HOUSMAIL HM132 July
2005 THOUGHTS ABOUT
CREMATION Many
Christians seem to be fairly strongly convinced that BURIAL is the only Scripturally
acceptable method for dealing with the remains of the dead. Further, some go so
far as to condemn cremation as SINFUL. Other Christians seem to regard Cremation
as acceptable for others but retain a personal preference as “not for themselves”.
And a smaller number have no problem with it at all. In this
short article we will seek to place the subject in its proper Biblical context
– which is that the Bible does NOT clearly discuss the subject at all! WHAT
DOES THE BIBLE REALLY SAY? Of course
there is no question that almost all records of deaths in both Old and New Testaments
indicate Burial as the “normal” Jewish practice. However it is noteworthy that
King Saul and his three sons were cremated! (1 Samuel
31:11-13) And we note in passing, that there were a few
cases under the law of Moses where the penalty for certain sins was burning. (It
is unclear whether this was meant to be carried out alive, or after death by other
means. We do know that in first century Jerusalem, the bodies of criminals who
had already been executed were often burned in Gehenna, a garbage disposal area
outside the city.) However:
SOME
PRACTICAL ISSUES The
end result of cremation is the same as for Burial. The body is reduced to dust
and returned to the earth. This is done by either burying the ashes in an urn
in a cemetery plot or scattering them somewhere. e.g. at sea, or in a garden. Of course
there are cases where ashes are kept by relatives at home. However, the location
is not important. The main point is that in these cases, the ashes are not ‘buried”
in the conventional sense. This is little different in its effect, to the Jewish
and middle ages Christian practice of recovering the bones after the rest of the
body had decayed and storing them in an ossuary. Jewish
“burials” mentioned in the Bible, were NOT burials in the modern sense of the
word. i.e. They were not literally buried in the earth. The bodies of the patriarchs
were buried in CAVES (Genesis 25:9-10, Genesis 49:29-31) Kings
were buried in man-made SEPULCHRES. The practice of burning heretics was thought, at
the time, to make resurrection impossible. It was believed that God could not
resurrect a cremated body! Some modern day Christians who oppose cremation as
sinful, still give the impression that they believe that! Of course
this belief is clearly NOT supported by the Bible. It is based on a VERY inadequate
understanding of the power of God. The God who made Adam from the dust of the
earth as a unique being doesn’t need the remains of a dead body to get a resurrection
started! CONCLUSION This
subject should NOT be made a matter of controversy, or a test of fellowship. Nor
should brethren criticize or despise one another because of differing opinions
about it. Nor should any brother or sister be made to feel outcast or rejected
if, in good conscience, they choose cremation for their departed loved ones. The
Scriptures do NOT resolve the issue beyond question. In the absence of any clear
instruction either way, the Bible leaves it open for the personal conscience of
the individual to choose between Burial and Cremation. "Do not judge, or you too will be judged.
For in the same way as you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure
you use, it will be measured to you. …… first take the plank out of your own eye,
and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.” (Matthew 7:1-5) The
body which is buried will decay and return to the dust. Cremated bodies also return
to the dust. Cremation merely hastens that process. Nowhere
does the Gospel say that our hope for the resurrection is affected by the method
of disposal of our bodies after death! The
Scripture promises that those who “sleep in the dust of the earth” “will be raised
to everlasting life” in which the “wise shall shine
like the brightness of the firmament” and
“those
who turn many to righteousness will shine like the stars for ever”. (Daniel 12:2-3) The
body which sleeps “in the dust of the earth” is
NOT the same as the body which will be raised! What is sown is perishable. What
is raised is glorious, imperishable, powerful, spiritual, in the image of the
man of heaven. (1 Corinthians 15:42-49) “The last enemy to be destroyed is death” (1 Corinthians 15:26). Allon |