Cremation
CREMATION: WHAT DOES
GOD THINK?
Cremation:
Does the Bible say anything about it?
.Cremation is a
subject that the Bible does not specifically discuss. It is interesting to note,
however, that people through the Bible times treated the human body with great
respect, and often showed deep concern about the disposition of the remains
following death (see Genesis 49:29-31 for instance). Embalming was practiced in
both Old and New Testament times (Genesis 50;26; Mark 16:1), and it was taken as
a great disgrace not to have a proper burial (1 Samuel 31:9-13; 2 Samuel 2:4-6:
Ecclesiastes 6:3).
Cremation is one of
the options now available for final disposition of the body at death. It is
estimated that less than 5 percent of American families choose cremation, but in
Japan
and
England
over half the families take this option.
Funeral arrangements
are not necessarily significantly different from other options. The body may
still be viewed prior to the service, and a worship service may be held with the
deceased present, in most cases. There are a number of options available as to
the disposition of the cremated remains, including burial and scattering.
In contemplating the
choices available, Christians will want to give thoughtful consideration to all
who may be affected by the decision, such as loved ones who may have strong
feelings on the subject. One certainly would not like to bring unnecessary
distress to anyone. Furthermore, the attitude of the Christian's heart will show
deep respect for the wonderful body that God designed (Psalm 139:14). Of course
God will resurrect all of His children regardless of what has become of their
bodies. When Jesus comes, "the dead in Christ" will be raised and given immortal
bodies "fashioned like unto his glorious body." I Thessalonians 4:16; I
Corinthians 5:54; Philippians 3:21. How happy we may be as we look forward to
that great day!
In a book on the subject of Christian funerals, a writer gives the following
advice regarding cremation:
"Personally, the minister may or may not approve of such proceedings.
Privately, he is free to hold any opinion that he will. But officially he should
keep an open mind. In the Christian religion there is nothing that frowns upon
cremation or requires burial."
Is this sound advice? Is cremation a matter of Christian liberty? In
certain places land space is so crowded that burial plots are very expensive and
in some cases there are efforts by the governments to discourage burial in
preference to cremation. That this problem has become acute in
Singapore
is referred to in the following official statement made by the Bible
Presbyterian Church of
Singapore
in May,1987--
"1. There is an increasing number of cremations in
Singapore
even amongst Christians. 2. It is quite evident that our Government favours
cremation by improving the facilities of the existing crematoria and columbaria,
and by increasing the cost of burial while keeping down the cost of cremation.
3. Some non-Bible Presbyterian pastor have spoken and written in favour of
cremation and have officiated at cremations while some non-Bible Presbyterian
churches have even built columbaria. 4. Those who favour cremation claim it is
more hygienic, cleaner and cheaper. 5. They see cremation as a convenient form
of disposal of the dead. 6. Cremation does away with burial plots that need to
be upkept and falls in line with our Government's stress on strategic land use"
(Far Eastern Beacon, July 1987, p. 4). In light of
this situation, the Bible Presbyterian Church of
Singapore
has taken a clear and commendable stand for the Word of God and
against the practice of cremation. We have
included their statement on this issue in the back of this booklet.
CREMATION INCREASING IN
NORTH AMERICA
The number of cremations in
North America
is increasing dramatically.
In 1975, only 6% of the people who died were cremated. By 2005 this had
increased to 32% overall. In
Hawaii,
the percentage of dead that are cremated is 66%,
Washington
64%,
Nevada
65%,
Arizona
59%,
Oregon
63.7%,
Montana
59%,
Alaska
58%,
Colorado
56%,
Maine
53%,
California
52%,
Florida
51%,
Wyoming
46%. (The states with the least percentage of cremations per death are
Alabama
at 9.5%,
Mississippi
and
Tennessee
10%,
Kentucky
12%,
Louisiana
15%,
South Dakota
16%.)
The 2005 statistics for
Canada
are as follows:
British Columbia
79%,
New Brunswick
61%,
Alberta
59%,
Manitoba
53%,
Nova Scotia
50%,
Quebec
47%,
Ontario
47%, and
Saskatchewan
46%.
According to the cover story in the
December 5, 1995,
issue of
USA
Today, the rising acceptance of cremation has coincided
with a drop in "religious barriers to cremation." It is interesting that
this secular newspaper noticed the connection between religion and cremation.
The disposal of the body after death is a religious matter. One's beliefs will
determine such choices. Historically, burial has been a
testimony of faith in the bodily resurrection.
Historically, cremation has been practiced among those, such as Hindus, who deny
the bodily resurrection and who believe in reincarnation. Historically, wherever
the Gospel of Jesus Christ has found acceptance, pagan practices such as
cremation have been rejected. The increase in cremation
in North American society has paralleled the wholesale rejection of the Bible in
this same society.
As paganism increases its steely hold on
American and Canadian hearts, cremation becomes increasingly popular.
THE METHOD OF CREMATION IN THE WEST
The following is excerpted from
USA
Today,
December 5, 1995:
"The three-hour process of burning a body and grinding it to small
fragments often takes place away from loved ones' eyes. The body, usually
dressed but stripped of all jewelry, slides into "retort"--a brick-lined oven
that looks like a big bread oven. "Pacemakers are
removed because their batteries can explode at high temperatures. Silicone
breast implants, which can't be removed, are creating problems for crematory
operators who say remains often stick to the melting silicone.
"The gas or oil-fired ovens are heated to about 1,700
degrees.
Although often called ashes, the remains
are actually bone fragments. These are swept with a giant hoe-like scraper from
the bottom of the retort and put in a container to cool down. Any large debris,
such as dental crowns or hip prostheses, is removed.
"Everything is then ground to granule-sized pieces. The whole process
takes about three hours. The result is about six pounds of remains compact
enough to fit in a shoe box."
For the following reasons, we are convinced that
the practice of cremation should be
rejected by God's people:
CREMATION HAS A HEATHEN ORIGIN AND PURPOSE
Cremation, as just described and as practiced today in the more
technically advanced nations, no longer has the physical ghastliness associated
with cremations performed in the less developed parts of the world. The modern
method, as we have seen, incorporates the use of an exceedingly hot incinerator
which reduces the body to ashes quickly, and the entire process is done out of
the view of loved ones and the public.
Not so in places like
South Asia,
where we lived and served Christ for ten years. It would seem that any Christian
who could stand beside the "holy" River Bagmati in
Kathmandu,
Nepal,
and observe the burning of the body of a Hindu and the heathen death rituals,
would cast aside in repulsion every thought of cremation being an acceptable
Christian practice.
A few years ago I stood three or so feet from a burning corpse with a
missionary pastor from
Singapore
and his wife who were visiting us. The head was already burnt beyond recognition
and the skull was split open due to internal expansion from the heat of the
fire. The lower legs and feet were unscorched, as they were protruding from the
pile of burning wood and stubble upon which the man's body lay. The professional
Hindu burners were poking the body from time to time to keep the members in the
fire and adding stubble and wood as needed. The bones were contracting and
popping; the bodily organs were frying and the juices sizzling in the intense
heat
My wife, a nurse with experience working with lepers in a hospital in a
very remote part of Asia and in an intensive care ward in the United States,
stood with another friend observing the ghastly sight from a distance, unwilling
to come closer. The air for a hundred yards or more was filled with the
unmistakable, stomach-turning stench of burning human flesh. When the fire had
burnt most of the body, the ashes and remaining members were shoved into the
river.
This is cremation as has been practiced by
heathen religions for centuries, but without the sanitization adopted in
more technically advanced areas.
Would you treat your loved ones so? Is this an acceptable Christian practice? No
sir, cremation is a heathen practice. It is of heathen
origin and serves heathen purposes. Why do the Hindus and those of other heathen
religions cremate? It has a connection with their belief in reincarnation.
There is nothing Christian
about cremation. We were standing that day, as I have
many other times, observing cremation in the surroundings
from which the practice arose--idolatrous, Christless
heathenism.
GOD'S PEOPLE HAVE ALWAYS PRACTICED BURIAL
At the outset let me answer an objection sometimes made at this point.
The objection is, "Yes, God's people in the Bible practiced burial. The example
is clearly there. But are we bound to follow these examples; they are not direct
commands?" The answer is given in Romans 15:4. "For
whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning
..." And again in 1 Corinthians
10:11
we read, "Now all these things happened unto them for
ensamples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of
the world are come." In these passages God is telling us that we are to follow
the Bible's examples as well as its direct instructions.
Following are just a few examples.
Abraham was buried (Genesis 25:8-10)
Sarah was buried (Genesis 23:1-4)
Rachel was buried (Genesis 35:19-20)
Isaac was buried (Genesis 35:29)
Jacob was buried (Genesis 49:33; 50:1-13) Joseph was buried (Genesis 50:26)
Joshua was buried (Joshua 24:29-30) Eleazar was buried (Joshua 24:33) Samuel was
buried (1 Samuel 25:1) David was buried (1 Kings 2:10) John the Baptist was
buried (Matthew 14:10-12) Ananias and Sapphira were buried (Acts 5:5-10) Stephen
was buried (Acts 8:2)
EVEN WHEN BURIAL WAS DIFFICULT
Even in difficult circumstances God's people in olden days practiced
burial. For example, Joseph's body was kept for over 400 years in
Egypt
and then carried through the 40 years of wilderness wanderings before being
buried in
Palestine,
the Promised Land. We read of this in Genesis 50:24-25; Exodus 13:19
and Joshua 24:32.
How much simpler it would have been for the Israelites to have cremated
Joseph, then carried his ashes with them in a tiny container! But this they
refused to do. Joseph, a follower of the one true God, a man who looked forward
to the bodily resurrection, was given an honorable burial.
From this important example, we learn that even if
cremation is less expensive or easier than burial, it is still to be rejected,
as the Israelites rejected the economical and simpler way to carry Joseph to the
Promised Land.
BURIAL LOOKS FORWARD TO RESURRECTION
"For we know that the whole
creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now. And not only they,
but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves
groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our
body" (Rom.8:22-23). See also 1 Cor. 15:20-23; 2 Cor. 5:1 and 1 Cor. 15:51-57.
The reason God's people have always been careful to practice burial is
not difficult to understand. We believe in a bodily resurrection. Yes, the
buried body will decompose in time. Yes, there are occasions in which Christians
die in ways which render burial impossible--in the sinking of ships, in house
fires, etc. But when at all possible we bury. Why the trouble? Because it is our
certain hope that the same individual will be raised in the same body, only
changed. The physical body is called the seed for the resurrection
body. When planted, a seed decomposes, and the new plant comes forth. The Bible
uses this to illustrate resurrection.
"But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they
come? Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die: And
that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain,
it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain; But God giveth it a body as it
hath pleased him, and to every seed his own body. ... So also is the
resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:
It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness; it is
raised in power; It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There
is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body" 1 Cor.
15:35-44
Notice that the Apostle answers those who would ask how it is
possible for God to raise again a decomposed body. The terminology used by the
Holy Spirit in this passage is that of husbandry--planting seed. The farmer does
not destroy his seed; he plants it, then from the decaying seed comes forth the
new life. Such is burial and the resurrection. When we bury a Christian loved
one, we are planting the seed for the resurrection body!
It is a powerful testimony of our unwavering faith in
God's Word regarding the promise of bodily resurrection.
Contrast heathenism. They have no such knowledge or hope. The Hindus and
Buddhists, for example, believe in reincarnation.
Yes, they believe in a human soul which is distinct from the body. But
they do not believe that soul, once departed from the
body at death, will be resurrected in any relation whatsoever to the first body.
Rather they believe the soul will be reincarnated in another entirely
unrelated body, or into a non-physical sphere of existence.
Were those who were buried in Old Testament times buried with a knowledge
of resurrection? Yes, God's people have had some knowledge of a bodily
resurrection from the earliest days. The book of Job is commonly considered to
be the oldest book in the Bible. There is no mention in the book of Job
concerning Israel, or Jerusalem, or Palestine, the temple or the Jewish kingdom,
and it is most likely that Job was a God-fearing man who lived in the days prior
to Abraham. Yet we see in Job 19:25-27 that this ancient man of God had thorough
knowledge of the bodily resurrection.
"For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the
latter day upon the earth: And though after my skin
worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God: Whom I shall
see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not another; though my reins be
consumed within me."
God's people have always
buried their dead with this magnificent hope burning in their hearts.
"We will see that brother or sister again in that same body,
only changed, glorified!" Hallelujah! Only through the death and shed blood of
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ can we have this certain hope. He has taken
upon Himself on the cross the punishment for our sins, carried our sins into the
grave, and rose again in eternal triumph three days later. When an individual
thoroughly acknowledges his sinfulness before God, repents (changes his mind
about and desires to turn from his sinful, self-willful
life) and receives Jesus Christ as his or her Lord and Savior, the sin
debt is paid, and eternal life and glory is promised from God the Father. Part
of this heritage in Christ is the glorified resurrection body.
GOD PRACTICES BURIAL
Another reason I believe burial is the will of God for His people is seen
in the fact that God Himself buried Moses: "So Moses the servant of the Lord
died there in the
land
of
Moab,
according to the word of the Lord. And he buried him in a valley in the
land
of
Moab,
over against Bethpeor: but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day"
(Deuteronomy 34:5,6).
CREMATION IS A SIGN OF GOD'S CURSE
Throughout the Bible the destruction of a human
body or of an object by fire is used as a sign
of divine wrath. Consider with me some
examples: The example of Sodom and Gomorrah (2 Peter
2:6) The example of Nadab and Abihu (Leviticus 10:1,2) The example of the men
who rebelled with Korah (Numbers 16:35) The example of idols (Exodus 32:20;
Deut. 7:25; 2 Kings 10:26; 1 Chron. 14:12) The example of magic books (Acts
19:18-19) The example of unsaved cast into the lake of fire for eternal
punishment (Revelation 20:15)
FOR A PERSON NOT TO HAVE A PROPER BURIAL WAS
CONSIDERED A DISHONOR
A key example of this is Jezebel who, because of her wickedness, was
eaten of dogs (1 Kings
21:23-24).
Again, we read of the Midianites "which perished at Endor: they became as dung
for the earth" (Psalm 83:9-10). Shall we dishonor our
loved ones by failing to give them a proper Christian burial?
THE CHRISTIAN'S BODY BELONGS TO GOD; IT IS
NOT OURS TO DESTROY BY FIRE OR BY ANY OTHER MEANS
"What? Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in
you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a
price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's"
(1 Corinthians
6:19-20).
When something does not belong to me, but is only borrowed
from its rightful owner, I certainly have no right to destroy it. If the master
destroys his own possession, that is his prerogative, but such does not belong
with the borrower. This is true of death and the Christian's body. The body is
not ours to desecrate or destroy. If God chooses to allow a Christian to die in
a house fire, that is His prerogative. But the
Christian himself has no such freedom to chose to destroy his own body.
And Romans 14:8 reminds us that this is true both in life and in death! "...
whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord's
GOD HAS PLAINLY CALLED CREMATION WICKEDNESS
"Thus saith the Lord; For three transgressions of
Moab,
and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof;
because he burned the bones of the king of
Edom
into lime" (Amos 2:1).
THE LORD JESUS WAS BURIED, AND HE IS OUR
GREAT EXAMPLE
"Then took they the body of Jesus, and wound it in linen clothes with the
spices, as the manner of the Jews is to bury. ... There laid they Jesus
therefore. ..." (John 19:38-42) Just as the Lord Jesus
Christ was buried in certainty that He would rise again on the third day
according to the Scriptures, even so is the Christian said to rest at death. To
be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord, as the Apostle Paul
testified (2 Cor. 5:9 and Phil.
1:21-23).
The body without the spirit is dead (James
2:26).
The dead body sleeps in the grave while the redeemed soul waits in glory for the
great resurrection day.
In light of the above Bible facts, the statement, "In the Christian religion
there is nothing that frowns upon cremation or requires burial,"
proves to be untrue. Of course we cannot force
people either to bury or not to bury. And we know that the manner of one's
burial does not affect his resurrection. But we do
believe these things are important, and we are
convinced that Christian leaders and God's people should patiently share these
truths in the churches and with friends. In these days of widespread
apostasy and doctrinal confusion a clear voice in all matters of Bible teacher
is urgently needed.
Isn't it wonderful that in Christ Jesus the sting of death has been removed! We
no longer must live in fear of death, but in hope of the dawning of that Perfect
Day! Let this be the Christian's testimony: If I die before Christ returns, lay
my body to rest in quiet sleep to await that Day. Please don't treat me as the
heathen treat their loved ones.
WHAT IF MY LOVED ONE ALREADY HAS BEEN
CREMATED?
Many sincere Christians have approached me after reading this book or
after merely seeing the title of the cover, and have expressed deep concern
about the status of their loved ones who have already been cremated.
I always remind these friends that the way the body is disposed of has no
eternal consequences. While I strongly believe cremation is contrary to
Scripture and is therefore not something a Christian should do, the most
important question is whether or not the deceased had trusted Jesus Christ as
his or her Savior, whether or not that one had been born again.
The question of whether someone is buried or cremated is a decision which
primarily affects the living rather than the dead. Burial witnesses to our faith
in the bodily resurrection, but the witness is to the living. Burial honors the
body of the deceased, but this honor, again, is something which relates largely
to the living who witness the burial, because the soul of the deceased has
already departed. The soul of the saved person goes to
be with Christ immediately upon death (Phil.
1:23;
2 Cor. 5:8; 2 Tim. 4:6; Lk.
23:43).
The soul of the lost man or woman descends to hell immediately upon death (Lk.
16:22-23;
Rev. 20:13). That which is done to the body after death does not affect the
soul's condition nor the future resurrection.
Thus, if a loved one has been cremated, it's not something to fret about.
It is over and done with and has no eternal consequences. If that loved one was
saved through the blood of Jesus Christ, the fact that he was cremated certainly
didn't keep him out of heaven!
A similar situation arises with those Christians who have loved ones who
have determined to be cremated. Many in such a situation have asked me what they
should do about this matter. An example would be a wife whose unsaved husband
wants to be cremated. Another example is a son or daughter whose parent wants to
be cremated.
The only thing that can be done is to try to explain with that loved one
the things we have shared in this study. We have seen many Christians change
their mind about cremation after reading this booklet. Again, the most important
issue is whether or not that loved one is born again and is ready to meet God.
Sometimes the very discussion of this topic can offer an opportunity to share
the Gospel. One man who was dying in a hospital was saved after his sister read
this booklet to him and discussed his need to be saved.
May the Lord encourage your heart and give you wisdom in dealing with
these sensitive but crucial subjects with your loved ones.
THE QUESTION OF CREMATION.
In a book on the subject
of Christian funerals, a writer gives the following advice regarding cremation:
“Personally, the minister may or may not approve of such proceedings.
Privately, he is free to hold any opinion that he will. But officially he should
keep an open mind. In the Christian religion there is nothing that frowns upon
cremation or requires burial.”
Is this sound advice? Is
cremation a matter of Christian liberty? In certain places land space is so
crowded that burial plots are very expensive and in some cases there are efforts
by the governments to discourage burial in preference to cremation. That this
problem has become acute in
Singapore is referred to in the following official statement made by the Bible
Presbyterian Church of
Singapore in May, 1987--
“1. There is an increasing number of cremations in
Singapore even amongst Christians. 2. It is quite evident that our Government
favours cremation by improving the facilities of the existing crematoria and
columbaria, and by increasing the cost of burial while keeping down the cost of
cremation. 3. Some non-Bible Presbyterian pastor have spoken and written in
favour of cremation and have officiated at cremations while some non-Bible
Presbyterian churches have even built columbaria. 4. Those who favour cremation
claim it is more hygienic, cleaner and cheaper. 5. They see cremation as a
convenient form of disposal of the dead. 6. Cremation does away with burial
plots that need to be upkept and falls in line with our Government’s stress on
strategic land use” (Far Eastern Beacon, July 1987, p. 4).
In light of this
situation, the Bible Presbyterian Church of
Singapore has taken a clear and commendable stand for the Word of God and against
the practice of cremation. We have included their statement on this issue in the
back of this booklet.
CREMATION INCREASING IN
NORTH AMERICA
The number of cremations
in
North America is increasing
dramatically. In 1975, only 6% of the people who died were cremated. By 2005
this had increased to 32% overall. In
Hawaii, the percentage
of dead that are cremated is 66%,
Washington 64%,
Nevada 65%,
Arizona 59%,
Oregon 63.7%,
Montana 59%,
Alaska 58%,
Colorado 56%,
Maine 53%,
California 52%,
Florida 51%,
Wyoming 46%. (The states
with the least percentage of cremations per death are
Alabama at 9.5%,
Mississippi and
Tennessee 10%,
Kentucky 12%,
Louisiana 15%,
South Dakota 16%.)
The 2005 statistics for
Canada are as follows:
British Columbia 79%,
New Brunswick 61%,
Alberta 59%,
Manitoba 53%,
Nova Scotia 50%,
Quebec 47%,
Ontario 47%, and
Saskatchewan 46%.
According to the cover
story in the
December 5, 1995, issue of USA Today, the rising acceptance of cremation has
coincided with a drop in “religious barriers to cremation.” It is interesting
that this secular newspaper noticed the connection between religion and
cremation. The disposal of the body after death is a religious matter. One’s
beliefs will determine such choices. Historically, burial has been a testimony
of faith in the bodily resurrection. Historically, cremation has been practiced
among those, such as Hindus, who deny the bodily resurrection and who believe in
reincarnation. Historically, wherever the Gospel of Jesus Christ has found
acceptance, pagan practices such as cremation have been rejected. The increase
in cremation in North American society has paralleled the wholesale rejection of
the Bible in this same society. As paganism increases its steely hold on
American and Canadian hearts, cremation becomes increasingly popular.
THE METHOD OF CREMATION IN THE WEST
The following is excerpted
from USA Today,
December 5, 1995:
“The three-hour process of
burning a body and grinding it to small fragments often takes place away from
loved ones’ eyes. The body, usually dressed but stripped of all jewelry, slides
into “retort”--a brick-lined oven that looks like a big bread oven.
“Pacemakers are removed
because their batteries can explode at high temperatures. Silicone breast
implants, which can’t be removed, are creating problems for crematory operators
who say remains often stick to the melting silicone.
“The gas or oil-fired
ovens are heated to about 1,700 degrees. Although often called ashes, the
remains are actually bone fragments. These are swept with a giant hoe-like
scraper from the bottom of the retort and put in a container to cool down. Any
large debris, such as dental crowns or hip prostheses, is removed.
“Everything is then ground to granule-sized pieces. The whole process
takes about three hours. The result is about six pounds of remains compact
enough to fit in a shoe box.”
For the following reasons,
we are convinced that the practice of cremation should be rejected by God’s
people:
CREMATION HAS A HEATHEN ORIGIN AND PURPOSE
Cremation, as just
described and as practiced today in the more technically advanced nations, no
longer has the physical ghastliness associated with cremations performed in the
less developed parts of the world. The modern method, as we have seen,
incorporates the use of an exceedingly hot incinerator which reduces the body to
ashes quickly, and the entire process is done out of the view of loved ones and
the public.
Not so in places like
South Asia,
where we lived and served Christ for ten years. It would seem that any Christian
who could stand beside the “holy” River Bagmati in
Kathmandu,
Nepal, and observe the
burning of the body of a Hindu and the heathen death rituals, would cast aside
in repulsion every thought of cremation being an acceptable Christian practice.
A few years ago I stood
three or so feet from a burning corpse with a missionary pastor from
Singapore and his wife who were visiting us. The head was already burnt beyond
recognition and the skull was split open due to internal expansion from the heat
of the fire. The lower legs and feet were unscorched, as they were protruding
from the pile of burning wood and stubble upon which the man’s body lay. The
professional Hindu burners were poking the body from time to time to keep the
members in the fire and adding stubble and wood as needed. The bones were
contracting and popping; the bodily organs were frying and the juices sizzling
in the intense heat.
My wife, a nurse with
experience working with lepers in a hospital in a very remote part of Asia and
in an intensive care ward in the United States, stood with another friend
observing the ghastly sight from a distance, unwilling to come closer. The air
for a hundred yards or more was filled with the unmistakable, stomach-turning
stench of burning human flesh. When the fire had burnt most of the body, the
ashes and remaining members were shoved into the river.
This is cremation as has
been practiced by heathen religions for centuries, but without the sanitization
adopted in more technically advanced areas.
Would you treat your loved
ones so? Is this an acceptable Christian practice? No sir, cremation is a
heathen practice. It is of heathen origin and serves heathen purposes. Why do
the Hindus and those of other heathen religions cremate? It has a connection
with their belief in reincarnation.
There is nothing Christian
about cremation. We were standing that day, as I have many other times,
observing cremation in the surroundings from which the practice
arose--idolatrous, Christless heathenism.
GOD’S PEOPLE HAVE ALWAYS PRACTICED BURIAL
At the outset let me
answer an objection sometimes made at this point. The objection is, “Yes, God’s
people in the Bible practiced burial. The example is clearly there. But are we
bound to follow these examples; they are not direct commands?” The answer is
given in Romans 15:4. “For whatsoever things were written aforetime were written
for our learning ...” And again in 1 Corinthians
10:11 we read, “Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples: and
they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come.”
In these passages God is telling us that we are to follow the Bible’s examples
as well as its direct instructions.
Following are just a few
examples.
-
Abraham was buried (Genesis 25:8-10)
-
Sarah was buried (Genesis 23:1-4)
-
Rachel was buried (Genesis 35:19-20)
-
Isaac was buried (Genesis 35:29)
-
Jacob was buried (Genesis 49:33; 50:1-13)
-
Joseph was buried (Genesis 50:26)
-
Joshua was buried (Joshua 24:29-30)
-
Eleazar was buried (Joshua 24:33)
-
Samuel was buried (1 Samuel 25:1)
-
David was buried (1 Kings
2:10)
-
John the Baptist was buried (Matthew
14:10-12)
-
Ananias and Sapphira were buried (Acts 5:5-10)
-
Stephen was buried (Acts 8:2)
EVEN WHEN BURIAL WAS DIFFICULT
Even in difficult
circumstances God’s people in olden days practiced burial. For example, Joseph’s
body was kept for over 400 years in
Egypt and then carried through the 40 years of wilderness wanderings before
being buried in
Palestine, the Promised Land. We read of this in Genesis 50:24-25; Exodus
13:19 and Joshua 24:32.
How much simpler it would
have been for the Israelites to have cremated Joseph, then carried his ashes
with them in a tiny container! But this they refused to do. Joseph, a follower
of the one true God, a man who looked forward to the bodily resurrection, was
given an honorable burial. From this important example, we learn that even if
cremation is less expensive or easier than burial, it is still to be rejected,
as the Israelites rejected the economical and simpler way to carry Joseph to the
Promised Land.
BURIAL LOOKS FORWARD TO RESURRECTION
“For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain
together until now. And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the
firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for
the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body” (Rom.8:22-23). See also 1 Cor.
15:20-23; 2 Cor. 5:1 and 1 Cor. 15:51-57.
The reason God’s people
have always been careful to practice burial is not difficult to understand. We
believe in a bodily resurrection. Yes, the buried body will decompose in time.
Yes, there are occasions in which Christians die in ways which render burial
impossible--in the sinking of ships, in house fires, etc. But when at all
possible we bury. Why the trouble? Because it is our certain hope that the same
individual will be raised in the same body, only changed.
The physical body is
called the seed for the resurrection body. When planted, a seed decomposes, and
the new plant comes forth. The Bible uses this to illustrate resurrection.
“But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? and with what body do
they come? Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die:
And that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body that shall be, but bare
grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some other grain; But God giveth it a body
as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his own body. ... So also is the
resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:
It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness; it is
raised in power; It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There
is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body” 1 Cor.
15:35-44
Notice that the Apostle
answers those who would ask how it is possible for God to raise again a
decomposed body. The terminology used by the Holy Spirit in this passage is that
of husbandry--planting seed. The farmer does not destroy his seed; he plants it,
then from the decaying seed comes forth the new life. Such is burial and the
resurrection. When we bury a Christian loved one, we are planting the seed for
the resurrection body! It is a powerful testimony of our unwavering faith in
God’s Word regarding the promise of bodily resurrection.
Contrast heathenism. They
have no such knowledge or hope. The Hindus and Buddhists, for example, believe
in reincarnation. Yes, they believe in a human soul which is distinct from the
body. But they do not believe that soul, once departed from the body at death,
will be resurrected in any relation whatsoever to the first body. Rather they
believe the soul will be reincarnated in another entirely unrelated body, or
into a non-physical sphere of existence.
Were those who were buried
in Old Testament times buried with a knowledge of resurrection? Yes, God’s
people have had some knowledge of a bodily resurrection from the earliest days.
The book of Job is commonly considered to be the oldest book in the Bible. There
is no mention in the book of Job concerning Israel, or Jerusalem, or Palestine,
the temple or the Jewish kingdom, and it is most likely that Job was a
God-fearing man who lived in the days prior to Abraham. Yet we see in Job
19:25-27 that this ancient man of God had thorough knowledge of the bodily
resurrection.
“For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the
latter day upon the earth: And though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet
in my flesh shall I see God: Whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall
behold, and not another; though my reins be consumed within me.”
God’s people have always
buried their dead with this magnificent hope burning in their hearts. “We will
see that brother or sister again in that same body, only changed, glorified!”
Hallelujah! Only through the death and shed blood of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ can we have this certain hope. He has taken upon Himself on the cross the
punishment for our sins, carried our sins into the grave, and rose again in
eternal triumph three days later. When an individual thoroughly acknowledges his
sinfulness before God, repents (changes his mind about and desires to turn from
his sinful, self-willful life) and receives Jesus Christ as his or her Lord and
Savior, the sin debt is paid, and eternal life and glory is promised from God
the Father. Part of this heritage in Christ is the glorified resurrection body.
GOD PRACTICES BURIAL
Another reason I believe
burial is the will of God for His people is seen in the fact that God Himself
buried Moses: “So Moses the servant of the Lord died there in the
land
of
Moab, according to the
word of the Lord. And he buried him in a valley in the
land
of
Moab, over against
Bethpeor: but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day” (Deuteronomy
34:5,6).
CREMATION IS A SIGN OF GOD’S CURSE
Throughout the Bible the
destruction of a human body or of an object by fire is used as a sign of divine
wrath. Consider with me some examples:
-
The example of
Sodom and
Gomorrah (2 Peter 2:6)
-
The example of Nadab and Abihu (Leviticus 10:1,2)
-
The example of the men who rebelled with Korah (Numbers
16:35)
-
The example of idols (Exodus 32:20; Deut.
7:25; 2 Kings
10:26;
1 Chron.
14:12)
-
The example of magic books (Acts
19:18-19)
-
The example of unsaved cast into the lake of fire for eternal
punishment (Revelation
20:15)
FOR A PERSON NOT TO HAVE A PROPER BURIAL WAS CONSIDERED A DISHONOR
A key example of this is
Jezebel who, because of her wickedness, was eaten of dogs (1 Kings
21:23-24). Again, we read of the Midianites “which perished at Endor: they
became as dung for the earth” (Psalm 83:9-10). Shall we dishonor our loved ones
by failing to give them a proper Christian burial?
THE CHRISTIAN’S BODY BELONGS TO GOD; IT IS NOT OURS TO DESTROY BY FIRE OR BY ANY
OTHER MEANS
“What? Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which
is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with
a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are
God’s” (1 Corinthians
6:19-20).
When something does not
belong to me, but is only borrowed from its rightful owner, I certainly have no
right to destroy it. If the master destroys his own possession, that is his
prerogative, but such does not belong with the borrower. This is true of death
and the Christian’s body. The body is not ours to desecrate or destroy. If God
chooses to allow a Christian to die in a house fire, that is His prerogative.
But the Christian himself has no such freedom to chose to destroy his own body.
And Romans 14:8 reminds us that this is true both in life and in death! “...
whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord’s.”
GOD HAS PLAINLY CALLED CREMATION WICKEDNESS
“Thus saith the Lord; For three transgressions of
Moab, and for four, I
will not turn away the punishment thereof; because he burned the bones of the
king of
Edom into lime” (Amos 2:1).
THE LORD JESUS WAS BURIED, AND HE IS OUR GREAT EXAMPLE
“Then took they the body of Jesus, and wound it in linen clothes with the
spices, as the manner of the Jews is to bury. ... There laid they Jesus
therefore. ...” (John 19:38-42)
Just as the Lord Jesus
Christ was buried in certainty that He would rise again on the third day
according to the Scriptures, even so is the Christian said to rest at death. To
be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord, as the Apostle Paul
testified (2 Cor. 5:9 and Phil.
1:21-23). The body without the spirit is dead (James
2:26). The dead body sleeps in the grave while the redeemed soul waits in
glory for the great resurrection day.
In light of the above
Bible facts, the statement, “In the Christian religion there is nothing that
frowns upon cremation or requires burial,” proves to be untrue. Of course we
cannot force people either to bury or not to bury. And we know that the manner
of one’s burial does not affect his resurrection.
But we do believe these
things are important, and we are convinced that Christian leaders and God’s
people should patiently share these truths in the churches and with friends. In
these days of widespread apostasy and doctrinal confusion a clear voice in all
matters of Bible teacher is urgently needed.
Isn’t it wonderful that in
Christ Jesus the sting of death has been removed! We no longer must live in fear
of death, but in hope of the dawning of that Perfect Day! Let this be the
Christian’s testimony: If I die before Christ returns, lay my body to rest in
quiet sleep to await that Day. Please don’t treat me as the heathen treat their
loved ones.
WHAT IF MY LOVED ONE ALREADY HAS BEEN CREMATED?
Many sincere Christians
have approached me after reading this book or after merely seeing the title of
the cover, and have expressed deep concern about the status of their loved ones
who have already been cremated.
I always remind these
friends that the way the body is disposed of has no eternal consequences. While
I strongly believe cremation is contrary to Scripture and is therefore not
something a Christian should do, the most important question is whether or not
the deceased had trusted Jesus Christ as his or her Savior, whether or not that
one had been born again.
The question of whether
someone is buried or cremated is a decision which primarily affects the living
rather than the dead. Burial witnesses to our faith in the bodily resurrection,
but the witness is to the living. Burial honors the body of the deceased, but
this honor, again, is something which relates largely to the living who witness
the burial, because the soul of the deceased has already departed.
The soul of the saved
person goes to be with Christ immediately upon death (Phil.
1:23;
2 Cor. 5:8; 2 Tim. 4:6; Lk.
23:43). The soul of the lost man or woman descends to hell immediately upon
death (Lk.
16:22-23; Rev. 20:13). That which is done to the body after death does not
affect the soul’s condition nor the future resurrection.
Thus, if a loved one has
been cremated, it’s not something to fret about. It is over and done with and
has no eternal consequences. If that loved one was saved through the blood of
Jesus Christ, the fact that he was cremated certainly didn’t keep him out of
heaven!
A similar situation arises
with those Christians who have loved ones who have determined to be cremated.
Many in such a situation have asked me what they should do about this matter. An
example would be a wife whose unsaved husband wants to be cremated. Another
example is a son or daughter whose parent wants to be cremated.
The only thing that can be
done is to try to explain with that loved one the things we have shared in this
study. We have seen many Christians change their mind about cremation after
reading this booklet. Again, the most important issue is whether or not that
loved one is born again and is ready to meet God. Sometimes the very discussion
of this topic can offer an opportunity to share the Gospel. One man who was
dying in a hospital was saved after his sister read this booklet to him and
discussed his need to be saved.
May the Lord encourage
your heart and give you wisdom in dealing with these sensitive but crucial
subjects with your loved ones.
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