Vatican issues guidelines on cremation, says no to scattering ashes
Rome (CNN) The Vatican announced Tuesday that Catholics may be cremated but should not have their ashes scattered at sea or kept in urns at home.
According to new guidelines from the
Vatican’s doctrinal office, cremated remains should be kept in a “sacred
place” such as a church cemetery. Ashes should not be divided up
between family members, “nor may they be preserved in mementos, pieces
of jewelry or other objects.”
The church has allowed cremation for
decades, but the guidelines make clear that the Vatican is concerned
that the practice often involves “erroneous ideas about death.” Those
ideas run the gauntlet from deeply nihilistic to New Age-y, the Vatican
says, from the belief that death is the definitive end of life to the
notion that our bodies fuse with nature or enter another cycle of
rebirth.
So, in a sense, the Vatican’s new
guidelines on cremation aren’t really about cremation. The church’s true
targets are modern societies’ increasingly secular notions about the
afterlife and the trivialization of dead bodies, making the departed
into mementos for the living instead of temples made in the image and
likeness of God.
“Struggle”
As cremation has become more popular — nearly half of Americans said they were at least “somewhat likely” to choose cremation upon their death — the Vatican, like other religious institutions, has struggled to keep pace with the trend.
In 1963, the Vatican said burial of deceased bodies should be the norm, but cremation is not “opposed per se to the Christian religion.” Catholic funeral rites should not be denied to those who had asked to be cremated, the church said.
But in recent years, “new ideas” contrary
to the Catholic faith have become widespread, the Vatican said. The new
statement names pantheism (the worship of nature), naturalism (the idea
that all truths are derived from nature, not religion) and nihilism (a
deep skepticism about all received truths) as particularly problematic.
If cremation is chosen for any of those reasons, the deceased should not
receive a Catholic burial, the new guidelines say.
In the United States, cremations have taken on a highly personalized and commercial aspect. Companies offer to load cremains into shotgun shells
so that family members can take them on turkey hunts. Nature lovers ask
that their ashes be scattered under a favorite tree or inserted into
coral reefs. Cremains can be shot into space, or refashioned as
diamonds.
“Sacrilegious”
Such practices are sacrilegious, the Vatican’s new guidelines say.
Catholicism teaches that all people will
be resurrected — both body and soul — at the end of days. Cremation does
not “prevent God, in his omnipotence, from raising up the deceased body
to new life,” the Vatican says, but it does raise the possibility that
the deceased’s body, which the church believes is sacred, will not be
properly respected by ancestors and relatives.
“By burying the bodies of the faithful,
the Church confirms her faith in the resurrection of the body, and
intends to show the great dignity of the human body as an integral part
of the human person whose body forms part of their identity,” the new
guidelines state.
The Vatican makes clear, however, that
there are valid sanitary, economic and social reasons for cremation. But
burial, the church says, is the best way to demonstrate “esteem” for
the deceased, and cremains can only be kept at home with special
permission from a bishop.
Labels: Catholic, Cremation, Scattering
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