Don't call it official yet, but many pastors may have one less thing on their plate in the coming years: officiating funerals. In the last decade, the American public has increasingly opted for funerals and memorial services that aren't led by ministers. According to William McQueen, president of the Cremation Association of North America, there's been a growing demand for secular "celebrants" who can deliver eulogies just as a pastor would—but without the religious or church rituals.
"What we've found in the past decade is that when you ask people whether they want a minister, people say, 'Not interested,'" McQueen says. "Today, of all the ceremonies we deal with, I'd say 50 percent are religious or clergy-led, 20 percent celebrant-led and 30 percent are having no ceremony or one led by family."
A 2008 survey of more than 6,000 people found that only one in four adults expects to have a religious service when they die. And with more than half of all Americans saying they don't belong to a church, many funeral directors believe Americans no longer see a value in religious funerals.
These people " don't see the need to be ushered into another world. There's no 'personal God' they expect to meet," says Ariela Keysar, who co-authored the 2008 survey at Trinity College's Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture in Hartford, Conn. "It's revelatory about where current social attitudes are heading."
What's interesting to note, however, is that even among those not wanting a church- or pastor-influenced service, there is still a desire for spiritual elements such as scripture passages or prayers. "Quite a few of the people say they're 'spiritual but not religious' or just not involved with a church anymore," says Eldon "Bud" Strawn, a celebrant on call for a St. Petersburg, Fla., funeral center. "Quite a few of the Catholics say they don't want to deal with a priest because they think they'll be scolded or guilt-tripped." [usatoday.com, 8/20/09]
Comments
'Jesus said, "I am the Resurrection and the Life." Take that out of a funeral and it's a sad one for sure!'
You've got that right. My experience in doing countless funerals is that there is a huge difference in a funeral for someone who obviously loved the Lord, and someone who didn't. You can literally feel it in the air. The "hope" that the Bible speaks of gives life and comfort to those who believe.
AMEN my sister!!
As for the family lead funerals, I would be curious to know how many of the family members leading the funeral are part of the body of Christ, because every member of the body of Christ is a minister; hence the statistics would again be changed.
People can be saved anywhere - but only one way. Out Lord tells us the He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. NO ONE gets to God without Him. (John 14:6) For many - a funeral is a time of sadness and despair They need to meet Jesus there. A believer's funeral is a joyus celebration.
Our job as survivors is to celebrate the lives of those who have passed before us and rejoice in the fact that they reside in eternity with the Lord - IF they were believers. And, it is our responsibility as believers to share the Good News anytime; anyplace we can do so in a loving way. If the pastor/preacher is worth his weight in salt he will deliver the truth in a way that will not belittle the grieving process or demean the one who is being memorialized.
If someone attending is offended by the truth then I suspect that they needed to hear it more than the others who were glad to hear of the things of God.
Idea: Say something nice and noncommittal about the dead person and the family. Keep your ideas about where he/she spends eternity to yourself. You don't know who is or isn't saved, anyway. Don't give an "invitation," please. It's not God people want out of funerals, it's the preachers.
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