Dr. C. Peter Wagner

Taken from his website at -

Global Harvest Ministries

Peter Wagner is the President of the Global Harvest Ministries and Chancellor of the Wagner Leadership Institute. Established in 1998, the Institute equips men and women for leadership positions in churches and translocal ministries. It is designed especially, but not exclusively, to meet the needs of leaders who have become a part of the New Apostolic reformation. Missions have been a watermark of Peter's career. From 1956 to 1971, he and his wife Doris served as missionaries in Bolivia under the South American Mission and Andes Evangelical Mission (now SIM International).

In 1971, Peter Wagner became a Professor of Church Growth at Fuller Theological Seminary School of World Missions. During his 28-year tenure at Fuller, he has had the privilege to teach students from nearly every country in the world.

To advance the role of missions in church growth, Peter Wagner has served on several mission oriented ministries, committees, and organizations. His memberships include: Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization (1974-1989); American Society of Missiology; Society for Scientific Study of Religion; Association of Professors of Mission; Evangelical Missiological Society; American Society for Church Growth (founding president); and the American Lausanne Committee.

Another perspective taken from

Cross+Word Christian Research

The Apostles Are Coming To Your City, Ready or Not

by Orrel Steinkamp

In a previous issue of PLUMBLINE, I described the efforts of C. Peter Wagner to create a New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) which he predicts will be even greater in scope and significance than the Protestant Reformation of the 1500's. The centerpiece of the movement is the purported restoration, by God, of the NT office-gift of "Apostle' to the end-time church.

Now Wagner and his apostolic buddies are attempting to move from vision to reality. In an article titled, APOSTOLIC REFORMATION on his Website

Global Harvest Ministries he reveals moves that are currently underway, to implement his apostolic reformation. In this article he restates the goals and also the preliminary means to implement them.

Goal:

Wagner asserts: NAR is an extra-ordinary work of God at the close of the 20th century that to a significant extent is changing the shape of Protestant Christianity around the world. For almost 500 years Christian churches have largely functioned with traditional denominational structures of one kind or another. Within this reformation, Wagner sees a growing recognition of present day apostolic ministries who are giving birth to their own family of leaders and churches to whom they have a relational commitment. Within New Apostolic Christianity, this governmental authority is being exercised in the local church by the pastor and on a translocal level by apostles who operate with a relational authority. Wagner sees what is happening in the NAR as key to world harvest. Wagner sees apostles as being at the peak of their (own) networks and the people in their networks as accountable to them. It is here in the article that the accountability of the apostles is addressed and Wagner begins to refer to the means of implementing the apostolic structure.

Implementation - The New Apostolic Roundtable:

Wagner is personally involved in an accountability structure called the "New Apostolic Roundtable." Twenty-five apostles were invited to join as members and they plan to meet together annually, the week after Easter. Eventually, the names of the roundtable will be made public.

The International Coalition of Apostles:

Because this movement is growing so rapidly around the world, Wagner also sees a need for a larger kind of structure. As a result he and a number of others have formed what they call the International Coalition of Apostles.

They have sent out their first invitations in January of this year (2001) and have just passed one hundred and fifty members. Wagner expects that they will ultimately attract from five hundred to one thousand members (solicited by invitation only). They plan to hold an annual meeting along with occasional regional summits across America and around the world.

Apostles to the Cities:

In Wagner's new book, APOSTLES OF THE CITY: HOW TO MOBILIZE THE TERRITORIAL APOSTLES FOR CITY TRANSFORMATION, he attempts to describe what the local role of these apostles might be. He defines Apostles to the City as those "whom the Holy Spirit gives an anointing for extraordinary authority in spiritual matters over the other Christian leaders in the same city." While not excluding others, Wagner hypothesizes that the most extensive pool for identifying apostles of the city is among the mega churches.

Wagner notes that extra-denominational alignments are already occurring, which provide the ideal structure for recognizing the Apostles in the city. He sees it highly probable that we will begin to see the development of spontaneous territorial spheres which will rise to a higher importance than traditional denominational affiliations. When asked what he thought the main stumbling block would be, that would keep leaders from embracing the Apostolic Reformation, Wagner cites "a commitment to tradition amongst ministers." Wagner states: "I think that some are bound by religious forms and functions that are ineffective and I think in many cases it is demonic influence."

Pastors: are you ready to be placed under certain translocal apostles who are identified by other translocal apostles? I think I feel a college of Cardinal/Apostles coming on.

Church members: are you ready to implement what these apostles pass on to you, via you pastor? District superintendents: are you ready to move over for a newly appointed apostle?

I am sure many of you tire of denominational Christianity with its penchant for politics and power and parochialism but are these new apostles immune from these very forces? Are they somehow unaffected by the same fleshly forces that create some of the undesirable features of denominationalism?

Does not the NAR smack of an attempt to replace one power structure with another? We already have a denomination called the Apostolic Church. I noticed that the new apostles are to be recognized by "invitation only." Is not this already a sort of insider 'good ole boys club' in the making?

I wonder if they have been free of politics even to this point. There will, of course, have to be a "preeminent" or "leading" apostle. How will he be recognized?

Will these cloistered apostles meet in secret and send out the message by smoke, ala the Roman Catholic College of Cardinals, that a new preeminent and leading apostle has been chosen?

I have seen the rumored statement on the Internet that Wagner has been designated the pre-eminent Apostle. It figures, for it was his baby from the beginning. [NB 2003: Peter Wagner has indeed been recognized as "Leading Apostle" of the group] It amazes me that virtually no one is challenging Wagner and his apostle buddies. Perhaps you have not known about it or perhaps you don't take it seriously, assuming it will just go away. The Apostles will not just go away and one day they will possibly arrive in your area. Will you accept them or will you respectfully challenge this NAR on Biblical grounds?

Further information can be found at....

The Roots & Fruits of the New Apostolic Reformation by Bob DeWaay

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