I am sharing this link with Pinay as well…
hancaquam.blogspot.com/2011/04/vatican-two-true-and-false-reform.html
What makes a true reform in the Catholic Church vs false reform…I put this out as well to the claims of certain vague references to St. Paul as defining the apostasy already at work. St. Paul was also of the opinion that Christ would come back soon within their generation…but in time, they realized they misunderstood.
Subsequently, the apostles and their successors made it their great aim to insure that the true faith was passed down…there were beginning modes of administrating…the Gentiles were collective, the Jewish Christians had one leader with a council, and in time the Holy Spirit revealed that the practice of the Jewish Christian way was chosen as the form to govern the Church with bishop, deacons, presbyters, priests.
The Church did not fall out of the sky. It was ready made, though, – Jesus Christ Himself the life of the Church. However, its human outward form took time to develop because Church is a human institution.
Drawing from the writings of French Dominican Yves Congar, his writings now pretty much considered orthodox regarding true and false reform of the Church, the Catholic Church must consider if the reform increases or decreases her own calling.
Any true reform in the Catholic spirit respects our style of worship and pastoral life. Sects, divisions in the Church are caused by ‘reformers’ who 'fanatically insist on sheer light of an intellectual system. The Catholic Tradition ‘considers concrete possibilities and works within a framework…’
In other words, we work with the world as it is…concrete. Our sacraments are concrete. The Eucharist has been the center of liturgical worship for 2,000 years. As we deal with the concrete with the deposit of faith, the Word of God is always reflected upon to relate to the times we live in. It is about context within the concrete.
Another important point is that "a reform that is Catholic in spirit will seek to maintain communion with the whole body of the Church, and will avoid anything savoring of schism or factionalism.
St. Paul speaks of anger, dissension, and party spirit as contrary to the spirit of God. (Galatians 5:20). To be Catholic is precisely to see one’s self as part of a larger whole, to be inserted into the universal Catholic Church."
These values have been held dear by the Church, itself akin to a living breathing sacrament as the Bride of Christ since its beginning.
The answer to the Mormons’ claim of apostasy only reflects on a different concept of God. The Holy Spirit never turned around, Jesus never turned around and left us…a failed mission…
Such an idea of believing in an apostasy would even happen at the beginning of Christianity, and assuming a strange and contradictory indifference by the apostles-- themselves turning their back on Christ and not insuring the faith would be passed down to subsequent generations-- is unbelievable.
We do not believe in a failed Christ, a balloon Holy Spirit that blows in and then blows out after the death of the last apostle.
The Church began at Pentecost. There were many attending at Pentecost…over a 100 people received the tongues of the Holy Spirit over them besides the Apostles and Mary, the Mother of Christ. The apostles recognized those who had true faith integrated within their being…Afterall, the Jews put great weight into who would be administrators of their religion…and the Apostles, living witnesses to Christ, in the same Substance as the Father and Holy Spirit…were in no way going to let this great mission of salvation be thrown away by their deaths.
If their deaths then caused the apostasy to happen, then death still holds power over the Mormons and not the true life of Jesus Christ.