A new ministry training initiative is preparing to launch in Puerto Rico next month, offering intensive programs designed to equip believers with practical skills in healing prayer, prophetic ministry, and street evangelism. The school, opening April 1, represents a focused effort to move beyond traditional classroom teaching toward activation-based learning.
The operation behind the initiative includes both Holy Spirit Fire Schools and Cameron Garner Ministries, organizations working to establish a training hub that emphasizes what they call “power evangelism”—taking faith practices outside church buildings and into public spaces.
Three Core Training Programs
The school offers three distinct curricula, each structured as short-term intensive courses. The flagship Identity School runs six days and covers topics ranging from mind renewal and living free in Christ to healing, deliverance, and prophetic activation. The program combines teaching with hands-on practice, a format the organizers believe creates faster skill development than lecture-based approaches.
A five-day Prophetic Activation course addresses what many consider a mysterious aspect of faith practice: hearing and communicating what participants believe is God’s voice. The training covers practical elements like testing prophetic impressions, understanding words of knowledge, and navigating prophetic protocol in church settings. The curriculum distinguishes between Old and New Testament approaches to prophecy and includes sessions on visions and angelic encounters.

The third offering, Power Evangelism training, directly addresses a common barrier in faith communities: fear of public witness. Participants learn methods for praying with strangers, sharing their beliefs conversibly, and conducting street ministry outreach with an emphasis on healing prayer.
Breaking the Orphan Mindset
The training philosophy centers on what the school describes as moving from “orphan mindsets” to embracing full identity as spiritual sons and daughters. This theological framework underpins all three programs, with the goal of helping participants understand their perceived authority within their faith tradition.
While the primary training base will be in Puerto Rico, the school also plans to bring its curriculum to local churches, making the programs accessible beyond the island location. The approach targets believers seeking immersive experiences rather than semester-long seminary programs.

Building Toward the Great Commission
The ministry’s stated aim is cultural shift within faith communities—preparing participants not just with knowledge but with applied experience. Each course includes what they call “activations,” structured opportunities to practice skills like praying for healing, delivering prophetic words, or approaching strangers with their message.
As the April launch approaches, the ministry training programs in Puerto Rico face the challenge common to new educational ventures: building initial enrollment and engagement. The organizers are actively working to attract participants to their condensed, practice-heavy model of religious education, betting that believers will respond to training that promises immediate application rather than theoretical study.


