Cremation and Faith: What Scripture Really Says—And What Truly Matters After Death

In 1 Samuel 31:12, the bodies of Saul and his sons are burned (not buried) after battle—then their bones are buried. This was likely for sanitary or wartime necessity, not ritual.
Burial was the norm in ancient Israel, reflecting belief in bodily resurrection (Job 19:26; Isaiah 26:19).
New Testament practice:
Jesus and early Christians were buried, following Jewish custom.
Yet, no verse condemns cremation—because it simply wasn’t a common practice in the Roman world at the time.
✝️ Christian perspective today:
Most Protestant denominations (Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, non-denominational) permit cremation, viewing it as a matter of personal conscience.
The Catholic Church lifted its ban in 1963 and now allows cremation—as long as it’s not chosen to deny the resurrection of the body. However, the Vatican encourages burial of ashes in sacred ground (not scattered or kept at home).🔸 Judaism
Orthodox & Conservative: Strongly oppose cremation—burial is a mitzvah (commandment). The body belongs to God and must return to the earth naturally (“ashes to ashes” is often misinterpreted; Genesis 3:19 refers to dust, not fire).
Reform Judaism: More accepting, though burial remains preferred.
🔸 Islam
Cremation is strictly forbidden. Burial is required as soon as possible after death, without embalming or caskets, reflecting humility before Allah.
🔸 Hinduism

For Complete Cooking STEPS Please Head On Over To Next Page Or Open button (>) and don’t forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *