In a powerful address marking Religious Liberty Day, Jamaican Seventh-day Adventist advocate Nigel Coke issued a stark warning against emerging legislative efforts in the United States that would legally enforce Sunday as a universal day of rest. Speaking at Andrews Memorial SDA Church in St. Andrew on January 24, 2026, Coke identified such proposals as a significant threat to fundamental religious freedoms.
The religious liberty director referenced specific initiatives by a Washington, DC-based advocacy group promoting statewide limitations on Sunday commercial activities. While acknowledging the表面上 virtuous intentions behind promoting family time and social cohesion, Coke emphasized that these measures fundamentally privilege one religious tradition’s day of worship over others.
“However well-meaning these proposals might appear,” Coke asserted in his sermon titled ‘It’s Buying Time,’ “they cross a critical boundary when they effectively favor one religious tradition’s practices. Seventh-day Adventists maintain that every individual—whether Baptist, Catholic, Muslim, or other—should possess the unequivocal right to worship on whatever day they choose.”
Drawing from Revelation 3:14–22, Coke contextualized the current debate within the Adventist movement’s 160-year history of opposing Sunday legislation. He noted that such restrictions, while often framed in secular terms like public health or national unity, create substantial practical challenges for faith communities that observe different Sabbath days, including Orthodox Jews and Seventh-day Adventists.
Coke elaborated that commerce limitations could restrict economic opportunities and indirectly pressure religious minorities to conform to Sunday observance. He invoked the biblical concept of “eyesalve”—spiritual discernment enabling believers to distinguish genuine religious freedom threats beneath appealing policy packaging.
“We urgently require this spiritual eyesalve today,” Coke told congregants, “particularly in an era characterized by misinformation. Laws framed under the guise of unity or safety may subtly erode conscience rights. This divine discernment helps us perceive when religious liberty, though theoretically protected, faces practical erosion.”
The religious liberty director encouraged believers to pursue the triple spiritual gifts described in Revelation 3:18: faith refined through adversity (gold), Christ’s righteousness (white raiment), and clarity of vision (eyesalve). He emphasized that only hearts transformed by grace could withstand mounting societal pressures.
Concluding with a call to action, Coke challenged attendees to utilize current freedoms to advocate for universal conscience rights while preparing for future challenges through prayer, scriptural study, and active community engagement.
