President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (LDS Church)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles is a priesthood calling in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Normally, the president of the Quorum of the Twelve is the most senior apostle in the church, aside from its president. When the church president dies, the president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles succeeds him. There have been twenty-nine men who have served as president of the Twelve (one of whom served two non-consecutive terms). Of these, seventeen subsequently become the church president. As of December 27, 2025, Henry B. Eyring is the quorum president. With Eyring serving in the First Presidency, Dieter F. Uchtdorf was set apart as acting president on January 8, 2026.[1]
When the church's president dies, the First Presidency automatically dissolves. The Quorum of the Twelve Apostles becomes the highest leadership body, and its president becomes the church's most senior leader. Following the death of church president Joseph Smith in 1844, Brigham Young was the quorum president, and he persuaded the majority of church members that Smith's death left him and not Sidney Rigdon, who had been Smith's first counselor in the First Presidency, as the senior church leader. Smith had reportedly taught the apostles, "Where I am not, there is no First Presidency over the Twelve."[2]
In 1847, the Quorum of the Twelve reconstituted the First Presidency, with Young as church president. During Young's presidency, seniority within the Quorum of the Twelve was formalized to mean "continuous service as an Apostle since being ordained as one of the Twelve". The original apostles of 1835 had been ranked by age, and two of them had been excommunicated and later restored to fellowship. With this rule in place, upon the death of Young, John Taylor led the church, first as quorum president and, after 1880, as president of the Church. Wilford Woodruff became president of the Twelve.
After Taylor died in 1887, Woodruff did not reorganize the First Presidency until 1889. But before his own death in 1898, he advised the Quorum of the Twelve that "in all future time, when the president of the church should die and thereby the First Presidency become disorganized, it would be the duty of the proper authorities of the church to proceed at once without any unnecessary delay, to reorganize the First Presidency."[3] Snow followed this advice and since then every interval between the death of the president of the church and the ordination of a new president has been less than two weeks, long enough to complete the funeral services and allow for the Quorum of the Twelve to nominate and sustain the president of the twelve as the new church president. When the president of the twelve becomes the president of the church, the next apostle in seniority becomes the new president of the twelve.
Duties
The president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles is the priesthood leader of the quorum members. As such, all quorum members report directly to him. The president's other duties consist of presiding at and conducting weekly quorum meetings in the Salt Lake Temple; making decisions about assignments to be made to quorum members; speaking on behalf of the quorum to members of the church and the media; scheduling twice-annual conferences for each stake and district in the church; and acting as a liaison in coordinating the work of the quorum with the First Presidency, the Quorums of the Seventy, and the Presiding Bishopric.
When adherents refer to the president of the Quorum of the Twelve, his name is usually prefaced by the honorific title "president".
