Vinita Seventh-day Adventist Church

Vinita Seventh-day Adventist Church The Vinita Adventist Church fosters a welcoming community committed to spiritual growth & service.

01/02/2026
Pastor Jerry & Kay Mayes had an interview done by 3abn recently. Here is the link to watch this beautiful testimony.
12/18/2025

Pastor Jerry & Kay Mayes had an interview done by 3abn recently. Here is the link to watch this beautiful testimony.

Soul Winning Adventures- 3ABN Today (TDY250093)

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12/09/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1GGdiiFu8r/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Charlie Kirk’s Final Message to America: “If I have to work on Saturday, I take Sunday as my Sabbath”

On December 8, 2025, The Free Press published an article by Erica Kirk titled “Charlie Kirk’s Final Message to America.” In it, she praised the need to restore a weekly Sabbath and argued that such a practice would help heal the nation. Erica Kirk went on to suggest that the Sabbath can be “adjusted,” quoting an excerpt from Charlie Kirk’s new book in which he admits that he sometimes needed to switch his Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday.

The message is unmistakable: Charlie Kirk’s new book functions as a proselytizing effort designed to intensify the movement to reintroduce a national Sabbath rest in America. And according to both Charlie and Erica Kirk, that Sabbath can most certainly be Sunday.

The Free Press published the following:

• “Charlie didn’t write a book about the Sabbath because he wanted to learn the impact that it would have on his life. He did it because he knew it worked. The Sabbath saved him.” [1] [2]

• “There is a reason this book isn’t political. Charlie wanted to heal the country … Charlie genuinely felt that if the world had a weekly day of rest, just one, it would be the ultimate game changer. The call to action here is very important. People will say, ‘Okay, this sounds great in theory, but how do I do it?’ The answer is, it will look different for everyone.” [1] [2]

• “Charlie didn’t observe the Sabbath perfectly. There were times when he was traveling and he couldn’t do a traditional Friday to Sunday morning. So he’d have to adjust.” [1] [2]

• “Even if you don’t believe in God, you still have to rest.” [1] [2]

• “You are worth nothing when you have no rest. Sometimes, you have to sleep. Sometimes, you have to pause. Above all: There is so much more in life than what’s in your cell phone. Don’t forget to make the time to find it.” [1] [2]

• Charlie Kirk: “Occasionally, I’m asked to speak at conferences, churches, or public forums that fall squarely on weekends. And in those moments, I face the same tension many of you do: How do I honor God when life won’t slow down? Here’s my answer: I do everything in my power to plan around it. But when that’s not possible, I get creative and deliberate. If I have to work on Saturday, I take Sunday as my Sabbath. If both days are booked and filled with travel or obligations, I plan ahead to block off the following weekend for extended rest—phone off, no emails, no output.” [1] [2] (This statement appeared in The Free Press article and is taken directly from Charlie Kirk’s new book, “Stop, in the Name of God: Why Honoring the Sabbath Will Transform Your Life”).

Charlie Kirk’s new book has the potential to significantly accelerate the national conversation about reviving a weekly day of rest—specifically Sunday—because it places the idea of a weekly “Sabbath” at the center of America’s moral and political renewal. By promoting rest as the solution to our cultural decline, Kirk is helping to mainstream the very arguments that have long been circulating within Christian nationalist circles.

The entire Charlie Kirk phenomenon—his media presence, his influence in conservative circles, his Turning Point USA empire, and now the release of his final book—is being used to promote what is being called his “final message to America.” That message is simple and direct: if America is going to survive, we must return to a weekly Sabbath rest. Erica Kirk reinforces this agenda by testifying that the Sabbath “saved” her husband’s life and insists that it could also save the nation.

The problem, however, is that the Sabbath they advocate is generic, meaning the day can refer to Saturday or Sunday, depending on personal preferences. In their public statements and in Charlie’s book, they openly discuss “adjusting” the Sabbath and even alternating between rest days. This is not accidental because it makes the concept of a national Sabbath acceptable to a wider audience, regardless of denomination lines or doctrinal beliefs.

But this is precisely where the danger lies. Once the Sabbath is detached from God’s commandment and turned into an adjustable practice, it becomes much easier to introduce a counterfeit day of worship in place of the true. And in the context of America’s religious and political climate—where Christian nationalism is rapidly advancing Sunday as a unifying day of rest—the publicity surrounding Charlie Kirk’s book will certainly be used to elevate the counterfeit Sabbath: Sunday, the very institution that Scripture warns would become the papal mark of apostasy.

The Kirks are helping to create the political momentum needed to reintroduce a “Sabbath” to American life—but one that is not rooted in God’s law. Instead, it paves the way for the nation to embrace the long-foretold Sunday institution, fulfilling prophecy and setting the stage for the final crisis.

Sources

[1] https://www.thefp.com/p/charlie-kirks-final-message-to-america

[2]https://nationalconservatism.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/Charlie-Kirks-Final-Message.pdf

11/03/2025

Please join us on Tuesdays at 6 PM for Bible prophecy presentations by Pastor Jerry Mayes

11/01/2025

Good morning & Happy Sabbath!

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10/21/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Jn8i5XtCj/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Atheists Advocate for the Rejection of Sunday Laws and Project 2025

There are voices outside of the Adventist community that also recognize the connection between Sunday rest legislation and Project 2025. The Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF), a nonprofit organization representing atheists that advocates for the separation of church and state, has warned that efforts to advance Sunday observance through Project 2025 would undermine the very liberty of conscience upon which the United States was founded.

On October 3, 2025, the Freedom From Religion Foundation published the following:

• “Sunday used to be the dreariest day of the week. Ask me. I was a child in the 1960s when ‘blue laws’ made everyone blue. I remember, especially in the coldest days of winter, feeling like I was under house arrest on Sundays. Now the creators of scary Project 2025 want to close down Sundays again, and America should be forewarned and refuse.” [1]

• “Today, we take for granted that you can do many of the things on Sunday that you can do on other days, perhaps reduced hours notwithstanding. Will this still be the case if Project 2025 becomes a reality? Not if the Heritage Foundation gets its way.” [1]

• “Let’s turn to page 589 of Project 2025, to a subsection titled ‘Sabbath Rest.’ ‘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,’ states the document. ‘Moreover, a shared day off makes it possible for families and communities to enjoy time off together, rather than as atomized individuals, and provides a healthier cadence of life for everyone. Unfortunately, the communal day of rest has eroded under the pressures of consumerism and secularism, especially for low-income workers.’ The document continues: ‘That day would default to Sunday.” [1]

• “Project 2025 assures us that churches, naturally, would, in most instances, be exempt from this rule! It pretends to care about workers, but clearly the real goal is to get more bodies back into churches because of less competition.” [1]

• “I suppose we should feel fortunate that Project 2025 doesn’t command the death penalty … yet, for working on the Sabbath.” [1]

• “Who has the time to plow through 900-plus pages of the bureaucratic authoritarianism that is Project 2025? Not many of us—and that’s what its creators are banking on. The dire political consequences of Project 2025, such as eliminating checks and balances and amassing all regulatory power in the White House, may seem like remote threats. But the threat to our Sundays is personal.” [1]

Even though Seventh-day Adventists are ideologically and theologically distinct from atheists and other secular groups, the coming crisis will impact everyone—regardless of religious or political beliefs. Sunday laws and Project 2025 represent real threats to the constitutional liberties that protect all citizens. When civil authorities begin enforcing religious observance, the result will not lead to spiritual renewal but to the erosion of freedom.

We would indeed have a far better world if every heart, including those of atheists and agnostics, were touched by the grace and transforming power of Christ. A society guided by the principles of love, mercy, justice, truth, and humility would experience true renewal and lasting peace. However, it is not the duty of the state to make people Christians, nor does forced religion produce genuine faith. Conversion cannot come through legislation or political agendas—it comes only through the convicting power of the Holy Spirit and the witness of loving, converted believers.

The real work of revival will begin when the churches get out of Washington, D.C., and stop looking for political power and return to the mission fields where Jesus ministered—the highways and byways, the prisons, the halfway houses, the nursing homes, the shelters, the soup kitchens, and the forgotten corners of society. It is there, among the suffering and neglected, that the gospel shines brightest and the kingdom of God truly advances.

Sources

[1] https://freethoughtnow.org/project-2025-wants-to-make-your-sabbath-dull-dreary-and-dolorous/

Address

536 N Scraper Street
Vinita, OK
74301

Opening Hours

Tuesday 6pm - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 2pm

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