Background:
My neighbors, who are Assembly of God Christians, attended their first Catholic funeral today and were kind of taken aback by it. They thought it was very impersonal and lacking in any kind of personal touch, kind of a cookie cutter ‘Insert name here’ sort of thing.
That is what they told my wife, anyway, and I heard that from her. I plan to share with them soon that they shouldn’t expect a Catholic funeral to be like one in their own faith tradition. In my opinion it’s kind of like comparing apples and oranges.
In some protestant faith traditions, the person who passed away is eulogized during the funeral ceremony. People who were near and dear to the deceased person sometimes are allowed to speak for a couple of minutes and share how the person affected their life in a positive way.
For example, when my father passed away in 2011 (lifelong Presbyterian), my childhood friend was allowed to tell a brief story at the funeral of how my father saved his son’s life when he hurt himself seriously in a nearby playground when he was little and my father was working nearby, saw it, applied a tourniquet and took him to his parents so they could take him to the hospital.
There are hymns and prayer and scripture reading too, but I’ve found that a Protestant funeral can vary quite a bit depending on the faith tradition and the family’s wishes.
I plan to share with my neighbors that the purpose of a Catholic funeral (or at least my understanding of it) is to pray for the repose of the soul of the person and for the Lord to have mercy on them.
For Catholics, it is my understanding that eulogies are typically not done at the funeral mass but are done outside of it at the vigil or at a Memorial Service separate from the funeral mass. It’s not that Catholics do not celebrate the life of the person who died – however they believe in Purgatory and therefore they believe it is most important to pray for the soul of the person at the funeral and for the mercy of God on the deceased.
Catholics celebrate the life of the person who passed away, they just do it outside of the funeral Mass.
Did I express the Catholic funeral tradition correctly? Please correct, clarify, or elaborate as necessary to make sure I can help explain to my neighbor the real purpose of the Catholic funeral mass because I want to get it right. Thanks.