God desires his people on earth to be actively involved in the society in which they live and promote the values, blessings, and prosperity of his kingdom for everyone. In On Earth as It Is in Heaven, Peter Wagner brings Spirit-inspired answers to the discussion of how we can accomplish this task and shows how God has revealed new strategies to bring his kingdom to this planet. In this powerful study, Wagner also addresses the following:
This groundbreaking study lays a biblical, theological, and inspirational foundation for the mandate God has given his people. Join in the fresh move of the Spirit to bring God’s reign upon earth.
In the Logos edition, this volume is enhanced by amazing functionality. Important terms link to dictionaries, encyclopedias, and a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Perform powerful searches to find exactly what you’re looking for. Take the discussion with you using tablet and mobile apps. With Logos Bible Software, the most efficient and comprehensive research tools are in one place, so you get the most out of your study.
“The underlying premise of this book is that God wills that His people here on earth take dominion of the society in which we live, promoting the values, blessings and prosperity of His kingdom for everyone.” (Page 8)
“Teachers research and expound the logos, prophets bring the rhema, and apostles put it together and point the direction into the future.” (Page 63)
“Reformation is built. Martin Luther set in place the final” (Page 27)
“Obviously, right now we all find ourselves on earth—not yet in heaven. Consequently, we must follow certain earthly rules if we are going to change our society for the good. A starting point is to recognize what many of us have been calling the seven mountains, which are the supreme molders of culture. These are religion, family, education, media, government, arts and entertainment, and business. For a given society to change, each one of the seven mountains needs to be influenced, or dominated, by persons of goodwill, whether Christians or non-Christians. This is a positive way of looking at dominionism.” (Page 11)
“Jesus, of course, founded the church, but at His ascension He delegated the operational nuts and bolts for the future growth of the church to apostles and prophets. He remains as the cornerstone. The cornerstone is not the foundation per se, but it is the unit that holds the foundation together. The foundation is apostles and prophets. It could be argued that churches without apostles and prophets rest on a faulty foundation.” (Page 30)