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What is the Jewish View on Cremation?



Question:

What is the Jewish view on cremation?

Answer:

Cremation has always been looked upon with horror by every sector of Jewish thought. The body is sacred, because it is the "temple of the soul" and because it is the medium by which we do goodness in this world.

Belief in the resurrection of the dead is counted by Maimonides as the thirteenth of the Thirteen Principles of the Faith. There is no rabbinic authority who does not consider this to be a fundamental belief. The Mishnah declares denial of this principle to be heresy. The reason is quite apparent: As Jews, we believe there is purpose to life, purpose to this world, purpose to the act of Creation. Therefore, anything that is used towards that purpose has a permanence -- and a sanctity.

Six million of our people were denied proper burial, most of them cremated. Should we willfully continue that which our enemies began?


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By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Rabbi Tzvi Freeman heads Chabad.org's Ask The Rabbi team, and is a senior member of the Chabad.org editorial team. He is the author of a number of highly original renditions of Kabbalah and Chassidic teaching, including the universally acclaimed "Bringing Heaven Down to Earth." To order Tzvi's books click here.


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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Jan 8, 2009
Temple of GOD
Our bodies=Temple of GOD.
Why would we burn GOD's temple ??
Posted By Michael N.Dineen, Ridgefield, Wa.-USA

Posted: Jan 7, 2009
Cremation or ??
I do not get this. Are we talking about natural decomposition as holy? Creating ash as destructive? What about some form of dehydration and burial? That is removing water without creating ash.


Is that unholy?

What exactly is the desecration?
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Aug 28, 2008
Re: Implications of Cremation
Nowhere was it stated that a cremated body cannot be resurrected simply because it was cremated. If the remains of a buried body after thousands of years can be resurrected, why not its ashes?

Burial, however, is seen as a statement of faith in resurrection. You are saying in effect that the body has inherent worth, even after its death, since it is truly eternal. Cremation is seen as a denial of that faith. The sages of the Talmud simply said that if one denies resurrection, how can he partake of it?
Posted By Tzvi Freeman (author), Thornhill, Canada



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