This chronology captures dated events that are directly relevant to C. Peter Wagner's biography, institutional roles, NAR framing, and the narrower evidence for his relationship to Lance Wallnau and Seven Mountains politics. It does not attempt a complete bibliography or full movement timeline.
The OAC Fuller archive finding aid identifies Charles Peter Wagner as born on 1930-08-15. This date is also consistent with the International Bulletin obituary notice reporting his 2016 death at age 86.
Biographical sources identify Wagner and Doris Wagner as missionaries in Bolivia with South American Mission and Andes Evangelical Mission. This period later becomes important in reporting accounts that connect Wagner's church-growth and charismatic views to Latin American evangelical and Pentecostal experience.
Wagner begins teaching at Fuller Theological Seminary's School of World Mission as a professor of church growth, according to archival and obituary sources.
The Fuller finding aid says Wagner taught MC510 Signs and Wonders with John Wimber. This supports the repo's treatment of Wagner as a bridge between church-growth missiology and charismatic signs / wonders practice.
The International Bulletin obituary note says Wagner became founding president of the North American Society for Church Growth.
The OAC finding aid dates the Reformation Prayer Network, originally Spiritual Warfare Network, to 1991. This anchors Wagner's strategic spiritual-warfare institution-building before the NAR label stabilized.
Wagner's Charisma essay says his research on the pattern he later called the New Apostolic Reformation began to come together in 1993. Archival and obituary sources also place Global Harvest Ministries leadership in this period, though endpoint dates vary.
Wagner's Charisma essay says he tested the name New Apostolic Reformation in 1994.
The OAC finding aid says Wagner founded Wagner Leadership Institute, later Wagner University, in 1998. Google Books metadata also supports 1998 publication metadata for The New Apostolic Churches.
The OAC finding aid dates the founding of International Coalition of Apostles to 1999. Google Books metadata supports Churchquake! publication in this period.
Religion Dispatches' guide, through its source chain, describes Eagles Vision Apostolic Team as established in 2000 under Wagner's leadership. That source later becomes important for Wallnau relationship mapping, but it is not a primary roster capture.
Biographical sources identify 2001 as Wagner's Fuller retirement year. Religion Dispatches reports Wagner as convener of the International Coalition of Apostles from 2001 to 2009; this is reporting-source support, not yet a primary ICA document in the current pass.
Religion Dispatches reports Wagner's Dominion! as a source where Seven Mountains / dominion framing is presented. The current pass has metadata and source-chain support rather than full-text capture of the book.
The Global Harvest transition page says Wagner turned Global Harvest Ministries over to Chuck Pierce on Wagner's 80th birthday, with Global Spheres organized afterward. This date is part of an unresolved Global Harvest endpoint discrepancy across sources.
NPR's Fresh Air transcript preserves Wagner discussing apostles, NAR, dominion, spiritual warfare, and Rick Perry's The Response. The interview is primary evidence for Wagner's own late public framing.
Wagner's Charisma essay preserves his self-description that NAR was not a formal organization and that he named and described, rather than founded, the movement.
The OAC finding aid and International Bulletin obituary note identify Wagner's death date as 2016-10-21.
The MDPI Seven Mountains network article provides a later scholarly synthesis that is important for relationship mapping: it says Wallnau received apostolic recognition from Wagner and places Wallnau inside an ICAL / marketplace-apostle frame. This is a source-publication date, not a dated relationship event.