The Intro & Setting the Stage
Welcome back to Investigating Adventism LIVE! I’m Ptr. Ronald Obidos, and across the table from me is Bro. Toto Paulino. If you're tuning in live in the chat, drop us a comment, let us know where you're listening from. Tonight, we are diving into a topic that is absolutely core theology if you grew up in or around the Seventh-day Adventist Church. We’re talking about the Mark of the Beast, Sunday laws, and a historical plot twist that a lot of folks aren't aware of.This isn't just a minor theological debate; this is the literal climax of the traditional Adventist end-times timeline, The Great Controversy scenario.
If you’re an SDA or checking out the theology, you’re taught that in the final days, a National Sunday Law is going to be passed. If you comply with it and worship on Sunday, you get the Mark of the Beast. If you keep the Seventh-day Sabbath, you get the Seal of God and face intense persecution. It’s high stakes. But tonight, we’re looking at some historical receipts from the 1800s and early 1900s that create a massive internal contradiction in this narrative.
We have a great article on the desk tonight that lays out a timeline of Ellen White's quotes alongside Uriah Smith's writings. The short version? The early Adventists were willing to go to jail over not resting on Sunday. But when a real legal crisis hit Australia in 1902, the counsel changed drastically. It actually completely flips the script on how Sunday laws are supposed to play out.
Let’s look at the early stance first. Let's break down these foundational quotes. What did Ellen White write back in 1847?
The Original Stance
Let’s go back to the very beginning, just a few years after the Great Disappointment of 1844. In 1847, in A Word to the Little Flock, Ellen White writes this:
"I saw that the number (666) of the image beast was made up; and that it was the beast that changed the Sabbath and the image beast followed on after and kept the Pope's, and not God's Sabbath. And all we were required to do, was to give up God's Sabbath and keep the Pope's and then we should have the mark of the beast and of his image." (A Word to the Little Flock (April 7, 1847, p.19)
Okay, so right out of the gate, keeping the "Pope's Sabbath", meaning Sunday, is explicitly equated with getting the mark. And this wasn't just a passing thought. Fifty years later, pioneer Uriah Smith in his landmark book Daniel and the Revelation (1897) doubled down. He wrote:
"This change of the fourth commandment must therefore be the change to which the prophecy points, and the Sunday sabbath must be the mark of the beast!" (Daniel and the Revelation, commentary on Revelation 13 (pp. 197–198 in the 1882 edition)
And let's fast forward to 1893, because this is where the definition gets incredibly specific. Ellen White writes in Testimonies to Ministers:
"John was called to behold a people distinct from those who worship the Beast and his image by keeping the first day of the week. The observance of this day is the mark of the Beast." (Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers, 1893, p.133)
Q1: "Does simply going to church on Sunday mean you have the mark right now, according to SDA theology?"
The official SDA position is no, nobody has the mark right now. It only happens when Sunday observance is enforced by law. Let's read exactly how Ellen White defined how someone receives it.
This is from the SDA Bible Commentary, vol. 7:
This is from the SDA Bible Commentary, vol. 7:
"If the light of truth has been presented to you, revealing the Sabbath of the fourth commandment... and yet you still cling to the false sabbath, refusing to keep holy the Sabbath... you receive the mark of the beast. When does this take place? When you obey the decree that commands you to cease from labor on Sunday and worship God... you consent to receive the mark of the beast..." (Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, Vol. 7, p. 976)
Notice the two strict criteria she sets up here:
- You "cease from labor on Sunday"
- You "worship God" on Sunday.
If you do those two things when the law tells you to, boom, you've received the mark. That was the line in the sand.
The Early Zeal & The 6-Day Work Requirement
Because they believed this so literally, the early Adventists in the late 1800s took it to an extreme. There were local "blue laws" in parts of the US and Europe that banned working on Sundays. A few SDAs actually chose to work publicly on Sunday just to stand their ground. Some got arrested, spent brief periods in jail, and two of their publishing houses, one in London and one in Basel, Switzerland, were actually shut down by governments because they refused to follow Sunday labor laws.
This is a part of church history that gets romanticized a lot as "early persecution." But there's a fascinating theological twist here. Why were they so stubborn about refusing to stop working on Sunday? It goes back to how they interpreted Exodus 20:9.
Exodus 20:9 says, "Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work." The early pioneers literally interpreted that as a commandment to work six days a week. So in their minds, if the government told them they couldn't work on Sunday, obeying that law meant they were only working five days a week, which they viewed as breaking God's law! They felt that simply ceasing from work on Sunday was a renunciation of their faith.
So a massive rift starts developing in the church. You've got the hardliners who want to purposely work on Sunday to show they aren't compromising, even if it incites the local authorities. Then you have another group saying, "Hey, maybe we don't need to pick fights with local police over this. Can't we just comply with the local law to keep the peace?"
And that brings us to the turning point: Australia, 1902.
The Australian Crisis & The Pivot
Let’s set the scene. It’s the early 1900s in Melbourne, Australia. A law is passed requiring certain businesses, including publishing houses, to close on Sundays. The SDA managers there decide to test the waters. They keep running their printing presses for three Sundays in a row. Finally, the local authorities have had enough and are threatening them with actual arrests.
Now the corporate leaders have a full-blown crisis. If they keep printing, they go to jail. If they stop, according to their own established theology, they are "ceasing from labor on Sunday" and giving in to the mark of the beast. So, what do they do? They turn to their living prophetess, Ellen White, who happened to be living in Australia around that era.
And this is where the entire theological framework takes a hard U-turn. Let's read her official response from Testimonies, vol. 9.
This is what she wrote in 1902:
"The light given me by the Lord at a time when we were expecting just such a crisis... was that when the people were moved by a power from beneath to enforce Sunday observance, Seventh-day Adventists were to show their wisdom by refraining from their ordinary work on that day, devoting it to missionary effort." (Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 9, p. 232)
She goes on to recount what she told the managers at the Avondale school:
"I replied: 'It will be very easy to avoid that difficulty. Give Sunday to the Lord as a day for doing missionary work. Take the students out to hold meetings in different places, and to do medical missionary work... This way of spending Sunday is always acceptable to the Lord.'"
Let's process that. In 1893, she says you get the mark of the beast when you obey the decree to cease from labor on Sunday and worship God. In 1902, face-to-face with actual arrests, she tells them to refrain from ordinary work, hold religious meetings, and do missionary work on Sunday.
She literally tells them to spend Sunday the exact same way a devout, conscientious Sunday-keeper spends it! No ordinary work, go to church meetings, and do ministry. And she caps it off by saying, "This way of spending Sunday is always acceptable to the Lord."
Q2: "If doing missionary work and refraining from labor on Sunday is 'acceptable to the Lord' when an SDA does it, why is it the 'Mark of the Beast' when a Baptist or a Presbyterian does it?"
If a non-SDA Christian spends their Sunday resting from their day job, going to church, and doing ministry, they are told by Adventist evangelism that they are participating in the system of the Beast. But when the threat of legal trouble hit the SDA church, doing that exact same thing became "wisdom" and "acceptable to the Lord."
It completely undermines the entire Great Controversy persecution narrative. Think about it practically: If a future global Sunday law is passed, and the SDA church follows Ellen White's 1902 counsel, they will close their businesses, stop their ordinary work, and hold religious meetings on Sunday. To the outside world and to the government inspectors, the Adventists will look identical to the Baptists or Catholics next door.
There would be no way to distinguish them. There would be no grounds for arrests, no persecution, no hiding out in the mountains. The whole grand finale of their eschatology becomes a non-event because the prophet provided a loophole to completely avoid detection and compliance issues.
Years before this happened, in 1882, Ellen White actually warned against this exact behavior. In Testimonies, vol. 5, she wrote:
"In this situation, worldly policy will urge an outward compliance with the laws of the land, for the sake of peace and harmony." (Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 5, p. 712)
But when the rubber met the road in Australia, that "worldly policy" of outward compliance for the sake of peace is exactly what she advocated. It mirrors the story of the plain of Dura in Daniel chapter 3. When Nebuchadnezzar built the golden image, only three Hebrews stood tall. There were likely thousands of other Hebrews there who compromised, blended into the crowd, and bowed down to avoid the fiery furnace.
It leaves us with a stark choice. Either Sunday laws were never the Mark of the Beast to begin with, or the pioneers and their prophet compromised their core values the moment real legal consequences showed up.
Beautifully put. If you're wrestling with these structural contradictions in SDA theology, look to the New Covenant. Our rest isn't found in a legalistic observance of a specific day under threat of a future geopolitical conspiracy; our rest is a person—Jesus Christ, who satisfies the law completely.
Real Talk Reflection: Where True Rest is Found
When we look closely at the turning points of religious history, we often see a frustrating pattern: human rules are fiercely defended until those very rules become too costly to keep. For decades, early believers were told that simply pausing their daily work on a Sunday under a government decree meant compromising their faith and receiving a prophetic mark of condemnation. Yet, when the real threat of fines and prison doors loomed in Australia, the counsel shifted to "outward compliance," blending in for the sake of peace and labeling it as wisdom.
This historic pivot exposes the exhaustion of trying to find spiritual security in complex end-times timelines and legalistic boundaries. When our standing before God is anchored to an institutional checklist, the goalposts will always move when a crisis hits.
The Wisdom of the New Covenant
Galatians 5:1
"Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage."
The Wisdom:
True spiritual security doesn't require playing hide-and-seek with future geopolitical laws or searching for loopholes to avoid persecution. The legalism that binds human conscience to specific days as the ultimate test of loyalty is a "yoke of bondage." Under the New Covenant, your loyalty is not tested by a calendar; it is anchored in a Person. Christ has already broken the power of condemnation.
Colossians 2:16-17
"Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: Which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ."
The Wisdom:
It is easy to get caught up in tracking shadows, human policies, and prophetic scenarios that cause anxiety. But Scripture reminds us that days and rituals were only shadows pointing to a grander reality. That reality is Jesus. When you have the Substance, you no longer have to live in fear of the shadows.
Call to Action
Stop carrying the heavy burden of keeping up with ever-shifting human standards and theological anxiety. If you have been conditioned to fear a future decree, look instead to the finished work of the Cross.
Examine your foundations this week. Are you trusting in your own ability to stand, or are you resting entirely in the One who already stood in your place? Step out of the cycle of performance and live out your freedom in Christ today.