Dag Heward-Mills and the Revival of Apostolic Sending

Bishop Dag Heward-Mills has never been satisfied with building a strong local church alone. His heart has always been for nations. For the unreached. For the places where the name of Jesus has not yet been lifted. This is why his ministry carries a strong apostolic grace—a passion to send, to plant, and to pioneer in places far from comfort.

He believes that the Church is not meant to be stationary. It is meant to move. To go. To spread. To carry the gospel beyond the familiar. And for this to happen, leaders must be raised and sent. This has become a major hallmark of Bishop Dag’s ministry: apostolic sending.

Churches are not only being established—they are being multiplied. Leaders are not only being trained—they are being deployed. Every year, hundreds of pastors, missionaries, and church workers are sent out under his covering to start new churches in nations and towns around the world.

Sending With Power and Preparation

Apostolic sending is not random. It is intentional. Bishop Dag trains his leaders carefully before sending them. They go out equipped with the Word, with spiritual discipline, with loyalty, and with a heart to build from the ground up. He does not send people unprepared. He sends them with structure, backing, and a strong spiritual foundation.

His Bible schools and pastoral camps are focused on forming men and women who can stand in foreign fields, who can preach without applause, and who can shepherd people without recognition. He instills in them a sense of mission—a divine urgency to go and to build.

They are sent out with blessing, with direction, and with clear expectations. And wherever they go, they carry the spirit of their father. They build with the same heart. They love with the same passion. And they serve with the same faith.

Restoring the Apostolic Flow to the Church

Many churches today have lost the flow of apostolic ministry. They are content to gather, but they no longer send. They are busy with internal programs but lack an external focus. Bishop Dag has challenged that model. He teaches that any church that does not send is slowly dying. Because the life of the Church is found in its going.

He is restoring the apostolic flow—not just through sermons, but through action. Entire cities are now home to new churches because someone was sent. Entire nations are being reached because a missionary was released. And the Church is remembering that the work is not finished until the gospel has reached every tribe and tongue.

He reminds leaders that the Holy Spirit is still calling, still sending, still equipping. But it takes a willing church to obey. It takes a spiritual father to release sons. And it takes a movement that is ready to go where others will not.

A Legacy of Sent Ones

The legacy Bishop Dag is building is not only in buildings or books—it is in people. In men and women who have been sent out with fire in their bones and the Word in their mouths. These sent ones are his fruit. They are his joy. They are his reward.

They are preaching in villages. Planting in cities. Teaching in schools. Praying in crusades. Loving people into the kingdom. They are everywhere—not because they chose it, but because they were sent.

Through Bishop Dag Heward-Mills, the Church is learning once again that the work is not done in one place. That the harvest is still plentiful. And that apostolic sending is not a thing of the past—it is the very heartbeat of God today.

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