Vatican tells Catholics not to scatter ashes of the dead | Inquirer News

Vatican tells Catholics not to scatter ashes of the dead

/ 08:13 AM October 26, 2016

A photo taken 12 May 2004 of the Pere Lachaise columbarium in Paris. Pere Lachaise is the largest cemetery in Paris and one of the most famous in the world.  The cemetery is a veritable roll-call of the great and good who have illuminated all facets of French and Parisian life over the past 200 years.  It is also the location of five Great War memorials.  The cemetery will celebrate its 200th anniversary 21 May 2004. AFP PHOTO JOEL SAGET / AFP PHOTO / JOEL SAGET

Flowers adorn chiches at the Pere Lachaise columbarium in Paris. Pere Lachaise is the largest cemetery in Paris and one of the most famous in the world. The Vatican on Tuesday urged Catholics not to scatter the ashes of the dead after cremation and instead to store them in places approved by the Church. AFP FILE

VATICAN CITY, Holy See — The Vatican on Tuesday urged Catholics not to scatter the ashes of the dead after cremation and instead to store them in places approved by the Church.

The new guidelines published by the Church also say that the ashes of the dead should not be kept at home but should instead be kept at a cemetery or other sacred place.

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“Conserving ashes in a home is not authorized,” Mueller said. 

Doing so reduces “the risk of shielding the dead from prayers for them and the memory of their family and the Christian community”, German cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, the prefect of the doctrinal watchdog, told journalists.

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“We also avoid eventually forgetting (them) and the lack of respect which can happen, especially after the passing of the first generation,” he said.

“Conserving ashes in a home is not authorized,” Mueller said.

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The Vatican first gave permission for cremation in 1963.

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“The body is not the private property of the family. A dead person is a son of God. It is part of the body of Christ, it is part of God’s people,” said Mueller.

The new guidelines come just in time for “All Souls’ Day” on November 2 when the faithful typically pray for the dead.

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“The body is not the private property of the family. A dead person is a son of God. It is part of the body of Christ, it is part of God’s people. It’s for this reason that there is not only private rites for the deceased but it’s a public ceremony,” said Mueller.

Bishops will however be able to authorize exceptions to the new guidelines “in serious and exceptional circumstances linked to local customs and practices”.

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The new rules also prohibit the scattering of ashes at sea, said Mueller.

But the guidelines will not be applied retrospectively to the relics of saints whose remains have been preserved over the centuries “to avoid provoking a war between believers”, according to one of Mueller’s aides.

Cremations have become increasingly popular since the Vatican order to allow them was issued a half century ago.

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The Vatican has said that cremations “do not touch the soul” and do no “prevent the all-powerful God from resurrecting the body”. CBB

TAGS: Cremation, Holy See, News, Vatican

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