Discover the untold story of Jennie Evans Moore Seymour, the overlooked Black woman who sparked the Azusa Street Revival by …

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  1. Jennie Evans Moore was born to former slaves in post-Civil War Texas, worked as a cook on the same street where revival would break out, spent years in hidden prayer without breakthrough, then on April 9, 1906 shattered like a vessel and erupted in six languages she'd never studied before walking to a piano she'd never touched and playing supernatural harmonies for the rest of her life—then co-led the Azusa Street mission as a board member and city evangelist while standing beside Seymour through racist newspaper attacks and vicious opposition, watched Clara Lum steal 50,000 subscriber addresses in one bitter afternoon and said nothing, buried her husband in 1922 with the building half-empty and every excuse to walk away, stepped into the pulpit anyway as pastor for fourteen more years, lost the building, moved services to her living room on Bonnie Brae Street where it all began, and kept the altar fires burning until her last breath in 1936 while the movement that her surrender ignited grew to 600 million people worldwide. If you're ready to stop chasing platforms and start guarding fires, choosing faithfulness over fame while finishing what God started in you even when the crowds are gone and the building is lost, comment: I WILL FINISH WHAT GOD STARTS IN ME and let us know WHO YOU WOULD LIKE US TO COVER NEXT
    NEXT VIDEO: Discover Rachel Sizelove — the woman who preached from a covered wagon while crowds pelted her with rotten eggs, watched her entire family die, and still interceded with such power that it literally changed atmospheric conditions over cities.
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