C
Chris-WA
Guest
Mormons, in a recent conversation with a local stake president it was explained to me that the LDS church has the same structural heiarchy as the early Christian Church. The LDS church is headed by the First Presidency, consisting of the prophet and his two counselors, and under those three there is the Quorum of the 12 Apostles. Mormons believe the early church had the same structure–that Peter, James, and John were the First Presidency (I guess that makes Peter the “prophet”), and that the rest made up the Quorum of the 12. But there is one huge problem I cannot reconcile. We seem to be missing three Apostles here.
The New Testament shows us that Christ chose 12 Apostles to head the church, not 15. In order to have the same structure as the LDS church, Christ would have had to name 15 individuals (3 for the First Presidency and 12 more for the Quorum). But Peter, James, and John were members of the twelve, so how can Mormons say they have the same structure as the church Christ established? Who were the additional three Apostles, and how did we end up with a “First Presidency” separate from the “Quorum of the Twelve.”
The New Testament shows us that Christ chose 12 Apostles to head the church, not 15. In order to have the same structure as the LDS church, Christ would have had to name 15 individuals (3 for the First Presidency and 12 more for the Quorum). But Peter, James, and John were members of the twelve, so how can Mormons say they have the same structure as the church Christ established? Who were the additional three Apostles, and how did we end up with a “First Presidency” separate from the “Quorum of the Twelve.”