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Title: Cremation or Bodily Burial:


1
Cremation or Bodily Burial
  • Which Brings God More Honor?
  • Darrell Stein

2
Origins of Cremation
  • Derived from the Latin cremare (to burn),
    cremation is the process of disposing
    (destroying) a dead body in the flames of fire.
  • Historical evidence indicates that burning dead
    human beings apparently did not occur until
    sometime between 2500 and 2000 years B.C. It is
    quite likely that it started in India and moved
    east. Outside of the Roman Empire, the Nordic
    culture of Scandinavia performed some crematory
    acts on fireboats from about 1500 to 1800 B.C.
  • It was the pagan religious beliefs, which were an
    integral part of cremation, that made burning the
    dead repugnant to the ancient Hebrews, as well as
    to the early Christians.

3
Historical Methods of Cremation
  • To cremate a deceased human being in ancient
    times required gathering wood to erect a pile or
    stack several feet high and longer and wider than
    the respective dead body. The bones of the
    cremated body, which for the most part did not
    burn, were either buried or placed in an urn.
    These urns were tall enough to accommodate the
    unburned bones together with the bodys ashes.

4
Modern Methods of Cremation
  • A crematoriums furnace, which resembles a large
    bread oven, is commonly called a retort in the
    furnace industry. After the body is laid into
    what is usually a brick-lined furnace, it is
    fired up to between 1700 and 2500 degrees
    Fahrenheit for approximately 90 minutes to two
    hours.

5
Modern Methods of Cremation
6
Modern Methods of Cremation
7
The Composition of Modern Cremated Remains
  • The mistaken common belief is that after the
    human corpse has been burned, only ashes are
    left. The bones do not burn. Consequently, they
    are pulverized by a grinding process. The entire
    contents of an urn, depending on the size of the
    corpse, ordinarily weigh between four and eight
    pounds of ash and fragments.

8
Whose ashes?
  • Recipients sometimes do not know what portions of
    the ashes they have on hand are really those of
    their loved one. Sometimes family members do not
    know whether the ashes they received are those of
    their deceased relative or ashes of wood or some
    other product.

9
Why Did Pagans Choose Cremation?
  • Some scholars think the burning of human corpses
    began because ancient people feared the dead
    thus, theoretically, destroying them by fire
    coped with that fear.
  • Cremation enabled the survivors to carry the
    bones of the deceased, back to their homes or to
    some other desirable place.
  • Ancient Greeks did it in part to prevent buried
    bodies from being stolen by thieves or disturbed
    by other miscreants.
  • In some instances, people burned dead human
    bodies because they believed in the pagan notion
    that fire freed the soul from wandering and
    searching for rest after the person expired.
  • All pagans burned their dead because they did not
    believe in the physical resurrection of the body.

10
Why Did Pagans Choose Cremation?
  • It is because of these pagan realities, in
    addition to the many biblical precedents of earth
    burial, including the burial of Jesus, that the
    early Christians opposed cremation, not simply
    because pagans practiced it. For Christians to
    accept and practice cremation would have been
    tantamount to identifying, at least symbolically,
    with the erroneous pagan beliefs associated with
    it.

11
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation
  • Shortly after Adams fall into sin, God told him
    that not only would he die, but his body, created
    out of the dust of the earth, would return to
    dust (Genesis 319). These words are a clear
    indication that Gods plan is for the deceased
    human body to be laid in an earthen grave.

12
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • Genesis 4929 Jacob told Joseph Bury me with
    my fathers in the cave in the field of Ephron the
    Hittite. Pharaoh granted Josephs request to
    take Jacobs body back to his homeland, where he
    was buried in the same field where Abraham and
    Sarah had been laid to rest (Genesis 505-613).
    Jacobs request indicates that he could not
    imagine his dead body being disposed of in any
    other way.
  • Joseph also asked to be buried in Canaan. In
    Exodus 1319, Moses took the bones of Joseph with
    him. For 40 years, the Israelites carried and
    protected his bones until they buried him in
    Shechem.

13
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • When Moses died, God Himself buried him. The
    biblical text reads, So Moses the servant of the
    Lord died there in MoabAnd He God buried him
    in Moab, in the valley opposite Beth Peor, but to
    this day no one knows where his grave is (Deut.
    34 5-6).

14
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • Christians who believe cremation is an acceptable
    option, and that God has no objections to it, may
    seriously want to ask why God Himself chose to
    bury Moses in an earthen grave. By giving Moses
    an earth burial, did God perhaps intend to show
    His faithful people that He only approves of
    their placing a deceased friend or relative in
    the earth? Biblically minded opponents of
    cremation should say yes. In fact, the
    rabbinic Talmud agrees with this conclusion, for
    it states, Follow the path of Godbury the dead,
    even as He God did bury Moses in the valley of
    Moab (Sotah 14a).

15
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • On through the generations following Moses, the
    Hebrews continued to bury their dead.
  • Joshua was laid to ret in a grave (Josh. 2430)
  • Samuel died and was buried in Ramah (1 Sam. 251)
  • Davids survivors buried him in Jerusalem (1
    Kings 210)
  • Inhumation was so important to the Hebrews that
    they even buried the slain bodies of their
    enemies (1 Kings 1115).
  • The prophet Jeremiah notes with horror dead
    people being unburied. Not to be buried was
    equivalent to being garbage or refuse (Jer.
    2533).

16
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • When they did return from Egypt, the Israelites
    continued to bury their dead. When they did
    perform cremations, it was only for certain
    criminals who committed the most heinous acts.
  • Joshua announced that the accursed criminal
    shall be burned with fire, he and all that he
    has, because he has transgressed the covenant of
    the Lord, and because he has done a disgraceful
    thing in Israel (Josh. 715).
  • Moses commanded the punishment of a consuming
    fire for a daughter of a priest who profaned
    herself and her father by engaging in
    prostitution (Lev. 219).
  • Moses also stated, If a man marries a woman and
    her mother, it is wickedness. They shall be
    burned with fire, both he and they, that there
    may be no wickedness among you (Lev. 2014).

17
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • These examples indicate that some of the worst
    criminals were occasionally incinerated, and that
    the cremation served as an added mark of
    punishment and humiliation. For the most part,
    however, the Israelites generally buried rather
    than cremated most criminals. There is not a
    single biblical case where God commanded
    cremating any individual as an act of honor or a
    blessing.

18
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • Throughout the entire OT, the act of destroying
    deceased humans by fire was never pleasing to
    God. This is especially evident with regard to
    the king of Moab, who took the bones from the
    king of Edoms tomb and burned them to lime (Amos
    21-2). God not only took offense, but he sent
    fire to destroy Moab and his fortresses. It can
    be argued that this biblical reference is a clear
    denunciation of cremation, one that applies to
    all people, pagans and Gods people alike.

19
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • Although one could become unclean through
    physical contact with a deceased person, the
    Hebrews, nevertheless, treated the body of a dead
    person with great respect. Respect for the human
    body was one reason the Israelites rejected
    cremation. It indicated a rejection of the
    concept of respect due to the deceased to
    commit the body to destruction by fire is
    tantamount to the deliberate burning of something
    that was once sacred.

20
Ancient Israelite View of Cremation (cont.)
  • The Talmud, the formal codification of the oral
    law, boldly states, Every death which is
    accompanied by burning is looked upon as
    idolatry (Avodah Zarah 13). If cremation was
    idolatrous to the Jews of the Talmudic era, then
    it was a practice contrary to the First
    Commandment, which proscribes all forms of
    idolatry. This reference is additional
    corroboration that cremation was unthinkable and
    unacceptable to faithful Jews.

21
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation
  • Early Christians had several noteworthy examples
    of individuals in the NT who were buried in
    graves.
  • Mary and Martha laid their dead brother Lazarus
    in a tomb (John 1138)
  • Stephen, the first Christian Martyr Godly men
    buried Stephen (Acts 82).
  • The disciples of John the Baptist, whom Herod
    Antipas had decapitated, buried him (Matt.
    1412).
  • Every person who is noted as having died in the
    NT received earth burial.

22
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • Even Ananias and Sapphira, who were struck dead
    for lying to the Holy Spirit, were interred (Acts
    53-10).
  • The most significant predecessor to whom the
    early Christians could point was Jesus Himself
    who, was laid to rest in the tomb of Joseph of
    Arimathea.
  • The early Christians also saw precedents for
    earth burial in what Jesus said and did. He once
    said, Let the dead bury their own dead (Luke
    960). Jesus fully accepted the Jewish practice
    of earth burial. Note, Jesus did not say Let
    the dead cremate their dead. Had He said so, it
    would have been in conflict with what He had
    previously said, namely that all the dead would
    hear His voice someday and come forth from their
    graves (John 528). Jesus attacked many early
    Jewish traditions, but burial of the dead was not
    one of them.
  • The early Christians had no other thought than to
    follow their biblical predecessors.

23
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • The Sanctity of the Human Body
  • It is well-known among church historians that the
    early Christians fervently opposed infanticide,
    child abandonment, abortion, and suicide because
    they believed in the sanctity of the human being.
    In their minds, the sanctity of the human body
    did not come to an end when a person dies. They
    saw the human being as the crown of Gods
    creation
  • Man was made in the image of God (Gen. 127)
  • You made him man a little lower than the
    heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and
    honor (Ps. 85).
  • Paul told the Christians in Corinth, Dont you
    know that you yourselves are Gods temple and
    that Gods Spirit lives within you? (1 Cor.
    316)

24
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • Given this biblical view of the human body, in
    addition to their belief in the resurrection of
    the body, the early Christians were not about to
    dispose of a body, even though dead, by the most
    destructive means known to man fire. They saw
    cremation as unbiblical, unthinkable, and
    sacrilegious.

25
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • This mindset continued for centuries. The fact
    that faithful Christians throughout the centuries
    believed in the sanctity of the human body, alive
    or dead, meant they did not see their body as
    their own, something they were free to treat
    however they selfishly wished. It was another
    reason why cremation of their dead was an
    unthinkable option.
  • If todays Christians still believe in the
    sanctity of the human body, and that it does not
    belong to them alone, they will shun and reject
    the practice of cremation, just as their early
    Christian predecessors did.

26
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • Early Church Fathers Oppose Cremation
  • The first church father who defended earth burial
    vis-à-vis cremation was Minucius Felix. Around
    A.D. 190, he stated, we adopt the ancient and
    better custom of burying in the earth. See,
    therefore, how for our consolation all nature
    suggests a future resurrection (Octavius 34).
  • Tertullian attacked the practice because of its
    cruelty and violence (On the Resurrection of the
    Flesh 1).
  • St. Irenaeus underscored the Christian practice
    of earth burial when he wrote, But although it
    the dead body is dissolved at the appointed
    time, because of our primeval disobedience, it is
    placed, as it were in the crucible of the earth
    (Fragments from the Lost Writings of Irenaeus
    XII).

27
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • Early church councils and synods did not issue
    any canons against cremation. Why not? There
    was no need to do so, because disposing of the
    dead by cremation was one cultural practice
    Christians did not imitate. There is not a
    single recorded instance of Christians having
    ever cremated their dead. There was no legalized
    prohibition against cremation in Christian
    Antiquity. None was needed, for the Christians
    by reason of their belief abhorred it.

28
Early Christian Rejection of Cremation (cont.)
  • Early Christians also knew and believed what
    Jesus said Dont be amazedfor a time is
    coming when all who are in their graves will hear
    His voice and come out (John 528). They herd
    Him say Graves, not urns. Moreover, burning
    the dead was not consistent with what was done
    with Christs dead body before He rose from the
    dead nor was it consistent with what He said
    concerning the future resurrection of the dead.

29
Cremation Over the Centuries
  • Early Christian opposition resulted in the
    practice of cremation being largely discontinued
    in much of the Roman Empire by the latter part of
    the fourth century. During the next several
    centuries, as Christianity advanced, the
    disappearance of cremation spread to the more
    remote parts of Europe. Earth burial became the
    norm and remained inviolable until the late
    1800s, when advocates of cremation in the West
    broke with Christianitys historic opposition and
    revived this custom from the pagan era of Rome.

30
Why a Revival?
  • As the spirit of the Age of Reason, with its
    accompanying values of secularism increasingly
    became a part of the culture in Western societies
    in the 20th century, many, including Christians,
    began conforming to the values of this
    ideological movement. Soon an increasing number
    of church members, including Christian clergy,
    began accepting and even defending the practice
    of cremating the dead.

31
U.S. Cremation Statistics
  • In 1900 there were only 2,414 (0.003) deceased
    persons cremated in the United States. In 1920,
    only 1 of all Americans were cremated.
    Cremation remained a rare occurrence until the
    1960s. In 1960, the American rate was
    relatively low when 60, 987 (3.56) were
    incinerated. It then steadily grew over the next
    four decades. In 2001, 26.25 of all deceased
    Americans were incinerated.

32
Biblical Arguments Against Cremation
  • The burial of Jesus
  • It is indeed true that the early Christians
    rejected cremation by burying their dead in large
    measure because they had the burial of Jesus
    Christ as a precedent. Christ was not merely
    buried because it was a Hebrew custom, but
    because it was also Gods will, reminiscent of
    His will in regard to the burial of Moses. Thus,
    given that God willed Moses and Jesus Christ to
    be buried, it is reasonable to conclude that He
    wills that all people, past and present, be given
    earth burial.

33
Biblical Arguments Against Cremation (cont.)
  • The custom of memorializing persons in graves
    with monuments is a centuries-old custom. The OT
    reports that Jacob set up a pillar on the tomb of
    Rachel, his wife (Gen. 3020). This act by
    Jacob, and others in the OT, was not just to
    honor and remember family members, but it was
    also intended to convey a theological message.
    They were perpetual reminders that they might be
    testimonies of the future resurrection, which
    they believed and expected. If cremation
    continues to increase, along with the scattering
    of cremains, the biblical precedent of erecting
    grave monuments will undoubtedly continue to
    decline, with an accompanying decline in the
    Christian testimony to the physical resurrection
    of the body.

34
Biblical Arguments Against Cremation (cont.)
  • Ashes to Ashes
  • Even though an omnipotent God can resurrect
    bodies from their cremated ashes and Orthodox
    Christianity has never denied this- these words
    do not have a biblical source or precedent. The
    Bible never speaks about dead bodies turning to
    ashes. According to the Bible, the deceased body
    turns only to dust.
  • It appears that these words became a part of the
    funeral liturgy in the Church of Englands Book
    of Common Prayer (1549) not because its
    formulators believed the body would eventually
    turn to ashes, but because these words provided a
    rhythmic, poetic alliteration.

35
Biblical Arguments Against Cremation (cont.)
  • Cremation undermines the doctrine of the
    resurrection
  • The resurrection of the body assumes burial and
    graves, whereas cremation does not. To be
    Christian is to believe in the physical
    resurrection of the body of which Christs bodily
    resurrection is the firstfruits.
  • The doctrine of the resurrection body, based on
    Christs own resurrection, is the lynch pin of
    Christianity. If cremation fosters a vague
    belief in only the survival of the soul, and the
    soul is never seen as becoming reunited with its
    body on resurrection day, then it shatters
    Christianitys cardinal doctrine. see 1 Cor.
    1516-18.

36
Psychological Factors
  • There is not a gravesite reminder of the departed
    family member. Consequently, relatives commonly
    forget cremated people.

37
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce
  • Doctrinal conflicts and divisions plagued the
    church soon after Christ ascended into heaven.
    There were the Gnostics, Docetists, Arians,
    Donatists, Nestorians, and others who departed
    from the orthodox biblical teachings of the
    church. Among these different heretical groups,
    however, none of their followers accepted or
    advocated the burning of their dead, not even the
    Gnostics who ridiculed the human body and denied
    the physical resurrection of the flesh.
    Similarly, the Docetists, who taught that Christ
    did not have a material body but only appeared to
    have one, also did not engage in burning their
    dead. Moreover, none of the other heretical
    groups within the church ever questioned the
    Christian opposition to it.

38
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce (cont.)
  • In terms of a Christian response to the modern
    cremation movement, the Roman Catholic Church was
    the only Christian denomination that formally
    opposed the practice when it was introduced in
    the West.
  • In 1963, however, the Roman Catholic Church made
    an about face in 1963 to permit Catholics to be
    cremated. This decision was not made on the
    basis of any biblically based theological study
    of the problem. Influenced by the secular
    culture, it merely issued a statement allowing
    it. No other Christian denominations have
    produced any formal theological studies dealing
    with cremation. They have merely acquiesced.

39
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce (cont.)
  • Acquiescence has occurred not only in the Roman
    Catholic Church, but in virtually all American
    Protestant churches, including conservative
    denominations. For the most part, they all voice
    similar responses when they say the Bible does
    not prohibit cremation.

40
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce (cont.)
  • Why have so many Christian clergy and their
    churches assented to cremation, especially since
    Christianity had rejected it for most of 2,000
    years? Answer The powerful influence of
    todays secularized culture. Apparently,
    unbeknownst to many clergy, churches, and
    theologians, the secular culture has been so
    subtly and powerfully persuasive that many clergy
    and churches apparently have not recognized how
    it is undermining the historic biblical/Christian
    position on the significance of earth burial and
    how it is related to the decline in belief in the
    doctrine of the physical resurrection of the
    body. As faith in the resurrection all but
    disappeared in mainline churches, the practice of
    cremation swelled.

41
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce (cont.)
  • Supposed biblical silence
  • Members of conservative churches tend to say that
    if a given behavior is prohibited in the Bible,
    it must not be practiced by them. However, when
    the question arises of whether cremation is
    biblically permissible, their churches leaders
    commonly say that the Bible is either silent on
    the matter or that it does not prohibit it.
    Members are told that cremation is a practice
    that is neither biblically commanded nor
    forbidden. For the most part, both liberal and
    conservative churches have acquiesced to the
    ancient pagan practice of burning the dead.

42
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce (cont.)
  • In 2003, the SBCs website stated, The act of
    cremation is not a sin. The website made this
    conclusion by contending that it would only be a
    sin if it violated one of Gods laws, and since
    God has no such law, it is therefore not a sin.
    Thus, the website further stated that, The
    disposal of the body is left to our desires and
    wishes in accordance with the law of the land.
  • As we saw earlier, however, the Bible is not
    silent on this issue.

43
Clergy and Churches Acquiesce (cont.)
  • Moreover, a search of denominational literature
    reveals that no denomination has ever produced a
    formal biblical-exegetical study document on
    cremation.

44
Be Not Conformed to This World
  • The early Christians were mindful of Pauls
    command in Romans 122 Do not conform any longer
    to the pattern of this world. Interestingly,
    this command from God is ignored today when
    Christians are either told, or led to believe,
    that cremation is an acceptable option. Why is
    it that so many Christian clergy and churches
    fail to see the applicability of this verse to
    the practice of cremation? This is especially
    puzzling since cremation is pagan in its origins
    and used in the OT as an extended form of
    punishment. Certainly, the early Christians
    fully understood that by imitating the Romans by
    practicing cremation, they would have been
    conforming to the world of their day. So they
    did not.

45
Be Not Conformed to This World (cont.)
  • It would be appropriate for Christian clergy to
    teach their members that when God says be not
    conformed to this world, it means that
    Christians do not have the option of choosing the
    secular, worldly practice of cremation.
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