Hello again, everyone! I am back again now with the
second part of this apostolic update, in which we will move on to talk specifics
regarding the long-form and decimal ages of our current apostles, which will
also include updated information on the average ages of the First Presidency,
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and the 15 apostles as a group, and current and
future nonagenarians.
So let’s get right into all of that. Again, all data is
current as of today (Sunday January 27, 2019). Since my last update, Elder Gong
has celebrated his 65th birthday (which occurred one week after my
last update) and Elder Christofferson has marked his 74th (which, as
noted previously, happened 3 days ago). Elder Rasband’s 68th birthday
will occur 10 days from now, and the next apostolic birthday (President Henry
B. Eyring’s 86th) will not occur until the last day in May. By that
time, two more of these updates will have been posted on this blog, and another
such update will follow 2 days after President Eyring’s birthday.
With that noted, we now move on to some exact figures
about the ages (and average ages) of the First Presidency, Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles, and all 15 apostles as a group. In the Church’s leading Quorum, President
Nelson is, as noted towards the end of my previous post, 94 years, 4 months,
and 18 days old, which results in a decimal age of 94.38 years. His First
Counselor, President Oaks, is now 86 years, 5 months, and 15 days old, or 86.46
years. President Eyring is now 85 years, 7 months, and 27 days old, which is 85.66
in decimal years.
The First Presidency thus now has a combined 266.5 years
of life experience, which results in an average age for each man of 88.83 years.
President Nelson remains 5.55 years older than that average, with President Oaks
closest to it (as he remains 2.37 years younger than that average), which means
that President Eyring remains 3.17 years below it. Unless there is something of
which we are not aware in relation to the health of any of these Brethren, they
will continue to set new records for the oldest-serving First Presidency in
Church history for the foreseeable future.
Next, let’s turn our attention to the members of the Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles. President Ballard’s long-form age now sits at 90 years,
3 months, and 19 days, or 90.30 years. Elder Holland now has a long-form age of
78 years 1 months, and 24 days, with a resulting 78.15 decimal years. Elder
Uchtdorf (who is a mere 27 days older than his senior apostolic seatmate) age
now stands at 78 years, 2 month, and 21 days old, which works out to 78.22
years.
Elder Bednar has now reached the full age of 66 years, 7
months, and 12 days, which works out to 66.62 decimal years. Elder Cook, the
last and oldest of the 3 apostles born in 1940, has a long-form 78 years, 4 months,
and 19 days old, with a resulting decimal age of 78.39 years. Elder Christofferson,
whose birthday was, as previously noted, just 3 days ago, has now reached the
age of 74 years and 3 days old, making his decimal age 74.01 years.
Elder Andersen, who will be marking a decade in the
apostleship this April, is now 67 years, 5 months, and 18 days, and his decimal
age is 67.47 years. Elder Rasband, who will be observing his birthday in 10
days, as I previously mentioned, is now 67 years, 11 months, and 21 days, or 67.97
years. Elder Stevenson, at exactly 4.5 years younger than Elder Rasband (as
both were born on the 6th), has a long-form age of 63 years, 5
months, and 21 days old, or 63.48 in decimal years.
We move on now the final 3 apostles. Elder Renlund has
now reached the exact age of 66 years, 2 months, and 14 days old, with a
resulting decimal age of 66.21 years. Elder Gong, the one other apostle who has
had his birthday since my last update, has a long-form age of 65 years, 1
month, and 4 days, which works out to 65.09 in decimal years. As for Elder
Soares, he is now 60 years, 3 months, and 25 days old, which is a resulting
60.32 decimal years.
With those numbers in mind, the 12 Quorum members now have
a cumulative 856.24 years of life experience, which is a resulting average of 71.35
years per member. Elders Christofferson and Rasband are respectively above and
below that average, with the former now being 2.66 years older, and the latter
remaining 3.38 years younger. Based on the information I provided earlier about
the members of the First Presidency, the entire body of apostles now have a
combined 1,122.74 years of life experience, which is an average of 74.85 years.
Elder Holland is older than that average by 3.3 years, while Elder Christofferson
remains 0.84 years younger.
We now move on to the nonagenarians. President Nelson
remains the seventh oldest apostle in Church history, and is set to move up to
the seventh spot on July 5 of next year. In the meantime, President Ballard’s
next nonagenarian milestone will not be observed until after my next update.
The exact date on which that will occur is Wednesday February 20, 2019. For the
other apostles, President Oaks will join that list 3 years, 6 months, and 15
days from today, while Elder Soares will do so in 29 years, 8 months, and 5
days, with the other apostles doing so at other various intervals, which will
be detailed more fully as they approach.
I hope that many of you found this information to be
interesting, informative, and accurate. That does it for this post. Any and all
comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as
long as such feedback is in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank
you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would
like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until
my next post, I wish each one of you all the best, and pray that the Lord will
bless you all in everything you do.