Posted on 06/21/2013 7:33:40 AM PDT by JoeProBono
In Connecticut, you can’t even bury your pet in your yard, any longer.
If you can afford a house, you can afford a cremation. Maybe the reasoning is her and her husband had something against that. I feel bad for her either way. A loved one’s death can affect people in different ways.
I got five from the town clerk when my wife died; additional notarized copies were $2/ea. Thd problem was, town hall was open 9:00-4:00 and no weekend hours. I thought I had all I needed and some places would take photocopies. I needed one more official, stamped copy and decided it wasn’t worth it to take time off work to get one more certificate.
I took a photocopy, a US silver eagle coin and a rolling pin. Voila, an official copy! It worked just fine
I agree with your second statement; but, I (not being a Bible scholar) have no knowledge of a scriptural ban on cremation. Can you help me with that?
When my mother passed away recently the cost of “direct cremation” (no embalming, no casket, no viewing, no service), still came to over $2500 after they tallied up all the necessary items. She would have been irate.
How would they know?
hmmm...was this question asked by the same person who ended up NEEDING a coffin? hahaha
this was in New Jersey. 'nuff said?
Question is. . .who are going to be the Sandmen ??
Cremated you lack the nasty pathogens that a dead human body gives off.
I read a story about someone that had died out of state. It was so expensive to ship the body home on an airline via the out of state funeral homes that the folks propped him up in the car and just drove him home for a funeral.
Right next to the hamster and the goldfish perhaps?
That’s what the neighbor’s yard is for.
While I’m sorry for her loss, there is another reason to bury a body in the backyard - and that’s to keep the checks coming in.
So apparently God is not big enough to put the body back together? If you can point to a Scripture, I’ll go along with you. Tradition doesn’t count.
Oh, and what about someone who dies a few hundred years ago, their body is dust. You might want to take a look at Genesis 3:19
When my dad died my mom couldn’t afford to pay for a funeral so my brother and I did. Cut rate and in an out of town cemetery.....$5k. My mom died 4 yrs ago and we pd to bury her. Same everything as my dad $5300.
People on limited incomes do NOT have that kind of money!
Again, look up at the defense for cremation a bit higher up in the thread.
“The spirit is everything. The body is nothing”. This is contrary to what Paul teaches. The body is important. If the body will be resurrected, then we have a duty to preserve the body. If the body is nothing, then cremate away.
“Can you explain further how cremation contradicts the law of God?”
I did my best to find scripture prohibiting cremation before originally asking that, could only find something externally explanatory to the effect that Saul and his sons had been cremated because the Philistines had defiled their bodies. I also remember that the Israelites burned the bodies of defeated peoples in Canaan.
I cannot agree that God prohibits cremation. I’m willing to believe it if anyone can provide a scriptural reference other than “Christian teachings”.
I’m not sure if the meddling idiot lawyers in Raleigh have changed the rules, but a few years back I asked a local funeral director if we could be buried on our property. We are out in the country and have several acres.
“No problem!”
Do we need a vault?
“Nope.”
Special casket?
“Nope.”
Pine box OK?
“Yep.”
Hmmmmm.... Would a cardboard box and a little lime do?
“Sure, if you want to get fancy.”
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