This excellent article is presented now from the BIOLA site with the hopes that more folk will be better informed about the NAR. The NAR “associated” churches continue to flourish. The OhMyGodJesus.com editor has preserved the original text – while only adding links to pertinent sites for reference purposes only.
Source: https://www.biola.edu/blogs/biola-magazine/2015/a-new-reformation
A New ‘Reformation’
That Many Don’t Realize They’ve Joined
If you thought apostles and prophets only lived way back in Bible times and have long since disappeared, think again. Contemporary people calling themselves apostles and prophets have many followers. They are vigorously active in churches in the United States and throughout the world. Odds are, some are active in your own community.
These men and women claim they have the God-given authority, divine strategies and miraculous powers needed to advance God’s earthly kingdom so that Christ can return. And they offer people a choice.
If you submit to their leadership, then you too will work mighty miracles. You’ll become part of a great end-time army that will bring about a world revival and cleanse the earth of evil by calling down hailstones, fire and the other judgments of God described in the New Testament book of Revelation.
If you do not submit to their leadership then, at the very least, you will miss out on God’s end-time plans. And if you actively oppose the apostles and prophets, then brace yourself for the fallout. Others must be warned that you are the pawn of a powerful demon, known as the “spirit of religion.”
This may sound radical and unappealing, but the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) is growing rapidly. In the United States, it began taking off in the 1980s and 1990s, when prophets and apostles starting showing up in churches.
Today, about 3 million people in the United States attend churches that openly embrace NAR apostles and prophets. And that number doesn’t include the many Pentecostal and charismatic churches that have not openly embraced these leaders, yet have been influenced by their teachings in varying degrees.
People in these churches read bestselling books by NAR prophets — books like Rick Joyner’s The Final Quest or the apostle Bill Johnson’s When Heaven Invades Earth. Or they use a new, wildly popular NAR Bible, called The Passion Translation, produced by the apostle Brian Simmons, who claims that Christ visited him personally and commissioned him to release this new translation.
And we haven’t yet mentioned NAR churches in other parts of the world where the movement is growing most swiftly — Africa, Asia and Latin America.
NAR leaders call their new movement apostolic because they claim to be restoring apostles and prophets to the church. And they call it a reformation because they say it will completely change the way church is done — and its effects will be greater than the 16th-century Protestant Reformation.
That’s a bold claim. Yet many people who are part of this movement don’t know it’s called the New Apostolic Reformation. In fact, they may not even know they are part of a movement at all.
And they may not be fully aware of all the extreme teachings associated with it. But they certainly know of — and follow the teachings of — men and women who believe they are apostles and prophets similar to the apostles of Christ and the Old Testament prophets.
*Excerpted from God’s Super-Apostles: Encountering the Worldwide Prophets and Apostles Movement, by R. Douglas Geivett (professor of philosophy) and Holly (Peters ’99, M.A. ’05) Pivec, Weaver Book Co., December 2014.
FOR MORE:
NAR “associated” churches continue to flourish. Many people who are part of this movement don’t know it’s called the New Apostolic Reformation. In fact, they may not even know they are part of a movement at all. And they may not be fully aware of all the extreme teachings associated with it. Do you?
“even from among your own selves men will arise, speaking perverse and distorted things, to draw away the disciples after themselves [as their followers]. 31 Therefore be continually alert, remembering that for three years, night or day, I did not stop admonishing and advising each one [of you] with tears.”
About Being Apostate… following “another gospel”
NAR-types are changing God’s Way, denying the Old Testament
Post New Apostolic Reformation Reflections
They in fact have seen nothing
Following the Jesus who was not God
The Bethel Johnson’s unbiblical teachings
About False Teachings of Today
Note to Preterists – Jesus did not return in 70AD. He is coming soon!
More By Holly Pivec and Doug Geivett
Sorry, not sorry: Why the NAR prophets’ apologies for getting things wrong don’t cut it – by Holly Pivec Reporting on the Rise of ‘Reckless Christianity’: Responding biblically to the worldwide prophets and apostles movement taking over churches
Reporting on the Rise of ‘Reckless Christianity’… Responding biblically to the worldwide prophets and apostles movement taking over churches. Written By Holly Pivec and Doug Geivett
NAR leader Brian Simmons reveals a new chapter of the Bible | by Holly Pivec (which Simmons said he will pick-up on his next trip to Heaven! He still has not done it, however). Pivec has a master’s degree in Christian apologetics from Biola University.
God’s Super-Apostles: Encountering the Worldwide Prophets and Apostles Movement | By Holly Pivec and Doug Geivett; “God’s Super-Apostles provides a concise entry-level overview of the key teachings and practices of the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) movement. This is a key resource in grasping the significance of this global, confusing, and controversial movement.”
A New Apostolic Reformation?: A Biblical Response to a Worldwide Movement | By Holly Pivec and Doug Geivett. Authors introduction:
“This critique provides a framework for understanding and interpreting the widespread but little-known New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) movement. As the authors state in the preface:
“We write this book with two major goals in mind.
First, to give people an idea of the sheer size and reach of the NAR movement.
And second, to systematize its key teachings and practices and evaluate them on the basis of Scripture and careful reasoning
In our judgment, the NAR perspective crosses these boundaries [that is, certain broad parameters, revealed in Scripture and practiced in the historical orthodox church], and it does so in part because of flawed theology rooted in a flawed understanding of Scripture.
We wish to warn readers about a possible confusion: Some critics have linked the NAR movement with mainstream Pentecostalism and charismatics. We do not do this. In fact, it is our contention that the NAR movement deviates from classical Pentecostal and charismatic teachings. This movement has emerged out of independent charismatic churches and, thus, has gained a foothold in many of those churches in varying degrees.”
Geivett and Pivec are also authors of A New Apostolic Reformation?: A Biblical Response to a Worldwide Movement, Weaver Book Co., December 2014.
More on Prophet Brian Simmons, The Passion Translation, and the NAR:
The Passion Translation (TPT) and why not to use it
Sorry, not sorry: Why the NAR prophets’ apologies for getting things wrong don’t cut it
AND
NAR leader Brian Simmons reveals a new chapter of the Bible (which Simmons said he will pick-up on his next trip to Heaven!)
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