In the United States, a person who dies is buried within 4 to 7 days of his or her death. That means the funeral happens in a week or less after the person dies. Between the time a person dies and his or her funeral, there are numerous major decisions that have to be made.

You have to:
  • inform as many people as possible that this person died.
  • choose a funeral home to prepare the body and handle the arrangements.
  • decide when the funeral will be held. 
    • What day and time is the funeral going to happen? 
    • And when will visitation take place?
  • decide where to have the funeral? 
    • Are you going to have it at the funeral home? 
    • In a church building? 
    • Somewhere else?
  • pick out clothes for the person who died to be buried in
  • decide what you can afford in terms of funeral and burial arrangements.
  • choose a casket and make other expensive decisions
  • find and buy a burial plot or, if you choose cremation, what will happen with the ashes
  • get the word out about the person’s death and the funeral arrangements.

There are so many decisions that have to be made in the course of a matter of days and those decisions are made while you are grieving. Then, you have to plan the funeral service and decide if you can speak and what to say.

This is where I come in.

I have officiated in dozens of funerals and heard many, many eulogies. Some eulogies I’ve heard have been unforgettable. Whether I knew the person who died or not, some eulogies I’ve heard have stuck with me.

But I’ve also heard some eulogies that didn’t work very well. The person who spoke tried his or her best, and I honor their efforts. But because they didn’t know what to say, they didn’t end up saying much that was memorable.

In addition to hearing other people’s eulogies, I’ve prepared and delivered several eulogies for people I knew and loved. I know how stressful it is to make all these decisions and then have to make a speech summing up a person’s life in just a few minutes.

As the Senior Pastor here at Calvary Bible Church, I speak in public all the time, but the first time I prepared and delivered a eulogy, it was really hard. But between preparing eulogies myself and listening to the eulogies of others, I have figured out a process that can help you write an unforgettable eulogy.

In one hour, I can help you get clear on what to say in your eulogy and prepare and deliver that eulogy in a way that will be unforgettable. So, take my course and I will guide you through all the thinking and sorting and structuring you need to do to write an unforgettable eulogy.

I’ve designed this course to lead you, by video, through the process of writing a powerful eulogy in one hour. Think about how anxious you are right now about what you’re going to say at the funeral. Now look at the clock. If it is 2:45 in the afternoon, imaging having the eulogy all done by 3:45—just one hour from now.

How do you do that?

Visit eulogycourse.com to learn more and get access to the help you need. The person you love deserves to be honored and remembered.

Don’t get up and wing it! Let me help you convey your love and honor your dead. Visit eulogycourse.com and let me show you how.