| Funerals | | Print | |
![]() Humanists accept death as part of the natural order and our funeral ceremonies celebrate the life of the person who has passed away. A humanist celebrant will spend time with the bereaved family gathering information on the life and personality of the deceased before writing a tribute to the life that was lived. This will be the centrepiece of the ceremony at which family and friends are invited and encouraged to read personal tributes or choose other readings and music. Humanist celebrants are aware that amongst those attending the funeral there may be people of faith and although prayers are not said, they will usually include a brief period when people can reflect or pray silently if they want to. From January 2008 our recommended fees are as follows: Standard ceremony £100.00 Extended ceremony £150.00 Under 16 and stillborn no charge Travel expenses £0.50 per mile NB: In case of hardship, the fee may be reduced or waived at the Celebrant’s discretion. Other extraordinary expenses (e.g. additional travel costs, ferry, overnight accommodation etc) to be agreed with client. All registered HSS Celebrants conduct funerals. To find one, please click here For further information, see our leaflet To Celebrate a Life. The Scottish Executive publish a very useful booklet: What to do after a death in Scotland…practical advice for times of bereavement. We also recommend the book Funerals Without God, which is also available from our celebrants. If you are a funeral director, please see our page Information for Funeral Directors . |
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News
The General Registrar Office of Scotland has just released its statistics on marriage in Scotland in 2007 and they make interesting reading.
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While marriage overall, and religious marriage in particular, continues to decline, the number of marriages conducted by the Humanist Society of Scotland (HSS) has risen dramatically for the third year running.
In 2007, the HSS conducted 710 legal marriages, 285 more than the 2006 total of 434. This represents an annual rise of 64%,… -
News
Two stars are born. HSS members Clare Marsh and Derek Young are the headline acts on the latest podcast from the Institute of Humanist Studies and American Humanist Association, Humanist Network News, recorded at the recent World Humanist Congress in Washington DC. The podcast can be downloaded from this webpage. Needless to say, they get top billing and their "segment" lasts for much of the first 15 minutes of the programme, followed by…
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News
Humanitie Summer 2008
Before the turn of the year I decided that this would be the Summer issue of Humanitie’s “Education Issue”. We would just have launched our own Humanism in Education campaign, founded on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, that “affirms the right of all children to an education that respects both their own cultural values and those of others”, and I thought that Alex Salmond would jump at…
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News
Families who don’t believe in God failed by education, Humanists say
By Andrew Denholm, Education Correspondent, The Herald, 23.04.08
Families who don't believe in God are being failed by Scotland's education system, it was claimed yesterday.
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The Humanist Society of Scotland (HSS) warned that both lessons and events such as assemblies in non-denominational schools were largely directed at those who had a Christian faith.
This Saturday, the society will launch an education campaign, founded on the UN… -
News
The Gifford Lecture Series 2008
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Date: Tuesday, April 15 2008
Time: 18:00
Venue: Sir Charles Wilson Lecture Theatre, University Avenue, Glasgow University
Category: Public Lectures
Speaker: Professor David Fergusson
David Fergusson, Professor of Divinity at the University of Edinburgh, will present the Gifford Lecture Series 2008.
Founded in 1887 by the bequest of Lord Gifford, the annual Gifford Lecture Series was established to promote, advance and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of that term.…
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Media Scan
He became famous as an angel investor in the ruthless tv show, but is a higher power driving Duncan Bannatyne to give it all away?, asks Paul Dalgarno in The Sunday Herald
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Palin describes herself and her family as 'typical'. But to most of the planet, she's an exotic. She's a fundamentalist Christian. She advocated teaching creationism alongside evolution in Alaska's schools. Her right-to-life convictions extend to stem cell research, which she…
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An extraordinary display of raw political talent could trump Obama’s ‘pretty speeches’ and rally the religious right, reports Sarah Baxter in Detroit for The Sunday Times
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The Archbishop of Canterbury has pandered to conservatives in the Anglican communion by scapegoating and marginalising homosexual Christians, a senior cleric claimed yesterday, reports Riazat Butt, religious affairs correspondent of The Guardian
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