were stoned out of their minds. Some of these people would soon become church leaders and even pastors.
The wild congregation met in a 1500 sq. ft. store-front property next to a restaurant. Everything was cool until revival broke out. The loud, pentecostal evening service took place at the same time as dinner hour. Banging drums competed with the restaurant owner’s hammering fists on the wall. “Hallelujahs” were met with, “Go to hell!”
Despite much opposition, (least being the restaurant) God moved mightily in many people’s lives. Addictions were broken, diseases were healed, and poverty was becoming a thing of the past for many. People were actually experiencing the inside-out change described in the Bible. It wasn’t long before they laid hands on a new generation of leaders and began to plant new churches.
Raul Barajas, a young man from Tijuana, Mexico, felt called to leave his prosperity in the States and return to the very city he left in order plant Templo de Alabanza. This decision wasn’t exactly favoured by