I've decided that it is time to start a list of examples demonstrating the ideological extremity of the New Apostolic Reformation.
This will be an evolving resource page, as Talk To Action researchers compile and chronicle material concerning the activities, speech, and writing of NAR apostles and prophets.
Note: these items are in no particular order, and this version (which will be updated frequently) currently contains only a small fraction of the available evidence. - Bruce Wilson, October 11, 2011.
-- Apostles C. Peter Wagner, Cindy Jacobs, Ed Silvoso, and Chuck Pierce. These four ICA apostles (Wagner, Jacobs, and Pierce also serve in ACPE) describe, in their books, the need for believers in their movement to burn or otherwise destroy objects associated with non-Christian beliefs, and world religious traditions:
"Top NAR leaders, including C. Peter Wagner, Cindy Jacobs, Ed Silvoso and, Chuck Pierce, have repeatedly emphasized in their writings the need for believers to destroy or neutralize, by burning, smashing, or flushing down toilets, objects deemed to be unholy, including profane books and "idolatrous" religious texts (such as Books of Mormon), religious relics (such as statues of Catholic saints, the Buddha, or Hindu gods), and native art (such as African masks, Hopi Indian Kachina dolls, and totem poles.)
According to New Apostolic Reformation doctrine, objects to be destroyed include those associated with Mormonism, Islam, Jehovah's Witnesses, Hinduism, eastern religions, Christian Science, native religions, and Baha'i."
See: Burning books, scripture, and native art.
-- Apostle Lou Engle. Apostolic Council of Prophetic Elders members Lou Engle is co-founder, along with ICA apostle and Wagner Leadership Institute Chancellor Che Ahn, of The Call. As major ideological elements, The Call's stadium-size rallies feature strident antigay and antiabortion rhetoric which bears resemblance to extreme rhetoric from the 1980's and 1990's terrorist group The Army of God. The Call events have featured calls, from onstage, for acts of Christian martyrdom to stop gay marriage and legalized abortion. The Call cofounder Engle posted, on his personal website, two months prior to the assassination of late-term abortion doctor George Tiller, a characterization of Tiller as similar to an Auschwitz death camp worker.
In May 2010, Lou Engle took The Call to Kampala, Uganda, for a controversial rally that featured onstage calls for speedy passage of Uganda's notorious, so-called "kill the gays" bill. Some Ugandan leaders such as apostle Julius Oyet (also tied to Peter Wagner's ICA, and who claims to have played a major role in Uganda's Anti Homosexuality Bill) interpreted Lou Engle's The Call Uganda event as support for the "kill the gays" bill.
-- Apostle Willie Wooten. ICA Apostle Willie Wooten attacked Martin Luther King, Jr., in book which claims King was responsible for a 40-year curse on African Americans incurred by the immoral acts of top Civil Rights movement leaders, especially King. Wooten cites writing from a white supremacist, Holocaust denial website, as evidence. Wooten's book has been endorsed and promoted by ICA apostle Alice Patterson, who (according to C. Peter Wagner) organized Rick Perry's The Response prayer event See - New Apostolic Reformation Reconciliation Expert Promotes Book Demonizing MLK.
-- Apostle Jim Ammerman (see 1, 2, 3.) Recently deceased ICA apostle Jim Ammerman, whose chaplain endorsing agency presided over a significant percentage of active duty chaplains in the United States military, printed in 2008, in his official chaplain endorsing agency newsletter, a letter from a retired military officer which stated that US Democratic senators Hillary Clinton, James Dodd, Joe Biden, and Barack Obama should be executed for voting against a senate bill to establish English as the official language of the United States.
-- Apostle Kim Daniels (see: 1, 2, 3, 4.) ICA Apostle Kimberly Daniels, who in the 2010 election won a seat on the Jacksonville, FL. city council, teaches a core course for the Wagner Leadership Institute. Daniels has claimed "the Jews own everything!", has played a national role (along with apostle and Bishop Harry Jackson) in fighting hate crimes legislation. Daniels' numerous demonology-centered books feature, among other things, a claim that Africans are especially prone to sex with demon spirits and asserts that homosexuality involves a covenant with the devil