THE CATHOLIC CEMETERY ASSOCIATION OF RACINE
The Order of Christian
Funerals provides three types of liturgical
celebrations that correspond to where they are
celebrated (the home, the Church and the cemetery).
The Vigil
The Vigil is the first
gathering of family and friends after the death of a
loved one. Historically this gathering occurred in the
home. Relatives and friends kept vigil by the
deathbed, prepared the body for burial and kept watch
until time of the funeral. In more recent times, the
vigil has taken place at a funeral home or the Church.
At the visitation, mourners
gather to pay respects, pray, share stories and
memories, and support the surviving family. Often,
photos and other meaningful items from significant
moments in life are put on display. The vigil prayer
takes place within the visitation. It can take the
form of a liturgy of the Word or evening prayer, and
can be simple or elaborate.
The Mass of Christian
Burial
This liturgy is the central
celebration of the Christian community for the
deceased and the mourners. In the funeral liturgy, the
Church’s love and care for the deceased – as well as
its trust and belief in the resurrection – are acted
out. The funeral liturgy focuses on the Paschal
Mystery of Jesus Christ, through the Liturgy of the
Word and the Eucharist.
The Mass of Christian
Burial includes a procession of the body, blessing
with holy water and covering the casket with a white
funeral pall. This is followed by the liturgies of the
Word and Eucharist, and concluding prayers and song.
In the liturgy we move from our physical relationship
with the deceased to a spiritual one, as our loved one
is committed into the Lord’s care.
The Rite of Committal
This rite is the
community’s final farewell to the deceased, where we
commit our loved one to burial or entombment in the
hope of the resurrection. The Rite of Committal makes
use of Scripture, intercessions and prayers. “Through
this act the community of faith proclaims that the
grave, or place of interment, once a sign of futility
and despair, has been transformed by means of Christ’s
own death and resurrection into a sign of hope and
promise” (Order of Christian Funerals 209).
The blessed ground of a Catholic cemetery is a most fitting resting place for someone whose body was a Temple of the Holy Spirit. To be laid to rest in a holy place with fellow believers is a powerful statement of faith in Christ and His Resurrection.
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