R
Reuben_J
Guest
This seems to work more to the contrary when they elected Mathias to replace the position of Judas.There is no explicit verse, no. However it is more than conjecture. First, the requirement to be considered an apostle cannot be fulfilled by anyone, either today or in the post-apostolic church (Acts 1:21-22). That, in and of itself would be enough to demonstrate that the apostolic office ceased.
If we look at the fact that a successor was required for Judas and later, the laying of hands on those to do the work of the apostles, obviously demonstrated the beginning and establishing of the office of the apostles, no matter how rudimentary it was then. The heirachy was certainly seemed to be already existed even though the Church was under persecution. It would be quite futile to look for a full fledged Church during the time of the apostles or when the scritpures were written.Secondly, when the apostles themselves are nearing death or the end of their ministry, they never instruct anyone to ordain new apostles or that their charism would continue. Rather, they say to remember what they were taught by the apostles and entrust it to those who come after them (Acts 20:28-35, 2 Peter 1:13-15, 3:1-2). Lastly, it’s a matter of historical record that those things gifted to the apostles -revelation, miracles, healing, divine assistance- ceased.