Christians and Cremation PDF Print E-mail
Written by Michael R. Walker   
Thursday, 04 September 2008 16:52

Richard Mouw offered some brief and helpful thoughts on cremation on his blog, and it's resurrected some of my own recent wrestlings with this issue.

I think there are good “arguments” for and against the practice of cremation from a Christian perspective. I worry less about whether cremation poses any obstacles for God’s power to resurrect the dead, and more about how the practice can impact our attitude toward the physicality of life in the present. We do tend to treat our bodies as objects apart from ourselves, rather than part of our-selves. Pressing issues in bioethics offer plenty of good examples, and in the evangelical community it tends to be part and parcel of the larger world-denying rather than world-engaging spirituality. If ultimately, God's plan is to redeem our bodies and indeed all creation, how should that impact the way we treat our own bodies and the creation now?  (Gilbert Meilaender has an interesting article on this issue, and he touches on cremation, in the February 2007 issue of Touchstone, called “Broken Bodies Redeemed.”)

Often when teaching in my congregation, I try to ground Christian ethics in the resurrection and the promise of the New Creation. If we are, in some sense, participating in God’s renewal of all things, a renewal headed toward the physical restoration of the world, it helps to explain the Christian posture toward culture, why we should treat our bodies as integrated aspects of ourselves rather than objectifying them, and why we should care about the environment rather than destroy it.

Recently, after I said such things in a Sunday School class, an older woman came up to me afterwards and said: “If what you said about the New Creation is true, and we’re supposed to think of our lives here as part of God’s work to renew the physical world and not destroy it, then what do you think about cremation?”

She made the connection on her own (I didn’t mention it in class, because we have a columbarium on campus, many have had their loved ones cremated and the pastors have different views on cremation…This is not an issue on which I think I should rock the boat.)

But this woman’s question raises an interesting point. She inferred a stance on cremation from what I’d said about how the promise of the New Creation can inform our way of life today. I have heard the line repeated in various places: “We ought not seek to destroy what God seeks to redeem.”

So, I don’t have a hard and fast stance on it, but I wonder sometimes how a particular practice can cultivate a wider view of the world and our bodies in this life….


 

The Notebook

Bonhoeffer: The Church Confesses, Christ Builds
From a 1933 sermon based on Peter's confession at Caesarea Philipi (Mt. 16:13-18):

"But it is not we who should build, but he who will build. No human hands builds the church, but Christ alone. Whoever thinks he can build the church is already destroying it. For what he is building is a temple for idols, without knowing or wishing it.

"We shall confess -- he shall build. We shall preach -- he shall build. We shall pray to him -- he shall build.  We do not know his plan. We do not see whether he builds or tears down. It may be that the times, which by human standards are times of collapse, are for him the times of great building. It may be that the times, which by human standards are times of great success, are for him times to tear down. It is a great comfort that Christ gives to his church: confess, preach, and bear witness to me.  I alone will build as it pleases me. Don't give me orders. Do your job -- then you have done enough. You are all right.  Don't seek out reasons and opinions. Don't keep judging. Don't keep checking again and again to see if you are secure. Church, remain a church!  But, you, church -- confess, confess, confess!  You have only one Lord -- Christ alone. By his grace alone you live. Christ builds."

Taken from Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Christmas Sermons,  ed. and trans. Edwin Robinson (Zondervan, 2005).

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