Eternal Applications

Eternal Applications Eternal Applications is an after-life messaging platform that allows people to create personal messages delivered to family and friends after passing

"I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith."Paul the Apostle. Final letter. c. 67 AD...
04/27/2026

"I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith."

Paul the Apostle. Final letter. c. 67 AD.

He wrote this from a Roman prison cell, days before his ex*****on.

The same man who had spent years hunting and killing Christians. Who was struck blind on the road to Damascus and woke up a different person entirely.

He then walked over 10,000 miles across the ancient world spreading a message. Shipwrecked three times. Beaten, imprisoned, stoned and left for dead.

And at the end, in chains, awaiting ex*****on — no regret. No bitterness.

Just a man at peace with how he spent his one life.

— Paul the Apostle, c. 67 AD


Image Credit: Public Domain

"Do not go gentle into that good night."Not last words. A son's plea.Dylan Thomas wrote this poem for his dying father i...
04/24/2026

"Do not go gentle into that good night."

Not last words. A son's plea.

Dylan Thomas wrote this poem for his dying father in 1947. A man who had lived quietly, unremarkably — and was now slipping away without a fight.

Thomas couldn't bear it.

"Rage, rage against the dying of the light."
His father died anyway. Thomas himself was dead six years later at 39, drinking himself to death in New York City.

But the words survived them both.

It is now the most quoted poem in the English language on the subject of death. Read at funerals, hospitals, and bedsides around the world by people who need someone to say what they can't.

Sometimes the legacy isn't your life.

Sometimes it's what you wrote for someone else.

— Dylan Thomas, 1947


Image Credit: Public Domain

"I am about to — or I am going to — die. Either expression is used."Dominique Bouhours. French grammarian. 1702.Not a ki...
04/23/2026

"I am about to — or I am going to — die. Either expression is used."

Dominique Bouhours. French grammarian. 1702.

Not a king. Not a conqueror. Just a man who spent his entire life obsessed with the precision of the French language.

And on his deathbed, with his last breath, he corrected his own sentence.

Couldn't help himself.

There's something beautiful about that. A man so fully himself, so committed to what he loved, that death itself couldn't interrupt his craft.

Die as you lived.

— Dominique Bouhours, 1702

"I am not throwing away my shot."Alexander Hamilton wrote to a friend weeks before his duel with Aaron Burr, knowing he ...
04/22/2026

"I am not throwing away my shot."

Alexander Hamilton wrote to a friend weeks before his duel with Aaron Burr, knowing he intended to deliberately miss his shot.

The man who built America's financial system from nothing. An orphaned immigrant who became Washington's most trusted aide, founded the Coast Guard, the New York Post, and the Bank of New York.

He chose honor over survival.

Burr didn't miss.

Hamilton was 49. He had already done more than most do in a hundred years.

— Alexander Hamilton, 1804


Image Credit: Public Domain

"To my oldest friend, I leave my library. To my children, I leave my name. To the world, I leave my music."Ludwig van Be...
04/21/2026

"To my oldest friend, I leave my library. To my children, I leave my name. To the world, I leave my music."

Ludwig van Beethoven. Final will. 1827.

He had been deaf for the last 25 years of his life.

Let that sink in. The greatest composer who ever lived wrote his most celebrated works — the 9th Symphony, the Moonlight Sonata — without ever hearing a single note.

Some people create for themselves. Beethoven created for everyone who would come after him.

Two hundred years later we're still listening.

— Ludwig van Beethoven, 1827


image credit: public domain

"I am ready to die for my Lord, that in my blood the Church may obtain liberty and peace."Thomas Becket. Archbishop of C...
04/20/2026

"I am ready to die for my Lord, that in my blood the Church may obtain liberty and peace."

Thomas Becket. Archbishop of Canterbury. December 29, 1170.

Four knights sent by King Henry II broke into his cathedral and demanded he submit to the crown.

He refused. Right there at the altar.

He had been the King's best friend. His closest advisor. The man Henry personally appointed as Archbishop, expecting loyalty.

Instead Becket chose the Church over the crown, exile over compromise, and death over submission.

Henry reportedly said "Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?" — and four men took him literally.

Eight hundred years later people still make pilgrimages to Canterbury where he fell.

Friendship ends. Convictions don't.

— Thomas Becket, 1170


Image Credit: Public domain

"I have offended God and mankind. My work did not reach the quality it should have."Leonardo da Vinci. Deathbed. 1519.Th...
04/17/2026

"I have offended God and mankind. My work did not reach the quality it should have."

Leonardo da Vinci. Deathbed. 1519.

The man who painted the Mona Lisa. Who designed flying machines 400 years before the Wright Brothers. Who filled notebooks with ideas we're still catching up to.

Died convinced he had underachieved.

If Leonardo da Vinci didn't do enough, none of us ever will.

Maybe that's the point. Maybe the ones who care most never feel finished.

— Leonardo da Vinci, 1519


Image Credit: Public Domain

"I go to prepare a place for you."Harriet Tubman's last words, spoken to friends and family gathered around her deathbed...
04/16/2026

"I go to prepare a place for you."

Harriet Tubman's last words, spoken to friends and family gathered around her deathbed. 1913.

She had spent her entire life preparing places for other people.

13 missions into slave territory. Roughly 70 people freed. Never lost a single one.

Then spent decades after the Civil War fighting for women's suffrage, running a home for elderly Black Americans, and giving away almost everything she had.

At 91, she gathered the people she loved, told them she was going ahead, and died.

— Harriet Tubman, 1913


Image Credit: Public Domain

"It is finished."Three words. The last thing Jesus said before he died on the cross. John 19:30.Not "I'm done." Not defe...
04/15/2026

"It is finished."

Three words. The last thing Jesus said before he died on the cross. John 19:30.

Not "I'm done." Not defeat.

The original Greek — tetelestai — was a word stamped on paid debts in the ancient world.

It meant: account settled. nothing more owed.

The weight of those words is undeniable. A man facing the worst death the Roman Empire could devise, and his final statement wasn't a cry for help or a curse at his killers.

It was a declaration that he had done exactly what he came to do.

— Jesus of Nazareth, c. 30 AD
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"I want to live because there are a few things I still want to do."Mahatma Gandhi, in a letter written shortly before hi...
04/14/2026

"I want to live because there are a few things I still want to do."

Mahatma Gandhi, in a letter written shortly before his assassination. January 1948.

He had freed a nation through sheer moral force. No army. No weapons. Just an unshakeable belief that truth and nonviolence could outlast any empire.

And yet at 78 he still felt unfinished.

Three days later he was shot walking to evening prayer. His last words were the name of God.

The ones who change the world are never done.

— Mahatma Gandhi, 1948


By Elliott & Fry - philogalichet.fr (context), Public Domain

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