The Structure and Government of the World Church are in Place!

 

 

INTRODUCTION by Tricia Tillin UK: You may not have realised that plans for the structure and government of the World Church are already in place!

Ministries, organisations and fellowships are networking together like never before, forming
major new allegiances, and meeting to formulate the doctrines, structure and leadership of an
entirely NEW global church. The denominations of today are seen as obsolete, and UNITY is the
key - the unifying force being revival and spiritual manifestations rather than biblical
doctrines.

For years now, organisations have been gathering in Colorado Springs, Denver and Boulder,
Colorado to create a Centre for World Christianity - a Vatican City of the new church if you
will. There you will find the World Prayer Centre and many different Christian organisations,
(such as AD2000, COR and Promise Keepers) all intent on reaching the world with their unifying
vision.

Peter Wagner of the Church Growth Movement is totally dedicated to the idea, and heads up a
great part of it. In May '96 he said this: For about three years now I have felt that we were watching two remarkable missiological phenomena relating to church growth: (1) A new cutting edge of the extension of the global Christian movement was being installed by God, and (2) The most radical change in the way of doing church since the Protestant Reformation was taking place in many diverse parts of the world. After the outbreak of "revival" in early 1994, Peter Wagner had perceived a new wave of church growth and a new structure for the Church that he labelled "Post Denominationalism".

This term was then dropped in January 1996 in favour of "New Apostolic Paradigm". Although at
first wary of objections to the use of the word "apostle" in today's Church, Wagner quickly
found that, on the contrary, new apostles and prophets were popping up everywhere. It seemed
that the new apostle was a de facto part of the new church anyway, so the terminology was very
apt. Wagner then sponsored a National Symposium for the emerging World Church in Pasedena in May 1996, incorporating Ed Delph's organisation N.A.T.I.O.N.S. which stood for Networking
Apostolic Thrust Internationally Or Nationally.

Networking they indeed were, as leaders as diverse as Morris Cerullo, Bill Hamon, Ted Haggard,
Roberts Liardon, Bobbye Byerey and Ralph Neighbour (and many, many more) gathered to plan the Church of the twentyfirst century.

This Church is based upon new paradigms: the restoration of the Church to a (supposed) Early
Church ideal; spiritual gifts and manifestations; and the doctrine of the christianisation of
the world before the return of Jesus Christ.

Most worryingly, it proposes Church Government of apostles and prophets now being created out of the charismatic leadership of the revival fellowships.

Here now is Orrel Steinkamp's overview of Peter Wagner's New Apostolic Reformation.

The Second Pentecost leads to the World Church? by Dr. Orrel Steinkamp, D. Min

C. Peter Wagner is attempting to will into existence what he calls a "New Apostolic
Reformation."He tells us in a book he has edited called "The New Apostolic Churches" of the
struggle he had with naming his new reformation:

"I needed a name. . . For a couple of years I experimented with 'Post-denominationalism.'. The
name I have settled on for the movement is the New Apostolic Reformation." [1]

Donald Miller, a colleague of Wagner, calls this movement "The New Paradigm Churches." [2]
This is advertised as a reformation greater in scale than the reformation of the 1500's.

It is suggested that this "new reformation" is something entirely new. Wagner outlines his
article with sections such as "new name", "new authority structure", "new ministry focus",
"new worship style", "new prayer forms" etc. The centerpiece of this New Apostolic Reformation
is the launching of new apostles and prophets.

The restoration of modern day apostles and prophets is promoted in the book "The Gift of
Apostle" by David Cannistraci. This book was offered to those attending a conference organized
by Wagner called "Churches in the New Apostolic Paradigm." Among the list of topics and
presenters for the conference was Bill Hamon. (Can we really refer to the Bill Hamon's
teaching as new?) Bishop Hamon has been promoting restoration and Manifest Sons of God
teaching for decades.

Can it be argued that this "New Reformation" is something that God has just recently dropped
new from heaven like the baby Superman from Krypton? I suggest that there is nothing new here
at all and for anyone willing to do the study they will find it a mere cutting edge version of
something at least 100 years old. G. Raymond Carlson, former General Superintendent of the
AOG, had this to say regarding the new apostles and prophets:

"I saw it in the New Order of the Latter Rain in the late 40's and early 50's. Before that, it
made its presence felt in the early days of the century among early Pentecostals." [3]

The only thing new about this movement seems to be the new personalities who are promoting it
and their creative marketing techniques. It is interesting that those promoting this end of
the age global revival visualize and allegorize it as a "Mighty River."

In the last "Plumbline" [newsletter] I asked the question if the "River Boat Captains" knew
the direction the current river is flowing. Now I would like to ask further questions. Do the
gleeful riverboat passengers know where "the River" originated? Do they know that this river
has been flowing for many years? Do they know the original channel that still determines where
the River will eventually flow? We all know that the source and the course of a river
determines its direction no mater how many tributaries may enter into it along the way. So it
is with what is currently called the "River of' Revival." Provided people think logically, the
underlying core paradigm will eventually play out according to the original vision much like
the rules of chess determine what is a valid move and what is not. G. Raymond Carlson was
right. This much publicized new paradigm can be traced to the Latter Rain movement of 40's and
early 50"s.

Even though the Latter Rain of the 50's faltered and fell into disrepute with the tragic death
of William Branham and the repudiation by the Assemblies of God it was kept alive by certain
survivors and reintroduced in a veiled manner into the Charismatic Renewal of the 60's and
70's.

Few people have realized just how influential the Latter Rain movement was and how effectively
Latter Rain concepts were introduced into the Charismatic Renewal. Ern Baxter who was
instrumental in the Shepherding Movement, worked with William Branham during the 50's Latter
Rain. George Warnock, who wrote the only systematic teaching from the Latter Rain (The Feast
of Tabernacles), was Ern Baxter's personal secretary.

In the midst of the Charismatic Renewal I remember well the teaching of the fivefold ministry
and at that time assumed it was a new revelation to the church not knowing it had been
imported directly from the Latter Rain. But is the mid-century Latter-Rain the headwaters of
the current River of revival? Not really. Rather than the headwaters it is a major tributary.
We must travel further upstream to find the actual source. Dr. Raymond Carlson again is
correct in asserting that some of the early Pentecostal pioneers of the turn of the century
also were involved. Before we stop with the early Pentecostals, we must go just a little
further and find the headwaters in the Holiness movement of the late 1800's

 

THE HOLINESS MOVEMENT

 

Holiness enthusiasts of the late nineteenth century searched the scriptures for reference to
the revival they were experiencing. One popular scripture was Matt. 24:14, "And this gospel
shall be preached in all the world and then the end come." Holiness teaching served as a
prelude to missions and missions a prelude to the second coming.

They identified their holiness experience as the Baptism of the Holy Spirit and the enablement
to take the gospel to every nation and then Jesus could return. Holiness preachers searched
the scriptures for this worldwide revival and interestingly enough the best they could find
was a teaching they called the "Latter Rain."

This Latter Rain allegory was pieced together from scripture references of the early and
latter rains of the Palestinian growing season. (Deut. 11:10-21 and James 5:7-8). These
Palestinian rainfall patterns metaphorically became a sort of lens though which to view all of
church history.

The outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost was seen as the early rain in which the church was
planted and the end of age revival was the latter rain, a divine preparation of a last days
harvest and the signal of the soon return of Jesus.

Wesley Myland (1858-1943) who began his career as a holiness preacher was the first to put in
writing the Latter Rain scheme which he titled "The Latter Rain Covenant." [4] He is also
credited with writing the first Pentecostal hymn "The Latter Rain." The Dictionary of
Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements also refer to his book, "The Latter Rain Covenant" as
the first definitive Pentecostal theology.

 

THE LATTER-RAIN AND THE EARLY PENTECOSTALS

 

It was Charles Parham, a Methodist Holiness preacher who broke with traditional Holiness
teaching and linked the Baptism of the Holy Spirit with a Latter-Day Pentecost. His new
discovery was that tongues was both a sign of this Spirit Baptism and also the signal of the
end of the age. The early Pentecostal pioneers initially accepted this Latter Rain motif.
Spirit Baptism was an end time repeat of the first Pentecost. Tongues was seen as an
eschatological sign signifying that a second and final Pentecost was taking place, bringing
the church into a new and final dispensation. This second Pentecost would bring a final world
revival in which the nations would have one last opportunity to hear the gospel and then the
end would come.

Tongues were at first perceived as actual missionary languages to enable the Gospel to be
quickly preached throughout the whole earth. Indeed many at that time went to China assuming
they had been given a Chinese tongue to announce the gospel. Most returned disillusioned.

The term "Latter Rain" was used freely by the early Pentecostal pioneers as well as the term
"apostolic." The early Pentecostals were convinced that not only would there be a Latter Rain
global revival but the last days church would be restored to the apostolic pattern. Joined to
the Latter Rain teaching was a complementary truth called restoration.

 

RESTORING THE APOSTOLIC CHURCH

 

The basic principle of restoration teaching is that there is a fundamental discontinuity,
historical and spiritual, between the church today and the New Testament church. In the
restoration agenda, God will end the church as He began it.

Events, however, caused the early Pentecostals to dispense with restorationism and the Latter
Rain motif. In 1914 and later the founding fathers of the AOG turned their back on Latter Rain
Apostolic Restoration thinking and espoused the current premillennial eschatology. The Latter
Rain motif then sat more or less dormant for decades until 1948.

In Canada the Latter Rain paradigm erupted again. Impartation of spiritual gifts by the laying
on hands was instituted as well as traveling prophets giving personal prophesy.

This time there was added the restoration of the apostolic office gifts of apostles and
prophets. Indeed to restore the apostolic church without restored apostles and prophets would
be a limited restoration of the apostolic church.

 

RESTORED APOSTLES & PROPHETS

 

To Latter Rain teachers it seemed obvious that if there was to be a repeated apostolic
Pentecost that Apostles and Prophets must be restored as well.

These teachers then devised a historical scheme of restoration. Church history was understood
as a succession of recoveries of lost or neglected truths. Luther recovered justification by
faith, Baptists believers baptism, Wesley holiness, A.B. Simpson healing and the early
Pentecostal pioneers the gifts of the Spirit. The recovery process was now extended further.
The endtime body of Christ must go on to maturity and restore the apostles and prophets and
these restored ministries must lead the church to a new and final dimension of power and
authority not only bringing in the final harvest but establishing the Kingdom of God upon the
earth.

 

KINGDOM NOW TEACHING

 

Now we are introduced to another major feature of the current move namely Kingdom Now
Dominionism. Previously Latter Rain teachers saw a second and repeated Pentecost as a final
harvest of souls before Christ could come back. Now there is a major addition to the
LatterRain/Restoration concept. The restored apostles and prophets will lead a new and
reconstituted body of Christ in conquering the kingdoms of this world and establishing the
Kingdom of God upon the earth. This dominion mentality is conceived as a gigantic end-time
revival that will sweep the whole earth in its wake. Some even refer to a billion souls being
swept in to the kingdom. An elite company of overcomers from out of the larger church will
subdue all things and will be so endued with supernatural power that the first church apostles
will be envious of the latter day apostles.

The church isn't going sit and take it any more. The Church isn't going to wait to be
helecoptered out of the world in some rapture rescue plan. The Church will stay right here and
by its spiritual authority even defeat the principalities and powers in the heavenlies,
dragging them to earth and putting them under their heel.

Paul Cain, a survivor of the Latter Rain (1950) is currently marketing a vision of an elite
company of overcoming spiritual warriors called "Joel's army." This end-time spiritual seals
unit will be an invincible band who lead the church in dominion on the earth. A purging of the
wider church of those who will not follow the new order is necessary to constitute a unified
global church.

Teachers of the new order tell us that all this has been prophesied. This is an end-time
fulfillment of the Feast of Tabernacles. These teachers assert that Passover found fulfillment
in the sacrifice of Christ on the cross. The Feast of Pentecost was fulfilled in the
outpouring of Spirit, and now the only remaining feast is that of Tabernacles to be fulfilled
in the last days church. It is a second Pentecost with restored apostles and prophets. This
endtime spiritual army will put all God's enemies under its feet, yes even the last enemy
death itself. This introduces us to another added teaching of the Latter Rain (1950).

 

THE MANIFESTED SONS OF GOD

 

The body of Christ coming to spiritual maturity will be able to defeat death itself. This
teaching became known as the "Manifest Sons of God." Taking childish cues from Paul's teaching
in Romans eight and misunderstanding them, they suggested that a company of overcoming
believers "the sons of God" will be manifested upon the earth with never dying spiritual
bodies before the return of Christ. This would have to be the ultimate in dominion teaching.

Bishop Earl Paulk has stated the Manifest Sons teaching very clearly without ever using that
unpopular term. Listen to his unmistakable teaching:

"Jesus Christ, as the first-fruit of the Kingdom, began the work of conquering death on an
individual basis, but we, as His church, will be the ones to complete the task. Jesus said
(Matthew 28:18), "all power is given unto me in heaven and in earth," and the church today has
that same power. Death will not be conquered by Jesus returning to earth. It will be conquered
when the church stands up boldly and says, "We have dominion over the earth." [5]

Obviously the church has not yet matured to the place of defeating death. Bishop Paulk
counsels Christians not to accept death unless they get a specific revelation from God
otherwise.[6]

There is a companion truth that often accompanies the Manifested Sons teaching namely the
birthing by the church of a corporate Christ. This corporate Christ is said to be a fusing
together of the spiritual Christ within His many membered body upon the earth. The end-time
glorious church is supposed to give birth to this corporate Christ. Though it is not always
stated this view assumes and some teach (not all) that the literal physical resurrected Jesus
will not need to return as such. Rather His second coming will happen when He is spiritually
incarnated into his church which will then be able to conquer death itself. This teaching has
been expressed in various ways.

"Jesus was God in the flesh. We must be as He was in the world, even greater in volume and
influence." [6]

"The completion of the incarnation of God in the world must be in His church...Jesus Christ is
the firstfruit, but without tile ongoing harvest, tile incarnation will never be complete."
[7]

"The living Word of God, Jesus Christ, was conceived in the womb of a virgin. The Word became
flesh in the God-Man Jesus Christ (John 1:1). Likewise, tile Word of God must be made flesh in
the Church in order for us to bear witness to the Kingdom which God has called us to
demonstrate." [8]

"We are on earth as extensions of God to finish the work He began. We are the essence of God,
His on-going incarnation in the world." [9]

This is saying far more than the orthodox view that Christ indwells His Church by the Holy
Spirit. The question arises: how can Jesus, with his current resurrected body in heaven, be
incarnated into the church that is still upon the earth? Some have seen this problem and solve
it by adjusting their Christology.

"He [Jesus] entered a higher realm of restoration and love by becoming an indwelling Spirit."
[10]

We must oppose this view. Jesus has not become the Holy Spirit. It is rather the Holy Spirit
who indwells the believer. The Resurrected Jesus is at the Father's right hand and in His
glorified resurrected body He will return bodily to the earth. Obviously an indwelling spirit
would not need to return from heaven.

It is on this basis that some Dominion teachers assert that Jesus can be an on-going
incarnation of God in His body (church) upon the earth. Consequently scriptures pertaining to
Christ's ruling on earth are often seen as referring the Church rather than Jesus. The Church
is viewed as a kind of virgin Mary who must give birth to Jesus the indwelling spirit.

Francis Frangipane teaches a similar a message: When the Spirit of Christ comes into the physical world, He must enter through a physical body. When Christ first entered our world as a child, it was Mary whom God chose to give Christ birth. Mary's life symbolized the qualities the church must possess to walk in the fullness of Christ. God is preparing us as He did Mary to give birth to the ministry of His Son. Even now, in the spiritual womb of the virgin church, the Holy purpose of Christ is growing, awaiting maturity, ready to be born in the power and timing of God. The virgin church is in labor and in pain to give birth (Rev. 12:5) even now hell trembles and the heavens watch in awe for I say to you, once again, the virgin is with child." [11]

Latter-Rain teachers have long used Rev. 12, teaching that the woman in this passage is the
church and the "Manchild" to be birthed is a spiritual second coming of Christ into His
corporate body. When Latter Rain Prophet Paul Cain describes, in passing, the church as the
"Manchild Company" he has this teaching in mind.

Marc Dupont of the former Toronto Vineyard claims to have received a significant prophecy in
which he states the following:

"This move of the Spirit in 1994 in not just a Charismatic and Pentecostal experience,
concerning power and gifting. It is one thing to be clothed with power; it is another to be
indwelt with the Person of God." [12]

Old Testament scriptures are spiritualized to see birthing as the return of the ark to the
temple, that is the coming of Christ invisibly into His living temple the church. This will
occur when the Feast of Tabernacles is fulfilled which celebrates the Lord dwelling among His
people. "When this happens, no longer will it be the Head (Jesus Christ) in heaven and the
body (believers) on earth - but one Perfect Man filling both heaven and earth." [13]

This teaching of a spiritual second coming of Jesus into His body is rarely advertised. Rather
the more palatable teaching of a final global revival and restored apostles prophets is the
public teaching most emphasized. How can the present Charismatic/Pentencost Church even
entertain elements of this teaching that originated from such a small group that operated on
the fringes of the Pentecostal movement in the early 50's?

When the Charismatic Renewal exploded in the 60's and 70's certain Latter Rain holdovers found
a new and undiscriminating audience. Charismatics had never heard of the Latter Rain and
received the new teaching as part of their new wine experience. Consequently Latter-
Rain/Restorationism received a greater hearing within the Charismatic renewal than it ever did
in the Classic Pentecostal tradition.

Through the Charismatic Renewal Latter Rain teachings were renamed and finally homogenized sufficiently so that today Latter Rain ideas float freely on "the River" without anyone detecting their true identity. Furthermore the Charismatic Renewal has been mainstreamed into wider evangelical circles through John Wimber and Vineyard conferences, signs and wonders teachings, etc. Indeed some of the more extreme parts of the paradigm are not put out front, nevertheless, little by little the wider church is coalescing around what, when thoroughly analyzed, are Latter Rain core beliefs.

Without unwarranted employment of the Latter Rain allegory there is not even a hint in
scripture of an end-time global revival and second Pentecost. Not everyone in the River
uniformly accepts all the parts of the paradigm. But as time goes by more and more Latter Rain
tenants exert a gravitational pull that draws participants to logically espouse more and more
of the paradigm.

When Peter Wagner calls for and attempts to network a world wide apostolic reformation does he espouse the whole of the Latter Rain/Restoration paradigm? I don't really know. In fact I
doubt that he does. I do know, however, that by bringing Bishop Bill Hamon to speak at his
conferences he is bringing the whole paradigm mentioned above. There must be at least an
openness on Wagner's part and many others because they without qualification recommend Bill
Hamon's books with its full blown Latter Rain and Manifested Sons teaching.

Wagner's "New Apostolic Reformation" is nothing more than warmed-over Latter Rain teaching. G. Raymond Carlson from his vantage point of history knew that all this has its source in a
second end-time Pentecost, first articulated at the turn of the century and restated and
expanded in the New Order of the Latter Rain 1950 and now imported and marketed into the wider church by means of the Charismatic renewal.

When much is made of a sweeping revival that will overflow the earth in the last days with
billions of converts you should be aware that this popular idea comes not from scripture but
from a view of church history that has been running now for over a century.

Take away the fraudulent allegorical use of "Latter Rain" scheme and there remains no other
biblical support for this elaborate view of the end-times.

Rather it was Jesus Himself who asked the question: "When the Son of Man comes will He find
faith upon the earth?" (Luke 18:8)

The Scripture leaves no doubt that Jesus will return bodily to earth and when He does His
"body" upon the earth (the full compliment of his church) will be raptured up to meet Him in
the air (I Thess. 4:17). It is then and only then that He will change our corruptible bodies
in a twinkling of an eye. It is then that Jesus will rule earth in His glorified and
resurrected body. It is then that the Sons of God will be manifest.

Rather than sensationalizing a false and unbiblical agenda, the church must occupy until He
comes and His body is completed. Faithfully this Gospel must be preached to every nation and
then the end will come. Even so come quickly Lord Jesus.

1. C. Peter Wagner, The New Apostolic Churches (Ventura CA; Regal, 1998). p. 18.
2. Donald E. Miller, New Paradigm Churches in the Twentieth Century (Pasadena CA: Ministry Advantage , Vol. 6, No. 4, July/Aug 1996.
3. G. Rayomond Carlson, personal letter to Jewel Van de Meere
4.Wesley Myland, The Latter-Rain Covenant (1910)
5. Earl Paulk, The Proper Function of the
Church (Atlanta: K Dimension Publishers, undated p. 13
6. Earl Paulk, The Ultimate Kingdom
(Atlanta: K Dimension Publishers, 1986, p.121.
7. Earl Paulk, The Wounded Body of
Christ(Atlanta: K Dimension Publishers, p. 43.
8. Earl Paulk,Held In The Heavens (Atlanta: K
Dimension Publishers, 1985, p.60
9. lbid, p. 125.
10. Earl Paulk, Thrust In The Sickle And Reap (Atlanta: K Dimension Publishers, 1986, p. 132. 11. Fancis Frangipane, In The Presence Of God, New Wine Press 1994, pp. 153-157.
12. Marc Dupont, Mantle of Praise, Alpha Magazine, 1994.
13. Tricia Trillin, The Source and Goal of the Second Pentecost (UK: Banner Ministries,1994)
 
The Plumbline 74425 County Road 21 Renville, MN 56284 Published by Orrel Steinkamp D. Min. Email Address: anst@tds.net Letters, comments, interaction, suggestions for future evaluation, and reports of issues that need analysis are all very welcome. The Plumbline has no
subscription fee. You are encouraged to photocopy Plumbline to give and send to your friends.
Please send names and addresses of people who would like to receive The Plumbline.
Banner Ministries: http://www.banner.org.uk/res/NewChurch.html

BACK