Introduction

Jimmy Swaggart (@JimmyLSwaggart) / Posts / X

**“THE LAST AMEN” Is Spreading Fast—But Is Jimmy Swaggart’s “Final Video Message” Real?**

A new headline is surging across Facebook pages and repost sites: *“THE LAST AMEN: Just Released — Jimmy Swaggart’s Final Video Message to His Followers — ‘If You’re Watching This, Then I’ve Already Gone To…’”* It’s the kind of line designed to stop a reader cold—half farewell, half confession, and wrapped in the promise of something “just released.”

But when a story arrives with maximum emotion and minimum sourcing, it deserves a careful look.

First, the confirmed backdrop: Jimmy Swaggart—the Louisiana-based televangelist who built a massive Pentecostal ministry and later continued preaching to a devoted audience—died in Baton Rouge on **July 1, 2025**, at age 90. Major outlets reported his passing and noted that his ministry announced the news publicly.

Now, about the “final video message.”

What’s circulating most widely appears to originate from **viral social posts**—particularly Facebook pages—using a cliffhanger quote and encouraging clicks to “learn more.”  Some repost-style sites repeat the same dramatic framing without offering basics that legitimate reporting would normally include: a full, watchable video hosted on an official channel; the date it was recorded; who released it; and a verifiable transcript.

That doesn’t automatically mean a farewell video *cannot* exist—public figures often record messages for their communities. But it *does* mean the specific “Just Released / If you’re watching this…” narrative should be treated as **unverified** until it can be tied to a traceable, primary source.

If a genuine final message is real, you’d typically expect it to appear through recognizable, accountable outlets: the ministry’s official platforms, a full-length upload on a known channel, or coverage from reputable news organizations with clear attribution. We do see official-style ministry updates and memorial-related videos online—yet that is not the same thing as confirming the exact viral “final message” clip and quote now being promoted.

For readers—especially those who followed Swaggart for decades—the best approach is simple: **don’t share the claim because it sounds moving; share it because it’s real.** Look for the original upload, confirm who posted it, and check whether credible reporting corroborates the content and context.

In an age where grief can be turned into clickbait overnight, discernment isn’t cynicism—it’s respect.

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