When Jonathan Pokluda was preparing to speak at a college worship gathering at Auburn University in the fall of 2023, the Waco, Texas, pastor was expecting a respectable crowd: maybe 500 students. After all, it was smack in the middle of football season in Alabama, and the event had only been in the works six weeks.
In fact, Pokluda had initially declined on such short notice. Yet a small but burgeoning group of college coeds and a prayer-warring Bible study mentor named Tonya Prewett, wife of Auburn assistant basketball coach Chad Prewett, had been pleading with God to move on their campus.
Pokluda, who was a friend of Prewett’s son-in-law, was stunned when he walked into Neville Arena that evening. Instead of 500, some 5,000 students were waiting to hear Passion Music, Bible teacher Jennie Allen, and Pokluda.
“There was just this palpable hunger and thirst for Christ and the sense that it was the prayers of other people that I was walking into, which was really humbling,” Pokluda recalled.
He preached a message from 1 Thessalonians 4 about sexual bondage and the freedom that Christ offers. After Pokluda finished and Allen had spoken, Allen wrapped up the meeting by reading text messages from students who had made decisions, including a student who wanted to be baptized right then.
“Is there water nearby?” Pokluda recalled Allen asking.
Within minutes, several thousand students were leaving the arena and walking a few blocks to a nearby landmark, the Red Barn, which sits adjacent to a pond.
“We ended up baptizing 350 college students,” Pokluda said. “And it wasn’t a line-up and dunk. Some of them were 20-minute Gospel conversations. … All of us knew at the end of that night that a movement had started.”
University of Georgia. Photo: Courtesy of UNITE US