems to be a denial of the actuality of death here somewhere.
    I also don't like the idea of the body going unaccompanied to the crematorium - it seems lascking in respect somehow. Not that the body knows anything about it, mind you.
     
    Posted by Henry Troup (# 3722) on :
     
    New Roman Catholic guidelines, at least in the Diocese of Pembroke (Ontario), are cited in a Toronto Sun op-ed titled It's a dying shame.
     
    Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Father Gregory:
    I notice that few here who support cremation have at all addressed the issue of why some churches suddenly got a new and better idea ... but not until the close of the 19th century after 4000 years of unbroken tradition.

    The reason it started in Britain then was the cost of land in and around London. The big public cemetaries (Kensal Green, Highgate, Nunhead) held it off for a generation, but by about 1900 most people would have had to travel a long way to get to a graveyard.
     
    Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
    the "space" issue - if everyone was buried then with today's population we'd very quickly need whole cities dedicated just to graves.

    I disagree. The old churchyards in the hearts of villages and towns, and even more the big 19th century municipal cemetaries, are wonderful green spaces we can all share. Especially when they go a bit wild - much better for wildlife than just about any other urban land environment, except maybe railway cuttings.

    Fewer than a million people die in Britain each year. At about two square metres each, that's adding 2 square kilometres to the total national graveyard each year. If the average grave was kept going for two centuries that would be about 400 km^2 - well under a fifth of a percent of the total land area of the country.

    Of course its already too late for London and perhaps some other big cities. The graveyard space we need should have been set aside in the outer suburbs in first part of the 20th century, as it was in the inner suburbs in the 19th. But smaller towns could still do it if they had the will. After all, they managed to find a great deal more space for golf courses.
     
    Posted by tfbundy (# 9914) on :
     
    I heard Dr Julian Lytton speak recently on this, (he is an ex-curator of the V&A and whose speciality was burials etc), and for those who wish to adhere to an ecological agenda, FYI the practice of cremation couldn't be more toxic to the planet when it comes to disposing of human remains.

    The most ecologically sound is the practice of air burial, but it's a bit difficult to do that in Norfolk. Our cows tend to eat grass and our starlings seed. any ideas anyone?
     
    Posted by andreas1984 (# 9313) on :
     
    What a thread...

    I want to make a comment on a strange "monophysitism", namely the "God can do anything" or that "God does not mind" kinds of arguments expressed in some posts. While God can resurrect the cremated, this has nothing to do with Christian life, because Christian life is, well, about the Christians that experience God and not about God Himself.

    Orthodoxy is about a synergeia between God and man. She tells us that life is such a synergy; we are here to co-operate. When we don't cooperate with God, we either do our own thing or we assume that God will do His thing. But, Orthodoxy tells us, God does not do His own thing without the consent and the ACTIVE will of the people.

    The question, the way I see it, is this: Is synergeia essential to the gospel of Christ? To my mind, it is. There can be no gospel without synergeia.

    quote:
    Originally posted by JimT:
    Then the body was dug up, the bones stacked neatly some place else, and the plot used over. Whoa! Did I miss that earlier in this thread? Apparently the church was fine with this?! I read one woman's statement that she was fine with it because if you saw lots of flesh after three years, it meant you were a good Christian. Reminded me of the whole scene in The Brothers Karamazov where the body of a priest didn't stink for a long time so they wondered if he might be a saint. Weird stuff. You just can't keep some people from superstition.

    It seems like there is internal debate inside Orthodoxy to soften the church's offical stance, and some of it is being justified on grounds of Jesus' position that social justice overrides strict adherence to rules and tradition that become an unbearable burden.

    Is JimT, good old JimmyT? If that's the case, then hello old chap!

    re par. 1 quoted above: I remember the new bishop of Pireus saying that the FINGER of Saint Basil the Great, which is now kept in the Holy Synod of Greece (after Caesaria was destroyed by the Turks), gave forth a beautiful fragrance, and that he himself has smelled it.

    It seems that God chose a part of Saint Basil to glorify Himself and His Saint, and to guide His Church.

    In fact, there are many Saints that remain intact. The champion of the first Ecumenical Council, Saint Spyridon, comes to mind, whose body is kept intact by God even in our days.

    re par. 2 quoted above:

    I remember a few months ago AGNOSTIC Greek intellectual Nikos Dimou (www.ndimou.gr) making a public letter to the prime minister, so that he will consider cremation. It seems that the prime minister made a deal with the Holy Synod, and cremation will be permitted for those WHOSE RELIGION PERMITS IT, OR who have expressed their will that they be cremated.

    The Synod has not made a council yet, because cremation has not begun. However, listening to the bishop of Lagada (near Thessaloniki), "we will decide in a council. The opinion of the majority will prevail. This is the way we operate in Orthodoxy. The opinion of the majority."

    However, many bishops spoke on the national networks, and they were clear that the Church will consider those who decide to get cremated, outside the Church, and they will not be enumerated among the faithful.
     
    Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
     
    An interesting item on British graveyards, their intensely overcrowded state, and a possible new/old solution may be found here.

    Ross
     
    Posted by JimT (# 142) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by andreas1984:
    The question, the way I see it, is this: Is synergeia essential to the gospel of Christ? To my mind, it is. There can be no gospel without synergeia.<snip> Is JimT, good old JimmyT? If that's the case, then hello old chap!

    Yes, it's me.

    The sweet-smelling finger stuff is too much for me. Your conclusion that God decided to glorify himself is the opposite conclusion of everyone else--everyone else thinks that it was to put his stamp of approval on the saint. God could have glorified himself by making a bad person's finger smell wonderful.

    The 'synergeia' sounds exactly like my understanding of 'process theology.' For myself, I have a different notion of the essential message of the gospel but that would certainly be another thread for which I don't have time.

    Nice to see you. [Smile]
     
    Posted by mdijon (# 8520) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by andreas1984:
    However, many bishops spoke on the national networks, and they were clear that the Church will consider those who decide to get cremated, outside the Church, and they will not be enumerated among the faithful.

    I know this will mark me out as someone who just doesn't understand Orthodoxy... or the ecumenical councillor method of decision making.... the subtleties of infallibility and indefectability... one hopelessly individualistic, a real "me and jaysus" protestant... but this strikes me as well beyond the calling of the church and the gospel to claim such authority over individual decisions... and beyond simple human decency.

    [ 09. September 2006, 19:40: Message edited by: mdijon ]
     
    Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
     
    quote:
    Originally posted by mdijon:
    quote:
    Originally posted by andreas1984:
    However, many bishops spoke on the national networks, and they were clear that the Church will consider those who decide to get cremated, outside the Church, and they will not be enumerated among the faithful.

    I know this will mark me out as someone who just doesn't understand Orthodoxy... or the ecumenical councillor method of decision making.... the subtleties of infallibility and indefectability... one hopelessly individualistic, a real "me and jaysus" protestant... but this strikes me as well beyond the calling of the church and the gospel to claim such authority over individual decisions... and beyond simple human decency.
    I'm with you. But then, it's only recently that suicides, for instance, were regarded the same way in many faith traditions.
     


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