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For over a century and a half the phantom Sunday Law has been in view. Page basics Adventist Sunday Law: 160 Years of Manufactured Hysteria Meta description (≈155 chars) Why the Adventist “Sunday Law” remains a phantom after 160 years—and how fear-based prophecies mirror tactics used by other high-control religious groups. /adventist-sunday-law-manufactured-hysteria H1 Adventist Sunday Law: One Hundred and Sixty Years of Manufactured Hysteria Featured snippet answer (45–50 words) The Adventist “Sunday Law” is a long-running prophecy claiming governments will enforce Sunday worship. After 160 years, no global movement has emerged. Critics argue it functions as a fear-based control narrative—similar to other high-control groups—rather than a doctrine grounded in the New Testament. Keyword & entity cluster Primary: adventist sunday law, SDA sunday law, sunday law prophecy, ellen g. white sunday law Secondary: manufactured hysteria, high-control groups, doomsday cult narratives, mark of the beast interpretation, Romans 14 days, salvation by faith not works, religious liberty in the U.S., ellen white prophecy criticism Entities to mention: Ellen G. White, Seventh-day Adventist Church, “third angel’s message”, Douglas Batchelor (Pastor Doug Bachelor), Watch Tower Society (for comparatives), Romans 14:5–6, Ephesians 1:13–14, Hebrews 9:15 For more than a century and a half, some Adventist voices have warned that governments—often at Rome’s urging—will enforce a universal “Sunday Law.” Yet after 160 years, the event remains perpetually approaching. The pattern looks less like unfolding prophecy and more like a manufactured hysteria that mirrors tactics used by other high-control groups: predict crisis, frame dissent as disloyalty, and keep members engaged through looming urgency.