What is the plot?

Cal Quinn, the pastor and public face of the U Star megachurch, announces that the church will expand into the United States, and this decision immediately shocks the family around him because it raises the stakes for the business, the ministry, and the private tensions inside the Quinn household.

As the expansion plan begins to move forward, the series tracks the pressure it puts on Cal's marriage to Abi, who is not merely a supportive spouse but a central operator in the church's machinery and a key part of the family's power structure. The church's outward image of confidence starts to collide with private instability, and the family's hidden fractures become harder to contain.

The situation turns darker when a member of the congregation dies by suicide, an event that throws the church into crisis and forces everyone to confront the emotional and reputational damage caused by the culture around U Star. Abi stands by Cal publicly in the aftermath, even as the death exposes fault lines that had been concealed beneath the church's polished surface.

As the fallout continues, more family secrets emerge, and the series broadens from a story about expansion into one about control, loyalty, and the cost of sustaining the Quinns' version of faith and success. The pressure inside the family grows as the church's mission becomes increasingly entangled with personal ambition and unresolved past behavior.

By the finale, the show makes clear that Cal and Abi's partnership remains the engine of the church's operation, even if it is built on strain and compromise. Cal openly admits that he loves Abi and that she is his "right hand," and Abi accepts that their arrangement is what keeps the whole enterprise functioning.

What is the ending?

Prosper's finale does not give neat closure: it ends with more revelations and unfinished subplots rather than a fully resolved ending. In simple terms, the Quinn family and their megachurch are left under strain, with ambition and faith still colliding as the story closes.

Scene by scene, the ending is best described as a buildup of unresolved pressure rather than a clean finish. Cal Quinn, the pastor at the center of the U Star megachurch, has already set the central conflict in motion by announcing an expansion into the United States, which unsettles his family and pushes the church into crisis. After a congregation member's suicide, Abi stands by Cal while other family secrets begin to surface, and the finale continues in that same unsettled state rather than resolving those tensions. The available finale coverage says the episode leaves "no closure," and instead introduces further revelations and hanging subplots, so the ending remains open-ended rather than conclusive.

The fate of the main characters at the end is therefore not presented as a completed outcome in the available sources. Cal remains the figure driving the church's expansion and the family conflict, Abi remains aligned with him despite the turmoil, and the broader Quinn family is left divided by secrets, ambition, and the consequences of the church's direction. The church itself is also not shown as restored or settled; the final state is one of continued instability and unresolved strain.

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no reliable source in the results confirming a post-credit scene in Prosper, and the available series pages and trailers do not mention one.

If you want the most careful answer: based on the sources provided, there is no documented post-credit scene to describe. The season is presented as a straight drama series about the Quinn family's megachurch empire and its looming U.S. expansion, but none of the supplied materials note any end-credits stinger or bonus scene.

What happens to Cal Quinn’s plan to expand the U Star megachurch into the United States?

This is one of the most commonly asked plot-specific questions because the series centers on Cal Quinn's announcement that he wants to take U Star into the US, a move that shocks his family and destabilizes the church. The question usually arises from viewers wanting to know how that expansion plan affects the Quinn family's power dynamics, and how far Cal pushes it after the initial announcement.

What role does Abi Quinn play after the congregation member dies by suicide?

Viewers frequently ask about Abi Quinn because the series ties her response directly to the crisis that follows the congregation member's suicide. The key story question is how Abi reacts to Cal's leadership in the aftermath, especially since she is described as standing by him while other family secrets surface.

Who are the Quinn family members in Prosper, and how are they connected to the megachurch?

People often ask this because the story revolves around the wealthy Quinn family running the U Star megachurch, and the family structure is central to the drama. The most directly identified family members in the available summaries are Cal Quinn and his wife Abi, with the broader Quinn family occupying the church's inner sanctum.

What family secrets are revealed in Prosper, and which characters are affected by them?

This is a common plot question because the series explicitly says that 'other family secrets emerge' after the suicide, suggesting hidden tensions within the Quinn household and the church leadership. Viewers usually want to know which secrets are tied to Cal, Abi, and the wider family, and how those revelations strain their relationships.

Why does Cal Quinn’s announcement surprise his family so much?

This question comes up because the series frames Cal's US expansion plan as a bold move that catches the family off guard. People ask it to understand not just the announcement itself, but why it creates such an immediate rupture inside a family that already controls a megachurch and appears to be managing private and institutional pressures at the same time.

Is this family friendly?

No--Prosper is not especially family friendly for young children. Stan lists it as M with mature themes, drug use, a sex scene, and coarse language, so it is better suited to older teens or adults.

Potentially upsetting or objectionable elements for children or sensitive viewers include: - Drug use - Sex scene - Coarse language - Mature themes involving family conflict, ambition, and pressure within a megachurch setting - A storyline involving a congregation member's suicide, which may be distressing for some viewers - General dysfunctional family conflict and emotionally tense scenes in a high-pressure religious environment

If you want, I can also give a spoiler-free "how intense is it?" rating for violence, language, and sexual content separately.