| 1999 Annual Council - October 1, 1999 |
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1999 Annual Council - October 1, 1999
DEVOTIONAL MESSAGE - October 1, 1999
By Jonathan
Gallagher
The devotional message entitled "Indicators of the End
Time--Certainty of the Imminence" was presented by Jonathan Gallagher, Associat e
Director of the Communication Department. Scripture texts are taken from
the New International Version.
"The year one thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine
and the seventh month a great frightening king will come from the sky"--Nostradamus: Prophecies,
Volume 3, Chapter 27.
Today we are in the tenth month of the year one thousand
nine hundred and ninety-nine. Sixteenth-century prophet Nostradamus, credited
by his believers with predicting both World Wars as well as Napoleon and
Hitler, is unarguably wrong!
So much for Nostradamus!
And all the rest! For as we approach the end of the millennium,
such supposed prophets are having a field day. Prophecies of doom, of
earthquakes and tidal waves and epidemics and alien invasion and comet
encounters and nuclear disasters . . . .
Taking a look over their shoulders, futurologists remind
us of what happened last time the numbers of the cosmic clock clicked over
in the year 999. The usual wars and famines that stalked Europe became
signs of the end. On December 31 the churches were packed. People even
confessed to sins they hadn't committed. The superstitious trembled in
terror. As the bells chimed midnight, some fell to the ground stone-dead,
killed by fear. Why?
Because in the mind of the common people the approach of
the next millennium spelled the last judgment. Visions of horrific destruction
filled the popular imagination. The end was really nigh. So what of 1999?
Not many people are rushing into the churches these days,
but the doomsayers are out in force. I took a look at current prophecies--it
is enough to overload your mind.
End-time Prophets?
Over the last couple of years, the following scenarios and
dates have been predicted. Listen to just a few of the prophets out there:
January 8, 1998: Heide Fittkau-Garthe predicts the world
will end, but she and her followers would commit suicide and be spiritually
raptured away by spacecraft from Mt Teide on Tenerife in the Canary Islands. Spanish
police raided the Isis Holistic Center and jailed Heide for attempted murder.
February 26, 1998: Edgar Cayce predicts a new magnetic pole
will appear on earth and cause destruction through earthquakes and tidal
waves.
March 31, 1998: Taiwanese, God's Salvation Church, under
the leadership of Hoh Ming Chen, moves to Garland, Texas to await
the end on this date. God is to announce His coming on cable channel 18.
May 31, 1998: Two prophets claim this date. Jack W Langford
says this will be the date for the apocalypse, based on his calculations
from Jewish Sabbaths and feast days, together with church festivals and
assorted Bible quotes. When the day passes, he just says it will be coming
real soon now. Marilyn Agee in a book called The End of the Age, identified
this date based on the 6,000- year age of the earth and the 50th anniversary
of the modern state of Israel. When the day passed she set another date--in
a week's time . . . .
June 7, 1998: Marilyn Agee set another date . . . .
June 14, 1998: Marilyn Agee set yet another date . . . .
June 21, 1998: Marilyn Agee set even yet another date.
June 20, 1998: "Dr" Samuel Doctorian announces this
will be the day of a biblically-based end, with pestilence, famine, fire,
flood, and earthquake.
October 10, 1998: The Concerned Christians, a group from
Denver, leave town when leader Monte Kim Miller announces the city will
be destroyed in an earthquake. They travel to Israel, where they are arrested
and deported for allegedly planning violent acts on the Temple Mount in
Jerusalem. Miller is not among them.
November 1998: Natalia de Lemeny-Makedonova, in her book Eternal
Laws - New Mankind - Spiritual Transformation, says this is the date
for the birth of Immanuel in His second coming. This event is to be
associated with negative impact upon most life on earth.
1998-2001: Gordon-Michael Scallion says the end of the world
begins in 1998 with Japan sinking and the western United States hit with
earthquakes. A new golden age is to begin on the bits of the earth left.
1999: Byron Kirkwood predicts a shift of the earth's axis
will result in the deaths of two thirds of the planet's population. The
faithful will survive until a spacecraft arrives to rescue them.
1999: Jack Van Impe, who calls himself The Walking Bible,
predicts that doomsday will happen this year, though the faithful were
already raptured in 1992. He offers a video to help prepare for the coming
disasters that include World War III.
1999: The surviving members of the Solar Temple say the
end is this year, and plan to travel to Jerusalem to be ready.
1999: The Taiwanese, God's Salvation Church group revise
their date-setting and now say that nuclear war will devastate the planet,
and that the already identified Jesus of the East (a nine year old boy)
must meet up with the Jesus of the West. This latter "Jesus" must
have been born in 1969 in Vancouver, Canada, and look like Abraham Lincoln.
1999: Jeane Dixon says an Asian Antichrist will be taking
power to usher in the End.
1999: Charles Berlitz wrote Doomsday 1999 in 1981,
based on legends and visions and UFO's.
1999: George Curle, an evangelist, predicts that Antichrist
will appear this year and Christ will return.
1999: Orville T Gordon says a UFO will come this year and
collect all the members of his Outer Dimensional Forces before a worldwide
flood destroys everyone else.
1999: Nelly Hurtado, who claims direct communication with
the Virgin Mary, says that she has been told about the coming of a deadly
comet, World War III, and an amazing miracle--all to happen between now
and 2000.
January 20 to February 14, 1999 "Dr" Morris Plammer
says a source at NASA told him about a 20-mile diameter asteroid that would
hit the earth on Valentine's day. Also, he was told that the rock would
look like the face of Satan.
March 1999: Surviving Branch Davidians announce the end
of the world for this month.
May 23, 1999: Marilyn Agee prophesies the end of the world--for
at least the fifth time.
July 7, 1999: Eileen Lakes says an alien race is to shift
the earth's poles and send the planet off at right angles. The basis for
her prediction is the Bible, a study of the Egyptian pyramids, and the
thoughts of the New Age. Apparently the earth is to be seen as a massive
baptismal font.
July 1999: Ed Dames says that, based on remote viewing,
a huge solar flare will kill millions and an Israeli leader will be killed
by three Iranian hit-men. This will begin World War III.
July, 1999: The Taiwanese, God's Salvation Church, now based
in Garland, Texas, also says World War III begins this month and that a
UFO will collect them from Miller, Indiana.
July, 1999: Nostradamus predicts the arrival of the great
and terrible king from the sky.
July 26, 1999, 5:00 p.m. Tokyo Time. Akio Cho, believer
in Nostradamus' prophecy, says this is the final end. This parallels Tsutomu
Goto who wrote a book in 1974,
Nostradamus's Great Prophesies: The Obliteration of Mankind
in 1999. In such a milieu groups as Aum Shinri Kyo and Kofuku no
Kagaku have flourished.
August 6, 1999: The Branch Davidians claim that David Koresh
will rise from the dead as judge of the world.
August 11, 1999: Some claim that since Nostradamus would
have been using the Julian calendar, then this is the date of the end. Add
to this the solar eclipse, and Sun magazine has World War III starting. In
fact, a tornado touched down in Salt lake City which some took to be the
fulfillment of this prophecy instead.
August, 1999: A Vienamese group calling themselves Universal
and Human Energy, or Spirituality, Humanity, Yoga, predict the world will
end this month.
August 18, 1999: Charles Criswell King, a psychic, made
in prediction in 1968 that the world would end this day. In his own words: "The
world as we know it will cease to exist . . . on August 18, 1999. . . .
We will cease to exist before the year 2000! . . . And if you and I meet
each other on the street that fateful day, August 18, 1999, and we chat
about what we will do on the morrow, we will open our mouths to speak and
no words will come out, for we have no future."
September 2 or 3, 1999: Leader of the Japanese group Aum
Shinri Kyo, Shoko Asahara tells his followers the world will end this month. He
communicates from prison where he is being held on murder charges relating
to the gas attack on the Tokyo subway.
September 9, 1999: World computer meltdown is predicted
on the day 9-9-99. (I am actually writing this on my computer on this
day.)
September 11, 1999: Philip Berg of the Kabbalah Learning
Center says a huge fireball will hit the earth on this date, and only by
being purified by following his teachings can salvation be achieved.
September 11, 1999: Bonnie Gaunt says she has worked out
the date of the rapture to be this day. Others, including her two grown
sons, will be left behind to burn in eternal hellfire.
September 1999: Stefan Paulus, another Nostradamus aficionado,
says this month is the end, complete with a meteor strike on earth, hurricanes,
tidal waves, droughts, World War III, and a Middle Eastern Antichrist.
October 1999: Toshio Hiji from Japan says Nostradamus predicted
an alien invasion this month.
October 22, 1999: Edgar Cayce says a polar shift will accompany
fire, flood, famine, earthquakes, and erupting volcanoes as the end of
the world. (This, the 155th anniversary of the Great Disappointment).
Late 1999: Ruth Montgomery, psychic and New Age prophet,
predicts earthquakes, tidal waves, fires, flood, drought, famine, pestilence,
war, anarchy, astral bombardment and polar shifts. Aliens who become superheroes
arrive in spacecrafts to rescue the spiritually prepared.
Late 1999: Father Alexander McKenna allegedly claims communication
from the Virgin Mary at Fatima on imminent global nuclear annihilation,
environmental disaster, and the satanic infiltration
of the Catholic Church.
Late 1999: Japanese group Sukyo Mahikari mixes various religious
themes to predict the end of the world before the end of the year.
Late 1999: Serghei Torpo, Russian prophet and former traffic
cop, claims to be Jesus Christ and has changed his name to Vissarion. The
end is around 2000, and if people do not believe in him he will release
a lethal virus to kill everyone except his followers.
December 19, 1999: Dotson Meade says this is the date of
the end based on his studies of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
1999-2004: James Harmston, a former Mormon, claims to be
a reincarnation of Joseph Smith and predicts the end in the next five years.
1999-2000: R G Stair claims the title of Last Prophet of
God and lives on a farm in South Carolina. In his own words: "If
the Lord God Almighty does not make a major move before the year 2000,
I'll tell God to 'go to Hell.'"
2000: Charles Taylor predicts Armageddon this year.
2000: The Reverend Sun Myung Moon predicts the arrival of
the kingdom of heaven on earth.
2000: Hal Lindsey's in his book Planet Earth--2000,
points towards this year as the time of Armageddon, but with contingencies
up to 2048.
2000: Lester Sumrall, author of 88 Reasons the Rapture
Will Be In '88, and who released a follow-up called 89 Reasons
The Rapture Will Be in '89, now issues I Predict 2000 A.D.
2000: Gwen Shaw, leader of the End-Time Handmaidens, promises
the end before the arrival of the turn of the millennium.
2000: Petrus Olivi, a Franciscan monk, identified the year
2000 as the day of judgment way back in 1297.
2000: Sir Isaac Newton identifies the date of the apocalypse
as the year 2000, based on his study of the Bible's seventy-week prophecy.
2000: Jonathan Edwards, eighteenth century Protestant minister,
indicates the year 2000 as the end. He also identified 1866 as the date
of the fall of the papacy.
2000: Michael Drosnin, author of The Bible Code,
concludes that the world may reach a radioactive end in 2000 or 2006.
. . . . and more!
* Astrologers: who are busy announcing the dawn of the Age
of Aquarius. Mystic sciences are used to prophesy the future Golden Age
of universal brotherhood in some mythical Utopia here on earth. More in
common with some drug-induced hippy fantasy than reality.
* New Agers: using mantras and chants, sitting on "ley
lines" and meditating transcendentally, are about to usher in their particular
version of spiritual blessedness.
* Super-scientists: who are super-confident that we can
fix the world's problems by the application of the great god Science. Bionic
men and women; limitless energy sources; genetically-manipulated children--real
Brave New World stuff.
* "Prophets:" who like Nostradamus are supposed to have
some inspiration about the future (wonder who the one is doing the "inspiring"?). Fortune-tellers
and psychics, soothsayers and seers--a whole rag-bag of the weird and wonderful,
the analytical and reasonable. . . .Future forecasters of every shape and
size and thought, ready to speculate on anything from coal reserves to
world churches, manufacturing life to ESP. So many voices! Who to believe?
Why do I list so many of these predictions? Because it seems
to me important to establish the volume and extent of these
supposed prophecies, some coming from less than bizarre sources. When
we as a Church become aware of the wide-ranging and pervasive nature of
such ideas, it forces us to reflect on our own message.
How Different are We?
How different do we appear to those outside of our Church? Is
there not a danger that our prophetic message can be confused with all
these other prophecies? In fact, one of the major signs of the times is
surely that there are so many other voices claiming to speak with the spirit
of prophecy and identify the future.
What of our historic focus on the signs of the times? How
can we differentiate ourselves from the date-setters and the prophets of
doom? How do we make our future emphasis a valid perspective, not one
that will be dismissed as just another oddball religion?
Think about it. Our history is rooted in the Millerite movement. Based
on William Miller's calculations of Daniel, he ended up with a date: 1843-44. After
the failure of the date, Hiram Edson got a vision while walking through
a cornfield which explained the situation.
If you had been bombarded with what I have just presented,
how different would such a prophetic message seem? While we cannot control
the oddball prophets of today's world, we do need to make sure our message
is as credible and relevant as possible. And before someone accuses me
of unbelief--not so! Just an appeal for an awareness of the contemporary
world. A true sign of the times.
I too have been guilty of using the odd and the peculiar. At
an evangelistic series just north of London, the local pastor had decided
on novel titles for a rather traditional program. Daniel 2 became "The
Truth about the Amazing Metal Man," creation became "Adam's Mother's
Birthday," and so on. My assigned topic was the Sabbath, transformed into "The
Mysterious Number Seven."
One of the guests came up to me before the lecture. "Oh,
I'm so excited to be here to find out about the mysterious number seven," he
gushed. "For me, it's always been number 6 which as been so special
and lucky. Now you're telling me it's sevens."
I groaned inwardly at the thought, and realized he was going
to be terribly disappointed. Needless to say, we never saw him again
So in our presentations, let us avoid the traps. For example,
let us refuse the almost over-mastering temptation to suggest some kind
of date. Some of our evangelists verge on date setting. I see the year
2000 appearing in our evangelistic advertising. Is this wise, bearing
in mind the current situation?
Ellen White comments: "The shortness of time is frequently
urged as an incentive for seeking righteousness and making Christ our friend. This
should not be the great motive with us; for it savors of selfishness. Is
it necessary that the terrors of the day of God should be held before us,
that we may be compelled to right action through fear? It ought not to
be so."--LHU 98
Let us also remember that the failure of millennial speculation
will prejudice the world against belief in the second advent, just as the
Millerite movement prejudiced the world with the
failure of the 1844 date. The enemy of truth would surely
be happy to present the second advent as part of the beliefs of weird and
troublesome sects--beliefs to be rejected and denied.
The delay in the Advent is dealt with elsewhere. However,
as we present the soon coming and the signs, we must also look back and
learn.
Note this: "We have been preaching for more than 125
years that Jesus will come soon, and he hasn't yet come.
"Some have become discouraged waiting. Others, even
though they are still in the church, have lost that first love for the
blessed hope. They are not sure that Jesus will ever return.
"What is your attitude? How is your faith? Are you
tired of waiting?
"We need to maintain the faith and confidence of our
pioneers in this blessed hope." M.S. Nigri, Review and Herald, February
20, 1975, p 8.
Another sign: "the love of many will grow cold."
Though we have not officially set any dates, can we so easily
deny the charge of "crying wolf"?
How do we continue to stress the imminence of the Advent
without appealing to the sensationalistic?
What of the historic signs? How do they relate to today? Are
they relevant? Can we honestly and with conviction say that signs we have
to look up in history books are present truth for the 21st century?
I would point you to some of the illustrations in our books
on prophecy. We can all smile at pictures of "the nation's airy navies" in
which biplanes attack each other. Of wondrous proclamations that trains
can now run at over 100 miles per hour.
Are we not in danger of pleading guilty to the charge of
re-inventing the signs for each generation? And talking about generation: what
about that statement that indicated the generation that saw the signs (as
defined ultimately as the falling of the stars in 1833) would live to see
Christ come? More on that in my second presentation.
I personally am not about to abandon the signs of the times. In
fact, I see them about us with ever-increasing urgency. But we need to
be credible; our message must not be a cartoon of the truth.
Another Look at the Signs
Let us go back to the Bible and re-discover the signs; what
they are for, and what they are not. Because we need to be closer to our
true historic perspective--the signs we are looking for should be those
that clearly reflect the issues in the great controversy. Otherwise why
should our signs be more credible than those of others?
It is time to take another look at Matthew 24:3-44, in the
light of our day.
Verse 3: "As Jesus was sitting on the Mount of Olives,
the disciples came to him privately. 'Tell us,' they said, 'when will
this happen, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of
the age?'"
How much better it would have been if the disciples had not
asked a double question! The conflation of the second advent with the
destruction of Jerusalem should make us wise in answering the sign question.
Verse 4: "Jesus answered: 'Watch out that no one deceives
you.'"
This is the pre-eminent warning when it comes to sign-identification. We
have seen enough of the false prophets in the earlier part of this presentation! Deception
is definitely with us today, and you could even argue that this is the
clearest sign!
It is easy to get too involved in working out each sign so
specifically that you get it wrong. Some people have believed that some
event proved Christ would come within a certain time, and then were
totally devastated when what they thought was a definite sign turned out
to be wrong. So tread carefully, says Jesus, and don't believe every hare-brained
scheme people may invent.
Verse 5: "'For many will come in my name, claiming, "I
am the Christ," and will deceive many.'"
This is a very definite sign of the times. While there have
been many throughout history who claim to be Christ, surely there are the
greatest number today. I receive an e-mail message from someone claiming
to be Jesus Christ nearly every week. These false Christs, and those who
claim he comes in secret, are a sign that Jesus himself will come soon,
says the real Jesus. (See also verses 24-26.)
Verse 6: "'You will hear of wars and rumors of wars,
but see to it that you are not alarmed. Such things must happen, but the
end is still to come.'"
Wars and rumors of wars are non-signs. While increased violence
concerns us, Jesus does not say that wars of themselves are signs. Interesting.
Verses 7, 8: "'Nation will rise against nation, and
kingdom against kingdom. There will be famines and earthquakes in various
places. All these are the beginning of birth pains.'"
Even the famines and earthquakes, as well as the international
conflicts mentioned, are not equated with signs of imminence. They are
just the beginning, says Jesus. In fact, these signs are given less space
than the more spiritual signs that follow.
Verses 9-13: "'Then you will be handed over to be persecuted
and put to death, and you will be hated by all nations because of me. At
that time many will turn away from the faith and will betray and hate each
other, and many false prophets will appear and deceive many people. Because
of the increase of wickedness, the love of most will grow cold, but he
who stands firm to the end will be saved.'"
The spiritual famine and the increase in evil are given more
attention by Jesus, and this should give us pause for thought. While it
is always difficult to quantify aspects of spirituality, such signs in
today's world are clearly evident. The widespread falling away from spiritual
values and commitment to moral and ethical principles could be deemed more
relevant than falling stars.
Are these things happening in the world today? What is the
evidence? Indicators include: increasing crime, collapse of marriage and
family, pornography, and persecution of Christians in totalitarian countries. False
prophets of the modern world are: materialism, secularism, and humanism.
Verse 14: "'And this gospel of the kingdom will be
preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the
end will come.'"
Global evangelism highlights this polarization in the modern
world, and the trend can only increase. Modern tools mean that communication
is ever more able to reach every being on this planet. The question is,
who is listening? Yet the widening availability of the message of the
gospel, in ways that would amaze the first apostles, must catch our attention
as part of the fulfilling signs. Today the gospel is being preached in
more countries than ever before.
Verses 29, 30: "'Immediately after the distress of
those days "the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its
light; the stars will fall from the sky, and the heavenly bodies will be
shaken." At that time the sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky,
and all the nations of the earth will mourn. They will see the Son of
Man coming on the clouds of the sky, with power and great glory.'"
This is an awesome description of the coming of Christ, preceded
by these catastrophic signs. Now some may say they will wait until they
see them before deciding, but they may be too late if they do; for the
'sign of the Son of Man' that appears in the sky may indeed be the actual
coming of Jesus Himself, by which time there is no more time!
Verses 31-39: '"And he will send his angels with a loud
trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from
one end of the heavens to the other. Now learn this lesson from the fig
tree: As soon as its twigs get tender and its leaves come out, you know
that summer is near. Even so, when you see all these things, you know
that it is near, right at the door. I tell you the truth, this generation
will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened. Heaven
and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away. No one knows
about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but
only the Father. As it was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming
of the Son of Man. For in the days before the flood, people were eating
and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, up to the day Noah entered
the ark; and they knew nothing about what would happen until the flood
came and took them all away. That is how it will be at the coming of the
Son of Man.'"
How many of this world's population really care about
God, or about living honestly and rightly? The modern trend is to look
after number one; hit the other guy before he hits you; grab what you can
while you can; get what you want by and all means. This is the advanced
modern religion of total selfishness and greed, with no concern for others
at all. (See2 Tim 3:1-4.)
Verses 42-44: "'Therefore keep watch, because you do
not know on what day your Lord will come. But understand this: If the
owner of the house had known at what time of night the thief was coming,
he would have kept watch and would not have let his house be broken into. So
you also must be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour when
you do not expect him.'"
Summary--Jesus' Signs:
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The scale of atheism, persecution and false religion.
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The expansion of Christian witness
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The moral state of the world
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The final world-shaking, visible signs
We can point to signs in history, society, the environment,
conditions in world, events in religious world (e.g. the Pope's Dies
Domini), ecumenical trends: Lutherans and Catholics, Lutherans and
Episcopalians, Episcopalians and Catholics. Some point to the recent hurricanes
and earthquakes. Yes, the earth is waxing old like a garment, but the
most important signs are those that reveal the end of the great controversy.
For in the end, whatever the perspective on the signs, they
are not delimitations of time, but reminders of God's future. As Augustine
remarked, "The last day is hidden so every day may be regarded." It
is not a question of when, though that is always the burning question for
us!
Sakae Kubo comments: "Our readiness must not depend
on the imminence of Christ's return but on its reality in our own experience." Sakae
Kubo, God Meets Man (Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing Association.,
1978), 107.
The signs all around us only reconfirm what we already know,
and the great message of hope that is our happy responsibility to share
with the world.
The importance of the Second Advent doctrine to Seventh-day
Adventists cannot be overemphasized. It is in truth a life-or-death matter
to our movement. "Seventh-day Adventists are irrevocably committed
to belief in, and proclamation of, the imminent second coming of Christ. Should
we for any reason whatever repudiate this truth, or cease to proclaim it
with sincerity, we would destroy ourselves. Openly or secretly to deny
the nearness of our Lord's return would be to invite the disintegration
of our cause.
"The great second Advent movement was founded upon the
conviction, resolutely and uncompromisingly held by our pioneers, that
the long-anticipated return of Christ was near at hand. Without this conviction
there would have been no Seventh-day Adventists nor any Seventh-day Adventist
movement.
"In other words, we were Adventists before we had an
organization. We were Adventists before we owned any property. We were
Adventists before we adopted the tithing system. We were Adventists before
we had anything to do with food reform, or dress reform, or any other reform.
"Belief in the imminent second coming of Christ is the
reason for, and basis of, our existence. . . . If we do not believe that
Christ's second coming is nigh at hand, we do not belong to the Advent
movement. Furthermore, if we no longer hold this belief we have no business
here today."--Arthur S Maxwell, "The Imminence of Christ's Second Coming" in Our
Firm Foundation [a record of a Bible Conference]; Washington DC: Review
and Herald Publishing Association, 1953, pp 186, 187.
"Living power must attend the message of Christ's second
coming in the clouds of heaven. . . . The message for this time is positive,
simple, and of the deepest importance. We must act like men and women
who believe. . . . Waiting, watching, working, praying, warning 0the world--this
is our work."--Ellen G White, Letter 150, 1902, 2-3. MS release 844
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