The fifth service of the XII Central American and Caribbean Congress, held in Panama, unfolded as a clear declaration of faith that crossed generational limits and geographic borders. The Panama Convention Center, with more than 12,000 people and delegations from all five continents, became an epicenter of Pentecostal glory. After the devotional came one of the congress's most outstanding moments: the participation of children. Through a display of flags and dramatizations led by the children's team, it was emphasized that children are not only the future, but active participants in God's move in the present. Drawing on biblical figures such as Samuel, David, and Esther, speakers highlighted that the success of this rising generation is not forged in school classrooms, but on the knees of parents who cultivate genuine faith and keep the family altar burning every night.
The institutional dimension of the service deepened with victory reports from distant lands. Pastor Rildo Cueto recounted progress in Japan, where the Gospel is reaching Japanese youth and opening new white fields in a diametrically opposed culture. The delegation from India, led by Pastor Sam Jacob and National Secretary Eappen Ittyl Pulickal, testified to the exponential growth of the work in the north of the country —a region of high complexity where more than 300 churches and 500 missionaries already operate—. This missionary segment made clear that the Work is not a human organization, but a design from heaven that uses willing vessels to conquer "spiritual mountains" through the power of the Holy Spirit, and reaffirmed that the family motto is a prophecy of blessing that must be guarded with the fear of God. In Panama, an army of children, youth, and adults is rising who, under the banner of sound doctrine, are ready to inherit the nations and proclaim that Christ is the only King of Kings.