Family & Relationships1 min ago
humanist funeral
He had asked for this type of funeral because he was disillusioned with religion and the way the world was going and the wars ..mainly over religion.When I go I think I would like this...it seemed more natural than all that praying and so on.What do others think.I know it's morbid but I had to get this off my chest !
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by shaneystar. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm a great believer in people havoing the funeral they want. I respect people's wish not to attend on religious grounds, but as an aetheist, I have no problem.
My wife and all my family are Catholics, so I may well get a Mass, which is fine by me - I have no preferences, and it will be of comfort for them. Likewise, I will arrange a Mass for my wife if she dies firstm, because that will be what she wants.
For me - take the bits you can re-use, and dump the rest in a skip!
Fantastic stuff shaneystar. I would class myself as secular so that funeral would do for me....played in with "i'm forever blowing bubbles" and out with Pink Floyds legendary "comfortably numb"
I went to my old bosses cremation the other day and the "priest" was giving all this religious crap and then we had to say the lords prayer....i find it very very hypocrytical as my boss was never religious.
As mentioned...take what's needed and dump me under the the strawberry patch
Some favourite songs and a few humourous stories from friends, what more could you want.
Religion is the top excuse these days for waging wars and comitting all kinds of atrocities.
I have faith in family and friends, thats all I need.
I celebrate Christmas because it is a tradition in this country and it's message is one of love and there's no harm in letting children know about the goodness in people.
I accept the death question is more tricky and I try to foster in my girls the importance of living good lives and leaving behind a legacy of decency that people will remember with pleasure.
Being a humanist does not mean we abdicate moral authority in our lives, it means we claim it and live by it, without resorting to forgivenss from above. The forgiveness needs to be in our hearts in the here and now.
I'm glad you were moved Shaneystar and I wish you well.
www.humanism.org.uk
Equally, another very close friend of mine died in February and there was a full Church of Scotland service. Also very moving. I can't understand people who decide not to attend funerals on religious grounds.
I agree with the other comments shaneystar. It's lovely when the funeral fits the person & their life, rather than have a hypocritical over religious service where evryone is thinking 'Well this isn't the person that they were'.
My sister works as a funeral arranger & so we talk about this a lot, but not miserably so!
She comes into contact with many people who haven't a clue what their loved ones wanted for their final send off, because they'd never discussed it or had refused to. It's a shame that people still can't talk about the one thing that's going to happen to all of us!
Humanist & 'environmentally friendly' funerals are becoming far more popular. I know what I want although I appreciate a funeral, as andy says, is for those left behind.
I'm so sorry you've lost someone close shaneystar, but I'm sure you have some lovely memories. x
Thank you all for your views on this.