LDN. Revival in Baton Rouge: Hundreds Gather for Worship on Halloween Night – While others celebrated Halloween, the streets of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, became a place of worship, prayer, and renewal as hundreds of believers gathered near the Louisiana State University campus for a revival-style event led by worship leader Sean Feucht. LDN

REVIVAL IN BATON ROUGE: HUNDREDS GATHER FOR WORSHIP ON HALLOWEEN NIGHT 🙌🔥
While much of the nation celebrated Halloween with lights, costumes, and late-night parties, the streets of Baton Rouge, Louisiana became the stage for something far more profound — a revival. On a night long associated with darkness, hundreds of believers filled the streets near Louisiana State University, turning fear into faith and celebration into salvation.
The event, led by worship leader Sean Feucht, drew students, families, and worshippers from all across the region. What began as a simple call to gather for prayer quickly became a powerful outpouring of the Holy Spirit — one that many described as unlike anything they’d ever experienced.
“Worship, salvations, baptisms, and a move of the Holy Spirit taking back Halloween,” Feucht wrote on X (formerly Twitter). “What the enemy meant for fear, God turned into fire.”
As worship began, the sound of guitars and voices echoed through the cool autumn air. Hundreds stood with hands lifted high, singing songs of praise that carried far beyond the LSU campus. Videos from the night show young people kneeling on the pavement, tears streaming down their faces, while others embraced and prayed for one another under the streetlights.
Then, something even more extraordinary happened — spontaneous baptisms.
Volunteers rushed to bring in large tubs of water, and before long, people began stepping forward — students, parents, even children — to publicly declare their faith in Jesus Christ. The crowd erupted in cheers each time someone rose from the water, their faces glowing with joy and freedom.
Local residents reported hearing the music and worship from blocks away, describing it as “the sound of hope.” One LSU student, still visibly emotional afterward, told reporters:
“I came here out of curiosity, but I left changed. I felt something real — peace like I’ve never known.”
Throughout the night, testimonies poured out — stories of healing, reconciliation, and forgiveness. Pastors from nearby churches joined in prayer, and strangers hugged like family. Even those who came just to watch were drawn into the worship, as laughter and tears mingled beneath the stars.
Sean Feucht later shared that the Baton Rouge gathering was part of a growing movement spreading across America — an effort to reclaim public spaces for worship and remind the world that revival doesn’t belong to a building; it belongs to the people.
“Revival isn’t a place,” he said. “It’s a posture — a heart that says, ‘Jesus, You’re still the answer.’”
By midnight, as the final song faded, no one wanted to leave. The air was cool, but hearts burned with renewed passion. In a city that has seen its share of division and pain, this night felt different — a reminder that even on Halloween, when shadows stretch long, light can still break through.
Across social media, the videos have gone viral — showing hundreds of believers singing, crying, and rejoicing in the streets. Many are calling it “the night God took back Halloween.”
And perhaps that’s exactly what it was — a revival born not in a cathedral, but on a college street in Louisiana, where the sound of worship rose louder than fear.
Because on October 31st, in the heart of Baton Rouge, darkness didn’t win — light did. ✝️🔥💧
