¶ New Apostolic Reformation network and leadership cluster
This source cluster summarizes leader lists and official organizational self-descriptions that present a contemporary apostolic-network ecosystem built around private coalitions, revival networks, apostolic centers, prophetic ministries, and movement-style leadership platforms.
The cluster combines one descriptive article mapping top NAR leaders with a large set of official sites and about pages. The official pages are not neutral; they are valuable mainly because they show how these ministries describe themselves, their leadership, and their network ambitions. Together they give the repository a clearer picture of movement infrastructure beyond isolated rhetoric.
- The dedicated C. Peter Wagner pass adds a historical institutional layer behind the present-tense network pages: archival and biographical sources tie Wagner to Global Harvest Ministries, Wagner Leadership Institute / Wagner University, International Coalition of Apostles, Reformation Prayer Network / Spiritual Warfare Network, and Eagles Vision Apostolic Team.
- The newer Wommack / Charis cluster adds a Colorado institutional node that overlaps with NAR-adjacent and Seven Mountains discussion without requiring the repo to settle every boundary question around formal movement membership.
- ICAL presents itself as a private membership coalition of apostolic leaders focused on building God's kingdom in the nations.
- Harvest International Ministry and Harvest Rock describe apostolic centers, apostolic leadership, and the release of revivalists and reformers.
- Bethel and Bethel Leaders Network describe themselves in explicitly apostolic terms and frame their leadership as a network with broad revival and kingdom ambitions.
- Global Spheres, Glory of Zion, and Generals International describe prophetic or apostolic ministry ecosystems linked to prayer, training, and global network building.
- Dutch Sheets, Give Him 15, Lou Engle, and TheCall frame prayer, fasting, appeal-to-heaven language, and national restoration as organized movement activity rather than only private devotion.
- Paula White's official site adds prosperity- and destiny-oriented movement language, but the current repository evidence is still thinner on how centrally she fits into the same organizational ecosystem.
- 1985: Generals International says it was founded by Mike and Cindy Jacobs.
- 1998-1999: archival and metadata sources place Wagner Leadership Institute and International Coalition of Apostles in the same late-1990s institutionalization window as Wagner's NAR naming and book publications.
- 2010-2012: Global Harvest / Global Spheres transition evidence exists, but source families disagree on endpoint details.
- 1999: Lou Engle's TheCall announcement site says the movement emerged from a prayer about turning America back to God.
- 2026: the current official sites show these organizations still using apostolic, revival, prophetic, and kingdom-network language in active public-facing infrastructure.
- Private and networked leadership structures
- Apostolic and prophetic branding as infrastructure, not only theology
- Prayer, revival, and national transformation framed as organized movement work
¶ Evidence limits and open questions
- These are mostly self-descriptions, so they are strongest as evidence of movement language, organizational self-understanding, and leadership structure.
- Wagner's institution-building dates are stronger than many later network-role claims, but several endpoint and membership details still need primary organizational records.
- The cluster is not yet enough to materialize every named ministry or leader as a durable entity page.
- The new Wommack material improves Colorado-side context, but some stronger claims about his exact NAR placement still remain partly interpretive rather than purely direct self-description.
- TheCall announcement site includes contamination in the lower page area; the repository should rely only on the clearly attributable announcement text preserved in the raw note.