arcticpenguin said:
Funerals are for the living, not the dead.
I think the key word here was private. I could do without the superstition, but I do want to share time with others.Larspeart said:No problem. I pretty much expected that response, and I have a question to follow-up on that one as well then.
Since funerals are (typically) dripping with religion, ritual, and other things that an atheist would disagree with, if not totally scoff at, why not just 'honor' them in your own private way, through memories (although 'honoring someone through memories' seems dangerously close to prayer, /gasp!)?
I am genuinely curious on this issue, and I am not meaning to stir any pots or rankle any feathers.![]()
"'Honor' them in your own private way" is completely contradictory to the social aspects of funerals. It is very hard to have a society of one. And grieving in groups has a comforting and healing psychological effect that grieving alone can't provide.Larspeart said:Since funerals are (typically) dripping with religion, ritual, and other things that an atheist would disagree with, if not totally scoff at, why not just 'honor' them in your own private way, through memories (although 'honoring someone through memories' seems dangerously close to prayer, /gasp!)?
Larspeart said:A common arguement of atheists is that religion only exists to help people feel better or more comfortable with lifes 'tougher questions', such as death, loss, hardship, etc. In that light, it seems to have worked in your case. you felt better afterwards, moved. You had a last chance to honor someone close to you, amongst family and friends. Without a (religious) funeral, a lot of that may not have occured.
Am I way off base here? Let me know.
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I'll agree to that. My experiences are the same. And 21 gun salutes make you proud and want to cry at the same time.arcticpenguin said:Small towns are the best place to die.
Religious ceremony as social tradition.... now there is a concept that gauls the gizzard of many a faithfull adherent. My Grandmother(may she rest in peace... *gasp!* Was that a prayer?!) had a term she used to refer to those that only used the church for baptisms, weddings, and funerals...karl said:
You are off base in the sense that you think of funerals as religious. This is not necessarily the case. When my grandmother died, the funeral was held in some local chapel by a priest, but I don't recall any mention of God, Jesus or anything specific to a religion during the ceremony. Though I'm not sure if this is the standard deal (because my country is very secularized), or if it was done on request (because my whole family has always been atheist/agnostic).
To answer your initial questions, I attend funerals for the same reason I buy Christmas presents. It's a social tradition.
Larspeart said:AP, I agree that the 21 gun salute to a fallen war hero/veteran is very powerful and moving. My uncle was a decorated war hero in WWII, and he received one as well. Now, the history behind that. . . is both religious and superstitious though. The salute is to ward off evil spirits. Before guns were around, people would bang pots and pans, and whoop and yell to the same effect. So again, religion seems to have a purpose, and it seems that you felt that at the funeral. While you may not believe in a higher power, it seems that the OTHER purpose of religion held true; it served to assuage your anguish, bring you closer to family, heal wounds left by the departed, etc.
I think you are at least somewhat off-base.Larspeart said:AP, I agree that the 21 gun salute to a fallen war hero/veteran is very powerful and moving. My uncle was a decorated war hero in WWII, and he received one as well. Now, the history behind that. . . is both religious and superstitious though. The salute is to ward off evil spirits. Before guns were around, people would bang pots and pans, and whoop and yell to the same effect. So again, religion seems to have a purpose, and it seems that you felt that at the funeral. While you may not believe in a higher power, it seems that the OTHER purpose of religion held true; it served to assuage your anguish, bring you closer to family, heal wounds left by the departed, etc.
A common arguement of atheists is that religion only exists to help people feel better or more comfortable with lifes 'tougher questions', such as death, loss, hardship, etc. In that light, it seems to have worked in your case. you felt better afterwards, moved. You had a last chance to honor someone close to you, amongst family and friends. Without a (religious) funeral, a lot of that may not have occured.
Am I way off base here? Let me know.
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