Story highlights Around two million Latinos are registered to vote in Florida, according a City University Of New York study

The study adds that Latinos will cast about 20% of the votes in Florida

Daytona Beach, Florida (CNN) The sound of Christian Latin pop music fills the air inside Ministerio Apostolico Avance Misionero, a Christian church on a recent evening in South Daytona Beach, Florida.

The lyrics profess love and faith in Jesus Christ while devout believers raise their hands to the heavens, signaling the start of Wednesday night service.

Ministerio Apostolico serves the growing Hispanic community in the Daytona Beach area, the starting point of the so-called Highway I-4 corridor stretching from Tampa on the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic Ocean with Orlando in between. This region is home to the second largest and more diverse concentration of Latinos in Florida after Miami and the southern part of the state where Cuban Americans are the majority.

"We have people from about 15 cultures in our congregation," says Yoan Hechavarria, the head of this church, who said Ministerio Daytona is part of a much larger church based in Jacksonville.

And while politics are not part of the pastor's sermon, Hechavarria admits the presidential election is part of the conversation before and after the service.

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