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The Post Credits Scene (Pentecost 2025)

An episode of the Asbury Church podcast, hosted by Senior Pastor Andrew Forrest, titled "The Post Credits Scene (Pentecost 2025)" was published on June 8, 2025 and runs 32 minutes.

June 8, 2025 ·32m · Asbury Church

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I believe that the Gospel of John is one of the greatest works of art in all human history. Its first twenty chapters are a masterpiece. And the conclusion that John gives us at the end of chapter twenty—after the resurrection, the greatest thing that has ever happened—after Jesus calls Mary by name, and she turns and knows—after Jesus breathes the Holy Spirit on the disciples—after Jesus shows Thomas His scarred hands and side—the conclusion that John gives us after all of that is just perfect:30 Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; 31 but these are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name [John 20:30–31].The screen finally fades fully to black. We finally exhale, deeply moved. We shift in our seats, slowly stand and stretch, and silently begin to make our way out of the theater. We don’t want to say anything and ruin the moment, so we walk single file down the stairs at the end of the row. The credits begin to roll.And then, when we least expect it, the screen lights up again and the story continues!John chapter 20 seems to end on the perfect note, but John is a peerless artist and what happens next is beyond perfection.There is another chapter—an epilogue.With John 20:30–31, nothing more needs to be said about Jesus. His story is complete, and we have all we need to know to believe in Him.But John knows there is more to be said about the church and its mission, and that is the purpose of his beautiful epilogue in chapter 21.

I believe that the Gospel of John is one of the greatest works of art in all human history. Its first twenty chapters are a masterpiece. And the conclusion that John gives us at the end of chapter twenty—after the resurrection, the greatest thing that has ever happened—after Jesus calls Mary by name, and she turns and knows—after Jesus breathes the Holy Spirit on the disciples—after Jesus shows Thomas His scarred hands and side—the conclusion that John gives us after all of that is just perfect:


30 Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; 31 but these are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name [John 20:30–31].


The screen finally fades fully to black. We finally exhale, deeply moved. We shift in our seats, slowly stand and stretch, and silently begin to make our way out of the theater. We don’t want to say anything and ruin the moment, so we walk single file down the stairs at the end of the row. The credits begin to roll.


And then, when we least expect it, the screen lights up again and the story continues!


John chapter 20 seems to end on the perfect note, but John is a peerless artist and what happens next is beyond perfection.


There is another chapter—an epilogue.


With John 20:30–31, nothing more needs to be said about Jesus. His story is complete, and we have all we need to know to believe in Him.


But John knows there is more to be said about the church and its mission, and that is the purpose of his beautiful epilogue in chapter 21.

Twenty Years on Horseback; or, Itinerating in West Virginia William Marion Weekley http://www.adfreebooks.com - 500+ audiobooks, all ad freeWilliam Weekley was graduate of Asbury Seminary, Wilmore, Kentucky, and a bishop in the Church of the United Brethren in Christ. From the author’s preface, “It was not my purpose, in the preparation of this little volume, to make it an autobiography, but rather a narration of incidents connected with the twenty years of humble service which I tried to render the United Brethren Church among the mountains of West Virginia. These incidents present an all-round view, in outline, of the real life and labors of the itinerant preacher, a third of a century ago, in an isolated section, where the most simple and primitive customs prevailed.” Asbury UMC mrawle2000 Podcast by mrawle2000 My Community's Health Starts With Me My Community's Health Starts With Me This is a podcast dedicated to engaging and educating the community about topics surrounding community health and sexual health care. Our community's health starts with us. Brought to you by the Prevention Resource Network located in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Matthew Perry - Gone 2 Soon Inception Point Ai Matthew Langford Perry, born on August 19, 1969, in Williamstown, Massachusetts, was a revered actor known for his humor and versatility across both the small and big screens. His parents, Suzanne Marie Morrison, a Canadian journalist, and John Bennett Perry, an American actor, separated when he was one year old. Perry was primarily raised by his mother in Ottawa, Ontario, although he also briefly lived in Toronto and Montreal. He attended Rockcliffe Park Public School and Ashbury College, a boarding school in Ottawa​1​.From a young age, Perry showed signs of rebellion; by 10, he was misbehaving, and by 14, he had begun drinking alcohol. Initially, he pursued tennis with vigor, becoming a top-ranked junior player in Canada. However, at 15, he moved to Los Angeles to live with his father, where the competition in tennis was stiffer. It was also at this age that he began studying acting at
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