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Joined: Jan 2003
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Both silly and pathetically sad at the same time, IMHO.... article here [ smallbusiness.aol.com]
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Joined: Mar 2006
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Jessup B.C. Deacon Member
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Jessup B.C. Deacon Member
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Since we moved up here to NE Pa 10 years ago, I've served at some Parastas services where some of the most outlandish things have been put in the casket with the deceased. One guy had a six-pack of Yuengling Beer in the casket with him (IMHO, that's not even a very good beer-but it's a local brew). I've seen caskets loaded up with model airplanes, model firetrucks, Yankee caps, you name it. I don't remember seeing such tackiness at N.J. funerals (not that N.J. is more Christian-quite the opposite!).
Dn. Robert
Last edited by Deacon Robert Behrens; 03/24/10 04:00 PM.
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Joined: May 2009
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Since we moved up here to NE Pa 10 years ago, I've served at some Parastas services where some of the most outlandish things have been put in the casket with the deceased. One guy had a six-pack of Yuengling Beer in the casket with him (IMHO, that's not even a very good beer-but it's a local brew). I've seen caskets loaded up with model airplanes, model firetrucks, Yankee caps, you name it. I don't remember seeing such tackiness at N.J. funerals (not that N.J. is more Christian-quite the opposite!).
Dn. Robert It must be a regional thing, because just across the border in central New York I haven't seen such things at funerals here.
Last edited by DMD; 03/24/10 04:22 PM.
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,214
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Except for a new suit I wouldn't expect anything else in my casket.
Have people been buried with icons or crosses?
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Joined: May 2009
Posts: 1,953
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Posts: 1,953 |
Except for a new suit I wouldn't expect anything else in my casket.
Have people been buried with icons or crosses? Icons, crosses - yes.
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 7,157 Likes: 67
Moderator Member
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Moderator Member
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 7,157 Likes: 67 |
You'd be surprised at the requests we have had. My concern is that we seem to make a big push for recycling so that heavy metals don't go into the ground and then turn around and bury cell phones, remotes, and other gadgets containing those very things.
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 701
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Only things (not counting bodies) I've ever seen go in coffins are religious medalions, flowers, and clerics buried fully vested, ready for divine liturgy.
Oh, and one chap, was wrapped in a fur.
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 7,157 Likes: 67
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 7,157 Likes: 67 |
Rifles, handguns, masonic regalia and insignia, religious items, whiskey, beer, cards, cigarettes, Cuban cigars, pictures of the grandchildren, letters from family members, a change of clothes, a second pair of shoes, a cane, crutches, sports tickets, checks, expensive jewelry.
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 10,990 Likes: 10
Moderator Member
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IMHO, this seems like a move back to the traditions of paganism, and an unsurety about the soul and eternity.
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Joined: Nov 2001
Posts: 543
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An elderly gentleman I knew was buried with: a photo of Dolly Parton (wishful thinking?), a bottle of rum and a cell phone.
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Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 10,090 Likes: 15
Global Moderator Member
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Global Moderator Member
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IMHO, this seems like a move back to the traditions of paganism, and an unsurety about the soul and eternity. I guess, in a way, I think it more suggests that folk believe in an afterlife - though their thinking may be a bit askew in how they believe it will be lived. Then, too, I've heard it said, a few times actually, that people wanted archeologists who might someday unearth their remains to understand and know what they were like, what was important to them, what they enjoyed in their life. Many years, Neil
"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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