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Dear
Gramps, |
Dear
Gidgtmidgt,
The
body is a sacred entity. In the first place, it is formed in the very image
the Great God, who is the creator and sustainer of the universe, who is the
Father of our spirits, who is the sustainer of all life, who condescends to
extend his love and mercy to those who love Him and keep his commandments and
who, through the great atoning sacrifice of his Beloved Son, has provided the
means whereby we may return to live with Him for eternity, conditioned on our
repentance and compliance with gospel principles.
Secondly,
the body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who may dwell within us, revealing
to us the will of God, and acting as a guide and protector in our lives,
depending on our faith and righteousness.
In
the third place, the body is the tabernacle of our own individual spirits that
have come from the presence of God to experience the mortal probation.
As
a sacred entity, the body should be treated with great respect, both in life
and in death. During our lives we should keep the body clean and free from the
contamination of evil. When the spirit leaves the body to return to its
heavenly home, the mortal remains are then laid to rest in anticipation of the
time that it will be brought forth again in the glorious resurrection to be
reunited with the spirit in an eternal state, to live forever in that
environment that is merited by the type of life lived during mortality.
Elder
Bruce R. McConkie has stated the proper procedure of the disposition of the
body at the time of death.
“It
is the accepted practice of the Church -- based on precedent and guided by the
spirit of revelation in those whom God has chosen to lead the Church to
dedicate the graves of faithful saints who depart this life. Dedication of
graves is an ordinance of the gospel and is performed in the name of Christ
and in the authority of the Melchizedek priesthood. The dedicatory prayer
should contain such expressions of thanksgiving, such words of comfort to the
bereaved, such assurances (or petitions) for the protecting care of Divine
providence over the grave as the Spirit may indicate to the one performing the
dedication (Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, p.188.)
Gramps