Jews can't have tattoos, the myth is that you can't be buried in a jewish cemetary which is not true.
You have a tattoo don't you, admit it sinner!!!!
What if you're cremated? Can Jews be be buried in an urn?
who cares, be responsible, have yourself cremated
The Jays Wrote:What if you're cremated? Can Jews be be buried in an urn?
when someone is cremated they dont get buried in an urn. your basic stupidity knows no bounds.
Try not, dumbass. Catholics are allowed to be cremated, but the cremains must be placed in the ground. They must be put in an urn and put in the ground, together. So, no, try not.
anyone who does anything based on what a religion says is stupid.
Why ruin a perfectly good urn, when a used Chinese food container works just as well.
my mom has the ashes of her friend in my house
its kind of creepy when i think about it
My grandfather was cremated and put in a bag. When my grandmother came from florida to put him in the wall at the cemetary, she bought him in a dustbuster box. I thought it was quite fitting.
yeah, I thought the same thing. Can't be a word, right? Wrong. <!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=cremains">http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=cremains</a><!-- m -->
The Jays Wrote:Try not, dumbass. Catholics are allowed to be cremated, but the cremains must be placed in the ground. They must be put in an urn and put in the ground, together. So, no, try not.
CITE YOUR SOURCES!!
cremains sounds like creamy lo-meins, sounds deeeeelicious.
oh man, I want some lo-mein now.
beef or shrimp?
Arpikarhu Wrote:The Jays Wrote:Try not, dumbass. Catholics are allowed to be cremated, but the cremains must be placed in the ground. They must be put in an urn and put in the ground, together. So, no, try not.
CITE YOUR SOURCES!!
Quote:Catholic burial practice calls for the cremains to be buried in an urn within a consecrated grave or placed inside a mausoleum. Keeping ashes at home or scattering them on land or sea, even where legal, is inappropriate to the Church's deep reverence for the body as a place where the soul has resided, As "Our Sunday Visitor's Catholic Encyclopedia" notes:
"Cremation was the normal custom in the ancient civilized world, except in Egypt, Judea and China. It was repugnant to early Christians because of the belief in the resurrection of the body. By the fifth century, cremation had been largely abandoned in the Roman Empire because of Christian influence."
<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.catholicculture.org/docs/doc_view.cfm?recnum=645">http://www.catholicculture.org/docs/doc ... recnum=645</a><!-- m -->
like i am going to believe some cult site. nice try.
GonzoStyle Wrote:oh man, I want some lo-mein now.
beef or shrimp?
pork