Here is a link to an article that goes over the process. It also gives a history of how the process came to be.
lds.org/ensign/1996/08/the-kingdom-of-god-will-roll-on-succession-in-the-presidency?lang=eng
There is no religious ceremony other than the ordination to the office.
The Holy Spirit is invovled in every aspect of the leadership of the church.
The calling to be an apostle is done throught fasting and prayer. They are called through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
I am a little confused. If this is the process for replacing the President of the Church, why was it not established by revelation in the Doctrine and Covenants when Joseph Smith, Jr. was murdered?
As I recall the Doctrine and Covenants (D&C) designated various successors to Joseph Smith by revelation (among them Oliver Cowdery and Sidney Rigdon) who were subsequently replaced in disputes. According to the (D&C) God’s designated successor to Joseph Smith at the time of his murder was his brother Hyrum. Did God not know Hyrum would be killed first in the same attack?
That is not just a flippant question. The President of the Quorum of the Twelve is usually the next President of the Church because he is usually the senior member. The actual standard is that sneior Apostle, defined by length of service in the office, not by age, is ALWAYS the successor. Sometimes that person sits on the First Presidency and an acting President of the Quorum is seated.
The justification for this is that God controls life and death. By determining when the President of the Church dies God also has decided which Apostle is in the position to take over – except that is inconsistent with the idea that God would designate Hyrum Smith as Joseph Smith’s successor, and have Hyrum killed first.
Regarding the beginning of the mantle of authority falling on the Quorum of the Twelve, this was by no means a unanimous decision of all Church members. There was a significant multiple schism in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints following the mob execution of Joseph Smith. Many members went on to follow Sidney Rigdon, many subscribed to a belief that the prophet had to be a descendant of Joseph Smith.
The largest of the other groups still exists today and is called “The Community of Christ” (formerly “The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints”). It owns the copyright on Joseph Smith’s “translation” of the Bible, which is why only selections of it are in the LDS King James edition. It also has a differing edition of the D & C, including revelations Joseph Smith received that the Salt Lake church leaves out. I have never examined it enough to see if it leaves anything out that Salt lake excepts.
None of these groups followed the clearly defined succession of authority described in the D&C at the time of Joseph Smith’s death, because that said Hyrum would lead next. In the case of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and all of the other groups descending from this schism, the voice of the people determined whome they would follow. The majority of Joseph Smith’s followers at the time he died chose to follow the Quorum of Twelve, so it has become generally recognized as the valid successor.
The important thing here is that Mormonism recognizes the majority voice of the body of believers as a valid determinant in succession of authority. This is significant when applied to the division of the Eastern churches from Rome. The difference is that we still consider Eastern churches in full communion, and vice-versa. A member of The Community of Christ cannot get a temple recommend from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or partake of the Sacrament (Communion/Eucharist)
The Eucharist is the most sacred thing Catholicism has to offer – and truly the most miraculous religious offering on Earth. Nothing can be more sacred than the real presence of the body and blood of Christ in our midst. Despite the fact that our belief about it is mocked we display our celbration of it before the whole world. We do not require an accounting of how much money we give the Church to share the most sacred “ordinance” God has given man. We have not denied it to anyone based on race, national origin, or geographic origin of their ancestors.
Any Catholic, Eastern or Roman, can share in the Eucharist in any other Catholic Church, so despite the huge numbers involved in the split between Rome and Constantinople, it is less a split among our communion than the split that exists among LDS believers.
The latter point digresses a bit, but is integral to the overall theme. The article you provided really just shows that the basis for authority is what a conference voted it to be in 1844, perceived divine sign or not. It is also only what the largest deivision of Joseph Smith’s followers chose. The Community of Christ has its own reasons for disavowing the decision to follow the Quorum of the Twelve, and they base that in the very divine revelation that you claim validates the Salt Lake sect.
So which is it? Does the continuation of LDS Priesthood leadership go by specified revelation of God, or by the vote of the members? The article you provided said that it is by the vote of the members.