Arnold Potter

Latter Day Saint pioneer and self-declared messiah (1804–1872)

Arnold Potter
Founder of the 'Church of the Potter Christ'
1857 – 1872
Personal details
Born(1804-01-11)January 11, 1804
Herkimer County, New York, United States
DiedApril 2, 1872(1872-04-02) (aged 68)
Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States
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Arnold Potter (January 11, 1804 – April 2, 1872) was a self-declared Messiah and a leader of a schismatic sect in the Latter Day Saint movement. Potter referred to himself as Potter Christ.

Biography

Potter was born in Herkimer County, New York. At age 19, he married Almira Smith. By 1835 Potter had moved with his wife and children to Switzerland County, Indiana. On November 10, 1839, Potter and his family were baptized by missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

In April 1840, Potter and his family moved to Nauvoo, Illinois, to join the main gathering of Latter Day Saints. On April 24, 1840, Potter was given the Melchizedek priesthood and ordained to the priesthood office of elder by Joseph Smith.[1] On June 1, 1840, Potter received a patriarchal blessing from church patriarch Joseph Smith Sr. Potter settled in Sand Prairie, Iowa, where he was the presiding elder of the church. In January 1845, Potter became a seventy in the church.

In 1848, Potter traveled to the Salt Lake Valley as a Mormon pioneer. By 1856, he had moved from Utah Territory to San Bernardino, California. On March 16, 1856, Potter received a call to serve as a missionary in Australia from LDS Church president Brigham Young. Later that year, Potter left California for Australia on the ship Osprey.

Potter later claimed that during his trip to Australia, he underwent a "purifying, quickening change" whereby his own spiritual body, called "Christ", entered into his body and he became "Potter Christ, Son of the living God". During his time in Australia, Potter wrote a book which he said was dictated to him by angels; it was described by Potter as the book from which all people were to be judged at the Final Judgment.

Potter returned to California by October 1857. A Latter-day Saint observer described Potter's re-appearance in the community:

Wednesday 21 October 1857—Arnold Potter, who calls himself Potter Christ, appeared in our streets today with a brand on his forehead which had been put in with India ink. The words which can be read at quite a distance, are "Potter Christ—The Living God—Morning Star". To the right of the inscription is a star, below a cross. He appears very desirous of winning followers. It is said there are several apostates about to join him.[2]

By 1861, Potter and some of his followers had left California with the intention of settling near Independence, Missouri, the traditional location of Zion for the Latter Day Saints. They settled at Saint Marys in northwest Mills County, Iowa. When Saint Marys was destroyed by flooding in 1865, they moved to Council Bluffs, Iowa. Potter spent his days wandering the streets in Council Bluffs wearing a long white robe and became a local oddity. Potter's followers in Council Bluffs were described as "few but devout". The men wore black robes and the women eschewed normal grooming practices. Potter and his followers held enthusiastic prayer meetings which would often culminate in Potter declaring a new revelation from God.

In 1872, Potter announced at a meeting of his church that the time had come for his ascent into heaven. Followed by his disciples, Potter rode a donkey to the edge of the bluffs, whereupon he leapt off the edge intending to "ascend," but instead fell to his death. His body was collected and buried by his followers.[3][unreliable source?]

Works

  • Potter, Arnold (1870). "Revelations of Potter Christ, the messenger of the new covenant". Council Bluffs, Iowa Evening Bugle News. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ www.josephsmithpapers.org https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/license-for-arnold-potter-24-april-1840-extract/1?highlight=Arnold%20Potter. Retrieved 4 February 2018. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ Manuscript History of the San Bernardino Settlement, LDS Church archives.
  3. ^ Barnes, James (2011), Unveiling of the Middleman: The Truth About Prophecy (self-published), AuthorHouse, pp. 63–64, ISBN 9781456723835, OCLC 705264070

References

  • Manuscript History of the San Bernardino Settlement, LDS Church archives.
  • Steven R. Parkes. Arnold Potter: From L.D.S. Convert to Pioneer to Missionary to Sect Leader (unpublished manuscript)
  • Russell R. Rich (2d ed. 1967). Those Who Would Be Leaders: Offshoots of Mormonism (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University)
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Church of Christ
Organized by: Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith's original 1830
organization; multiple sects currently
claim to be true successor
1844 (trust reorganized)
1851 (incorporated)
1860
(reorganization)
The Church of
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of Latter-day Saints
Organized by: Brigham Young
and Quorum of the Twelve
14 million members
Community of Christ
(Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints)
Organized by: Joseph Smith III
More than 250,000 members
New Restoration
Sects.
185719431861
Church of the
Potter Christ
Organized by: Arnold Potter
defunct
House of Aaron
Organized by: M. L. Glendenning
1,500–2,000 members
Church of the Firstborn
(Morrisite)
Organized by: Joseph Morris
defunct
186119361951186618821884
Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints
(Gibsonite)
Organized by: Walter M. Gibson
defunct
Third Convention
Organized by: Abel Páez
Status: Continued into the 21st century
Zion's Order, Inc.
Organized by: Merl Kilgore
approx. 100 members
Kingdom of Heaven
Organized by: William W. Davies
defunct
Church of Jesus Christ of
Saints of the Most High
Organized by: John R. Eardley
defunct
Order of Enoch
Organized by: James Brighouse
extant
195519832007
Perfected Church of
Jesus Christ of Immaculate
Latter-day Saints
Organized by: William C. Conway
Status: unknown
Church of Jesus Christ
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Organized by: Art Bulla
Latter Day Church
of Jesus Christ
Organized by: Matthew P. Gill