

The NAR is rooted in the Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity movements.

Curated/Reviewed by Matthew A. McIntosh
Public Historian
Brewminate
Introduction
Theย New Apostolic Reformationย (NAR) is a theological belief and movement that combines elements ofย Pentecostalism,ย evangelicalismย and theย Seven Mountain Mandateย to advocate forย spiritual warfareย to bring about Christianย dominionย over all aspects of society, and end or weaken theย separation of church and state. NAR leaders often call themselvesย apostlesย andย prophets. Long a fringe movement of the Americanย Christian right, it has been characterized as “one of the most important shifts in Christianity in modern times.”
The NAR’s prominence and power have increased since the 2016 election ofย Donald Trumpย as US president. Theology professorย Andrรฉ Gagnรฉ, author of a 2024 book on the movement, has characterized it as “inherently political” and said it threatens to “subvert democracy.” American Republican politicians such asย Mike Johnson,[1]ย Doug Mastriano,[2]ย Marjorie Taylor Greene, andย Lauren Boebert[2]ย and activists such asย Charlie Kirk[2]ย have aligned with it.[3][4][5][6]
History and Reach

Americanย missiologist, theologian, and “church growth guru”[7]ย Charles Peter Wagnerย was the founder of the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) and coiner of the term itself.[2][8]
The nameย New Apostolic Reformationย and whether it constitutes a distinct movement is the subject of some controversy.[9]ย Some scholars also use the termsย Independent Network Charismaticย (INC) orย Apostolic-Prophetic Movementย to refer to the NAR. Sociologists Brad Christerson and Richard Flory argue that the NAR is part of the INC, but there is enough difference that not all INC groups would fall under the NAR.[10][8]ย Elizabeth A. McAlisterย notes that the names Spiritual Mapping movement, Transformation or Revival movement, and Third Wave Evangelical movement are also used.[11]ย The termย NARย has been described as “relatively well established in the academic community”.[12]
Primarily “influenced and driven by North American evangelicals,”[13]ย the NAR is rooted in theย Pentecostalย andย Charismatic Christianityย movements: namely, the first-wave Pentecostalism of the 1900s, theย Latter Rain movementย of the 1940s, the second-wave Charismatic Christianity of the 1960s through 1980s, and theย Shepherding movementย of the 1970s and 1980s. The NAR has been described as taking theย restorationism,ย dominionism, and “end-timesย revival” focus of the Latter Rain movement โ thought to lead to a new Christian influence on the world โ and the authoritarian nature of the Shepherding movement, described as “a kind of pyramid of power and accountability whereby authority (usually male) would flow down from a leading national (or global) figure to local pastors, and even through a chain of pastoral command between congregants”.[14][7][15]
Described as a “born networker”, Wagner was involved in a number ofย missionsย andย church growthย organizations and a charter member of the Evangelicalย Lausanne movementย focused onย evangelism.[16]ย Starting in the early 1980s, Wagner was a professor in Church Growth atย Fuller Theological Seminaryย inย Pasadena, California, where his influence grew. A “key disciple” ofย Vineyard Churchย founderย John Wimber, who focused on exercisingย spiritual giftsย such asย prophecyย andย miracles, Wagner initially emphasized spiritual gifts as well, holding “Signs, Wondersย and Church Growth” courses at Fuller Seminary along with Wimber. Wagner saw the growth of independent Charismatic churches in the 1980s โ including in Latin America and Africa and combining elements of indigenousย cosmologies; Wagner termed the newย neo-charismaticย movement the “Third Wave”.[17][18][19][20]ย As the movement developed and Wagner’s views were changed through his connection with Wimber, Wagner’s focus would later shift toย spiritual warfareย andย exorcism. The neo-charismatic movement โ as opposed to traditional Pentecostal belief, which focused on individual demonic oppression โ developed a theology of regions being controlled by specific demons termedย territorial spirits. Wagner helped popularize the concept. Though spiritual warfare had not been of significant importance in evangelical theology, his Spiritual Warfare Network of the 1980s and 1990s profoundly and quickly impacted broader evangelical belief on the matter.[2][21]
In 1996, Wagner organized a convention with 500 evangelical leaders, the National Symposium on the Postdenominational Church, including the organization of the church and evangelization, at Fuller Seminary. It addressed the changing organizational forms Wagner saw in churches, which he considered a radical paradigm shift. He then coined the termย New Apostolic Reformationย to refer to the new movement.[22][23]ย Over time, the termย New Apostolic Reformationย gained prominence over the previousย Third Wave.[24]

The same year, Wagner publishedย Confronting the Powers: How the New Testament Church Experienced the Power of Strategic-Level Spiritual Warfare and Engaging the Enemy, in which he discussed spiritual warfare on multiple levels.[8]ย Starting in the late 1990s and through the mid-2000s, the NAR began to absorb the spiritual mapping movement, which had started in 1989 at the Evangelicalย Second International Congress on World Evangelization, and which focused on on-site prayer campaigns to battle demons in specific areas.[25]
As the fastest growing group “within or on the periphery of American Christianity” since the 1980s, the New Apostolic Reformation has rapidly gained religious and political influence in the United States.[15]ย In 2015, it was estimated that churches openly part of the NAR were attended by 3,000,000 Americans;[26][27]ย some estimates as of 2020ย claim an “[influence on] approximately thirty-three million adherents in the United States”, though this number is disputed.[15]
The movement is global, growing in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, with it constituting a significant part of church growth in the southern hemisphere.[28][26][24]ย American missionaries introduced New Apostolic thought and spiritual warfare practices to Haitian pastors and seminarians during the first presidency of Jean-Bertrand Aristide and again following theย 2010 Haiti earthquakeย through transnational missionary networks.[29]ย Additionally, tenets typical of the NAR have spread into the broader Pentecostal and Charismatic worlds.[28]ย NAR beliefs have a global reach throughย Trinity Broadcasting Network, an international Christian television network, which “regularly promotes the teachings of the NAR” in its programming.[30]ย Theย Elijah List, a prophecy-focused website founded in 1997, is influential in the NAR.[31]
Beliefs

The title New Apostolic Reformation is descriptive of a theological movement and is not an organization and therefore does not have formal membership, though some of the organizations belonging to the movement have a system of membership, and, at times, overlapping leadership.[32]ย Religion scholar and theologian Geir Otto Holmรฅs states that the “NAR is not a denomination or an organization with membership lists and an unambiguous doctrinal foundation, but a loose movement which primarily operates through informal or semi-formal channels,” continuing on to say that the movement is spread in bits and pieces:[28]ย religion scholar Matthew D. Taylor terms this “propheticย memes”.[33]ย Holmรฅs states that “this explains the slightly odd fact that that people who are associated with the NAR do not necessarily identify with the movement. Some of them will not evenย have heardย the term ‘New Apostolic Reformation'”.[28]
Among those in the movement that inspired the title NAR, there is a wide range of variance on specific beliefs. Those within the movement hold to their denominational interpretations of the ongoing ministry of theย Holy Spiritย within each believer. Unlike some parts of Protestant Christianity, these include the direct revelation ofย Christย to each believer,ย prophecy, and the performance ofย miraclesย such asย healing.[clarification needed]ย This movement has also been given the descriptive title “Third Wave of the Holy Spirit”.[34]
Although the movement regards the church as the true body of saved believers, as does most of evangelical Protestantism, it differs from the broader Protestant tradition in its view on the nature of church leadership, specifically the doctrine ofย five-fold ministry, which is based upon a non-traditional interpretation ofย Ephesiansย 4:11, the so called-“apostles and prophets”, evangelists, pastors (also referred to as the shepherds), and teachers.[35][8]ย Wagner considered 2000โ2001 to be the beginning of the second apostolic age and that the lost offices of prophet and apostle were restored around that time.[36][37]
Theย eschatologyย of broader Pentecostalism is typicallyย premillennialistย โ believing that biblical end-times prophecies have not yet been fulfilled and that the world will go through “a period of decay, tribulation and persecution under the reign of theย Antichrist”,[38]ย leading to Jesus Christ’s return to earth to reign for one thousand years. In contrast, the NAR holds that most such prophecies have been fulfilled in the early church, with prophecies from the movement’s prophets gaining importance in its understanding of the end times. It believes that the end times will be an “optimistic” period of theย Kingdom of Godย being established on earth through the actions of obedient Christians, leading to theย Second Coming.[39]
Religion scholar Matthew D. Taylor describes the NAR’s leadership in contrast with other forms of localย church governance, in which churches are run by either an episcopal hierarchy, authoritarian pastor, or democratic system such as a church board. Rather, the movement’s shared authority among the apostles and prophets is what he terms a “spiritualย oligarchy”.[40]ย This leadership sees itself as having the divine authority and spiritual power โ used inย spiritual warfareย โ to “advance God’s earthly kingdom so thatย Christ can return.”[26]ย Made up of networks of apostles and prophets and networks of churches, Wagner saw the movement as the “most radical change in how churches operate since theย Protestant Reformation.” These “relational networks”, as opposed to a church bureaucratic system, were part of the previous Latter Rain movement.[4][10]ย Biola Universityย theology professor R. Douglas Geivett and writer Holly Pivec, who have written three books on the movement, described the movement’s promises inย God’s Super-Apostles: Encountering the Worldwide Prophets and Apostles Movement:
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.[26]
Those in opposition, seen to include much of the US federal government and theย Democratic Party, are viewed as being subject to demonic forces.[26][41]

Theย Seven Mountain Mandateย (7M) โ argued to hold “revelationย status” in the NAR โ is another aspect of NAR belief,[42][4][26]ย which states that Christians should take over multiple aspects (“mountains”) of society: family, religion, education, media, arts and entertainment, business, and government.[33][43]
Prominent NAR believerย Lance Wallnau, who has asserted Donald Trump was “anointed” to be president, has promoted 7M combined with spiritual warfare against perceived demonic spirits.[44]ย Wallnau told followers in 2011:
If you’re talking to a secular audience you don’t talk about having dominion over them. This whole idea of taking over and that language of takeover, it doesn’t actually help. It’s good for preaching to the choir and it’s shorthand if we interpret it right, but it’s very bad for media.”[4]
Theology professorย Andre Gagnรฉย asserts the Seven Mountain Mandate is more of a strategic marketing tool to mobilize NAR adherents than a theology.[4]
Wagner defined three kinds of strategic spiritual warfare to defeat territorial spirits controlling people or areas: prayer walking in groups through demon-controlled areas, large prayer marches to an area where a rally is held, and strategic-level spiritual warfare, prayer journeys in which spiritual warriors travel to “powerful ‘spiritual strongholds'” to confront demons. The first two forms have also been defined as “ground-level” and “occult-level”, in which demons are exorcised from individuals, and perceived demonic concepts such as theย New Age,ย Freemasonry, andย Buddhismย are targeted, respectively. Those in the movement, including Wagner himself, have undertaken journeys to spiritual stronghold areas, such as climbing Mount Everest in 1997 (“Operation Ice Castle”) to pray against the “Queen of Heaven” or “Mother of the Universe”, believed to be the demon underlying Catholicism’s concept ofย Mary, mother of Jesus.[45][46][47][48]ย Strategic spiritual warfare also often aims at opening theย 10/40 Window, a region defined in Christianย missiologyย as having low socioeconomic status and little access toย the gospel.[49][46]ย NAR believers claim there is demonic control of a number of other areas, including Utah (due to its high population ofย Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saintsย members), and Detroit, Michigan (due to the city’s large Muslim population), as well as sites such as abortion clinics and masonic temples.[50][11]ย In US politics, televangelistย Paula White, chair of the evangelical advisory board in theย Trump administration, called for “every demonic network that is aligned itself against the purpose, against the calling of President Trump, let it be broken, let it be torn down in the name of Jesus.” Gagnรฉ, author of the 2024 bookย American Evangelicals for Trump: Dominion, Spiritual Warfare, and the End Times, asserts White’s high-profile platform contributed to the “mainstreaming of spiritual warfare” against “demonic forces in the world that have sometimes taken over their political enemies.”[4]ย NAR prophet Lance Wallnau has referred to Trump’s presidency as a “spiritual warfare presidency”.[51]ย Media Mattersย reported in January 2024 that former Trump strategic advisorย Steve Bannonย often spoke of a “spiritual war” that characterized Democrats as “demons.”[52]
Many NAR adherents have adopted theย Appeal to Heaven Flagย from theย American Revolutionary Warย that symbolized seeking authority from a power higher than the British king. NAR leaders such as apostleย Dutch Sheetsย popularized the flag to symbolizeย Christian nationalism, and many participants in the January 6 attack were seen carrying it. Andrรฉ Gagnรฉ asserts the NAR symbolism of the flag “has completely turned” from the original meaning, to now “support the idea that Trump should be president, that he’s chosen by God.” The flag is displayed outsideย Speaker Mike Johnson’s Capitol Hill office, and has flown at the New Jersey vacation home ofย United States Supreme Courtย justiceย Samuel Alito.[5][1][53][54]

Dutch Sheets has long advocated the end ofย separation of church and state, co-authoring a 2022 “Watchman Decree” that states “we, the Church, are God’s governing Body on the earth.”[55]ย During a summer 2022 livestreamed service, Sheets prayed over congresswomanย Marjorie Taylor Greene, who identifies as a Christian nationalist, concluding, “You are highly favored, you will not fail, in Jesus’ name, Amen!”[56]ย House Speaker Mike Johnson said in November 2023 that the “separation of church and state is a misnomer” because the Founders “did not want the government to encroach upon the churchโnot that they didn’t want principles of faith to have influence on our public life. It’s exactly the opposite.”[57]ย Speaking at a religious service in summer 2022, congresswomanย Lauren Boebertย said:
The church is supposed to direct the government. The government is not supposed to direct the church. That is not how our Founding Fathers intended it. I’m tired of this separation of church and state junk that’s not in the Constitution. It was in a stinking letter, and it means nothing like what they say it does.[58]
Brian Simmons is a NAR apostle and the author ofย The Passion Translation, which he asserts Jesus Christ personally commissioned him to translate from theย New Testamentย and theย Hebrew Bibleย into new scripture in 2009. He added that he had been transported to meet Jesus in an immense library in heaven. Pivec, who has co-authored three books on the NAR, writes that the translation has been endorsed by several NAR leaders, and many in the movement use it as their primary Bible. She adds that Simmons is the sole author of the translation and he has not disclosed the editors and scholars he says have reviewed his work. Pivec and her co-author, Geivett, assert the translation contains “completely reworded verses, making it appear that the Bible supports NAR teachings.” Bible scholars say the Simmons book does not meet the rigorous standards of a translation but rather functions as aย paraphrase.ย BibleGateway, an evangelical Christian website providing access to 232 versions of the Bible in 74 languages, removed The Passion Translation from its site in February 2022.[59][60][61][62]
Associated People, Organizations, and Events

Few, if any, organizations publicly espouse connection to the NAR, though there are numerous public individuals associated with it, including:
- Chรฉ Ahn, Harvest International Ministries; an asserted NAR apostle[2]
- Mike Bickle, founder ofย International House of Prayer,[4]ย though he has stated he is not affiliated with Wagner or a dominionist[63]
- Lauren Boebert, Republican congresswoman[2]
- Lou Engle, founder ofย TheCall[64]
- Michael Flynn, Republican former Trump national security advisor, whoseย ReAwaken America Tourย is sponsored by NAR proponentย Charisma News[65][2]
- Jim Garlow, former senior pastor ofย Skyline Church[66]
- Faytene Grasseschi, Canadian conservative activist and broadcaster[67]
- Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican congresswoman[2]
- Cindy Jacobs, cofounder of Generals International[68]
- Bill Johnson, senior leader ofย Bethel Church, has been called part of the movement;[4][26]ย he states, however, that the church has no official connection[69]
- Mike Johnson, Republicanย Speaker of the US House of Representatives[5][1]
- Rick Joyner, founder ofย MorningStar Ministries[4][26]
- John P. Kelly, founder of John P. Kelly Ministries and Convening Apostle[70]
- Charlie Kirk, Republican leader ofย Turning Point USA[2]
- Guillermo Maldonado, co-founder and senior pastor ofย El Rey Jesรบsย and apostle in the International Coalition of Apostles[71][72]
- Doug Mastriano, 2022 Republican nominee for governor of Pennsylvania[2]
- Ana Mรฉndez Ferrell, “general of spiritual warfare” under Wagner and leader of spiritual mapping operations[73][49][74]
- Thomas Muthee, Kenyan apostle[75][76]
- Tom Parker, Republican chief justice of theย Alabama Supreme Court[77]
- Alice Patterson, leader ofย Justice at the Gate, who has characterized the Democratic party as a demon structure[35]
- Dutch Sheets, founder of Dutch Sheets Ministries and asserted apostle[5][78]
- Ed Silvoso, founder of Harvest Evangelism and member of Eagles Vision Apostolic Team[79]
- Brian Simmons, founder of Stairway Ministries and Passion and Fire Ministries, author ofย The Passion Translation[26]
- Roger Stone, Republican political advisor[2]
- Jan-Aage Torp, head ofย European Apostolic Leaders, an organization founded by Wagner[32]
- C. Peter Wagner, founder ofย Global Harvest Ministries, who coined the termย New Apostolic Reformation[35]
- Lance Wallnau, an asserted apostle[2]
- Todd White, Lifestyle Christianity[80]
After being named as part of the NAR, and critics believing that Bethel Church was instrumental in leading some Christians to embrace tenets of NAR, Pastor Bill Johnson of Bethel became regularly listed as an NAR leader. Johnson confirmed that he does believe in the apostolic and prophetic ministries; he denied, however, in an official statement that his church had any official ties to the NAR.[69]ย Johnson and NAR apostle Lance Wallnau co-wrote the 2013 bookย Invading Babylon: The 7 Mountain Mandate.[81]
When Rick Joyner of MorningStar Ministries was listed,[where?]ย he announced that “there will likewise be a horde of false apostles released”, continuing: “Our team received two very specific dreams warning about false ‘apostolic movements’ that were built more on organization than relationship. The dreams indicated that these were trying to bring forth apostles that were really more like corporate CEOs, and the movement that they led had the potential to do great damage to the church. The enemy’s intent with this false apostolic movement was to have the church develop a deep revulsion to anything that was called apostolic.”[82]

Though the NAR movement is loosely constituted of networks of congregations, apostles, and prophets, there are a number of NAR apostle and prophet-related organizations:[83]
- Apostolic Council for Educational Accountability (ACEA)
- Apostolic Council of Prophetic Elders (ACPE)
- Eagle Vision Apostolic Teamย (EVAT)
- European Apostolic Leaders (EAL)
- Global Harvest Ministries
- Heartland Apostolic Network (HAN)
- International Association of Healing Ministries (IAHR)
- International Coalition of Apostolic Leadersย (ICA)
- International Society of Deliverance Ministries (ISDM)
- Wagner Leadership Instituteย (WLI)
In 2021, NAR leaders played a key part in heading the newly foundedย Michael Flynnย ReAwaken America Tour, which was initially aย protest against COVID-19 restrictions. The events have become what has been described as “a rollingย Chautauqua-style celebration of the spiritual side ofย Trumpism.”[33]ย NPRย likewise characterizes it as “part conservative Christian revival, partย QAnonย expo and part political rally.”ย Anthea Butler, chair of theย University of Pennsylvaniaย religious studies department, asserts the prophecies and charismatic preaching at ReAwaken events can be traced to NAR. Themes of spiritual warfare and accompanying territorial spirits are prominent. “Darkly messianic religious speakers” speak at the events, with one warning, “Do not be surprised if the Angel of Death shows up in Washington”, and others referring to “demonic territoryย that’s over the land”.[84][85]ย Flynn, a former Army lieutenant general and Trump national security advisor, said at a November 2021 event that “If we are going to have one nation under God, which we must, we have to have one religion. One nation under God and one religion under God, right?” At one event, Trump confidantย Roger Stoneย asserted there is a visible “satanic portal” over the Biden White House that must be closed by prayer. At another event, self-declared prophet Julie Green claimed God had spoken to her that “These are the days for you to control the governments of this earth. God said he can take this country back in unconventional ways. He doesn’t need an election to do it.”[86][87][88]
NAR-Associated Media

In 2022, the Victory Channel, owned byย prosperity gospelย televangelistย Kenneth Copeland, launched the programย FlashPoint, hosted by Gene Bailey, a pastor at Copeland’sย Texas church. The NAR-aligned program has the appearance of a cable news show, though reporting is delivered by prophets. Bailey’s website asserts the show’s programming is delivered “under the anointing,” meaning that its hosts and guests speak for God. Pentecostal preachers constitute its primary guests, notably Lance Wallnau and Omaha pastor Hank Kunneman.
Donald Trump has appeared on the program six times; other guests have included Michael Flynn, Charlie Kirk,ย Jeanine Pirro, Steve Bannon,ย Glenn Beckย andย Chaya Raichik.ย FlashPointย told viewers that criminal indictments against Trump were “against the purposes of God” and represented a “battle between good versus evil.” Bailey has said, “We do have an agenda, and that is I am aย Christo-fascist, Christian nationalist.”ย Media Mattersย reported that at an August 2022ย FlashPoint Liveย event, Dutch Sheets led Bailey, Wallnau and Kunneman in reciting the Watchman Decree with a live audience, declaring that “we have been given legal power and authority from Heaven” and “delegated by Him to destroy every attempted advance of the enemy.” The show launched a seven-stopย FlashPoint Liveย roadshow in support of Trump in February 2024.[89][90][91][33]
Coverage, Controversy, and Criticism
The NAR first drew national attention in the United States in the midst of Alaskan governorย Sarah Palin’s 2008 vice presidential campaign,[27]ย when a 2005 video surfaced of her being prayed for at Wasilla Assemblies of God church by Kenyan NAR apostleย Thomas Muthee. Anthea Butler notes that “by praying for favor and for the use of her to turn the nation around, Muthee, like many in Wagner’s leadership, understood that she was trying to get to a mountain of power. The prayer format asking for righteousness in the state and nation means that Palin is the person who can bring it, who has been anointed by God for that task. Muthee’s prayer is an interesting artifact in understanding how Palin considered her ‘destiny’; that she has been set apart, called by God.” Including a request for protection from witchcraft โ “alien to contemporary American culture”[92]ย โ the event was covered in the media. One scholar noted the video “seemed to reveal a well-kept secret: a prominent politician running for vice-president of the United States secretly fighting a hidden war against the Evil One in the here and now of American civilization.”[92]ย Wagner expressed concern that negative coverage of Palin’s ties to the NAR may have led to the campaign’s loss.[76][93]

In 2011, discussion about the political influence of the NAR was again brought to a national audience.[27]ย Lou Engleย andย Don Finto, who are considered to be leaders within the NAR, participated in a prayer event held by Engle’sย TheCallย called “TheResponse”, hosted by former Texas governorย Rick Perry, on August 6, 2011, in Houston, Texas. This event is cited as a sign of the influence of NAR beliefs on Rick Perry’s political viewpoints. It was covered byย National Public Radioย and other media outlets.[34][94][76]ย Forrest Wilder, senior editor for theย Texas Observer, describes the New Apostolic Reformation as having “takenย Pentecostalism, with its emphasis on ecstatic worship and the supernatural, and given it an adrenaline shot.” Wilder adds that beliefs of people associated with the movement “can tend toward the bizarre” and that it has “takenย biblical literalismย to an extreme.”[34]ย Later TheCall events that year, including a Detroit rally, were covered in the media. NAR “calls to ‘take back the land’ of Muslim Americans” by engaging in spiritual warfare prayer over mosques, described as “like sending our special forces into Afghanistan”, drew concern. An apostle stated the event was “not divisive at all” and that they were “praying for God to move in Detroit … so that we can all be one”; the event’s goal was to get African Americans to convert local Muslims, who would then convert others in the Middle East. Baptist, Methodist, and Catholic clergy protested the event.[95][96]
Duringย Newt Gingrich’s 2012 presidential campaign, his connections to NAR apostles were covered in the media. This included Pray & ACT events sponsored by his organization Renewing American Leadership, which featured NAR apostles Lance Wallnau and Lou Engle and which included Seven Mountains exhortations. Dutch Sheets served as co-chair of Gingrich’s Faith Leaders Coalition that year.[97]
The same year, sociologistย Margaret Polomaย described the NAR’s spiritual warfare rhetoric: “The way some of the leaders talk, you’d think they were an army planning to take over the world…It sounds to me like radical Islam.”[97]ย In 2013, Paul Rosenberg called the NAR “America’s Own Taliban” in an article highlighting the NAR’sย dominionismย as bearing resemblance toย Islamic extremismย as seen in groups such as theย Talibanย because of the NAR’s language concerning a form of prayer called spiritual warfare.[98]
In 2022, Matthew D. Taylor, a scholar of Protestantism at the Institute for Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Studies, released an audio documentary on the movement’s connection to theย January 6 United States Capitol attack, entitledย Charismatic Revival Fury.[99]ย Taylor asserts that NAR is “the backbone … of Christianย Trumpism.” He argues it was “seen as fringy, was seen as the realm of hucksters, seen as kind of low-brow and populist and extremist” before Trump recruited it in 2016 to rally evangelical support for his campaign. Taylor asserts NAR is difficult to track due to its intentional anti-institutional, decentralizedย “mesh network”ย of influencers on the internet. Taylor says radicalized NAR spiritual warfare adherents believe entire cities and institutions are possessed by demonic spirits (territorial spirits) that can be defeated only by the presence of large numbers of Christians. In the weeks preceding the January 6 attack, self-proclaimed NAR apostles such as Dutch Sheets told followers they needed to be at the Capitol to ensure Trump would remain president. Sheets met with Trump administration officials at the White House days before the Capitol attack. In addition, four of the six protest permits that day were issued to “NAR-affiliated charismatic church groups.”[100][101][99]ย Similarly, Andrรฉ Gagnรฉ states, “a lot of NAR people just embrace theย Big Lie” based on messages from the movement’s prophets.[99]
Lance Wallnau’s prophetic rhetoric has been described as having “nationalist”, “anti-democratic”, and “fascist” traits by scholar Arne Helge Teigen[102]ย and a 2022 joint report from theย Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Libertyย and theย Freedom From Religion Foundationย on the role of Christian nationalism in the Capitol attack argues that Wallnau’s “warfare rhetoric” is linked toย stochastic terrorism.[103]
Politicoย reported in February 2024 thatย Russell Vought, a leader ofย Project 2025โa group closely aligned with Trump that created an expansive blueprint for the next Republican presidencyโwas spearheading plans to instill Christian nationalism into that presidency.[6]ย One of the story authors, Heidi Przybyla, later said in a television interview, in part:
Remember when Trump ran in 2016, a lot of the mainline Evangelicals wanted nothing to do with the divorced real estate mogul who had cheated on his wife with a porn star and all of that, right? So what happened was he was surrounded by this more extremist element. You’re going [to] hear words like ‘Christian nationalism,’ like the ‘New Apostolic Reformation.’ These are groups that you should get very, very schooled on because they have a lot of power in Trump’s circle.
Vought and several others criticized Przybyla onย Xย for her televised remarks, which she said they had misunderstood.[104]
Dartmouth Collegeย professorย Jeff Sharletย is the author of the 2023ย The Undertow: Scenes from a Slow Civil War. After years traveling to meet with Trump supporters, he writes that his initial “objections to describing militant Trumpism as fascist have fallen away.”[105]ย He asserts Project 2025 is influenced by NAR. Sharlet contends that the Project’s first mandate to ‘restore the family as the centerpiece of American life and protect our children’ “isย Q-codedโit’s ‘protect the blood,’ it’s theย 14 words, it’s all this stuff.”[33]

Writing inย The Atlantic,ย Stephanie McCrummenย reported in March 2024 thatย Frederick Clarkson, who has studied the Christian right for decades, “considers the NAR to be one of the most important shifts in Christianity in modern times.” Clarkson said “Christian nationalism is a handy term, but it is a box into which NAR does not quite fitโ because the movement is “so much bigger than that.” McCrummen wrote:
This [NAR] language, which can be mystifying to those not steeped in it, is commonly categorized as fundamentalism or Christian nationalism. But those terms do not adequately capture the scope and ambitions of the rapidly growing charismatic Christian movement with which [Tom Parker] has publicly associated himselfโa world of megachurches, modern-day apostles and prophets, media empires, worship bands, and millions of followers that is becoming the most aggressive faction of the Christian right and the leading edge of charismatic Christianity worldwide.[77]
Conservative Christians have critiqued the movement for its unorthodox beliefs.[106]ย Holly Pivec, co-author with Biola University theology professor Douglas Geivett ofย Counterfeit Kingdom: The Dangers of New Revelation, New Prophets, and New Age Practices in the Church, says many Pentecostals and Charismatics are concerned that the NAR movement is inconsistent with historical Christian teachings. She asserts, “They’re not just promoting the miraculous gifts, they’re actually promoting the offices of apostle and prophetโthese authoritative offices that all others are supposed to submit to.” Pivec asserts some modern Christian churches “promote novel teachings and practices that do not have the support of Scripture” and that “NAR teachings and practices have divided families, split churches, stunted the spiritual growth of believers, and left countless Christians disillusioned by promises of healing and miraculous power that haven’t panned out.”[107][108]
Marvin Olasky, former longtime editor of the evangelical magazineย World, says that American evangelicalism is fracturing in real time, between a faction that embracesย pluralism, other faiths and democracy, and one that advocates governance by strict biblical law “by any means necessary.” He added, “I have to say that compassionate conservatism is out of business these days, and in a sense, cruel conservatism is ascendant.” NPR reported the “any means necessary” faction has a direct line to House Speaker Mike Johnson due to his close ties to NAR leaders such as Jim Garlow.[5]
The movement has been compared by multiple scholars to extremist conspiracy groups. Scholar Steve Snow argues that the “NAR represents whatย Richard Hofstadterย referred to as the modernย paranoid style in American politics” characterized by theย John Birch Societyย (JBS). The NAR โ similarly to the JBS’s labeling of presidentย Dwight D. Eisenhowerย as a communist agent โ has stated presidentย Barack Obamaย is a “treasonous Muslim”.[109]ย Likewise, Anthea Butler says the messaging at ReAwaken America events ofย election denialism,ย vaccine conspiracy theoriesย and anti-government sentiment has been largely embraced by theย Republican Party.[86]ย Butler and Matthew D. Taylor find that the NAR movement garners little attention in the press, noting its violent rhetoric. Butler states, “All the talk you hear about demonic stuff, about violent stuffโpeople should take that very seriously.”[33]ย Snow contends that there is significant overlap between these extremist and more mainstream groups, stating that the primary difference between the conspiracy theories believed by groups such as theย Christian Coalitionย and theย Moral Majorityย and those of is that extremists “take the violent rhetoric more seriously”.[110]
Michael Flynn has told ReAwaken America attendees that they are engaged in a political and spiritual war. Mark Clatterbuck, associate professor of religion atย Montclair State University, described an October 2022 ReAwaken event he attended as aย MAGA-driven “seething groundswell of spiritually sanctioned incitement to violence that was impossible to ignore.” He wrote the event was “saturated” with war imagery, as well as preachers engaged in violent religious rhetoric. Clatterbuck added that leaders aligned with NAR are “driven by a prophetic certainty that God is commanding them to establish a militant Christianย theocracyย in the United States.”[111][112][113]
Researcher Bruce Wilson asserts he has identified well-funded programs designed “to obscure, to confuse and confound reporters and journalists and academics who are writing about and discussing dominionist Christianity.” Andrรฉ Gagnรฉ argues that NAR’s “strength is that they’re stealth” and that the media “has a very important role to play in speaking about this movement and how it will use the levers of democracy to eventually subvert democracy.”[4]
One scholar, noting the prevalence of Wagner’s spiritual warfare teachings in Singapore, describes the belief’s potential for divisiveness in a multicultural society where the deities of neighboring non-Christians are seen as “cultural ethnic demons”.[46]
In Media
NAR beliefs have been part of evangelical, and particularly charismatic Christian, media. By the mid-to-late 1980s, Christian authorย Frank Peretti’s novels featuring spiritual battles, territorial spirits, andย demonologyย โ seen as spiritual reality portrayed in fictional settings โ found popularity among evangelicals; Wagner considered them the best depiction of real-world spiritual warfare.[114]ย Scholar Damon T. Berry argues that the “presence of imagined enemies [threatening] to destroy Christianity and America added to Trump’s appeal” to evangelicals, issues NAR prophecies were believed to address.[114]ย Mark Taylor’s prophecies in his 2017 bookย The Trump Propheciesย have been described by scholar Arne Helge Teigen as being aimed at NAR followers.[115]
The 2006 documentaryย Jesus Campย depicts the life of young children attending Becky Fischer’s neo-charismatic summer camp; though Fischer has sometimes been identified as Pentecostal, she is most closely associated with the NAR.[116]
See endnotes and bibliography at source.
Originally published by Wikipedia, 03.13.2006, under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.


