Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
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In Mormonism, the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (also known as the Quorum of the Twelve, the Council of Twelve, or the Twelve) is one of the governing bodies of the church hierarchy in many Latter Day Saint denominations, members of which are considered to be Apostles. The Quorum was originally designated to be a body of "traveling councilors" equal in authority to the First Presidency as well as to the Seventy, the standing High Council of Zion and the High Councils of the various Stakes of Zion (Doctrine & Covenants 107:25-27, 36-37). The jurisdiction of the Twelve was limited to areas of the world outside of Zion or its outlying Stakes.
Within the Latter Day Saint movement today, many denominations have organized Quorums of the Twelve.
The Quorum in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
After the death of Joseph Smith, Jr., the President of the Quorum of the Twelve was Brigham Young. Assuming control of the church, Young elevated the status of the Quorum as the supreme governing body of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Some years later, after a new First Presidency was formed, the Quorum of the Twelve assumed a place within a hierarchy subordinate to the First Presidency and higher in authority than the Seventy.
Each member of the Quorum is considered to be an Apostle. Each is also sustained as a "Prophet, Seer and Revelator". Thus, each Apostle is considered to hold the rights ("keys of the Priesthood") to use all powers granted by God to the Church. Individually and collectively, the Twelve hold the keys and have confirmed the authority to exercise all of the keys upon the senior Apostle, the one man who is to preside over the Church. Thus, officially, only the President and Prophet of the Church is entitled to receive revelation for the entire Church. When the President of the Church dies, the most senior member of the Quorum is ordained as the President and Prophet of the Church.
The most senior remaining member of the Quorum is then invariably called as the President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles; if he is a Counselor in the First Presidency, the most senior member of the Quorum who is not in the First Presidency is designated Acting President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
As vacancies arise within the Quorum, all of the Apostles, including the First Presidency, meet to pray and to come to a unanimous decision as to whom among the rank and file of the Church will be called to fill the vacancy. The chosen man is generally ordained an Apostle by the President of the Church,or failing him by a Counselor in the First Presidency or President of the Twelve. Depending on circumstances this may occur before or after a sustaining vote is held at a General Conference of the Church, which is sometimes the occasion for the new Apostle to be publicly announced.
Presently, the members of the Quorum are as follows:
- President Boyd K. Packer - (ordained Apostle 1970) Acting President of the Quorum of the Twelve since 1994
- Elder L. Tom Perry (ordained 1974)
- Elder Russell M. Nelson (1984)
- Elder Dallin H. Oaks (1984)
- Elder M. Russell Ballard (1985)
- Elder Joseph B. Wirthlin (1986)
- Elder Richard G. Scott (1988)
- Elder Robert D. Hales (1994)
- Elder Jeffrey R. Holland (1994)
- Elder Henry B. Eyring (1995)
- Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf (2004)
- Elder David A. Bednar (2004)
List of Members of the Quorum
This is a list of the members of the quorum and the dates when they were ordained. In some cases, the date of the calling is used instead as the actual date of ordination is unclear.
- Thomas B. Marsh (April 26, 1835)
- David W. Patten (February 15, 1835)
- Brigham Young (February 14, 1835)
- Heber C. Kimball (February 14, 1835)
- Orson Hyde (February 15, 1835)
- William E. McLellin (February 15, 1835)
- Parley P. Pratt (February 21, 1835)
- Luke S. Johnson (February 15, 1835)
- William B. Smith (February 15, 1835)
- Orson Pratt (April 26, 1835)
- John F. Boynton (February 15, 1835)
- Lyman E. Johnson (February 14, 1835)
- John E. Page (December 19, 1838)
- John Taylor (December 19, 1838)
- Wilford Woodruff (April 26, 1839)
- George A. Smith (April 26, 1839)
- Willard Richards (April 14, 1840)
- Lyman Wight (April 8, 1841)
- Amasa M. Lyman (August 20, 1842, August 12, 1844)
- Ezra T. Benson (July 16, 1846)
- Charles C. Rich (February 12, 1849)
- Lorenzo Snow (February 12, 1849)
- Erastus Snow (February 12, 1849)
- Franklin D. Richards (February 12, 1849)
- George Q. Cannon (August 26, 1860)
- Joseph F. Smith (July 1, 1866)
- Brigham Young, Jr. (February 4, 1864)
- Albert Carrington (July 3, 1870)
- Moses Thatcher (April 9, 1879)
- Francis M. Lyman (October 27, 1880)
- John Henry Smith (October 27, 1880)
- George Teasdale (October 16, 1882)
- Heber J. Grant (October 16, 1882)
- John W. Taylor (May 15, 1884)
- Marriner W. Merrill (October 7, 1889)
- Anthon H. Lund (October 7, 1889)
- Abraham H. Cannon (October 7, 1889)
- Matthias F. Cowley (October 7, 1897)
- Abraham O. Woodruff (October 7, 1897)
- Rudger Clawson (October 10, 1898)
- Reed Smoot (April 8, 1900)
- Hyrum Mack Smith (October 24, 1901)
- George Albert Smith (October 8, 1903)
- Charles W. Penrose (July 7, 1904)
- George F. Richards (April 9, 1906)
- Orson F. Whitney (April 9, 1906)
- David O. McKay (April 9, 1906)
- Anthony W. Ivins (October 6, 1907)
- Joseph Fielding Smith (April 7, 1910)
- James E. Talmage (December 8, 1911)
- Stephen L. Richards (January 18, 1917)
- Richard R. Lyman (April 7, 1918)
- Melvin J. Ballard (January 7, 1919)
- John A. Widtsoe (March 17, 1921)
- Joseph F. Merrill (October 8, 1931)
- Charles A. Callis (October 12, 1933)
- J. Reuben Clark (October 11, 1934)
- Alonzo A. Hinckley (October 11, 1934)
- Albert E. Bowen (April 8, 1937)
- Sylvester Q. Cannon (April 14, 1938)
- Harold B. Lee (April 10, 1941)
- Spencer W. Kimball (October 7, 1943)
- Ezra Taft Benson (October 7, 1943)
- Mark E. Petersen (April 20, 1944)
- Matthew Cowley (October 11, 1945)
- Henry D. Moyle (April 10, 1947)
- Delbert L. Stapley (October 5, 1950)
- Marion G. Romney (October 11, 1951)
- LeGrand Richards (April 10, 1952)
- Adam S. Bennion (April 9, 1953)
- Richard L. Evans (October 8, 1953)
- George Q. Morris (April 8, 1954)
- Hugh B. Brown (April 10, 1958)
- Howard W. Hunter (October 15, 1959)
- Gordon B. Hinckley (October 5, 1961)
- N. Eldon Tanner (October 11, 1962)
- Thomas S. Monson (October 10, 1963)
- Boyd K. Packer (April 9, 1970)
- Marvin J. Ashton (December 2, 1971)
- Bruce R. McConkie (October 12, 1972)
- L. Tom Perry (April 11, 1974)
- David B. Haight (January 8, 1976)
- James E. Faust (October 1, 1978)
- Neal A. Maxwell (July 23, 1981)
- Russell M. Nelson (April 7, 1984)
- Dallin H. Oaks (May 3, 1984)
- M. Russell Ballard (October 10, 1985)
- Joseph B. Wirthlin (October 9, 1986)
- Richard G. Scott (October 6, 1988)
- Robert D. Hales (April 1994)
- Jeffrey R. Holland (June 23,1994)
- Henry B. Eyring (April 1995)
- Dieter F. Uchtdorf (October 7, 2004)
- David A. Bednar (October 7, 2004)
External links
- Salt Lake Tribune article on new apostles being added in 2004
- Deseret News article on procedures for filling vacancies,2004
- Biographical sketches of all the apostles
de:Kollegium der Zwölf Apostel