Because of our belief not only
in the immortality of the soul, but also in the resurrection of the body, the
Church professes hope in the face of death, and acts with charity in the
funeral rites. The Church provides a number of prayers for the
faithful to offer both to accompany the dying of a loved one and to strengthen
our faith upon their death. Through private prayer and public funeral
rites, we strengthen our faith and hope, comfort those who mourn, and bury the
bodily remains of the deceased with care befitting what was the Temple of the
Holy Spirit.
The following excerpts are
taken from the General Introduction of the Order of
Christian Funerals:
4. At the death of a Christian, whose life of faith was
begun in the waters of baptism and strengthened at the Eucharistic table, the
Church intercedes on behalf of the deceased because of its confident belief
that death is not the end nor does it break the bonds forged in life. The
Church also ministers to the sorrowing and consoles them in the funeral rites
with the comforting word of God and the sacrament of the eucharist.
5. Christians celebrate the funeral rites to offer worship,
praise, and thanksgiving to God for the gift of a life which has now been
returned to God, the author of life and the hope of the just. The Mass, the
memorial of Christ's death and resurrection, is the principal celebration of
the Christian funeral.
6. The Church through its funeral rites commends the dead to
God's merciful love and pleads for the forgiveness of their sins. At the
funeral rites, especially at the celebration of the eucharistic sacrifice, the
Christian community affirms and expresses the union of the Church on earth with
the Church in heaven in the one great communion of saints. Though separated
from the living, the dead are still at one with the community of believers on
earth and benefit from their prayers and intercession. At the rite of final
commendation and farewell, the community acknowledges the reality of separation
and commends the deceased to God. In this way it recognizes the spiritual bond
that still exists between the living and the dead and proclaims its belief that
all the faithful will be raised up and reunited in the new heavens and a new
earth, where death will be no more.
"The Church earnestly recommends that the pious custom
of burying the bodies of the deceased be observed; nevertheless, the Church
does not prohibit cremation unless it was chosen for reasons contrary to
Christian doctrine" (canon 1176.3).
Canon 1176 from the Code of Canon Law states, "Deceased
members of the Christian faithful must be given ecclesiastical funerals
according to the norm of law." Others who are eligible for an
ecclesiastical funeral include:
§ Catechumens
§ Children
whom the parents intended to baptize but who died before baptism, and
§ "In
the prudent judgment of the local ordinary, ecclesiastical funerals can be
granted to baptized persons who are enrolled in a non-Catholic Church or
ecclesial community unless their intention is evidently to the contrary and
provided that their own minister is not available" (canon 1183.3).
While the Church continues to
hold a preference for corporeal burial, cremation has become part of Catholic
practice in the United States and the around the world.
The Church's reverence and care
for the body grows out of a reverence and concern for the person whom the
Church now commends to the care of God. This is the body once washed in
baptism, anointed with the oil of salvation, and fed with the bread of life.
This is the body whose hands clothed the poor and embraced the sorrowing. The
human body is so inextricably associated with the human person that it is hard
to think of a human person apart from his or her body.
In April 1997, the Holy
See granted an indult for the United States to allow the diocesan
bishop to permit the presence of the cremated remains of a body at a Funeral
Mass. Later that year, they confirmed the special texts and ritual directives, which
were then published as an appendix to the Order of
Christian Funerals.
However, the Order of
Christian Funerals' Appendix on Cremation states: "Although cremation is now
permitted by the Church, it does not enjoy the same value as burial of the
body.The Church clearly prefers and urges that the body of the deceased be
present for the funeral rites, since the presence of the human body better
expresses the values which the Church affirms in those rites" (no. 413).
The growing interest in and
desire for cremation continues to remain a question in the minds of many
Catholics. Resources on this website are available to help better explain and
deepen the Catholic understanding of cremation as an option for the final
disposition of the body.
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