If a loved one dies at home or in a nursing home, telephone their GP. The GP, or the doctor on call, will visit and confirm the death. They issue the Medical Certificate of Cause of Death (MCCD), the document you need to register.
If the death is in hospital, the bereavement office there will explain how to collect the MCCD and any belongings, and will point you towards next steps.
Telephone the parish priest as soon as you can. He can come to pray with the family, anoint the body where appropriate, and begin to plan the funeral. Even if the death was expected, the call to the priest is an early one.
By law, you must register the death at the local Register Office within five days in England and Wales. Most Register Offices ask you to telephone first to book an appointment.
Take with you:
The registrar issues two documents:
Most Catholic families work with a funeral director who knows the parish and the local Catholic cemetery or crematorium. Ask the parish priest for recommendations. The funeral director liaises with the parish, the cemetery or crematorium, and the family on practical arrangements.
The Catholic Church offers two main forms of funeral:
The priest will help you choose readings, hymns, and a homily plan. Bring photographs and stories. Funerals are pastoral as well as liturgical, and the priest will want to know the person.
The Catholic Church prefers burial of the body, in continuity with the burial of the Lord. Cremation is permitted, with one important condition: the ashes must be buried, not scattered, kept at home, or divided. Catholic cemeteries and many municipal cemeteries have areas for the burial of ashes. Speak to the funeral director about this at the first meeting and tell them clearly that the ashes will be buried.
If burial of ashes follows the cremation by some weeks, plan a short Rite of Committal at the graveside with the parish priest.
Funeral directors give a written estimate. Parishes do not charge a fee for the priest's ministry, but it is normal practice to make an offering, which the funeral director can pass on if you prefer. Hospital and council bereavement teams can advise on financial help if cost is a worry.
The Church remembers the dead at every Mass. Many families ask for the names of their loved ones to be read at Mass during November (the month of the Holy Souls), or have anniversary Masses offered each year. Speak to the parish office to arrange Mass intentions.
Bishop Davies' pastoral letter At the Hour of Our Death (29 October 2023) is a helpful read for families thinking about Catholic funeral planning ahead of time.
A Catholic funeral is, at heart, a prayer of hope. The practical steps fall into place once the parish priest is alongside the family.