Country of God

BRASÍLIA, Brazil — Pastor Hadman Daniel stands on the altar in Novo Dia in Brasília, a church of the Assembly of God, the most popular denomination among Brazil's 42 million evangelical Christians. In the pews, about 3,000 people chant and sing as the pastor invokes them to spread the gospel "to the ends of the Earth, from the Amazon to the world's five continents." Daniel also has another prayer: for Marina Silva, the Socialist Party's candidate in the Oct. 5 presidential election, and a member of Novo Dia, who has a chance to become the country's first evangelical Christian president.
Country of God by Thavam

BRASÍLIA, Brazil — Pastor Hadman Daniel stands on the altar in Novo Dia in Brasília, a church of the Assembly of God, the most popular denomination among Brazil's 42 million evangelical Christians. In the pews, about 3,000 people chant and sing as the pastor invokes them to spread the gospel "to the ends of the Earth, from the Amazon to the world's five continents." Daniel also has another prayer: for Marina Silva, the Socialist Party's candidate in the Oct. 5 presidential election, and a member of Novo Dia, who has a chance to become the country's first evangelical Christian president.Country of God by Thavam