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Because historically, cremation was generally used as a denial of the Resurrection. But it doesn't have to deny the Resurrection, which is why the Church allows it now (however, the Church still does not recommend or encourage cremation).
Christianity will still be here.
There wasn't a fall of Christianity. It is still a popular religion.
No. Heavy metals may still be detectable, but once the body is burned there is no way to tell what was in it.
If the individual is still living. The power of attorney represents a living person.
church
The common belief is that Gnosticism originated as a branch of Christianity. There are some theories that claim the central ideas of Gnosticism existed before the birth of Christ. These ideas, of a dualistic religion (two Gods), still prevail today in modern Christianity with the teachings of one supremely good God of Heaven and one sinful, loathsome God of Hell.
No, as of 2013 John McCain still opposes equality for gay people.
Ancient Egyptians spoke Egyptian, which was used from before about 2690 BC into the late 17th century AD, when it was called Coptic. Coptic is still the liturgical language of the Coptic Church, an independent branch of Christianity. Modern Egyptians speak Egyptian Arabic.
Catholicism was the original Christian religion and still is, dating back to the apostles. Other groups throughout the ages have broken with the Catholic Church and formed their own Christian groups.
a branch is still connected to the tree and a stick is not
Ethics is a branch of philosophy, not a branch of science (although scientists can still strive to be ethical).