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{{Infobox Christian denomination
| name = Iglesia del Dios Vivo, Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo
| image = {{GLNF|Logo of La Luz del Mundo Church.png}}
| caption = Logo of La Luz del Mundo Church
| imagealttext = Logo of La Luz del Mundo Church
| main_classification = [[Restorationism (Christian primitivism)|Restorationist<br />(Christian primitivism)]]{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|pp=147-162}}{{sfn|Biglieri|2000|p=407}}
| orientation = [[Charismatic movement|Charismatic]]{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|pp=147-162}}
| structure = Hierarchical
| director = Naasón Joaquín García<ref>{{cite news |last=García |first=Omar |date=14 December 2014 |title=Naasón Joaquín García relevará a su padre en la Luz del Mundo |trans-title=Naasón Joaquín García will relieve his father in La Luz del Mundo |url=http://www.informador.com.mx/jalisco/2014/565278/6/naason-joaquin-garcia-relevara-a-su-padre-en-la-luz-del-mundo.htm |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Informador |location=Guadalajara |accessdate=17 December 2014}}</ref>
| founder = Aarón (born Eusebio) Joaquín González
| founded_date = 1926<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/2007/historia.html |title=Historia |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=25 December 2012}}</ref><ref name="fundacion">{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/2007/fundacion.html |title=Fundación |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=25 December 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref>
| founded_place = [[Guadalajara]], [[Mexico]]
| area = 44 countries<ref name="lldm">{{cite web |url=http://lldm.org/2013/?p=930 |title=Ceremonia de Bienvenida |date=9 August 2013 |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=28 August 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref> <small>{{As of|2013|August|lc=y}}</small>
| separations = Iglesia del Dios Vivo, Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, El Buen Pastor
| congregations = 2,869<ref name="lldm" /> <small>{{As of|2013|August|lc=y}}</small>
| members = Between 1 and 5 million. See [[La Luz del Mundo#Statistics|Statistics]]
| ministers = 620 in Mexico<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.asociacionesreligiosas.gob.mx//work/models/AsociacionesReligiosas/pdf/Numeralia/MC_por_tradicion.pdf |title=Ministros de Culto |author=Dirección General de Asociaciones Religiosas |date=12 December 2014 |publisher=Secretaría de Gobernación de México |accessdate=1 January 2015}}</ref>
| website = {{URL|http://www.lldm.org}}
| other_names = '''Spanish:''' La Luz del Mundo; LLDM; LDM; Iglesia La Luz del Mundo; ILLM
'''English:''' La Luz del Mundo Church; Church of the Living God, Column and Ground of the Truth, The Light of the World; The Light of the World Church
| footnotes =Local {{IPA-es|i´ɣlesja ðel djoz ´biβo, ko´lumna j a´poʝo ðe la βeɾ´ðað, la luz del ´mundo}}
}}

The '''''Iglesia del Dios Vivo, Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo''''', (English: "Church of the Living God, Column and Ground of the Truth, The Light of the World"){{mdash}}simply referred to as '''La Luz del Mundo'''{{mdash}}is a [[Christian denomination]] with international headquarters in [[Guadalajara, Jalisco]], Mexico. La Luz del Mundo is centered on three [[charismatic movement|charismatic]] leaders, founder Aarón Joaquín González (1898-1964), Samuel Joaquín Flores(1937-2014), and Naasón Joaquín García (1969-). These men are regarded by the Church as living [[Apostle (Christian)|apostles]] of God.

The Church had its restoration in 1926 just as Mexico plunged into a [[Cristero War|violent struggle]] between the anti-clerical government and Catholic rebels. The conflict centered in the west-central states like Jalisco, where González focused his missionary efforts. Given the environment of the time, La Luz del Mundo remained a small missionary endeavor until 1934 when it built its first temple. Thereafter the Church continued to grow and expand, interrupted only by an internal schism in 1942. After the death of González in 1964, his son became the Church's new leader and worked to expand the Church internationally. The Church is now present in 44 countries and has between 1 and 5 million adherents worldwide.

La Luz del Mundo describes itself as the restoration of [[Restorationism|primitive Christianity]]. The Church does not use [[Christian cross|crosses]] or images in its worship services and its members do not observe [[Christmas]] or [[Holy Week]]. Female members follow a dress code that includes the wearing of long skirts and head coverings during religious services. The Church's hierarchy allows only men to hold leadership positions in the religious arena, and it is headed by Flores, who is referred to by believers as the Apostle of [[Jesus|Jesus Christ]] and the [[Servant of God]].

==Name==
The name of the church is derived from two biblical verses{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=77}} Matthew 5:14 - "You are the light of the world"<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+5%3A14&version=NIV |title=Matthew 5:14 NIV |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date= |website=Bible Gateway |publisher=Biblica, Inc. |accessdate=27 December 2014}}</ref> and 1 Timothy 3:15 - "you will know how people ought to conduct themselves in God's household, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Timothy+3%3A15&version=NIV |title=1 Timothy 3:15 NIV |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date= |website=Bible Gateway |publisher=Biblica, Inc. |accessdate=27 December 2014}}</ref>

==History==
===Historical background===
The founder of the Church, Jesus Christ, chose Eusebio Joaquín González, who was born on August 14, 1896 in [[Colotlán]], Jalisco. At a young age, he joined the [[Constitutional Army]] during the [[Mexican Revolution]].{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=71}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldmusa.org/imagess/2008/HP/2008-11-14_Homenaje.html |title=Homenaje. Historia Militar: Mtro. Aarón Joaquín González. 90 Años de haber alcanzado el grado de subteniente de infantería |last=Pineda |first=Israel |date=14 November 2008 |website=La Luz del Mundo USA |accessdate=20 July 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref> While he was on leave in 1920, he met Elisa Flores, whom he later married.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=22}} While stationed in the state of [[Coahuila]] in 1926, he came into contact with Saulo and Silas, two ascetic preachers from the Iglesia Cristiana Espiritual. Their teachings forbade their followers to keep good hygiene and wear regular clothes.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=71}} After being baptized by the two itinerant preachers, González [[desertion|resigned]] from the army, and along with his wife worked as servant for the preachers.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=149}}

During the 1920s, Mexico underwent a period of instability under the [[Plutarco Elías Calles]] administration that was seeking to limit the influence of the [[Catholic Church]] to modernize and centralize the state within the religious sphere of Mexican society. To protest Elías Calles' policies, the Catholic Church suspended all services, bringing about an uprising in Mexico. This uprising, or [[Cristero War]], lasted from 1926 to 1929 and reemerged in the 1930s.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=148}} On April 6, 1926 González had a [[Vision (spirituality)|vision]] in which God changed his name from Eusebio to Aarón and was later told to leave [[Monterrey]] where he and his wife served Saulo and Silas.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=73}} On his journey, he preached near the entrances of Catholic churches{{mdash}}which contributed to the persecution he faced{{mdash}}until arriving at Guadalajara in December 12, 1926.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=149}} The Cristero Wars impacted both Catholic and non-Catholic congregations and preachers, especially evangelical movements. Small movements were attacked by the government and the Cristeros, which provided for a hostile environment for González's work.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|pp=73-74}}
===Ministry of Aarón Joaquín González (1926-1964)===
====Early years====
Working as a shoe vendor, González formed a group of ten worshipers who met at his wife's apartment.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=28}} He began constructing the Church's hierarchy by instituting the first two deacons, Elisa Flores and Francisca Cuevas.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=35}} Later he charged the first minister to oversee 14 congregations in [[Ameca, Jalisco]].{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=36-37}} During these early years (late 1920s), González traveled to the states of [[Michoacán]], [[Nayarit]] and [[Sinaloa]] to preach.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=73}} In 1931, the first ''Santa Cena'' ([[Last Supper|Holy Supper]]) was held to commemorate the [[crucifixion of Jesus]].{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=34}} The Church met in rural areas, fearing complaints from Catholic neighbors.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=37}} Immigrants from the countryside added a significant amount of members to the Church.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=37}}

In 1934, a temple was built in Sector Libertad of Guadaljara's urban zone and members were encouraged to buy homes in the same neighborhood thereby establishing a community.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=38}} The temple was registered as ''Iglesia Cristiana Espiritual'' (Spiritual Christian Church) but González claimed to have received God's word in the dedication of the temple, saying that it was "Light of the world" and that they were the ''Iglesia del Dios Vivo, Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad'' (Church of the Living God, Column and Ground of the Truth).{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=38}} The Church used the latter name to identify itself.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=38}} In 1939, it moved to a new meeting place at 12 de Octubre street in San Antonio in southeast Guadalajara, forming its second small community which was populated mainly by its members.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=39-40}} This community was an attempt to escape the hostile environment,{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=41}} not to create an [[Egalitarianism|egalitarian]] society.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=42}}

In 1938 González returned to Monterrey to preach to his former associates. There he learned that he had been baptized using the [[Trinitarian formula]] and not in the [[Jesus' Name doctrine|name of Jesus Christ]] as he preached.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=38}} His re-baptism in the name of Jesus Christ by his collaborator Lino Figueroa marked González's separation from the rest of the Pentecostal community.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=38}}

====Schism of 1942====
In 1942, in its most significant [[Schism (religion)|schism]], at least 250 members left the Church.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=80}} Tensions began to build after González's birthday, when the congregation gave him gifts of flowers and sang hymns celebrating his birthday.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=43}} This celebration generated a heated debate that culminated with the defection of several church members, including some pastors.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=43}} Anthropologist Renée de la Torre described this schism as a power struggle in which González was accused of having enriched himself at the expense of the faithful.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=80}} Church dissidents took to ''[[El Occidental]]'' to accuse members of La Luz del Mundo of committing immoralities with young women. Some of the accusations were aimed to close down a temple that LLDM used with government permission.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=42-45}} Members of La Luz del Mundo attribute this episode to the envy and ambition of the dissidents, who formed their own group called ''El Buen Pastor'' ([[Good Shepherd|The Good Shepherd]]) under the leadership of José María González,{{sfn|Gill|1994|p=277}} with doctrines and practices similar to those of La Luz del Mundo.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=80}} The leader is considered a prophet of God.{{sfn|Gill|1994|p=277}} As of 2010, El Buen Pastor Church has a membership of 17,700 in Mexico.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-first=Todd M. |editor1-last=Johnson |editor2-first=Brian J. |editor2-last=Grim |title=World Christian Database |accessdate= |year=2007 |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden/Boston |isbn= |page= |url=http://worldchristiandatabase.org/wcd/search/results.asp?SearchCriteria=Iglesia+El+Buen+Pastor}}</ref>

Among those who [[defection|defected]] to El Buen Pastor Church was Lino Figueroa, the pastor who had re-baptized González in 1938. González had a vision in July 1943 where the baptism by Figueroa was invalidated and he was ordered to re-baptize himself invoking Jesus' name.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=42–44}} The whole congregation was re-baptized as well, as now González was the source of baptismal legitimacy and authenticity.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=44}} With all those who had challenged him gone, González was able to consolidate leadership of the Church.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=43}}

With the growth of the Church in the city, issues of safety developed in the 12 de Octubre street meeting place in the late 1940s and early 1950s. In 1952, González purchased a plot of land outside the city and called it ''Hermosa Provincia'' (Beautiful Province).{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=46–47}}

====Hermosa Provincia====
In 1952, González purchased land on the outskirts of Guadalajara with the intent of forming a small community made up exclusively by members of LLDM.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=81}} The land was then sold at reduced prices to church members. The community included most necessities; services provided in Hermosa Provincia included health, education, and other urban services, which were provided in full after six years partly with help that the Church received from municipal and non-municipal authorities.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=149}} This dependency upon outside assistance to obtain public services ended by 1959 when residents formed the Association of Colonists of Hermosa Provincia, which was used to directly petition the government.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=50-51}} Hermosa Provincia received a white flag from the city for being the only neighborhood in the city that has eliminated illiteracy by the early 1970s.{{sfn|Greenway|1973|p=118}} González started missionary efforts in Central America and by the early 1960s, La Luz del Mundo had 64 congregations and 35 missions.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=150}} By 1964, after his death, the Church had between 20,000 and 30,000 members spread through five countries, including Mexico.{{sfn|Joaquín|2004|p=104}}{{sfn|Greenway|1973|p=121}} The neighborhood became a standard model for the Church which has replicated it in many cities in Mexico and other countries.{{sfn|Nutini|2000|p=47}}

===Ministry of Samuel Joaquin Flores (1964-2014)===
Samuel Joaquín Flores was born on February 14, 1937 and became the leader of the Church by the age of 27 after the death of González. He continued his father's desire for international expansion by traveling outside of Mexico extensively.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=151}} He first visited members of the Church in the Mexican state of [[Michoacán]] in August 1964 and later that year he went to [[Los Angeles]] on a missionary trip. By 1970, the Church had expanded to Costa Rica, Colombia, and Guatemala. The first small temple in the Hermosa Provincia was demolished and replaced by a larger one in 1967.{{sfn|Joaquín|2004|p=61,67}} With Flores' work, La Luz del Mundo became integrated into Guadalajara and the Church replicated the model of Hermosa Provincia in many cities in Mexico and abroad. By 1972, there were approximately 72,000 members of the Church, which increased to 1.5 million by 1986 and to 4 million by 1993. Anthropologist Patricia Fortuny says that the Church's growth can be attributed to several factors, including its social benefits, which "improves the living conditions of believers."{{sfn|Fortuny|1996|pp=33–37}} Flores oversaw the construction of schools, hospitals and other social services produced by the Church.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=87}} It also expanded to countries including the UK, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Ethiopia and Israel between 1990 and 2010.{{sfn|Joaquín|2004|p=71}} After fifty years at the head of La Luz del Mundo church, Flores died in his home on December 8, 2014.<ref>{{cite press release |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Boletín informativo: Duerme en los brazos de Cristo el Apóstol Samuel Joaquín Flores |url=http://lldm.org/2013/?p=1833 |location=Guadalajara, Jalisco |publisher=Iglesia La Luz del Mundo A.R. |date=8 December 2014 |accessdate=2014-12-31 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

===Ministry of Naasón Joaquín García (2014-Present)===
On December 14, 2014 Naasón Joaquín García, the fifth born of the Joaquin family, became the spiritual leader and international director of La Luz del Mundo church.<ref>{{cite news |last=García |first=Omar |date=14 December 2014 |title=Naasón Joaquín García relevará a su padre en la Luz del Mundo |url=http://www.informador.com.mx/jalisco/2014/565278/6/naason-joaquin-garcia-relevara-a-su-padre-en-la-luz-del-mundo.htm |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Informador |location=Guadalajara |accessdate=17 December 2014}}</ref> García was born on May 7, 1969 and previously served as minister in [[San Diego]], California.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Eligen a director internacional de La Luz del Mundo |url=http://www.cronicajalisco.com/notas/2014/32528.html |newspaper=La Crónica de Hoy |location=Jalisco |date=14 December 2014 |accessdate=31 December 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Torres |first=Raúl |date=17 December 2014 |title=Luz del Mundo: un líder del que poco se conoce |url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/estados/2014/impreso/luz-del-mundo-un-lider-del-que-poco-se-conoce-97169.html |newspaper=El Universal |location=Mexico City |accessdate=31 December 2014}}</ref>

==Beliefs and practices==

===Worship===
During La Luz del Mundo's religious services, male and female members are separated during worship; from the preacher's perspective, women sit on the left side of the temple and men on the right.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|p=9}}<ref>{{cite news |title=Hallelujah: Spirit and emotion run high at The Light of the World Church |first=Jessica |last=Ravitz |url=http://www.sltrib.com/ci_10073039 |newspaper=The Salt Lake Tribune |date=2 August 2008 |accessdate=12 January 2013}}</ref> The Church does not use musical instruments during its services.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=244}} There is no [[Worship dance|dancing]] or clapping,{{sfn|Ochoa Bohórquez|2011|pp=122}} and women cover their heads with a [[Christian headcovering|veil]] during worship services.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=De la Torre |first1=Renée |last2=Fortuny |first2=Patricia |year=1991 |title=La mujer en "la luz del mundo" Participación y representación simbólica |journal=Estudios sobre las culturas contemporáneas |volume=IV |issue=12 |pages=137–138 |publisher=Universidad de Colima |url=http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=31641207 |issn=1405-2210 |oclc=819025679 |language=Spanish}}</ref> Hymns are sung [[a cappella]];<ref name="Mask/BG">{{cite news |title=Congregation blossoms: Church catering to Hispanic community grows in BG |first=Jenna |last=Mink |url=http://www.bgdailynews.com/features/congregation-blossoms/article_187fc414-cc98-5695-a881-8839c0021d0e.html?mode=story |newspaper=Bowling Green Daily News |date=5 August 2011 |accessdate=12 January 2013}}</ref> Despite this, members listen to instrumental music and some have composed Christian music. When singing, all congregants sing at the same time. Congregations practice the songs to maintain proper melody and uniformity during their religious meetings.{{sfn|Ochoa Bohórquez|2011|pp=121-123}} The Church believes that worship should be done spiritually and only to God, and thus temples are devoid of [[Christian art|images]], [[saint]]s, crosses, and anything that might be considered [[idolatry]].<ref name="sltrib">{{cite news |title=For this Salt Lake City church, it's the beliefs, not the building, that matter |author=Peggy Fletcher Stack |url=http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/lifestyle/56351879-80/church-says-lake-salt.html.csp |newspaper=The Salt Lake Tribune |date=24 May 2013 |accessdate=16 July 2013}}</ref> The places of worship have plain walls and wide, clear windows.<ref name="Mask/BG" />

The Church holds three daily prayer meetings throughout the world, with two meetings on Sundays and one regular consecration. On Sunday mornings, congregants meet at the temple for Sunday School, which begins with prayers and hymns. After that, the preacher{{mdash}}usually a minister{{mdash}}presides over a talk during which he reads from the Bible and presents the material to be covered throughout the week. During the talk, it is common for members of either sex to read a cited verse from the Bible. At the end of the talk, more hymns and prayers are recited and voluntary offerings are given. Sunday evening services begin with hymns and prayers, after which members of the congregation of both sexes recite from the Bible or sing hymns. A shorter talk is held with the aim of deepening the Sunday School's talk.{{sfn|Ochoa Bohórquez|2011|pp=139-142}}

The Church holds three scheduled prayer meetings each day. The first daily prayer meeting is at 5:00&nbsp;a.m. and usually lasts one hour. The service includes a talk that is meant to ''recordar'' (remember) the material covered in the Sunday School. The 9:00&nbsp;a.m. prayer was originally started by González's wife, Elisa Flores. A female church member presides over the prayer meeting, which includes a talk. The evening prayer has the same structure as the 5:00&nbsp;a.m. meeting. In each prayer meeting members are expected to be prepared with their Bibles, hymn books and notebooks and to be consecrated.{{sfn|Ochoa Bohórquez|2011|pp=142-148}}

===Bible===
Members of La Luz del Mundo believe that the Bible is the only source of Christian doctrine. It is used as the source of ministers' and lay persons' talks during prayer meetings. Through organizational arrangements, such as Sunday school, church authorities attempt to maintain uniformity of teachings and beliefs throughout all congregations.{{sfn|Ávila Meléndez|2008|pp=180–181,187}} The Bible is the only historical reference used by La Luz del Mundo during religious services. Members can find cited Bible verses quickly, regardless of their level of education.{{sfn|Ochoa Bohórquez|2011|p=147}} It is also seen as the only and "sufficient rule of faith for salvation".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/es/doctrina/ |title=Doctrina |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |quote=CREEMOS en la Santa Biblia como única y suficiente regla de fe para la salvación del ser humano&nbsp;... |accessdate=28 December 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

===Restorationism===
La Luz del Mundo teaches that there was no salvation on Earth between the death of the last Apostle ([[Apostle John]]) around 96 AD and the calling of González in 1926. Members believe that the Church itself was founded by Jesus Christ approximately two thousand years ago and that after the deaths of the Apostles of God, the church became corrupt and was lost.<ref name="fundacion" />{{sfn|Ávila Meléndez|2008|p=177}} The Church claims that through González, it is the restoration of the [[Primitive Christian]] church that was lost during the formation of the Roman Catholic Church. After those times passed, the beginning of González's ministry is seen as the restoration of the original Christian Church.{{sfn|Ochoa Bohórquez|2011|p=150}} Salvation can be attained in the Church by following the Bible-based teachings of their leader.{{sfn|Biglieri|2000|p=407}}

===Calling of the Servants of God===
The Church states that its members believe in "the calling of the Servants of God, sent to express the will of God and Salvation".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/2007/principios.html |title=Principios |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=18 January 2013 |quote=CREEMOS en la vocación de los Siervos de Dios, enviados para manifestar la voluntad de Dios y la Salvación. |language=Spanish}}</ref> It teaches that Flores was elected by God as Apostle and the new leader of the Church after González died in 1964. La Luz del Mundo teaches that it is the only true Christian church founded by Jesus Christ because it is led by Flores, who it considers the only true servant of God and Apostle of Jesus Christ.<ref name="fundacion" /> Members believe that this Apostolic Authority allows them to find peace, feel close to God and attain meaning in their lives from the hopes of joining with Christ to reign with him for eternity.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/2007/historia.html |title=Historia |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=18 January 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

===Christology===
There is disagreement among sources regarding the [[christology]] of La Luz del Mundo. According to theologian Roger S. Greenway, the Church is [[Trinity|trinitarian]] but baptizes in the name of Jesus to conform to apostolic practice.{{sfn|Greenway|1973|p=119}} Theological librarian Kenneth D. Gill agrees with Greenway that the Church is trinitarian, and says it refuses to "use the term 'person' to describe the three modes of God."{{sfn|Gill|1994|p=275}} Sociocultural anthropologist Hugo G. Nutini also says the Church is trinitarian but that its worship focuses exclusively on Jesus Christ as the source of salvation.{{sfn|Nutini|2000|p=48}} Other sources say La Luz del Mundo is [[nontrinitarianism|nontrinitarian]].{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|p=27}}{{sfn|González|González|2008|p=290–291}} In its principles, La Luz del Mundo proclaims a belief in the existence of one God and in Jesus Christ, "Son of God and Savior of the world".<ref name="Principles">{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/2007/principios.html |title=Principios |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=18 January 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref> The Church also states a belief in baptism in the name of Jesus Christ for forgiveness of sins, and [[baptism with the Holy Spirit]] as confirmation from God for entrance into heaven.<ref name="Principles" /> ''[[The Salt Lake Tribune]]'' said that these principles mean the Church preaches that "there is only one God, and Jesus is his son and savior of this world, rather than part of a Trinity".<ref name="sltrib" />

===Role of women===
In the tradition of [[Pentecostalism]], female members of La Luz del Mundo do not wear jewelery or makeup and are instructed to wear full, long skirts.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26–29}} Women can have their hair as short as their shoulder blades. These restrictions do not apply to recreational activities, where wearing bathing suits is permitted.<ref>Fortuny, pps. 126, 149–150</ref> Women wear a head covering during religious meetings.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=125}} According to an interview of one adherent, women in the Church are considered equal to men in social spheres and have equal capacities for obtaining higher education, social careers, and other goals that may interest them.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|pp=133-134}}

González established the 9&nbsp;a.m. prayer after hearing about one of his followers who was being abused by her Catholic husband.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=33}} This prayer became one led by women.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=33}} These prayers are seen as a religious activity equal to all other activities.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=139}} This prayer provides space for empowerment in which women can express themselves and develop a status within the congregation's membership.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=144}} Anthropologist Patricia Fortuny said, concerning the 9&nbsp;a.m. prayer, that, "I infer from this that, if the membership considers this as [a] female [gathering], they would be giving authority to women in the religious or ecclesiastical framework of the ritual, and this then [would] put [them] on a plane of equality or [in] absence of subordination to men."{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=140|ps=: "Yo deduzco de esto que, si la membresía considerara este culto como femenino, le estarían otorgando autoridad a las mujeres en el marco religioso o eclesiástico del ritual, y esto entonces las pondría en un plano de igualdad o de ausencia de subordinación frente a los hombres"}} She said that women of the Church may be playing with their subordinate roles in the Church to acquire certain benefits.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=140}}

Church women personalize their attire, according to Patricia Fortuny. [[Rebozo]]s are worn by indigenous members and specially designed veils by other female members.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=148}} Fortuny says that, "...&nbsp;wearing long skirts does not negate the meaning of being a woman and, although it underlines the difference between men and women, [the Church's female members] say that it does not make them feel like inferior human beings".{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=149|ps=: "En este sentido, usar falda larga no niega el significado del ser mujer y aunque subraye la diferencia entre hombres y mujeres, ellas dicen que no las hace sentirse seres humanos inferiores&nbsp;..."}} Fortuny says women describe their attire as part of obeying biblical commands found in 1 Timothy 2:9, and 1 Corinthians 11:15 for long hair.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=142}} Female members say the Church's dress code makes them feel they are honoring God and that it is part of their "essence".{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|pp=146–147}}

Fortuny also states that dress codes are a sign of a patriarchal organization because men are only forbidden from growing their hair long or wearing shorts in public. Women, at times, can be more autonomous than those in the general population in Mexico. Fortuny says that the growing trend of educated women having husbands in supporting roles is also seen within the Church both in the Guadalajara (Mexico), and Houston (Texas) congregations.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|pp=156–157}} Many young female members said they want to undergo post-secondary education, and some told Fortuny they were degree students. Both young men and women are equally encouraged to enter post-compulsory education. Fathers who are members of La Luz del Mundo are more likely than their mothers to direct their daughters towards attending university.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|pp=155–157}}

La Luz del Mundo Church does not practice [[ordination of women]]. According to Fortuny, women can become missionaries or evangelizers; the lowest tier of the Church's hierarchy.{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=136|ps=: "Al interior del cuerpo ministerial o jerarquía de la iglesia, la mujer puede ocupar el puesto obrera o evangelizadora si así lo desea, ya que constituye el último rango de la jerarquía."}} She states that "the rank of deaconess is not a position which common women could aspire to".{{sfn|Fortuny|2001|p=138|ps=: "el rango de diaconisa no es una posición a la que puedan aspirar las mujeres comunes de la comunidad religiosa&nbsp;..."}} Dormady states that the first two deaconesses were Elisa Flores and Francisca Cuevas.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=35}} Wives of important members of the Church usually get the rank of deaconess, according to Dormady.{{sfn|Dormady|2011|pp=35–36}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldmusa.org/imagess/2009/HP/2009-03-25_D_Carmen_Flores.html |title=Duerme la diaconisa Carmen Flores viuda de Ávalos |last=Pineda |first=Israel |date=25 March 2009 |website=Iglesia La Luz del Mundo USA |accessdate=20 July 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

Women are active and play key roles in organizing activities and administering them in the Church.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26–29}} Women can serve as legal representatives of the Church.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.asociacionesreligiosas.gob.mx/work/models/AsociacionesReligiosas/pdf/Numeralia/AR_por_SGAR.pdf |title=Directorio de Asociaciones Religiosas por Clave SGAR |pages=58–59 |publisher=Dirección General de Asociaciones Religiosas de la Secretaría de Gobernación|location=Mexico|accessdate=3 November 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref> Female office holders are always head of groups of women and not groups of men. A deaconess can help pastors and deacons, but cannot herself administer the sacrament. All members of the ministerial hierarchy are paid for their services as part of the [[tithe]] by the congregational members.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=157}}

===Other beliefs and practices===
The Church teaches moral and civil principles such as community service and that science is a gift from God.<ref name="Principles" /> Members of La Luz Del Mundo do not celebrate Christmas or [[Holy Week]]. The most important yearly rituals are the Holy Supper (''Santa Cena'' in Spanish or "Santa Convocation"), held yearly on August 14, and the anniversary of Flores' birth is held on February 14 at its international headquarters in Guadalajara.{{sfn|Biglieri|2000|p=409}}

==Organization==

===Ecclesiastical organization===
The organization of La Luz del Mundo is hierarchical. The head of the Church is Flores, who refers to himself as the "Apostle and Servant of God" and the organizational authority as General Director of the Church. Below him is the ranks of pastors, who are expected to develop one or more of the qualities as doctor, prophet, and evangelist. All pastors are evangelists and are expected to undertake missionary tasks. As doctors, pastors explain the word of God and as prophets they interpret it.{{sfn|Fortuny|1995|p=155}} Below them are the deacons, who administer the sacraments to the congregational members. Below the deacons are the ''encargados'' (managers or overseers), who have responsibility for the moral conduct and well-being of certain groups within the congregation. Overseers grant permits to members who wish to leave their congregations for vacations or to take jobs outside of the church district. At the lowest echelon of the hierarchy are the ''obreros'' (laborers), who mainly assist their higher-ups with [[missionary]] work.<ref>{{cite book |last=Fortuny-Loret de Mola |first=Patricia |chapter=Una iglesia tapatía: evangélica, popular y transnacional |title=Los "otros" hermanos : minorías religiosas protestantes en Jalisco |url=http://sc.jalisco.gob.mx/acervos/libro-electronico/299 |year=2005 |publisher=Secretaría de Cultura, Gobierno del Estado de Jalisco |location=Guadalajara, Jalisco |isbn= |page=176 |accessdate=8 October 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

===Territorial organization===
A church, or group, that is unable to fully provide for the religious needs of its members is called a mission. Missions are dependent on a congregation which is administered by a minister. A group of several congregations with their missions form a district. The Church in each nation is divided into multiple districts. In Mexico, several districts form together into five jurisdictions that act as legal entities.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lldm.org/2007/organizacion.html |title=Organización |publisher=Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna y Apoyo de la Verdad, La Luz del Mundo |accessdate=18 January 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

==Architecture==

La Luz del Mundo uses the architecture of its temples to express its faith through symbolism and to attract potential converts.<ref>{{cite news |title=After 4 years, 'wedding cake' is only half-baked |author=Kaylin Bettinger |url=http://www.adn.com/2010/07/09/1360931/after-4-years-wedding-cake-is.html |newspaper=Anchorage Daily News |date=9 July 2010 |accessdate=17 November 2012}}</ref><ref name="Julia O'Malley">{{cite news |title=Church constructs unusual building to attract converts |author=Julia O'Malley |url = http://www.adn.com/2008/03/30/360232/church-constructs-unusual-building.html |newspaper=Anchorage Daily News |date=30 March 2008 |accessdate=17 November 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=La Luz del Mundo: God May Not Live in a Material Church, But He's Building a Sweet Pad |first=Robrt L. |last=Pela |url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2010-11-04/culture/la-luz-del-mundo-god-may-not-live-in-a-material-church-but-he-s-building-a-sweet-pad/full/ |newspaper=Phoenix New Times |date=4 November 2010 |accessdate=28 July 2013}}</ref> Among the Church's buildings are a replica of a [[Mayan pyramid]] in Honduras, a mock [[Taj Mahal]] in [[Chiapas]], Mexico, and a Greco-Roman-inspired temple in Texas. Its flagship temple is located in its headquarters in Hermosa Provincia. Two smaller replicas of this temple are being built in Anchorage, Alaska, and in Chile to symbolize "the northern and southern-most reach of the Church's missionary efforts."<ref name="Julia O'Malley"/>

===Hermosa Provincia Temple===
[[File:Templolldm02.jpg|thumb|alt=Flagship temple of La Luz del Mundo Church in Guadalajara|Flagship temple in Guadalajara]]

The flagship temple in Guadalajara is pyramidal and has an innovative structure. The project began in 1983, when the Church's former temple built to accommodate 8,000 people was deemed insufficient to accommodate the growing number of people who attended various annual celebrations.<ref name="Templo de la Luz: Símbolo y orgullo" /> Construction began on July 3, 1983 when Flores laid the cornerstone and lasted until August 1, 1992.<ref>{{cite news |title=Luz del Mundo influencia en 33 países |first=Joel |last=Muñoz |page=8 |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |newspaper=Mural |date=April 6, 2001 |language=Spanish}}</ref> The temple was completed largely by members of the Church. It is a notable architectural feature in Guadalajara in a working-class district on the outskirts of the city. Dozens of institutions, architects, and engineers were invited to submit proposals for a new temple. The pyramidal design submitted by Leopoldo Fernández Font was from the final shortlist of four proposals.<ref name="Templo de la Luz: Símbolo y orgullo">{{cite news |title=Templo de la Luz: Símbolo y orgullo |first=Ariel |last=Noriega |page=5 |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |newspaper=Mural |date=August 13, 2000 |language=Spanish}}</ref> Fernandez Font was later awarded an honorary degree for this and other structures. The temple was built to accommodate 12,000 worshipers and is used for annual ceremonies.

The building's design represents the infinite power and existence of God. It consists of seven levels over a base [[Menorah (Temple)|menorah]], each of which symbolize steps toward the human spirit's perfection.<ref name="Templo de la Luz: Símbolo y orgullo" /> In February 1991, a laser beacon was installed to commemorate the 449-year anniversary of the founding of Guadalajara.<ref>{{cite news |title=Cartas a Mural/ Sobre el templo de La Luz del Mundo |last=Pineda |first=Israel |newspaper=Mural |date=31 August 2000 |language=Spanish}}</ref> On July 1999 the pinnacle of the temple "La Flama" was replaced by [[Aaron's rod]], a twenty ton bronze sculpture by artist Jorge de la Peña. The installation of the {{Convert|23|m|adj=on}} long structure required a special crane.<ref>{{cite news |title=Estrenan símbolo |page=1 |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |newspaper=Mural |date=July 14, 1999 |language=Spanish}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Una escultura de peso |page=1 |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |newspaper=Mural |date=July 1, 1999 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

===Houston Texas Temple===
[[File:LuzDelMundoHoustonTX.jpg|thumb|alt=Large Greco-Roman style church sitting along a road within a residential area.|The Houston Texas Temple]]

The main temple in [[Houston]], Texas, was inspired by Greco-Roman architecture.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26-29}} It is the largest temple constructed by La Luz del Mundo in the United States as of 2011. The temple's pillars resemble the [[Parthenon]], according to religious historian Timothy Wyatt. The front of the building is decorated with carved scenes from the Bible and three panes of stained glass also depict biblical scenes. The temple can hold 4,500 people. The interior has marble floors, glass chandeliers, and wood paneling.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26-29}}

The structure is worth {{USD|18 million}} and consists of the temple, classrooms, offices, and a parsonage. There is a sitting area with 14 free-standing columns in a circle next to the temple.<ref name="HC 07_23_2005">{{cite news |first=Richard |last=Vara |title=La Luz del Mundo prepares to dedicate new church facility |url=http://www.chron.com/default/article/La-Luz-del-Mundo-prepares-to-dedicate-new-church-1949467.php |location =Houston |work=The Houston Chronicle |date=23 July 2005 }}</ref> Each column represents each of the Apostles{{mdash}}including Aarón and Samuel Joaquín.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|p=26-29}}{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26-29}} On top of the temple under [[Aaron's rod]]{{mdash}}the Church's symbol which represents God's power tobring spiritual life to believers{{mdash}}is a large, golden dome.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26-29}}<ref name="HC 07_23_2005" /> The symbol is also a reference to the Church's founder.<ref name="HC 07_23_2005" />

Construction of the temple began in 2000 and it was finished in 2005. Most of the construction was done by Church volunteers, who provided funding and a skilled workforce.<ref name="HC 07_23_2005" />{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|p=26-29}} The structure was designed by Church members and the design was revised by architects to ensure compliance with building codes.<ref name="HC 07_23_2005" /> The decorations and ornaments were also designed and installed by Church members.<ref name="HC 07_23_2005" /> The temple serves as a central congregation for southeastern Texas.{{sfn|Wyatt|2011|pp=26-29}}{{sfn|Fortuny|2002|p=24}}

==Demographics==
[[File:La Luz del Mundo in Mexico by state.png|thumb|left|alt=Distribution of church members in Mexico by state according to the 2010 INEGI Census.|Distribution of church members in Mexico by state according to the 2010 [[Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía|INEGI]] Census.]]
There are no definitive statistics for the total membership of La Luz del Mundo.{{sfn|Nutini|2000|p=47}} It has reported having over five million members worldwide in 2000 with 1.5 million in Mexico.

===Mexican census===

The census has included a question ¿Cuál es la religión deesta persona?

La Luz del Mundo did not get its own category in the Mexican census until 2000. Previously respondents could only identify into five broad categories: None, Catholic, Protestant or Evangelical, Jewish, and Other (Clasificación de Religiones, INEGI 2010; Cuestionario 1990). In response to increasing religious diversity in Mexico, INEGI modified the questionnaire to three options: None, Catholic, or Other. The interviewer would write explicitly the response for Other. The 2000 Census reported four million people in the Evangelism category: 36% pentecostal, 2% La Luz del Mundo, and 62% gave a generic response, i.e. evangelical.

The 2000 Mexican census reported about 70,000 members nationwide,{{sfn|Dormady|2011|p=115}}{{sfn|Ávila Meléndez|2008|p=180}} and the 2010 census reported 188,326 members.<ref>{{cite web |title=Población total por entidad federativa, sexo y religión según grupos de edad (INEGI 2010) |url=http://www3.inegi.org.mx/sistemas/TabuladosBasicos/Default.aspx?c=27302&s=est |publisher=Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía |location=Mexico |accessdate=21 September 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref> [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]], whose numbers also differ significantly from those of the census{{mdash}}1,234,545 compared to the census figure of 314,932{{mdash}}said ambiguity in the census questionnaire was the source of the disparity.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.saladeprensamormona.org.mx/art%C3%ADculo/%C2%BFcuantos-mormones-hay-en-m%C3%A9xico- |title=¿Cuantos mormones hay en México? |date=28 March 2012 |website=Sala de Prensa - México |publisher=Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de los Últimos Días |accessdate=31 August 2013 |language=Spanish}}</ref> The [[World Christian Encyclopedia]] reports 430,000 adherents in Mexico in 2000 and 488,000 in Mexico in 2010.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-first=Todd M. |editor1-last=Johnson |editor2-first=Brian J. |editor2-last=Grim |title=World Christian Database |accessdate= |year=2007 |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden/Boston |isbn= |page= |url=http://worldchristiandatabase.org/wcd/search/results.asp?SearchCriteria=La+Luz+del+Mundo}}</ref> Anthropologist Hugo G. Nutini estimated that the Church had around 1,125,000 members in 2000 in Mexico.{{sfn|Nutini|2000|p=47}} In 2008, Fortuny and Williams estimated the membership at 7,000,000.<ref>Fortuny and Williams 2008, p. 15</ref> Anthropologist Ávila Meléndez says that the membership numbers reported by La Luz del Mundo are plausible given the great interest it has generated among "religious authorities" and the following it receives in Mexico.{{sfn|Ávila Meléndez|2008|p=180}}

The church reports approximately 40 thousand members in Jalisco alone.<ref name="Rubio">{{cite news |last=Rubio |first=Ismael |title=La Luz del Mundo Iglesia de mayor crecimiento |url=http://www.rnnoticias.com.mx/nuevo-laredo/es-la-luz-del-mundo-iglesia-de-mayor-crecimiento-en-mexico |newspaper=RN Noticias |location=Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas |date=9 August 2011 |accessdate=3 January 2015}}</ref> Moreover 5 thousand new members are baptized in the Santa Cena in August.<ref name="Rubio" />

===Social indicators===
La Luz del Mundo strongholds are Jalisco and Veracruz with 19.5% and 13.3% of believers residing in those states respectively. Municipalities with the highest number of believers as percentage of all believers are Guadalajara (12.1%) and neighboring Tonalá (2.6%) in Jalisco. Municipalities where church members make up a significant percentage of the population are [[Soledad Atzompa]] 10.20%, [[Magdalena Municipality, Veracruz|Magdalena]] 7.91%, and [[Atlahuilco]] 7.35% in the central zone of the state of Veracruz near Puebla. The median age for church members is 23, whereas the median age for Mexico is 26. The [[human sex ratio]] is 0.956 males per female, compared to 0.954 for Mexico. 1.010% (0.856% Mexico) were born in another country and 22.352% (17.579% Mexico) were born in a different state. 8.96% of church members over 5 years old are [[literacy|illiterate]] compared 9.35% of Mexicans. 7.87% (6.67%) speak an indigenous language while 7.06% (5.45%) speak both Spanish and an indigenous language, Náhuatl, Mixteco, and Maya. For the population 3 years and older, church members have higher primary education completion levels compared to the general population; this trend is reversed for secondary and higher education. 16.286% (13.954%) have completed elementary [[elementary school]] and 19.349% (16.528%) have completed [[middle school]]. 11.190% (12.512%) have completed high school, 0.670% (1.348%) have completed bachellors, 0.188% (0.725%) have completed masters, 0.039% (0.132%) have doctorate degrees. Moreover 9.011% (8.539%) have no schooling. For the feminine population 12 and older, the [[total fertility rate]] was 2.53 births per woman compared to a national of 2.30 births per woman. The average household size is 4.60 persons per household compared to 3.99 for Mexico. 80.61% (76.81%) lived in localities with more than 2500 inhabitants. 91.8% (90.9%) of believers had access to water and 98.5% (97.8%) had electricity. 45.25% (40.53%) are married.

===Membership abroad===
In El Salvador, as of 2009, there are an estimated 70,000 members of La Luz del Mundo, which had 140 congregations with a minister and 160 other congregations with between 13 and 80 members.<ref>{{cite news |last=Alfaro |first=William |title=La Iglesia Evangélica gana más terreno en El Salvador |url=http://www.elsalvador.com/mwedh/nota/nota_completa.asp?idCat=6358&idArt=4362857 |newspaper=El Diario de Hoy |location=El Salvador |accessdate=21 September 2012 |date=21 December 2009 |language=Spanish}}</ref> As of 2008, there were around 60,000 members of the Church in the United States.{{sfn|Marquardt|2011|p=119}}

==Mass media controversy in 1997==
In the wake of the [[Heaven's Gate (religious group)|Heaven's Gate]] mass suicide, La Luz del Mundo found itself embroiled in a controversy that would play out in some of Mexico's major media outlets.<ref name="L.A. Times">{{cite news |title=A Growing Faith--and Outrage |first=Mary Beth |last=Sheridan |url=http://articles.latimes.com/1998/mar/10/news/mn-27361 |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=10 March 1998 |accessdate=23 September 2010}}</ref>{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=19}}<ref>{{cite news |last=Barranco |first=Bernardo |date=29 December 1997 |title=Balance religioso en 1997 |url=http://www.jornada.unam.mx/1997/12/29/barranco.html |newspaper=La Jornada |location=Mexico City |accessdate=24 December 2014 |language=Spanish}}</ref> Former members and [[anti-cult movement|anti-cult]] groups leveraged accusations against the church and its leadership.<ref name="L.A. Times" />{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=19}} Church members and sympathizers defended the integrity of the church.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=19}} Academics, meanwhile, denounced a climate of intolerance toward [[Minority religion|religious minorities]] in Mexico.{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=19}}

===Allegations of potential for mass suicide===
Following the Heaven's Gate [[mass suicide]] on March 26, 1997, Mexican journalists asked which religious group at home could stage similar acts.<ref name="L.A. Times" />{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=156}} The following day, in [[TV Azteca]]'s flagship program, [[Jorge Erdely Graham]] leader of the obscure anti-cult group Instituto Cristiano de Mexico (Christian Institute of Mexico) pointed to La Luz del Mundo as a group with the potential to commit mass suicide.<ref name="L.A. Times" /> Erdely's claims were based on an interview with three church members conducted two years earlier.{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=156}} La Luz del Mundo denied the claims arguing that the answers of three individuals cannot be used to make generalizations about an entire community.{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=156}} Religious scholars [[Gordon Melton]] and [[David G. Bromley|David Bromley]] characterized the accusations as "fraudulent reports by ideological enemies."{{sfn|Bromley|Melton|2002|p=50}} Anthropologist Elio Masferrer Kan criticized the methodology employed in the interview, noting that the interviewer cornered the subjects to obtain the desired response.{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=156}}

This incident focused media attention on the church,<ref name="L.A. Times" /> and in May 4, 1997 the accusations were broadcast on Mexico's most-watched newscast on [[Televisa]].{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=161}}

===Sexual abuse accusations against leader===
On May 18, 1997 (a day after Flores' 35th [[wedding anniversary]])<ref>{{cite news |last=García de la Mora |first=Humberto |date=6 January 2014 |title=2014: Año del Jubileo |url=http://www.oem.com.mx/eloccidental/notas/n3247863.htm |newspaper=El Occidental |location=Guadalajara |accessdate=25 December 2014 |language=Spanish}}</ref> in a follow-up report on Televisa, a handful of women claimed to have been sexually abused by Flores approximately twenty years earlier.{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=164}} In a third report on August 17, shortly after the church's most significant holiday, former member Moisés Padilla Íñiguez also accused Flores of sexually abusing him when he was a teenager.{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=164}}{{sfn|De la Torre|2000|p=19}} These accusations were spearheaded by Erdely's anti-cult group, which demanded that La Luz del Mundo be stripped of its legal recognition as a religious organization.{{sfn|Garma Navarro|2004|p=446}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Garma Navarro |first1=Carlos |year=1999 |title=La situación legal de las minorías religiosas en México: Balance actual, problemas y conflictos |journal=Alteridades |volume=9 |issue=18 |pages=141–142 |publisher=Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Iztapalapa |url=http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=74791812 |issn=0188-7017 |oclc=31126010 |accessdate=25 December 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref> Four people later filed formal complaints with the [[state prosecutor]], but the [[statute of limitations]] for the alleged crimes had passed.<ref name="L.A. Times" />

The issue came back to life in February of the following year when, two days before Flores' birthday, Padilla reported being kidnapped and stabbed by two gunmen.<ref name="L.A. Times" /><ref name="Salas">{{cite news |title=Atacan a denunciante de la Luz del Mundo |first=Irma |last=Salas |url= |newspaper=El Norte |date=11 February 1998 |location=Monterrey, Mexico |language=Spanish}}</ref><ref name="Church denies knife connection">{{cite news |title=Church denies knife connection |author= |url=http://airwolf.lmtonline.com/news/archive/021298/pagea2.pdf |newspaper=Laredo Morning Times |date=12 February 1998 |page=2A |accessdate=25 December 2012}}</ref> Padilla received 57 shallow slashes from a dagger which did not put his life in danger,<ref name="Salas"/> but he could have died from [[Exsanguination|blood loss]].<ref name="L.A. Times" /> Padilla blamed Flores for the stabbing and for an earlier attack in which he was allegedly beaten by men who warned him against criticizing the church leader.<ref name="L.A. Times" /> A church spokesman denied that the Church or Flores had any involvement in the attack and suggested that Padilla may have orchestrated the attack in a desperate attempt to authenticate his previous charges against the Church.<ref name="L.A. Times" /><ref name="Church denies knife connection"/>

Judicial authorities investigating the charges said the alleged victims were not being fully cooperative, whereas former members were suspicious of the Mexican legal system, arguing that it favored the church.<ref name="L.A. Times" /> Ten years later a spokesman for the state prosecutor said the criminal complaints were unsuccessful because, in addition to the statute of limitations, the accusations were unfounded.<ref name="DivineRetreat">{{cite news |first=Todd |last=Bensman |title=Divine Retreat |url=http://www.toddbensman.com/Bensman/Light_of_the_World_Church.html |newspaper=San Antonio Express-News |date=25 May 2008 |accessdate=19 January 2013}}</ref>

Sociologist Roberto Blancarte called the controversy a "persecution" fueled by "obscure interests."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Blancarte |first=Roberto |year=2002 |title=Religiones y creencias en México |journal=Revista Este País |page=112 |publisher=Desarrollo de Opinión Pública |url=http://estepais.com/inicio/historicos/133/7_Ensayo4_Religiones_Blancarte.pdf |accessdate=18 January 2013}}</ref> Journalist [[Carlos Monsiváis]] described the issue as a diffamation campaign.{{sfn|Monsiváis|2002|p=86}} Sociologist Bernardo Barranco described it as a dirty war that was well exploited by the media.<ref>{{cite news |title=Balance religioso en 1997 |last=Barranco |first=Bernardo |url=http://www.jornada.unam.mx/1997/12/29/barranco.html |newspaper=La Jornada |date=29 December 1997 |accessdate=12 January 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Barranco |first=Bernardo |date=17 December 2014 |title=La Luz del Mundo |url=http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2014/12/17/politica/020a2pol |newspaper=La Jornada |location=Mexico City |accessdate=25 December 2014 |language=Spanish }}</ref> Anthropologist Carlos Garma Navarro criticized that the accusations were first brought before the mass media, and thought it was very likely that the accusations were an attempt to give the church a bad image.<ref name="Navarro 2003">{{cite journal |last1=Garma Navarro |first1=Carlos |year=2003 |title=Problemas éticos en la antropología de la religión |journal=Alteridades |volume=13 |issue=25 |page=32 |publisher=Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Iztapalapa |url=http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=74702504 |accessdate=3 January 2013 |issn=0188-7017 |oclc=31126010}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Carlos |last=Garma Navarro |title=Buscando el espíritu: Pentacostalismo en Iztapalapa y la ciudad de México |year=2004 |publisher=Plaza y Valdés |isbn=978-970-722-280-9 |page=172}}</ref>

==Discrimination==
===Opposition to new temple in California===
In 1995, La Luz del Mundo acquired a vacant nursery building in a commercial zone in [[Ontario, California]]. The Church planned to use it for religious activities and was assured that it could as long as building requirements were met. The city then passed a law requiring all new religious organizations to obtain a conditional use permit to operate a church in the commercial zone.<ref name="IVDB">{{cite news |title=Ontario clears way for La Luz Del Mundo |first=Brenda |last=Gazzar |newspaper=Inland Valley Daily Bulletin |date=10 February 2005}}</ref> In 1998, the Church petitioned for such a permit but concerned residents objected to its plans.<ref name="DivineRetreat">{{cite news |first=Todd |last=Bensman |title=Divine Retreat |url=http://www.toddbensman.com/Bensman/Light_of_the_World_Church.html |newspaper=San Antonio Express-News |date=25 May 2008 |accessdate=19 January 2013}}</ref> María de Lourdes Argüelles, professor at [[Claremont Graduate University]] and board member of the Instituto Cristiano de México,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cgu.edu/print/386.asp |title=
María de Lourdes Argüelles |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=School of Educational Studies |publisher=Claremont Graduate University |accessdate=10 October 2013}}</ref> led the opposition against the Church, which she called a "destructive sect".<ref name="L.A. Times" /> She said she had seen children and teenagers working overnight on the site under precarious conditions.{{sfn|Masferrer Kan|2004|p=153}}

Ontario officials met with objecting residents and began researching the Church and checking with cities where Luz del Mundo had temples, but found no problems.<ref name="L.A. Times" /> After considering zoning questions and citing traffic, parking and disruption of economic plans for that area, the city denied the permit to the Church. La Luz del Mundo then sued the city for denying it use of its own building for services and for allegedly violating its civil rights. The case was settled out of court in 2004, and the Church was allowed to build the temple.<ref name="DivineRetreat"/> The city agreed to pay about {{USD|150,000}} in cash and fee credits to the Church.<ref name="IVDB" /> The case was not taken to court because city officials and attorneys concluded the city would most likely lose the case and spend more money than the settlement.<ref name="IVDB" />

===Religious intolerance===
According to Patricia Fortuny, members of La Luz del Mundo along with members of other Protestant denominations, are treated as "second class citizens".{{sfn|Fortuny|2002|pp=25–26}} She says the Church is called a sect in an offensive manner in Mexico.{{sfn|Fortuny|2002|p=33}} Rodolfo Morán Quiroz, a sociologist, said that the discrimination started by the Catholic Church, which in the past caused La Luz del Mundo to seek help from the authorities who promoted religious freedom in establishing its community in Hermosa Provincia, continues in Mexico.<ref>{{cite news |last=Munez Machuca |first=Aimee |title=Mantiene la Hermosa provincia su autonomía sin aislamientos |url=http://gaceta.udg.mx/Hemeroteca/paginas/289/289-26.pdf |accessdate=5 February 2013 |newspaper=Gaceta Universitaria |date=3 March 2003 |language=Spanish}}</ref> Church founder González was beaten by Cristeros and was jailed by the government for preaching in the open air.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Daniel R |last=Miller |year=2008 |title=Protestantism and Radicalism in Mexico from the 1860s to the 1930s |journal=[[Fides et Historia]] |volume=40 |issue=1 |pages=43–66 |publisher=The Conference on Faith and History |issn=08845379}}</ref>

In 1995, as thousands of members of the Church traveled to the Holy Supper celebration in Guadalajara, several members of a neighboring community supported by Cardinal [[Juan Sandoval Íñiguez]] protested the use of schools to provide temporary shelters for the Luz del Mundo pilgrims. The protesters said that after the ceremony the schools were left in disarray; however church authorities presented photographic evidence to newspapers to refute these claims.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Fortuny |first=Patricia |title=La Luz del Mundo, estado lacio y gobierno panista. Análisis de una coyuntura en Guadalajara |journal=Espiral: Estudios sobre Estado y Sociedad |publisher=Universidad de Guadalajara |year=2000 |volume=7 |issue=19|pages=129–159 |url=http://148.202.18.157/sitios/publicacionesite/pperiod/espiral/espiralpdf/Espiral19/140-161.pdf |issn=1665-0565 |oclc=32365060 |accessdate=20 October 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

According to Armando Maya Castro, many students who are members of the Church have been discriminated against for refusing to partake in celebrations and customs concerning the [[Day of the Dead]] in their schools, and some have been punished for it.<ref>{{cite news |last=Castro |first=Armando Maya |title=La discriminación religiosa, una realidad en México |url=http://www.oem.com.mx/eloccidental/notas/n2047635.htm |accessdate=20 October 2012 |newspaper=El Universal |date=18 April 2011 |language=Spanish}}</ref> In one case reported by a Mexican newspaper, La Gaceta, a female member of the Church was pushed by a fellow bus passenger, who then [[Sign of the Cross|crossed herself]] because the member was wearing a long skirt.<ref>{{cite news |last=Loera |first=Martha Eva |title=Las variantes de la fe |url=http://www.gaceta.udg.mx/Hemeroteca/paginas/449/449-4-5.pdf |accessdate=20 October 2012 |newspaper=La Gaceta |publisher=Universidad de Guadalajara |date=28 August 2006 |language=Spanish}}</ref> In July 25, 2008, a public official sealed the entrance to a La Luz del Mundo temple in [[Puerto Vallarta]], Jalisco, trapping the congregation inside until other officials removed the seals. This incident occurred because of complaints from individuals who did not like the presence of the Church in the area. Reporter Rodolfo Chávez Calderón stated the Church was in compliance with local laws.<ref>{{cite news |last=Chávez Calderón |first=Rodolfo |title=Clausuraron templo de la Iglesia de La Luz del Mundo en Vallarta |url=http://www.oem.com.mx/esto/notas/n786471.htm |accessdate=5 November 2012 |newspaper=El Occidental |date=25 July 2008 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

Many female church members have faced discrimination and verbal abuse on buses, schools, and hospitals.<ref>Fortuny, pps. 150–154</ref> Church members who were patients in a Mexican hospital were denied access to their ministers in 2011. The hospital required permission from Catholic clergy so that LLDM ministers could visit patients.<ref>{{cite news |last=Rello |first=Maricarmen |title=Hospital Civil se disculpa con Luz del Mundo |url=http://archive.is/zKSjA |accessdate=20 October 2012 |newspaper=El Milenio |date=13 August 2009 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

Ministers of the Church reported that the site of a newly constructed temple in [[Silao]] was subject to harassment of its members, vandalism, and physical threats because of religious intolerance, which caused them to request increased police protection.<ref>{{cite news |last=Álvarez |first=Xóchitl |title=Piden prevenir brote de intolerancia religiosa |url=http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/estados/84011.html |accessdate=20 October 2012 |newspaper=El Universal |date=18 January 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Religion in Mexico: Where angels fear to tread |first= |last= |url=http://www.economist.com/node/21551091 |newspaper=The Economist |date=24 March 2012 |accessdate=12 January 2013}}</ref> In February 2012, seventy ministers of La Luz del Mundo from different nations appeared before Mexican authorities in Guadalajara to denounce the lack of police protection for the Church's residents in the city after a series of attacks left several members hospitalized.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ministros de La Luz del Mundo exigen seguridad |url=http://www.informador.com.mx/jalisco/2012/358112/6/ministros-de-la-luz-del-mundo-exigen-seguridad.htm |accessdate=20 October 2012 |newspaper=El Informador |date=18 February 2012 |language=Spanish}}</ref>

==Notes==
;Citations
{{Reflist|2}}

;References
*{{cite book |editor1-last=Zalpa |editor2-first=Genaro |editor2-last=Offerdal |editor1-first=Hans Egil |last=Ávila Meléndez |first=Luis Arturo |title=¿El reino de Dios es en este mundo? El papel ambiguo de las religiones en la lucha contra la pobreza |url=http://biblioteca.clacso.edu.ar/ar/libros/clacso/crop/zalpa/11avila.pdf |accessdate=30 December 2012 |year=2008 |publisher=CLACSO-Siglo del Hombre |location=Bogotá, Colombia |isbn=978-958-665-126-4 |chapter=Entre las cosas de Dios y las preocupaciones terrenales: el camino contradictorio hacia la santidad en la "Iglesia de la Luz del Mundo" |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal |last=Biglieri |first=Paula |year=2000 |title=Ciudadanos de La Luz. Una mirada sobre el auge de la Iglesia La Luz del Mundo |journal=Estudios Sociológicos |volume=XVIII |issue=2 |publisher=El Colegio de México |pages=403–428 |url=http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=59805304 |accessdate=25 December 2012 |issn=0185-4186 |oclc=47166994 |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{Cite book |last1=Bromley |first1=David G. |year=2002 |title=Cults, religion, and violence |last2=Melton |first2=J. Gordon |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-66898-9 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal|last=Cobián R|first=Felipe|title=Responde La Luz del Mundo|journal=Proceso|date=11 December 2005|url=http://apostolsamueljoaquinflores.blogspot.nl/p/entrevista.html|accessdate=4 December 2012 |language=Spanish}}
*{{cite book|last=De la Torre|first=Renee|title=Los hijos de la luz: discurso, identidad y poder en La Luz del Mundo|year=2000|publisher=ITESO|isbn=968-5087-15-6|url=http://books.google.com/?id=mzxw5UPpPNoC&dq=hermosa+provincia+luz+del+mundo |accessdate=8 October 2013 |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book|last=Dormady|first=Jason H.|title=Primitive Revolution: Restorationist Religion and the Idea of the Mexican Revolution 1940--1964|year=2011|publisher=University of New Mexico Press|location=Albuquerque|isbn=978-0-8263-4951-4 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal|last=Fortuny|first=Patricia|title=Religión y figura femenina : entre la norma y la práctica|journal=Revista de Estudios de Género. La ventana|publisher=Universidad de Guadalajara|year=2001|volume=2 |url=http://148.202.18.157/sitios/publicacionesite/pperiod/laventan/Ventana14/14-4.pdf|accessdate=18 September 2012 |ref=harv |language=Spanish |issue=14}}
*{{cite book |last=Fortuny |first=Patricia |editor1-first=Helen Rose |editor1-last=Ebaugh |editor2-first=Janet |editor2-last=Saltzman Chafetz |title=Religion Across Borders: Transnational Immigrant Networks |chapter=Chapter 2: The Santa Cena of the Luz del Mundo Church: A Case of Contemporary Transnationalism |year=2002 |publisher=Rowman Altamira |isbn=978-0-7591-0226-2 |page=24 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=IAmdggo3hh4C |accessdate=31 December 2012 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal|last=Fortuny|first=Patrica|title=Origins, Development and Perspectives of La Luz del Mundo Church|journal=Religion|year=1995|volume=25|issue=2|pages=147–162|doi=10.1006/reli.1995.0014|ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Fortuny |first1=Patricia |last2=Williams |first2=Philip J. |title=Iglesias y espacios públicos : Lugares de identidad de mexicanos en Metro Atlanta|journal=Trayectorias |publisher=Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León |year=2008 |volume=10 |issue=26 |pages=7–19 |url=http://trayectorias.uanl.mx/26/iglesias_y_espacios_publicos.htm |accessdate=5 November 2012 |issn=2007-1205 |oclc=44417986 |language=Spanish}}
*{{cite book |last=Garma Navarro |first=Carlos |chapter=The Legal Situation of Religious Minorities in Mexico: The Current situation, Problems, and Conflicts |editor=James T. Richardson |title=Regulating Religion: Case Studies from Around the Globe |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=U6opyVE_IYkC&pg=PA446 |year=2004 |publisher=Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers |location=New York |isbn=978-0-306-47886-4 |accessdate=10 October 2013 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book |last1=González |first1=Ondina E. |last2=González |first2=Justo L. |authorlink2=Justo Gonzalez |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2008 |title=Christianity in Latin America: A History |isbn=978-0-521-86329-2 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal|last=Greenway|first=Roger S.|title=The 'Luz Del Mundo' Movement in Mexico|journal=Missiology: an International Review|year=1973|volume=1|issue=2|pages=113–124|url=http://www.strategicnetwork.org/index.php?loc=kb&view=v&id=10440&fto=639&|doi=10.1177/009182967300100211 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book |first=Kenneth D. |last=Gill |title=Toward a contextualized theology for the Third World : the emergence and development of Jesus' name pentecostalism in Mexico |year=1994 |publisher=Peter Lang |isbn=978-3-631-47096-1 |page=277 |series=Studies in the intercultural history of Christianity |volume=90 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite news|last=Joaquín Flores|first=Samuel|title=A la opinion publica|newspaper=El Norte|date=28 October 1997|location=Monterrey, Mexico}}
*{{cite book|last=Joaquín|first=Benjamin|title=El Elegido de Dios|year=2004|publisher=Fundación Maestro Samuel Joaquín Flores|location=Guadalajara |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book |title=Living "Illegal": The Human Face of Unauthorized Immigration |year=2011 |publisher=The New Press |isbn=978-1-59558-651-3 |page=119 |url=http://books.google.com/?id=gGEW91yGlmkC&dq=la+luz+del+mundo+church |first=Marie |last=Marquardt |coauthors=Timothy Steigenga, Philip Williams |chapter=4 Picking Up The Cross |accessdate=8 October 2013 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book |last=Masferrer Kan |first=Elio |title=¿Es del César o es de Dios? Un modelo antropológico del campo religioso |year=2004 |publisher=Plaza y Valdés, CEIICH-UNAM |isbn=978-970-722-316-5 |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book |title=Protestantismo, diversidad y tolerancia |chapter=¿Por qué estudiar al protestantismo mexicano? |url=http://200.33.14.34:1010/Protestantismo.pdf |year=2002 |publisher=Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos |isbn=978-970-644-277-2 |first=Carlos |last=Monsiváis |authorlink=Carlos Monsiváis |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal |last=Nutini |first=Hugo G. |year=2000 |title=Native Evangelism in Central Mexico |journal=Ethnology |publisher=University of Pittsburgh |volume=39 |issue=1 |issn=0014-1828 |oclc=1568323 |doi=10.2307/3773794 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite web |last=Ochoa Bohórquez |first=Ana Victoria |title=Lo religioso como agente transformador de la cultura: Iglesia La Luz del Mundo: surgimiento, expansión, usos y ceremonias México-Colombia 1926–2006 |url=http://www.bdigital.unal.edu.co/7030/1/43552161.2012.pdf |year=2011 |publisher=Universidad Nacional de Colombia |accessdate=4 September 2012 |language=Spanish |ref=harv}}
*{{cite journal |last=Wyatt |first=Timothy |year=2011 |title=Iglesia La Luz Del Mundo |journal=Houston History |volume=8 |issue=3 |page=9 |publisher=University of Houston |url=http://www.class.uh.edu/hist/public_history/houston_history_project/houston_review/pdfs/v8n3.pdf |accessdate=25 December 2012 |issn=2165-6614 |oclc=163568525 |ref=harv}}

==Further reading==
Note: Most of De la Torre's work listed below was incorporated into her book ''Los hijos de La Luz''.
* {{cite journal |last1=De la Peña |first1=Guillermo |last2=De la Torre |first2=Renée |year=1990 |title=Religión y política en los barrios populares de Guadalajara |journal=Estudios Sociológicos |volume=8 |issue=24 |pages=571–602 |publisher=El Colegio de México |oclc=85446277 |jstor=40420093 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite journal |last1=De la Torre |first1=Renée |last2=Fortuny |first2=Patricia |year=1991 |title=La construcción de una identidad nacional en La Luz del Mundo |journal=Cristianismo y Sociedad |volume=XXIX |issue=109 |pages=33–47 |issn=0011-1457 |oclc=2259924 |language=Spanish}}
* {{Cite thesis |type= |chapter= |title=Discurso, identidad y poder en la construcción de una identidad religiosa: la Luz del Mundo |url=http://ccdoc.iteso.mx/cat.aspx?cmn=browse&id=679 |last=De la Torre |first=Renée |year=1993 |publisher=ITESO |docket= |oclc= |accessdate=8 October 2013 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |last=De la Torre |first=Renée |title=El verbo oficial: política moderna en dos campos periféricos del estado mexicano |editor1-last=Roth Senef |editor1-first=Andrew |editor2-last=Lameiras |editor2-first=José |year=1994 |publisher=El Colegio de Michoacán, ITESO |pages=147–179 |chapter=Al que no habla Dios no lo oye. Al que Dios no oye, no habla. Orden social y discurso hegemónico en La Luz del Mundo |isbn=978-968-6959-07-9 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite journal |last=De la Torre |first=Renée |year=1994 |title=Comunicación como acto creador de la identidad religiosa. Estudio de caso en La Luz del Mundo |journal=Cuadernos del Departamento de Comunicación del ITESO |volume=1 |issue= |pages=9–31 |publisher=ITESO |url=http://ccdoc.iteso.mx/cat.aspx?cmn=browse&id=680 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite journal |last=De la Torre |first=Renée |year=1994–1995 |title=Guadalajara, la perla de la Luz del Mundo |journal=Renglones |volume=10 |issue=30 |pages=34–39 |publisher=ITESO |url=http://ccdoc.iteso.mx/cat.aspx?cmn=browse&id=67 |issn=0186-4963 |oclc=13536814 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Giménez |editor-first=Gilberto |last=De la Torre |first=Renée |title=Identidades Religiosas y Sociales en México |chapter=Pinceladas de una ilustración etnográfica: La Luz del Mundo en Guadalajara |year=1996 |publisher=Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México |isbn=978-968-36-4956-0 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite journal |last=De la Torre |first=Renée |year=1996 |title=Los motivos de la conversión: Estudio de caso en La Luz del Mundo, Guadalajara, México |journal=Iztapalapa |volume=39 |issue= |pages=109–126 |publisher=Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana |url=http://148.206.53.230/revistasuam/iztapalapa/include/getdoc.php?rev=iztapalapa&id=531&article=540&mode=pdf |issn=0185-4259 |oclc=6826600 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Masferrer Kan |editor-first=Elio |first=Renée |last=De la Torre |title=Sectas o iglesias: Viejas o nuevas religiones |year=2000 |publisher=Plaza y Valdés, Asociación Latinoamericana para el estudio de las Religiones |chapter=Una Iglesia mexicana con proyección internacional: La Luz del Mundo |isbn=978-968-856-579-7 |edition=2nd |pages=261–282 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |last=Dormady |first=Jason H. |title="Not Just a Better Mexico": Intentional Religious Community and the Mexican State, 1940--1964 |year=2007 |publisher=ProQuest |location=University of California, Santa Barbara |isbn=978-0-549-15247-7}}
* {{cite journal |last=Fortuny |first=Patricia |year=1996 |title=La Luz del Mundo: una oferta múltiple de salvación |journal=Estudios Jalisciences |volume=24 |issue= |pages= |publisher=El Colegio de Jalisco |oclc=25067830 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Castañeda |editor-first=Carmen |last=Fortuny Loret de Mola |first=Patricia |title=Vivir en Guadalajara. La Ciudad y sus Funciones |chapter=La historia mítica del fundador de la lglesia La Luz del Mundo |year=1992 |publisher=Ayuntamiento de Guadalajara |pages=363–379 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |last=Fortuny-Loret de Mola |first=Patricia |chapter=La Luz del Mundo Church |url=http://knowledge.sagepub.com/view/globalreligion/n401.xml |title=Encyclopedia of global religion |year=2012 |publisher=SAGE Publications, Inc. |location=Thousand Oaks, CA |isbn=978-0-7619-2729-7 |editor1-first=Mark |editor2-first=Wade Clark |pages=683–686 |editor1-last=Juergensmeyer |editor2-last=Roof |editor1-link=Mark Juergensmeyer}}
* {{cite journal |last=Fortuny-Loret de Mola |first=Patricia |year=2012 |title=Migrantes y peregrinos de La Luz del Mundo: religión popular y comunidad moral transnacional |journal=Nueva Antropología: Revista de Ciencias Sociales |volume=25 |issue=77 |pages=179–200 |publisher=Nueva Antropología A.C. |issn=0185-0636 |oclc=262698382 |language=Spanish}}
* {{cite book |last=Morán Quiroz |first=Luis Rodolfo |title=Alternativa religiosa en Guadalajara: una aproximación al estudio de las iglesias evangélicas |year=1990 |publisher=Universidad de Guadalajara |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |isbn=978-968-895-220-7 |series=Colección Estudios Latinoamericanos |volume=3 |language=Spanish}}

==External links==
{{Commons category|La Luz del Mundo Church}}
* {{Official website|lldm.org}}

[[:Category:Christianity in Mexico]]
[[:Category:Restorationism (Christianity)]]
[[:Category:Religious organizations established in 1926]]
[[:Category:Indigenous Christianity]]
[[:Category:Nontrinitarian denominations]]

Latest revision as of 03:49, 14 January 2015