. . . . . "Leaders"@en . "Various Restoration leaders"@en . . . . . "Restoration branches"@en . . "Outreach Restoration Branch, a Restoration branch located in Independence, Missouri"@en . . . . . . . . "3480990"^^ . . "1984"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "United States"@en . . . . . . "Ramas de la Restauraci\u00F3n"@es . . . . . . . . . . . "c. 10,000 as of 2011"@en . . . "Restoration Branches movement is a Christian/Latter Day Saint religious sect which was formed in the 1980s by members of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS, now the Community of Christ) in a reaction against the events of the RLDS 1984 world conference. The movement holds in the traditional RLDS theology of the 19th and early-to-mid 20th centuries and hold that events leading up to and surrounding the 1980s and decades since have introduced sweeping, fundamental changes into RLDS doctrine and practice which are illegitimate because they contradict the long-standing RLDS theological tradition this sect holds as true. It is also a part of the Mormon religion."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Restoration Branches Movement"@en . . . . "Ramas de la Restauraci\u00F3n es una facci\u00F3n religiosa cristiana del Movimiento de los Santos de los \u00DAltimos D\u00EDas que fue formada en los a\u00F1os 1980 por miembros de la Iglesia Reorganizada de los Santos de los \u00DAltimos D\u00EDas (RLDS, por sus siglas en ingl\u00E9s) como reacci\u00F3n contra los acontecimientos de la Conferencia Mundial RLDS de 1984. El movimiento mantiene la teolog\u00EDa tradicional RLDS del siglo XIX y de la primera mitad del siglo XX, pero rechaza los cambios en sus pr\u00E1cticas y doctrinas a partir de los a\u00F1os 1980.\u200B El movimiento est\u00E1 ubicado principalmente en Independence (Misuri), lugar que los seguidores creen, de acuerdo con las doctrinas de Joseph Smith y Joseph Smith III, es el lugar central de Sion.\u200B Tradicionalmente, la \"rama\" es una congregaci\u00F3n local unida a la iglesia RLDS. El t\u00E9rmino \"Restauraci\u00F3n\" se a\u00F1adi\u00F3 a ra\u00EDz del cisma, para denotar la separaci\u00F3n de una rama de la jerarqu\u00EDa organizativa e infiriendo que los participantes sean leales a los principios originales de la Restauraci\u00F3n de Joseph Smith y la Reorganizaci\u00F3n de Joseph Smith III en duro contraste a la teolog\u00EDa liberal abrazada por la Comunidad de Cristo. Los organizadores de las Ramas de la Restauraci\u00F3n consideraron que la organizaci\u00F3n oficial de la iglesia ha sido corrompida o ha ca\u00EDdo en apostas\u00EDa, de modo que la iglesia est\u00E1 ahora en un estado de \"desorganizaci\u00F3n\". Su desacuerdo primario con la Comunidad de Cristo, como la iglesia oficial RLDS se rebautiz\u00F3 en 2001, fue nominalmente por la decisi\u00F3n de la iglesia de ordenar mujeres al sacerdocio; Las Ramas de la Restauraci\u00F3n contin\u00FAan afirmando que s\u00F3lo los hombres tienen autoridad de sacerdocio; sin embargo, otros asuntos religiosos y doctrinales fueron y son tambi\u00E9n discutidos.\u200B Ninguna organizaci\u00F3n central universalmente reconocida existe actualmente dentro del movimiento, as\u00ED que cualquier estimaci\u00F3n de su membres\u00EDa es dif\u00EDcil de constatar. La Conferencia Conjunta de las Ramas de la Restauraci\u00F3n fue informada que ten\u00EDa entre 6,000 a 7,000 miembros registrados en 2010.\u200B Sin embargo, todas las personas bautizadas por el sacerdocio autorizado RLDS es considerado como \"miembros de la iglesia\" por la conferencia, independiente de su inscripci\u00F3n formal, afiliaci\u00F3n a la conferencia (o carencia de la misma) incluyendo ramas no-afiliadas, miembros de la Iglesia Remanente de Jesucristo de los Santos de los \u00DAltimos D\u00EDas e incluso algunos miembros de la Comunidad de Cristo (dependiendo de las circunstancias de su bautismo, dada la postura del movimiento contra el sacerdocio de las mujeres); as\u00ED que la fracci\u00F3n de la membres\u00EDa reconocida total que est\u00E1 registrada es desconocida pero es considerablemente m\u00E1s alta que el n\u00FAmero registrado.[cita requerida]"@es . . . . "Ramas de la Restauraci\u00F3n es una facci\u00F3n religiosa cristiana del Movimiento de los Santos de los \u00DAltimos D\u00EDas que fue formada en los a\u00F1os 1980 por miembros de la Iglesia Reorganizada de los Santos de los \u00DAltimos D\u00EDas (RLDS, por sus siglas en ingl\u00E9s) como reacci\u00F3n contra los acontecimientos de la Conferencia Mundial RLDS de 1984. El movimiento mantiene la teolog\u00EDa tradicional RLDS del siglo XIX y de la primera mitad del siglo XX, pero rechaza los cambios en sus pr\u00E1cticas y doctrinas a partir de los a\u00F1os 1980.\u200B"@es . . "250"^^ . . . "Restoration Branches movement is a Christian/Latter Day Saint religious sect which was formed in the 1980s by members of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS, now the Community of Christ) in a reaction against the events of the RLDS 1984 world conference. The movement holds in the traditional RLDS theology of the 19th and early-to-mid 20th centuries and hold that events leading up to and surrounding the 1980s and decades since have introduced sweeping, fundamental changes into RLDS doctrine and practice which are illegitimate because they contradict the long-standing RLDS theological tradition this sect holds as true. It is also a part of the Mormon religion. The movement is centered on Independence, Missouri which followers believe, as Joseph Smith, Jr and Joseph Smith III taught, is the centerplace of Zion. Traditionally, the \"branch\" is a local congregational unit in the RLDS church. The term \"Restoration\" was added as a result of the schism to denote a branch's separation from the organizational hierarchy and inferring what participants see as loyalty to the original principles of the Restoration of Joseph Smith and the Reorganization of Joseph Smith III in stark contrast to the liberal theology embraced by the Community of Christ. Organizers of the Restoration Branches movement considered the official RLDS church organization to have become corrupt or to have fallen into apostasy, so that the church is now in a state of \"disorganization\". Their primary disagreement with the Community of Christ, as the official RLDS church organization renamed itself in 2001, was nominally over the church's decision to ordain women to the priesthood. Restoration Branches continue to assert that only men have priesthood authority; however, other religious and doctrinal issues were and are also disputed. No universally recognized central organization exists currently within the Restoration Branches movement, so any figures concerning membership numbers are difficult to ascertain. The Joint Conference of Restoration Branches was reported as having 6,000 to 7,000 registered members as of 2010. However, all persons baptized by authoritative RLDS priesthood are regarded as \"church members\" by the conference regardless of formal registration, conference affiliation (or lack thereof) including non-affiliated branches, members of the Remnant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and even some Community of Christ members (depending on the circumstances of their baptism, given the movement's stance against women in the priesthood) therefor what fraction of the total recognized membership are registered with the conference is unknown but it is likely much higher than the registered number."@en . . . . "Local congregations are self-governing"@en . "22495"^^ . "Latter Day Saints"@en . . . . . . . . . . "1107483790"^^ . . . "Various local leaders from the RLDS Church"@en . . . .