Mormons often point with pride to the
fact that their Church has "Twelve Apostles" just like
Jesus had. However, any church could ordain twelve men
and call them "Twelve Apostles," but would that make
them true successors of Christ’s Twelve Apostles? Our
last article showed that the prayers given at the
ordination of Mormonism’s first Twelve Apostles were
full of false prophecy. Can true apostles of Christ be
ordained by men who are uttering false prophecy as they
ordain those Apostles? In II Corinthians 11:13, Paul
spoke of "false apostles" who transform themselves into
the apostles of Christ. And in Revelation 2:2 Jesus was
commending the Ephesian Church when He said, "thou hast
tried them who say they are apostles, and are not, and
hast found them liars." These texts clearly show that
there are false apostles. Therefore, we should test the
claims of those who say they are apostles as the
Ephesian Church did.
Nevertheless, the tenth Mormon Prophet,
Joseph Fielding Smith, wrote: "Christ chose twelve men
and conferred upon them the apostleship, and these
twelve men constituted the only Council of Apostles in
the Church in that day, and there is but one Council of
Apostles in the Church today. These twelve men are
endowed with the power and responsibility to serve as
the special witnesses for Christ" (Doctrines of
Salvation, vol. 3, p. 146). James E. Talmage, Mormon
apostle and theologian, also wrote: "Twelve men holding
the apostleship, properly organized, constitute the
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, also designated The
Council of the Twelve. These the Lord has named as the
twelve traveling councilors; they form the Traveling
Presiding High Council, to officiate under the direction
of the First Presidency in all parts of the world" (The
Articles of Faith, p. 210).
These LDS leaders claim there are only
"twelve" men who make up the Council or Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles who minister in all parts of the world.
The Twelve Apostles, like the President of the LDS
Church hold their offices until they die, unless they
are called into the First Presidency. When an LDS
President dies, "The senior apostle is always chosen and
set apart as the President of the Church" (Mormon
Doctrine, p. 49). The new LDS President selects a First
and Second Counselor, usually from the Twelve Apostles,
to serve with him in the First Presidency. New Apostles
are chosen to replace those who moved into the First
Presidency which means that there are usually 15 living
men who have been ordained to the LDS "Quorum of Twelve
Apostles." Mormons claim that Peter, James and John made
up the original First Presidency in the first century.
But those three men were never called a "First
Presidency" nor were there Twelve Apostles in addition
to them! LDS claim that their Church is organized just
like Jesus organized His Church, but that is not true
with their Twelve Apostles.
There is another problem with the LDS
claim that the true church has Twelve Apostles. In
discussing the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith said,
"This book also tells us that our Savior made His
appearance upon this continent after His resurrection;
that He planted the gospel in all its fulness, its
power, and blessing; that they had Apostles, Prophets,
Pastors, Teachers, and Evangelists..."(History of the
Church, by Joseph Smith, vol. 4, p.538). And the
Book of Mormon says that on the American continent
Jesus chose Twelve disciples from the white Nephite
people and authorized them to baptize believers into the
church (III Nephi 12:1). Those Twelve men must be the
Apostles Joseph Smith mentioned because no others are
identified in the Book of Mormon. It records that
the "Twelve" on the American continent experienced
greater miracles than the Twelve Apostles in Palestine,
so they must have been true Apostles. Otherwise, the
church they built was false since LDS claim that the
true church must be built upon the foundation of
Apostles and Prophets! But the "Twelve" in America were
contemporaries of the Twelve in Palestine which means
that Jesus had twenty-four Apostles on earth at the same
time! The Twelve in America were not under the authority
of the Twelve in Palestine because they never had any
contact with them!
In the Book of Mormon, Jesus
promised three of the Nephite Apostles that they would
not die, but remain on the earth and proclaim the gospel
until His second coming (III Nephi 28:1-40). Their
ministry was not limited to America but it was to "all
nations, kindreds, tongues and people" (v.29). But that
claim raises some obvious questions. If they were really
doing what the Book of Mormon says, how could
there have been hundreds of years of "universal
apostasy" without a single Christian on earth as the LDS
claim? Weren’t those Apostles and their converts
Christians? Why would the gospel need to be a "restored"
if the three Nephite Apostles were proclaiming it? And
if it was deemed necessary to "restore" the true gospel,
couldn’t these three Apostles have done it? But Joseph
Smith said it was Peter, James and John from Palestine
who restored the "authority" to proclaim the gospel (Doctrine
& Covenants 128:20). And they did it here in America
where the three Nephite Apostles lived! Since the
Book of Mormon claims that the three Nephite
Apostles are still ministering on earth and Doctrine
& Covenants 7:1-6 says that the Apostle John would
live and minister on earth until Christ returns, why do
the LDS need Twelve more Apostles? Did those four
Apostles of Christ lose their Apostleship? Thus Mormon
scripture does not support the LDS claim of a universal
apostasy. Nor does it support their claim that they have
a Quorum of Twelve Apostles which shows that they are
the true church.
For more information about LDS Apostles
we suggest The Mormon Hierarchy, Origins of Power
by D. Michael Quinn, published by Signature Books in
1994. This is a book dealing with historical problems
and is not a Christian response to Mormonism. Next time
we will discuss prophets and prophecy in Mormonism.