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2002 Frontline Reports


Churches, members mobilize to help people with disease (December 30, 2001)

Pilot shows plane, shares the Lord (December 23, 2001)

SonBeams provides social outlet, spiritual training (December 16, 2001)

Veterans Day (November 11, 2001)

Chi Alpha chapter reaches the world (September 30, 2001)

Church's Independence Day celebration draws more than 50,000 (September 16, 2001)

A passion for missions (September 9, 2001)

Lifestyle evangelism influences hedonistic neighborhood (August 26, 2001)

Church takes Christ to inner-city needy (August 12, 2001)

Nontraditional services draw worshippers (July 22, 2001)

Dirt floors and horses: Welcome to Cowboy Church (July 13, 2001)

Northland Cathedral members know God's timing is best (June 24, 2001)

Youth, children's outreaches spur church growth (June 17, 2001)

Revival transforms blighted neighborhood (June 10, 2001)

Vacant mall becomes home for growing church plant (May 20, 2001)

Single moms find strength to build strong families (May 13, 2001)

Spiritual freedom is hallmark of three-decade ministry (April 29, 2001)

Modern hangout serves as haven for teens (April 22, 2001)

Merged congregation challenges stereotypes (April 8, 2001)

Hell's Alternative: The Reality (March 25, 2001)

Vietnamese congregation moves forward (March 18, 2001)

Rejoicing in the rubble (February 25, 2001)

Faith Health Clinic treats the whole person (February 18, 2001)

Former prostitute befriends box-dwellers (Feb. 11, 2001)

Crisis Pregnancy Outreach saving lives, helping mothers (January 21, 2001)

Ministering at the Gates of Hell (January 14, 2001)


2000 Frontline Reports

A passion for missions

(September 9, 2001)

It’s a morning chapel service at Latin American Bible Institute in La Puente, Calif., but it feels like a political convention.

"Our Fellowship is growing in its Spanish-speaking numbers," says President Isaac Canales. "My goal is to restore the vision and sense of mission that the school had under its founding fathers and mothers back in 1926."

Sixty or so students are cheering and applauding their candidates for student government posts in the chapel building on the corner of the beautiful LABI campus. The student body president – just elected by a show of hands while he and other candidates waited outside – makes a short speech.

"Thanks for your confidence," he says in Spanish. "I know the other candidates would have done a great job, too."

When the positions have been filled, and the students have prayed for the newly elected officers, everyone pours out of the back door and heads to classrooms nestled among palm, orange and eucalyptus trees on the newly renovated campus. The mild climate, resident songbirds and greenery give the "new" LABI an edenic quality that goes along with President Isaac Canales’ mission to transform the institute into a "jewel" among Assemblies of God Bible institutes.

"Our Fellowship is growing in its Spanish-speaking numbers," says Canales. "My goal is to restore the vision and sense of mission that the school had under its founding fathers and mothers back in 1926. We provide both English-speaking and Spanish-speaking leadership for churches around the world." Instructing students in both languages is one of the strengths of the school.

In a psychology class taught (in Spanish) by Professor Anna Perez, 12 students, six men and six women, are discussing essays they’ve written. Jaime Acevedo, 21, who came here from El Salvador, asks a question about demons.

"It’s best to fast and pray before praying that a demonized person be delivered," says Perez. "Your own life has to be ready." The school is decidedly Pentecostal.

The students then give short presentations, taking the podium and briefly explaining a psychological concept, then discussing it.

The school draws from an impressive range of western states and foreign countries. In this class alone are students from Argentina, Mexico, Guatemala and Peru. Together, the diverse student body is pursuing an education that will equip them for ministerial work in the United States or in their home countries.

At noon the cafeteria fills up quickly with students and lively conversation. Administrators eat alongside students at tables decorated with flower centerpieces.

When they finish their meatloaf and cherry pie students head to the dorms to study and socialize. Laptops, music and desks piled with textbooks give the men’s dorm its motif. Jaime Acevedo has returned from lunch and will soon start his psychology homework, which he says is substantial.

"I’ve been here a year and a half pursuing ministerial studies, and I love it," he says. "The professors have a good relationship with the students. I have learned to depend on God and have more faith. After I graduate I want to go back to El Salvador and help my father at the [5,000-member] church he pastors."

There are 176 students living on campus, and another 1,600 receive pre-college-level training through extension courses or through the Internet. Canales has assembled a faculty that includes professors from nearby Fuller Theological Seminary, USC, UCLA, Azusa Pacific, Claremont and others.

Canales was educated at Vanguard University and Harvard and taught at Fuller for 20 years before accepting this position. His father was the first person to graduate from LABI under the GI bill and Canales remembers running around the LABI campus as a boy.

Now he passes on a passion for missions and his legacy in Pentecost.

"The pastors we train send missionaries from their churches," he says. "That is foundational to who we are. We want to attract students who have a definite call from God and are excited about being a pastor, or going into the marketplace with a background in ethics and faith, or going on to seminary with a strong emphasis in urban multi-cultural study."

Canales and the students and staff at LABI are enthusiastic about the direction the school is taking and hope to achieve candidate status for accreditation in the next three to five years. This could make it the first Hispanic-run and Hispanic-owned Christian college in America to do so.

"It’s time to rebuild with the Spanish joy and the excitement of Kingdom life, as our Lord tarries," Canales says. "This is the new LABI, the Moody of the West."

— Joel Kilpatrick

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