Death, Ritual, and Belief

Front Cover
A&C Black, Jan 1, 1997 - Religion - 216 pages

Describing a variety of funeral ritual, from major world religions and from local traditions, this book shows how cultures cope not only with corpses but also create an added value for living through the growth of afterlife beliefs. The key theme of the book is the rhetoric of death -- the way cultures use the most potent weapon of words to bring new power to life. Human identity and its transformation through mortuary rites is explored through the mummies of Chile and Egypt; African sacrificial deaths; Indian cremations; immigrant cemeteries in the USA; ancestor rites in Eastern religions and Mormonism; and the freezing of the dead in cryonics. Research findings are presented on cremation and afterlife beliefs, especially reincarnation, sensing the presence of the dead, and the death of pets in Britain, to show how mortuary rituals are constantly changing in response to death as a major feature of the human environment.

 

Contents

1 Interpreting Death Rites
1
Impurity Fertility and Fear
24
3 Theories of Grief
43
4 Violence Sacrifice and Conquest
62
5 Eastern Destiny and Death
81
6 Ancestors Cemeteries and Local Identity
91
7 Jewish and Islamic Destinies
118
8 Christianity and the Death of Jesus
125
10 Somewhere to Die
155
11 Souls and the Presence of the Dead
163
12 Pet and Animal Death
182
13 Book Film and Building
196
14 Offending Death Grief and Religions
211
15 Secular Death and Life
224
Bibliography
240
Index
258

9 NearDeath Symbolic Death and Rebirth
145

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About the author (1997)

Gregory K. Beale is J. Gresham Machen Chair of New Testament, Professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology, at Westminster Theological Seminary, PA, USA.

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