
Cremation
and Why It's Not For Christians

by
Pastor Alan Brooks
Cremation: Burning of the
dead.
The following are the
reasons we are convinced that cremation should not be practiced by
Christians.
Cremation has a heathen
origin and purpose.
Why do the Hindus and those of other
heathen religions cremate? They do it in the belief that the dead
are not raised again, whereas the Bible says there is a resurrection of
the just and the unjust. The heathen practice cremation in the
belief that the dead will be reincarnated; to destroy the body is
sometimes considered a way of releasing the spirit of the
deceased. Again, some practice cremation with the heathen idea
that by destroying the body of the deceased, the fear of that individual
staying in the vicinity and haunting the loved ones is diminished.
There is nothing Christian about cremation.
God's people have always practiced
burial.
Abraham (Genesis 25:8-10), Sarah (Genesis
23:1-4), Rachel (Genesis 35:19-20), Isaac (Genesis 35:29), Jacob
(Genesis 49:33; 50:1-13), Joseph (Genesis 50:26), Joshua (Joshua
24:29-30), Eleazar (Joshua 24:33), Samuel (1 Samuel 25:1), David (1
Kings 2:10), John the Baptist (Malachi 14:10-12), Ananias and Sapphira
(Acts 5:5-10), Stephen (Acts 8:2).
In Romans 15:4 and 1 Corinthians 10:11 God
tells us that we are to follow the Bible's examples as well as its
direct instructions. 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 40 years of
wilderness wanderings before being buried in 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! 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 transport Joseph's body.
Burial looks forward to resurrection
. The reason God's people have always been careful to practice
burial is not difficult to understand. We believe in a bodily
resurrection (Romans 8:22-23; I Corinthians 15:20-23; 2 Corinthians 5:1;
I Corinthians 15:51-57). 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 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. When planted, a seed decomposes, and the new plant comes
forth. The Bible uses this to illustrate resurrection. In I
Corinthians 15:35-44 the Apostle answers those who would ask how it is
possible for God to raise 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. Though they believe in a human soul which is
distinct from the body, 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 nonphysical
sphere of existence.
God's people have always buried their dead
with this magnificent hope burning their hearts. "We will see
that brother and 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 risen again in eternal
triumph three days later.
When an individual thoroughly acknowledges
his sinfulness before God, repents of his sin, 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 (Deuteronomy 24:5,6)
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 (Exodus 32:20; Leviticus 10:1-2,
Deuteronomy 7:25; Numbers 16:35; 2 Kings 10:26; I Chronicles 14:12; Acts
19:18-19; Revelation 20:15).
For a person not to have a proper burial
was considered a dishonor
(I Kings 21:23-24; Psalms 83:9-10).
The Christian's body belongs to God.
The body is not ours to destroy by fire or by any other means (Romans
14:8; I Corinthians 6:19-20)
God has plainly called cremation wickedness
(Amos 2:1).
The Lord Jesus Christ was buried, and He is
our great example (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 Corinthians 5:9 and Philippians
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.
Of course we cannot force people either to
bury or not to bury. We know that the manner of one's burial does
not affect one's salvation or resurrection, but we do believe these
things are important, and we are convinced that Christians should take
their stand upon the examples of the Word of God.