This week, I was asked to deliver the eulogy at Mary Magdalene Jones’s celebration of life. It also happened just days before the one-year anniversary of my mother’s passing. For the first time since last January, I found myself standing in a funeral home again; familiar, quiet, and heavier than I had anticipated.
Places like that tend to bring clarity. They don’t create meaning; they reveal what a life has already expressed. Standing there stirred more than memory.
It wasn’t my first time delivering a eulogy or sharing words of hope in a space filled with grief. However, it was my first time returning to that place since my mother passed away. The setting remained unchanged, the silence was familiar, and the heavy atmosphere persisted in the room long before anyone arrived to speak.
And it stirred something more profound than simple recollection. Funeral homes do not generate meaning; they reveal it.
They don’t forge a legacy; instead, they reveal what a life has already expressed: day by day, choice by choice, long before anyone steps onto a platform.
What a Life Is Already Saying
This understanding lingered with me as I reflected on Mary’s life and stayed with me at home as I thought about my mother.
Both lives shared a simple and rare quality: consistency.
Not limelight faith. Not a Sunday-only devotion. They did not reserve their words for the end. Their faith showed up in ordinary places, around kitchen tables, through open doors, and in perseverance when life pressed hard. It wasn’t performative; it was practiced.
That kind of life doesn’t require editing at the end.
Finishing Well Is Earned, Not Claimed
Paul recognized this when, towards the end of his life, he wrote:
I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith. 2 Timothy 4:7, KJV
Those words weren’t filled with hope or aspiration; they were statements of fact. Paul could confidently make them because he had lived in a way that proved their truth. He didn’t wait until the end to determine who he was.
Finishing strong begins long before the finish line appears.
Mary’s faith was evident not only in sacred moments but also in her daily life, her treatment of others, and her private communion with God. My mother embodied the same principles. For her, hospitality was more than a trait; it was a form of ministry. Endurance was not optional; it was a necessity.
Resilience was essential for survival during my teenage years when life turned upside down. Faith didn’t erase the weight of that moment, but it shaped how she carried it. Instead of becoming bitter, she grew resilient. She kept showing up, maintained her home, and held onto the belief that faithfulness mattered, even amid injustice. Such a faith endures for a lifetime.
This means that when the end arrives, words spoken do not have to distort or soften reality. They are not required to smooth over edges or fill gaps. The truth remains clear and undeniable, as life has already conveyed it.
Live Today What You Want Spoken Tomorrow
That’s what continues to weigh on me. Not on how we’ll be remembered, but on how we are living today.
We cannot control when someone summarizes our lives. However, we select the life that makes their words true. We make this choice through our behavior when we’re exhausted. We decide whether faith influences our Mondays just as much as our Sundays. Our endurance, service, and quiet obedience, which remain timeless, reflect our faith.
Eventually, someone will speak about each of us. The real question isn’t what we hope they’ll say.
The question is whether our current way of living permits the truth to be spoken honestly, faithfully, and without alteration.
Live the life you’d want others to speak about you, and start living it now.
Additional reading related to living a life worth eulogizing.
- A Tribute to My Mother on What Would Have Been Her 80th Birthday
- Eulogy for Mom: Sharon Elaine Agriesti
Credits
AI Usage Credit: OpenAI helped create my article outlines and generate the imagery. Grammarly corrected my grammar and usage, and QuillBot improved my phrasing.
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