Archbishop John (Shahovskoy) of San Francisco and Western America (+1989)
And [the spirit] cast him into the fire... (Mk.
9:22)
Pastors frequently hear the
question: “Why does the Church not bless cremation of a
departed Christian’s body?”
I will try to answer this as
briefly as possible. Yes, the Church is against the burning of human bodies
because this does not reflect the spirit of faith and the evangelical, biblical
understanding of human worthiness.
Junk, old rags and waste are
burned; but a person’s body is not waste or an old rag! A believer’s body
anointed by the Holy Spirit, “Life. A temple can fall apart or cease to be used
for prayer, but it is not burned. Both the living and the dead body of a person
who believes in the Resurrection, is a seed of the resurrection. It is
sown a physical body, it is raised a spiritual body (1 Cor 15:44).
Having received the Holy Spirit, having communed with the Body and Blood of
Christ, that body must reverently be placed in the ground as a seed of the
future age. This body cannot be hanged from a tree, it cannot be given for
birds to eat, it cannot be dumped into a cesspool, or be given to dogs or
beasts to be torn apart, or be subject to an artificial destruction.
You are dust, and to dust you
shall return (Gen 3:19). This law must be fulfilled in all cases,
simply and without craftiness as a form of respect for the human body,
returning it and the soul to God. The body’s decomposition must not depend on
man but only on God, the Creator of life. Only He, the Master of the world,
commands our life and our body.
A person, regardless of his
wishes, could of course drown, be consumed by fire, be torn to pieces by
animals or have his body destroyed completely by some explosion. Those dying in
a ship are sometimes committed to the seas. All this takes place despite the
believing deceased’s will and in this he does not sin. The sin lies in the
direction of the will. In an outrage against human bodies, Hitler burned
millions of bodies in crematoria. This was not a sin on the part of the persons
whose bodies these were; this was a testimony to their suffering. That’s the
whole point.
It is precisely the person’s
determination to direct the disposition of his body as if it was “his own
property.” This is where the sin of opposing God is generated (perhaps even
unconsciously). A person is “God’s property”, in body and soul. Created by God,
redeemed by Christ the Savior, the person does not belong to himself but to
God. The person is called to be the temple of the Living God in body and soul.
In body, soul and spirit, the Christian is anointed by the Holy Spirit.
Only a believing person can
understand where the sin of cremation lies. The sin is not in the fact of
physical burning of the body but in the false direction of the person’s will to
rule over God’s property, which his body is. A person sins when he looks upon
his life as if it belonged only to him. A rather vivid manifestation of this
sinful egocentric consciousness is suicide. The instruction to have one’s body
cremated is a sign of a similar Divine disobedience. This leads a person to
rule over his earthly life and his earthly body. In suicide a person rules over
his earthly body, ignoring the will of God.
Because of this, true Christians
(as well as Jews who are faithful to their ancient Biblical belief) do not burn
their bodies; believing Christians bury their bodies, which communed of the
Holy Mysteries, bodies which became a part of Christ’s Body, reverently and
devoutly, as was the Savior’s Body.
Of course, the painting and
decorating of the dead body (as practiced in America) doesn’t reflect the
Christian faith and human dignity either. People do this from a pusillanimous
desire to shield themselves and others from the reality of death. But the vision
of death is the same will of God as the vision of life! As the seed of the life
to come our body must reverently be placed in the ground. And the Church does
this, proclaiming the truth of the Resurrection.
Those who do not know God's
will or are indifferent to it or are consciously opposed to it, burn their
bodies. Pagans in India do this, mistakenly believing in purification, which
comes from the natural form of fire, ignorant of God’s Grace and of the unique
human personality (and from this they believe in the cosmic cyclical migration
of souls).
Symptomatic of this, the “League
of Militant Godless” which was founded in Moscow shortly after the revolution,
proclaimed as one of their basic aims in their cruel fight against God, the
campaign for the cremation of the dead. This alone shows how repulsive
cremation is to the will of God.
It is necessary for believing
people to rid their conscience of every theoretical and practical unbelief. It
is necessary for a person living in the image of the world to come, to give his
soul and body into God’s hands for all time. For the kingdom of God to come is
not a partial but a complete fulfillment of God’s Will.
Source: Church Life, November 1962. Holy Trinity
Cathedral, San Francisco, CA (Metropolia/OCA).
Online: https://orthochristian.com/171819.html
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