Skip to content
AU | Americans United logo
DONATE
  • Home
  • About Us

    About AU | Mission and Values

    FAQ

    History

    Our Team

    Board of Directors

    Faith Advisory Council

    Careers

    Contact Us

  • Our Work
    KEY ISSUES

    Our Work

    Separation of Church and State 101

    Public Education

    LGBTQ+ Equality & Religious Discrimination

    Reproductive Freedom

    Civil Rights & Religious Freedom

    Fighting Christian Nationalism

    Legal & Policy Advocacy

    Court Cases

    Bill Tracker

    Report a Violation

    EDUCATION & RESOURCES
    Toolkits and Resources
  • Take Action
    FEATURED ACTION

    Urge Your State Legislators to Protect Church-State Separation

    Get Involved

    Join AU

    Events & Webinars

    Youth Activism

    Protest Signs and Resources

  • News & Media
    FEATURED ARTICLE

    What an officially ‘Christian nation’ looked like in America

    November 4, 2025
    Rob Boston

    News & Media

    Press Statements

    Church-State Separation Blog

    Church & State Magazine

  • Press
Report a Violation
  • DONATE

    Donate

    Give Monthly

    Planned Giving

    Renew Your Membership

    Support AU’s Legal Fund

    More Ways to Give

    Donation FAQs

Religious Minorities

Christian Nationalists and Project 2025 have a radical scheme to remake your weekends

Stylish man shopping in a clothes store - Christian Nationalists want to seize your Sundays
July 30, 2024
Rob Boston

Americans United has been sounding the alarm about Project 2025, a radical Christian Nationalist blueprint to remake American society along theocratic lines.

Project 2025 is exactly what you would expect from Christian Nationalists. It calls for restricting reproductive freedom and rolling back LGBTQ+ rights, and it seeks to install an extreme vision of religious freedom that would enable people to use their faith to ignore many civil rights and other secular laws.

But there’s another section that could affect every American that should not be overlooked: The architects of Project 2025 want to control how you spend your weekend.

Christian Nationalists – Seizing your Sunday

A section on employment policy, written by Jonathan Berry, a member of the conservative Federalist Society, would, if implemented, subject Americans’ leisure time to government oversight by limiting what you can do on Sundays.

“God ordained the Sabbath as a day of rest, and until very recently the Judeo-Christian tradition sought to honor that mandate by moral and legal regulation of work on that day,” Berry writes. Elsewhere, he adds, “Unfortunately, that communal day of rest has eroded under the pressures of consumerism and secularism.”

Let’s be clear about what is being proposed here: This proposal would restrict your ability to decide what you want to do on Sunday. That’s the sabbath Berry and his allies are talking about. Never mind that Jews, Muslims, the nonreligious and some Christians (Seventh-day Adventists, Seventh Day Baptists and others) don’t keep Sunday as the sabbath – which means it’s hardly “communal.”

And note Berry’s use of the term “day of rest.” At first glance, that might sound nice to some stressed-out workers. But what’s really being called for here is a restriction on how you choose to spend your free time. Perhaps you’d like to spend Sunday meeting a friend for lunch, visiting a museum, taking in a sporting event or doing some shopping. Religious extremists want to stop you from doing those things on a day some people consider sacred, a day some people say their religion mandates that you stay at home (after attending church services, of course).

Feeling blue: strange, unworkable laws

Sunday-closing laws, sometimes called “blue laws,” have a checkered history in America (and pre-America). The Puritans’ blue laws were so strict that they even banned people from working in their yards on Sunday. In more recent times, many states had a weird patchwork of laws that closed some retail establishments but allowed others to open depending on what was being sold. In some stores, certain items could be sold – Sunday newspapers, food, drugs – while others – toys, office supplies – could not. In Anne Arundel County, Md., a store owner was busted because he allowed a customer to buy floor wax, a stapler and a toy submarine on Sunday. (The mind boggles at the planning that must have gone into this undercover sting.)

A system this unworkable could not stand, and it didn’t. Even though the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Sunday-closing laws in 1961 in one of its more poorly reasoned decisions, the laws soon died a natural death, mainly because people wanted to do things, including shop, on Sunday. States were happy to get the tax revenue.

Yes, Americans probably work too much, and everyone deserves time off. But a state-mandated day of rest that just happens to coincide with some Christians’ sabbath isn’t the answer. That’s just more humbuggery from the Christian Nationalists at Project 2025 who are certain they know what’s best for you.

As usual, they don’t.

PrevPREVIOUSChristian Nationalists are attacking all our rights. We can prevail – if we stick together.
NEXT UPProject 2025 isn’t going anywhere. Let’s keep exposing its extremism.Next
Responsive Form

STAY INFORMED

Facebook-f Instagram Linkedin Youtube

Americans United for Separation of Church and State is a nonpartisan, not-for-profit educational and advocacy organization that brings together people of all religions and none to protect the right of everyone to believe as they want — and stop anyone from using their beliefs to harm others. We fight in the courts, legislatures, and the public square for freedom without favor and equality without exception.

1310 L Street NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC 20005

(202) 466-3234
Contact Us

State Nonprofit Disclosures 

Privacy Policy

Financial Information

State Nonprofit Disclosures      Privacy Policy     Financial Information

“Americans United for Separation of Church and State,” “Americans United” and “Church & State” are registered trademarks of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

© 2025 Americans United for Separation of Church and State. All rights reserved.
BBB Logo
Charity_Navigator_2024_Logo_AU_Navy
Candid Seal Platinum Transparency 2025

Website powered by:

Erawatech - Make peace with technology