First Sunday Law in the United States. That's what we'll be looking at. There is things to understand about the world Sunday Law and what takes place. But when I talk about the Sunday Law, I'm talking about the one that's going to arrive in the United States in the very near future. And I hope by the time we get through with this presentation in this couple weeks, you'll see that it is the very near future. And that particular Sunday Law has been very well defined in the Spirit of Prophecy. It has two parts to it. It's not simply a Sunday Law that says we shouldn't buy gasoline or can't buy gasoline on Sunday. It's something more specific in Bible Prophecy. Sister White's clear about that definition. We'll look at that later on, but the definition is this. The Sunday Law that fulfills Bible Prophecy is a Sunday Law that is going to persecute you for keeping the seventh-day Sabbath. And it's going to force you to keep Sunday as the Sabbath. It has two parts. You're going to be forced to keep Sunday, persecuted for keeping the seventh-day Sabbath. And this passage out of the Great Controversy that we started with the other night, from Great Controversy 573-574, if you go back home this evening or tomorrow and you read further on in that passage, that's exactly how the Sunday Law came in the early Church. It began by uplifting Sunday, and then after Sunday was more and more uplifted and more legally enforced, then Sabbath began to be downgraded, and it ultimately reaches a point in this chapter where she's describing that, where it was forbidden to keep the seventh-day Sabbath, you were persecuted for doing so, and you were forced to keep Sunday. When that Sunday Law arrives in the United States, the United States will have spoken as a dragon, Revelation 13-11 will be fulfilled. And that sequence of first the Royal Edicts, then General Councils, and then the third step is Church Ordinances, followed, enforced by secular power, there's three aspects to look at. We briefly looked at Deus Domini the other night as what I'm identifying as the Royal Edict in our day and age. It's a document from the Catholic Church saying Sunday should be upheld. From the Detroit News, the same month that the Deus Domini came out in 1998, and I believe it was in July, but a Roman Catholic commenting on that particular encyclical says this. This is quoting from the Detroit News. In his letter the Pope goes on to say, In obedience to the Third Commandment, Sunday must be sanctified above all. In his letter the Pope states, a violator should be punished as a heretic, said J. Manconelli. J. Manconelli is an official representative of the Roman Catholic Church. Now, if you were to share that with a Roman Catholic, as I said the other night, that understood that particular letter, what they might say to you is, well, that letter was strictly for the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church has the right to treat Catholics within the Church.