In fact, people now choose their best funeral choice without taking into account the so-called old ideas of religious ban. Despite religious beliefs, people still choose cremation, but this is not the case during Christian growth. All Christian sects including the Roman Catholic Church, Sikhs, Hindus, Persians, Buddhists can be cremated. (Prosero, 2001). The limitation of this religion which becomes a major obstacle to cremation is starting to decline, and people are increasingly conscious of the benefits offered daily by cremation.
An important factor for many people is the price. The burial of a higher price tag requires a cemetery, a coffin, a rust preventive service, a ceremony, a burial charge, a tombstone and a vault. Cremation saves money and costs only one-third of the burial price. Those planning to combine rituals, cremations, wills will incur cremation costs, but burial coffins, preservatives, and in some cases the cost of safes will be eliminated. Follow the religious or cultural tradition that the deceased loved. In the absence of planned end-of-life service, you should consider family hope when deciding funeral or cremation. If you are not funeral or burial, does your family feel uneasy? Do you want to be buried after cremation so that family and friends can visit the grave? Or is there a pot? Where does it stay?
If you tend to cremate, you are not alone. According to the National Funeral Association, the largest number of Americans ever chose to burst - 50.2%, not buried, and this proportion is expected to grow. In some states in Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Hawaii, more than 70% have selected cremation. As of 2015, 66% of Canadians are choosing cremation
How much evangelists will choose to cremate if it costs as much as a traditional funeral as simple as that? It is very small. During the past few decades cremation activity in the US has soared (1960-3.5%; 1999-24.8%; 2014-46.7%; in some states it is over 75%). There are various reasons, but the much bigger one is a combination of secularization and economics. The fewer people test this practice with Biblical standards, the more people want the cheapest solutions. So my goal is to touch these two reasons. First, I propose that the church will encourage Christian antipathy, people expect simple and cheap funerals and places where all of us can participate. Next, I would like to point out some Bible guidelines on why burial is preferable to cremation. I do not order, but a better way of speaking, but I hope that the creative culture will not condemn or exclude people who choose different people.