Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Arnold Potter (“Potter Christ”) (1804-1872) Identifying Himself with the First and Last Adam and the Ancient of Days

  

I, Potter, received the title of Christ, on the 15th day of August, 1856, on my outward bound voyage to Australia, sent there by the Mormon authorities, to preach the Gospel.

 

. . .

 

I now return to the subject of my immortal change. Suffice it to say, I lost every drop of my mortal blood, yet I did not die—my Resurection [sic] Angel (Christ) entered my body as fast as my mortal blood left. This angel is the spirit called in Scripture the Holy Ghost; the same spirit that quickened Jesus body, [1 Peter, III, 18]. This spirit was what made Jesus the Christ, by quickening him. This spirit also done the same by me, So this quickening revealed to me that I was [5] the very person Paul calls the last Adam, [I Coe- XV, 45-49]. Then, being the last Adam—q quickening spirit—I traced my spirit lineage back through TWENTY-TWO mortal bodies, to the first Adam, in Eden’s Garden. Then I saw plainly, according to Paul, I held the title Christ, the Lord from Heaven—being a quickened spirit.

 

. . .

 

Then comes the celebrated Marriage of the Lamb. The Bride, the Lambs wife, the Two Hundred and Eighty-eight Thousand are then clothed in white robes and crowned with Celestial Crowns. Each crowned head is then planted in His Kingdom or State, Jesus Abraham being here with us long enough to give us all useful Instructions, then he goes back to the great White Throne of his Father. Adam, or Michael the Arch-Angel, at the Marriage of the Lamb, Jesus Abraham, then gives the Kingdom under the whole heaven to Potter Christ, the Ancient of Days, as says Dan. VII, 13, 14. I, Potter Christ, now hold this title by virtue of my spiritual lineage and quickening change, being now the first Adam and the last Adam. This is why I go to the Grand Council of Heaven, to receive the Keys of Power. (Potter Christ, “The Titles Potter Christ has by Scripture” (April 1870), in Kirk Watson, Potter Christ: The Life, Death, and Doctrine of a Mormon Messiah [2026], 110, 111, 118)

 

 

Arnold Potter (“Potter Christ”) (1804-1872) Identifying the "Son of Man" with the "Ancient of Days"

  

If I mistake not in the number, there are six millions more saints in the South that the little horn has waged war against ever since 1861, and has just as Daniel says, prevailed against them more or less all the time and will continue to prevail more or less until the Ancient of days come to their deliverance.

 

. . .

 

I will now pass on to verse xxv, “And he (the little horn) shall speak great words against the Most High and think to change times and laws, and the (the saints) shall be given unto his (Lincoln’s hand) until a time of times and the division of time.” The words “Most High” here, means our most sacred Laws and Constitution, which were framed and given by inspiration, to our forefathers, . . .

 

. . .

 

Now, to prove my position, that the person Daniel calls the “Ancient of Days,” will close this bloody struggle. I will explain the words of Jesus Christ, to be found in Math. chap. xxiv. Verse xxiv: “Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the Sun be darkened and the Moon shall not give her light, the Stars shall fall and the powers of Heaven shall be shaken.” Verse xxx. speaks of the coming of the son of man. This person called the “Son of Man” and the “Ancient of Days,” is one and the same person.

 

. . .

 

Four seals—three bloody ones were opened when the war commenced, and now the three remaining seals, which are seals of peace, or to bring peace, will be opened by the “Son of Man” or the “Ancient of Days,” all in one day . . . The day of the 6th Seal is opened puts an end to the war in a moment and reveals the “Son of Man,” not Jesus; but Father Adam, the “Ancient of Days.” He comes to make his abode with us and sit on His Throne as Daniel describes him, in chap. xii. verses ix.-x. (Arnold Potter, Letter to the Editors of The Council Bluffs Weekly Bugle, February 8, 1865, in Kirk Watson, Potter Christ: The Life, Death, and Doctrine of a Mormon Messiah [2026], 89, 94-95, 96)

 

Transcription of Abraham P. Dowdle, Letter to C. C. Rich, April 23, 1857

The following is a transcription of Abraham P. Dowdle, Letter to C. C. Rich, April 23, 1857 (CHL call no.: MS 829). This is the main body of the letter:

 

 

Sydney April 23d 1857

 

President C. C. Rich

 

With feelings of pleasure at this time I attempt to occupy a few Moments in writing to you once More which will be the last while in this lands.

 

I am now posting up My books So as to leave the business of the Mission in Shape So that My Successor May have a knowledge of the business as it [really] is. I intend leaving a full and true account of all Moneys that I have Received and the amount expended and when I leave I intend Bringing a full and true account So that when I get with you I Can Show an account of My Steward Ship. I have long Since found it to be very necessary that a full account Should be Kept of all moneys donated for the work and Als what was done with the Same- as there is a jealousy Existing towards those who are placed to Receive and use the Money So in this Country than any place I ever was in before- in Settling up the business I have Some little difficulty by not having the account of President Hyrumham in Consequence thereof I Can not go any further back with the General Mission account that to the time when I Meved the business back to that time I can leave with the bretherin an account of My Steward Ship which I have no doubt will be quite Satisfactory to them. If I had have had the general account left with Me I Could have left it More full but under Circumstances that exist I will do the best that I Can I Can go back with My books and Shew from the time that I began to Receive donations at Adelaide up to the time I left there and by Whom it was given - and what it was laid out for this I feel Glad and willing to do and I Consider it nothing More than right- then if I have not done as I Should have done let Me bare the blame of Squandering the Money- I will here Say that I beleive take the people of Australia throats that they ar the Most Jealous people in the world- Every Man Seams to be frightened of his Neighbor- in pine it is a hard Country and insted of Geting beter it is Growing wors Continually

 

I am now Making up a company to Start from Sydney the first of June I am not at present prepared to Stat the number of Saints there will be in the Company I Epect it will be Small there is Many that would be glad to Get out but they ar Generely pore and not able to pay there way Consequently they will have to Remain till longer and wate the lands time to open the way before them there is Some Good Saints in Australia that is trying to live there religion on the other hand there is Some that have the Means and will not Gather- nor Yet help thoes that would Gather and thus as it wer stand in the dore and Keep thoes from Entering or Gatherning whos desire is to Gather and Serve the lord but So it is—

 

Since Elders Hannham & Fleming left there has not bein a gre many Baptized- Since the Elders Came to Australia we have bein able to Send Mission in to Various places of this and the adjacent Coloneys. the Elders have went forth and have laboured faithfull for the Spred of truth and the lord has blessed them in there labours they have Stired up the Minds of the people in Many places and the prospects ar that Mutch good will be the Result- Elder Stewart when first he Came here was a pointd a Mission to New Zealand in Company with Elder Peter but in Consequence of the Soverity is of Means to Send them forth they was a pointd a Mission in this Coloney they traveled together for Sum time- when Elder Clark was a pointd to travel with Elder Stewart Elder Sailed with Peter- Elders Stewart and Clark Continued traveling until the April Conferenc when Elder Stewart Received an Appointment with Elder Wall to the Sydney district Elders Clark and peter was then a pointd to travel together in the Same Mission that Elder Stewart had bein called from Elders Chaffin & Said weer a pointd A Mission to the Maitland and Wolumby districts- the other Elders weer Sustained in former appointments- Elder Stewart was taken in to the presidenc of the Mission As Elder William Baxter one of My Council has Retired from the Presidency and Mission with the privilege of Making his way to Zion I feeld hopy of having the privilege of Saying that as far as I no the Bretherin ar and have bein doing all that they Can for the Spred of truth Since they landed in this Country- Whil Elders Stewart & Clarke wer traveling together they Maid a travel of Some hundred & thirty Miles out from Sydney in there travels they Rept as having found many people whos harts felt worme to the truth and whos them warm Reception they think that Mutch Good May be done in that Part of the Country it is Semde with the others of the bretherin Elders Wall and Stewart Conritute my Council they take hold of the work with Energy they have bein a Grat help to Me in Geting along with My buiriness it Requires Men in this Country who has a pretty Good nerve and with it ambition Elder Wall has had wery bad helth Most of the time Since he Came in to this Climet and unless his helth improves from what it is at the present I Epect he will Return home with the first Company

 

I Shal if the Lord will Cume with the June Company for I paked and have felt for years back a desire to get home I fully Expected to have bin with Elders Hannham & Fleming but it turned other-wise and I maid up my mind to be Content therwith and feeld that all was right Since there departure I have bein doing the best that I Could have I have Some pretty hard times but I feeld that the blessings of the lord his bin with Me for which I feeld Gratefull Taylor and Johnson has Returned to Australia they have don all that they Could to Make trouble for Me but as Yet I have got a long with them Middling Quiet- they ar Boath Cut off from the Church- Taylor is a Worthless being Since he has Return he has Given his Mother and Sisters A dreadful Bad name I Supose that Sister Taylor thought that to Save his property She would put it in to the hands of his Sun She has Saved it There is much to Save that I Epect it will do her Good when She Gets any of it- Johnson has done all that he Could against the Church Since his Return to Sydney- he has Seen his Race and left Sydney Whether he will again Return I Can not tell- I have Given up Sister Taylors papers to her Sun and have got a full Keept so She May Sleep Sound when She Gets to See this Please to Remember Me to all- My Respects to you Elders Wall and Stewart Join me in Sending their Respect to You- Your fellow laborer

 

Abraham P. Dowdle

 

 

This was the additional material attached to the letter:

 

Arnold peter Whoo Came here with Elder Said has Carried in high hand against the Church and the authorities of the Same before he was put in to the Asylum he did considerable We Called on him to Stay his hand and humble himself before god and do right but our Entreaties were all in vane he affirmed that he would not subject him self to be controlled by any of the Mormons no not Even Brigham Consequently he was not fellow- shiped here- after he was Released from the Asylum he was far more delusive than before he has done all that he possibly Could to Revile the Character of president B. Young & also attempted to disclose the principle of the Enduement this he has done not only privetely but in a Publick Capacity in the open aire on publick [Square] in the presence of a large Concorse of people giving out that. he was Caleed of god to Make known the Abominations in Salt Lake this things wee Submit to your Consideration { A. P. Dowdle As he has left her Sum time Since for home { W. Cb. Hall { Andrew J Stewart

 

 

Robert M. Royalty, Jr. on 1 Kings 13 and the Unnamed Prophet

  

Man of God and Old Prophet in Bethel (1 Kings 13:11–32)

 

My first example of prophetic conflict is from 1 Kings, part of the so-called Deuteronomic History. The death of Solomon (ca. 922 BCE) and the subsequent struggle for succession, a struggle that rekindles divisions between Judah and the northern tribes of Israel, are the backdrop for one of the earliest stories about prophets in the Hebrew Bible. This particular disagreement between prophets results in the death of one of them. Religious cult sites are at the center of this conflict. Solomon had centralized the cult in Jerusalem, along with other political and military functions. His taxation and labor policies aggravated tensions between Judah and the northern tribes; his son, Rehoboam, adopts an even harder-line policy (1 Kings 12:1–15). Jeroboam, who was in political exile in Egypt, returned to lead the northern tribes against Rehoboam. But prophets had already acted as agents in these political conflicts. Ahijah, a prophet of the northern Israelite cult site of Shiloh, urged Jeroboam, then an official overseeing the corvée for Solomon’s kingdom, to break off the northern tribes as punishment for Solomon’s religious practices, which could be characterized as polytheistic or not exclusively Yahwistic (1 Kings 11:26–40). Jeroboam then re-established shrines in Bethel and Dan as part of separating the northern kingdom of Israel from the hegemony claimed by Judah (1 Kings 12:25–33).

 

The conflict between north and south plays out in the narrative of 1 Kings 13 as conflict between northern and southern prophets. While Jeroboam was offering incense at the altar in Bethel, a “man of God” (ʼîš ʼĕlōhîm) from Judah proclaimed against the altar “by the word of YHWH” (bîdĕbar YHWH). Jeroboam answers the threat by trying to seize the Judean, but the king’s hand is withered and the altar is destroyed. Jeroboam entreats the southerner’s favor; the “man of God” heals the withered hand but has taken a vow not to eat or drink until he has returned to Judah and attempts to leave Bethel. This ironically foreshadows the next scene, in which an old prophet (nābî zāqēn) in Bethel tricks the “man of God” into eating and drinking with him:

 

Then the other said to him: “I also am a prophet as you are, and an angel spoke to me by the word of the LORD: Bring him back with you into your house so that he may eat food and drink water.” But he was deceiving him. (1 Kings 13:18)

 

As soon as the “man of God” sits and eats at Bethel, the “word of the LORD” comes to the northern prophet again, who condemns the Judean to die away from his ancestral home. The Bethel prophet and his sons send the “man of God” back south on a donkey, where he is killed by a lion, confirming the prophecy of the northern prophet as well as the original commandment to the “man of God” not to honor the Bethel cult by eating or drinking outside of Judah.

 

Both prophets cite the “word of the LORD,” the same Hebrew phrase in 1 Kings 13:9 and 13:18, to explain why the “man of God” should or should not eat in Bethel. The northern prophet utters what turns out to be false prophecy that ensnares the man from Judah to stay and eat, while the prophecy and vow of the man from Judah, a vow that kills him, turn out to be true. The division between the prophets is harsh; the old prophet of Bethel effectively assassinates the southern “man of God” by deceiving him with “the word of the LORD.” But this conflict also shows the ideology of prophetic unity in Israel. While the old prophet of Bethel ostensibly supports the independence of the northern kingdom and the legitimacy of its cult, his deception of the “man of God” from Judah confirms the prophecy originally given to the Judean (1 Kings 13:9) and thus de-legitimates the Samarian cult site. The scene of reconciliation in 1 Kings 13:26–32 then subverts the division between the prophets as well as the authority of the northern prophet. He saddles his donkey to recover the body of the man of God, laments the death of his “brother,” (ʼāhî) and asks to be buried next to him, confirming that the “man of God” spoke the actual word of God against the shrine of Bethel and Jeroboam’s kingdom. The two prophets were not enemies but brothers after all. The conflict ends in reconciliation.

 

The ideology of Judean hegemony over all Israel underlies this story. The conflict centers on the altar of Bethel, a cult site that challenged the power of Jerusalem, a power we might label both religious and political in contemporary terms but which was unified in ancient Israel. The theological question of where to worship, and what to worship—since Jeroboam had labeled the golden calves the “gods, O Israel, who brought you out of the land of Egypt” (1 Kings 12:28)—is a political conflict between north and south; “prophet” is a synecdoche for the kingdom. The story includes a second layer of political discourse. The “man of God” invokes the future king Josiah, inscribing the reforms of this later Davidic king onto these divisions between ancient Israel and Judah. Read at this level, the story of prophetic conflict and reconciliation expresses the ideology of a unified “Israel” under Judean control. (Robert M. Royalty, Jr., The Origin of Heresy: A History of Discourse in Second Temple Judaism and Early Christianity [Routledge Studies in Religion 18; New York: Routledge, 2013], 31-32)

 

Rom Garrison on Almsgiving in the Septuagint

  

The Septuagint and the Apocrypha

 

The translation of the Hebrew Scripture into Greek, the so-called Septuagint (LXX) version, was carried out during the third and second centuries BCE. More precise dates are not known. Particularly because of the widespread effects of Hellenism, the influence of the Septuagint was enormous. To a large degree it was the Septuagint which was to become the version of the scriptures preferred in the early church. Thus any developments of the doctrine of redemptive almsgiving in the Greek Bible would have had a clear impact on early Christianity.

 

The translation of Dan. 4.27 (MT, 4.24) is of considerable significance. The LXX version reads,

 

O king, let my counsel please you. Redeem your sins by ‘almsgiving’ (τῶν ἁμαρτιῶν σου... ἐν ἐλεημοσύναις λύτρωσαι) and your iniquities by compassion on the poor. It may be that God will be long-suffering of your trespasses.

 

The Greek translation of Daniel renders the original reference to ‘righteousness’ as ἐλεημοσύνη. This identification is found elsewhere in the LXX (and underlies rabbinic thought). Such word association may be present in early Christianity. The Daniel passage can be taken to mean that the form of righteousness that will provide a ransom (λύτρον) for sins is almsgiving, the financial outpouring of compassion on the poor.

 

The Greek translation of Proverbs perhaps reveals further development of the doctrine of redemptive ἐλεημοσύνη. While the Hebrew form of 16.6 reads, ‘By loyalty and faithfulness iniquity is atoned for’, the LXX (= 15.27a) states, ‘By ἐλεημοσύνη and faithfulness sins are purged away’. Similarly, Prov. 20.28 in the Hebrew claims, ‘Loyalty and faithfulness preserve the king and his throne is upheld by loyalty’, yet the LXX translates the verse, ‘ἐλεημοσύνη and truth are a guard to the king and will surround his throne with righteousness’. It is possible that Prov. 15.27a and 20.28 in the LXX could largely explain the Greek translation (and interpretation) of Dan. 4.24/27. These passages from Proverbs clearly teach that ἐλεημοσύνη serves to redeem sin and to preserve a king’s dominion. For the Greek editor of Daniel, Nebuchadnezzar would provide the specific example in which to promote the emerging doctrine. Even if it were to be argued that Prov. 15.27a and 20.28 (again, LXX) had no influence on the Greek version of Dan. 4.24/27, it is undeniable that the term ṣĕdāqā’, ‘righteousness’, has been rendered by ἐλεημοσύνη. Righteousness is identified with the term that comes to mean almsgiving, and this theme certainly emerges in Proverbs (LXX).

 

Ch. 21 of Proverbs (LXX) introduces some significant ideas that shape the developing doctrine of redemptive almsgiving. Verses 3 and 21 read, ‘To do justly and truthfully is more pleasing to God than the blood of sacrifices...The way of righteousness and ἐλεημοσύνης will find life and glory’. These two verses, in their Hebrew form, are both cited in rabbinic discussions of redemptive almsgiving where ṣĕdāqā’ (‘righteousness’) is interpreted as the giving of alms.

 

It is striking that here in the LXX translation, ἐλεημοσύνη is used to render not ṣĕdāqā’ but hesed. Throughout the Greek Old Testament, ἐλεημοσύνη and δικαιοσύνη both are used to translate the two Hebrew terms. This ‘overlapping is indeed a curious linguistic phenomenon’. It may well point to the evolution of the belief that almsgiving is both an act of kindness and mercy, and that it is a righteousness that redeems from sin and death, a righteousness more acceptable to the Lord than sacrifice. Sirach and Tobit provide considerable evidence of this stage of the doctrine.

 

The pseudonymous author of Tobit claims to have lived with many of his fellow Jews in Nineveh before its destruction. He boasts of his goodness, insisting that he ‘walked in the ways of truth and righteousness (δικαιοσύνης)’ his whole life and frequently practised ἐλεημοσύνας among his countrymen (1.3). Tobit’s charity included feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and providing for the burial of the dead (1.16-17; cf. 4.16). The author clearly advocates a belief in redemptive ἐλεημοσύνη.

 

Give alms (ἐλεημοσύνη) from your possessions to all who live uprightly, and do not let your eye begrudge the gift when you make it. Do not turn your face away from any poor man, and the face of God will not be turned away from you. If you have many possessions, make your gift from them in proportion; if few, do not be afraid to give according to the little you have. So you will be laying up a good treasure for yourself against the day of necessity. For almsgiving rescues from death (ἐλεημοσύνη ἐκ θανάτου ῥύεται) and keeps you from entering the darkness; and for all who practice it almsgiving (ἐλεημοσύνη) is an excellent offering in the presence of the Most High (4.7-11).

 

Prayer is good when accompanied by fasting, almsgiving and righteousness. A little with righteousness is better than much with wrongdoing. It is better to give alms (ποιῆσαι ἐλεημοσύνην) than to treasure up gold. For almsgiving rescues from death and it will purge away every sin (ἀποκαθαριεῖ πᾶσαν ἁμαρτίαν). Those who give alms and do righteousness will have fulness of life... (12.8-9).

 

Tobit virtually identifies ‘almsgiving’ with ‘righteousness’ and apparently interpreted Prov. 10.2 and 11.4 in light of his belief in the redemptive power of almsgiving. The passages from Proverbs claim that ‘righteousness’ rescues from death.¹ Tobit has made the significant step of regarding almsgiving as the manifestation of righteousness.² This is also borne out in the parallelism: ‘A little with righteousness is better than much with wrongdoing [cf. Prov. 16.8]. It is better to give alms than to treasure up gold’. Finally, Tobit agrees with Proverbs (LXX) that ἐλεημοσύνη purges sin.

 

Sirach, which strongly denounces greed and a perverse interest in wealth,⁴ advances the doctrine of redemptive almsgiving. While it is certainly possible for a rich man to be righteous (cf. 31.8), the wealthy must consistently give alms (31.11). The Greek translator of Sirach clearly treated ‘almsgiving’ as an appropriate meaning for the Hebrew ṣĕdāqā. He has made this translation/interpretation in at least six passages (3.14, 30; 7.10; 12.3; 40.17, 24).

 

Sirach’s understanding of the power of almsgiving is stated succinctly in 3.30, ‘Water extinguishes a blazing fire: so almsgiving atones for sin’. Thus the author admonishes his reader to assist the needy, to provide for the poor, to care for orphans and widows. The reward is tremendous: ‘You will then be like a son of the Most High and he will love you more than does your mother’ (4.1-10).

 

Dishonest wealth cannot protect a man from trouble (5.8), but compassion to the poor will earn a blessing (7.32; cf. 7.10). The uncharitable will not be blessed but the man who wisely gives alms will be repaid by the Lord himself (12.2-7). A man’s almsgiving is like a signet with the Most High (17.22).

 

Lay up your treasure according to the commandments of the Most High, and it will profit you more than gold. Store up almsgiving in your treasury and it will rescue you from all affliction; more than a mighty shield and more than a heavy spear, it will fight on your behalf against your enemy (29.11-13; cf. 40.24).

 

Sirach implies that providing for the poor is more important than ritual sacrifices or sin offerings. In any event, the offerings of those who abuse the needy are meaningless (34.18-22). Almsgiving, by contrast, is a sacrifice of praise (35.2). Finally, the Hebrew phrase, ‘righteousness endures forever’, is rendered in the Greek Sirach as ‘almsgiving endures forever’ (40.17). This may well have been an interpretation of the description of the generous man in Ps. 112.1-9.

 

The Greek Scriptures, particularly Daniel, Proverbs, Tobit and Sirach, move beyond the Hebrew Old Testament in specifically identifying righteousness and almsgiving³ and in explicitly claiming that ἐλεημοσύνη has the power to purge sin, to atone for and redeem iniquities. Almsgiving rescues from death. (Roman Garrison, Redemptive Almsgiving in Early Christianity [Library of New Testament Studies 77; Sheffield: JSTO Press, 1993], 52-55)

 

Dustin R. Smith on Luke 4:6-7

  

Since Jesus does not dispute Satan’s reign claim and chooses only to refuse to offer worship, we can confidently discern that Satan has indeed been handed all the kingdoms of the world, presumably by God. (Dustin R. Smith, A Systematic Theology of the Early Church, ed. J. Jeffrey Fletcher and Scott A. Deane [Boise, Idaho: Integrity Syndicate, 2025], 190)

 

Roman Garrison on Paul Teaching Baptismal Regeneration in the Epistle to the Romans

  

Paul's letter to the Romans also introduces the rigorous view that baptism is a spiritual line of demarcation. When the believer is baptized, he is set free from sin and should never again submit to its power.

 

Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it? Do you not know that all of us who have been baptised into Christ Jesus were baptised into his death. We were buried therefore with him by baptism, so that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life ...

 

We know that our old self was crucified with him so that the sinful body might be destroyed, and we might no longer be enslaved to sin. For he who has died is freed from sin ...

 

So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies, to make you obey their passions. Do not yield your members to sin as instruments of wickedness, but yield yourselves to God as men who have been brought from death to life, and your members to God as instruments of righteousness. For sin will have no dominion over you, since you are not under law but under grace. What then? Are we to sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means! (6.1-15)

 

Paul himself is largely responsible for the widespread belief that through baptism the believer is liberated from the power and effects of sin. Early Christianity (and certainly the church at Rome) embraced the promise that baptism served as the ‘method of entry’ to eternal life, to becoming a ‘new creature’, gaining release from evil spirits and being washed of one’s sins. (Roman Garrison, Redemptive Almsgiving in Early Christianity [Library of New Testament Studies 77; Sheffield: JSTO Press, 1993], 137-38, emphasis in bold added)

 

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