cardaway
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2002
- Messages
- 12,216
My granmother passed away on the 24th and her funeral was on the 30th.
The funeral service was at her small church, a very small church that actually sets up in a fire station. Given the small setting I was expecting what would be a very personal and heartwarming service.
While the pastor did try and make it personal quickly it was obvious this was going to be just another long session about how only select individuals get into heaven. And if that wasn't bad enough I had a woman get in my face asking me if "I knew Jesus" and giving me the third degree after I told her that I no longer follow the Christian religion. But of course she will pray for me. Things would have been a lot better had I just lied to her.
When did funerals go bad? What happened to having services that focused on the deceased and left the preaching and witnessing for Sunday?
The funeral service was at her small church, a very small church that actually sets up in a fire station. Given the small setting I was expecting what would be a very personal and heartwarming service.
While the pastor did try and make it personal quickly it was obvious this was going to be just another long session about how only select individuals get into heaven. And if that wasn't bad enough I had a woman get in my face asking me if "I knew Jesus" and giving me the third degree after I told her that I no longer follow the Christian religion. But of course she will pray for me. Things would have been a lot better had I just lied to her.
When did funerals go bad? What happened to having services that focused on the deceased and left the preaching and witnessing for Sunday?
on... no telling where this one will go..
Sorry about your grandmother.
To respond to your question, I have never had such a thing happen at any funeral I've attended. Even the more "impersonal" funerals I've been to (where the minister did not know the deceased) were very benign. I think it was a problem with that guest, not in general.
My dh is not a Christian but of course, tolerates any service he is part of. This however, caused him to turn to me and say, "Do they do this in the Catholic church? If they do, we are NOT giving a Catholic funeral for our kids if something happened." My answer was that I had never seen this done anywhere. It was beyond belief!
He cried when he knew that HE was about to die. Sure, I believe that people go to heaven to be with Jesus, but that does not mean we don't legitimately grieve their loss in our lives. Any preacher who says we should rejoice at the death of a loved one is an idiot.
The God I believe in embraces all and if there is a Heaven, all good, decent people, will go there no matter what name they call their God. Or Don't believe at all...