M
marywarfield
Guest
Indeed it is, because we believe an apostle is not a bishop or a pope. Apostolic succession vanished from the earth with the deaths of the apostles a long time ago, and was only restored when a resurrected Peter and James along with John, who was translated, placed their hands on Joseph Smiths head and restored the priesthood. If this truly happened as I have said, then there really is not point in arguing further.
But if they actually have the authority for these sacraments/ordinances whyI have found that most, if not all, of the verses cited by LDS in relation to a complete apostasy and loss of authority either refer to partial/personal apostasies (and not an apostasy of the Church), or something unrelated in the Old Testament. I find much more Biblical support for the continuation of Christ’s Church, His Kingdom, after He establishes it, which He did anciently.
Further, when LDS speak of a restoration, it is difficult to actually point to a cohesive body that believed similarly to the LDS. For example, was there a Church anciently that can be pointed to that believed in baptism for the dead, the necessity of temple ordinances for eternal life, “Seventy” as a priesthood office name (and not just seventy men), an embodied God the Father (let alone one that progressed to/achieved Godhood), etc? Where is there evidence that the LDS really restored these things that were supposedly lost? This is a question that helped lead me back to Catholicism.
The one area that I will grant makes more sense to me in the LDS world is the issue of authority to perform sacraments/ordinances. LDS believe that only the priesthood in the true Church has the authority to validly perform ordinances. Therefore, only they have that authority (in their view). This makes more sense to me than viewing, for example, Orthodox as having valid apostolic succession, valid orders/priesthood, and valid sacraments, despite them not being in full communion with the Catholic Church.
is it all done entirely under the cover of complete secrecy?