R
Religio71
Guest
I agree, evidence points towards Peter having primacy and a leadership role among the Apostles.The members of the First Presidency have not ceased to be apostles because they have the added responsibility. There is the quorum of twelve…but in reality there are fourteen or fifteen…a quorum is a minimum, not a maximum.
I see your point about the Presidency not being ‘part’ of the twelve—but where is there in the bible anywhere to say that Peter didn’t hold the same sort of position that the first presidency does now? I would suggest that the very evidence that you use to proclaim him the 'first Pope" indicates his rather special position. Remember, our claim isn’t that there were ONLY twelve, is it? Quite the contrary…and then after a bit, our claim is that there were not even twelve, hence the apostasy.
there is also no mention in the bible that there were to be ONLY twelve…all we do know is that efforts were made to replace those who died or were otherwise disqualified (Mattias for Judas). And do we really know who Paul replaced?
This is really an interesting argument coming from a Catholic who has…how many cardinals to vote for the next Pope…currently available? More than twelve, certainly.
Yes, Matthias did replace Judas (there was another thread on LDS apostles quite recently that you should check out.). However the Catholic/traditional view of this is that the criteria for being a member of the Twelve was given when it came down to Matthias and Barsabbas. Thus, Paul was an apostle, but he was not one of the Twelve. Using the same criteria, we do not see how there could be any new members of the Twelve, especially today.
I don’t see how my argument applies to the Catholic situation…cardinals aren’t apostles, nor do we see them as being part of a Quorum of the Twelve…