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Bye-Bye, Blue Laws?
With diversity up and the economy down, these Sabbatarian statutes could be coming off the books.
"Blue laws" do not appear in the indices of any of the American church history survey texts on my shelf (I looked), but in many parts of the country these quirky codes are some of the most enduring reminders of a bygone era. You can't buy a car at a dealership on Sunday in Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Oklahoma, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, or Wisconsin. Rules governing purchases of alcohol on the Lord's Day are far more complicated. On Sundays, you can't buy alcohol between 4 and 8 a.m. in New York (but if you want to get blasted before the late church service, go right ahead), between 2 and 10 a.m. in Arizona, before noon in Michigan, or at any time in several states. In some places, you can buy beer or wine, but not liquor, on Sundays, and in others, you can buy warm drinks but not cold. And, of course, almost no one gets mail on Sunday - unless you live in Seventh-day Adventist enclave Loma Linda, California, where you can't get mail on Saturday instead.
All of this could be changing soon, with potentially considerable consequences.
Though the etymology is murky, the "blue" in "blue laws" seems to refer not to blue paper or blue-bound law books but to a pejorative descriptor for Puritans, as in bluenose and blueblood. Puritans do not entirely deserve their reputation as killjoys, but they did take their Sabbath seriously, restricting trade, travel, entertainment, and sex, among other things. They did not, however, originally forbid drinking on Sunday. Those laws came later, after alcoholic beverages grew more potent and water supplies were purified.
Health and holiness were never the only reasons behind Sabbath laws. True, 19th-century revivals often spurred campaigns against such impieties as Sabbath-breaking and drunkenness, but cultural protectionism lay behind some blue law crusades as well. Jews and Seventh-day Adventists, especially in the West, sometimes found themselves targeted by efforts to halt business on a day they did not recognize as the Sabbath, while Roman Catholic immigrants felt particularly acute Protestant hostility on Sundays. For many immigrant laborers, Sunday was their only day off. Already frustrated by restrictions on alcohol (a classic attack on "rum, Romanism, and rebellion"), immigrant workers were disproportionately burdened by Sabbath-day store closings and public transportation stoppages.
Blue law backers shifted over time. After New England religion lost much of its hard-edged holiness, blue laws remained in place to promote general sobriety and, at least as important, the social status quo. It is important to remember that, generally speaking, the same people who fought for abolition went on to champion woman suffrage and Prohibition, all ideas considered "progressive" in their day. By the 1920s, though, liberal and conservative Protestants began to split on this and so many other issues. A 1920 New York Times article highlighted the opposition of the Rev. Dr. William T. Manning, rector of Trinity [Episcopal] Church, to a coalition that sought to make "church the only place to go and home the only place to stay" on Sunday. Rev. Manning proclaimed that a return to the Puritan-style Sabbath would "injure religion" and protested that "God is near in joys also." From that decade forward, morality legislation became increasingly identified, sometimes aptly and sometimes opportunistically, with the born-again wing of American Christianity.
Much of the fervor behind Sabbath-keeping has dissipated. Now that so many people worship different gods, or no god at all, hitting the grocery store - or the bar - on Sunday raises far fewer eyebrows than it might have years ago. (I still do not recommend that you mow your lawn on Sunday morning in my small Indiana hometown. You will get looks.) More important, in this economy, cash-strapped states crave revenues raised on products like beer and cars. And so, from South Carolina to Minnesota, Connecticut to Texas, lawmakers are working to scratch blue laws and open for business on Sunday.
Will repealing blue laws make any difference?
Regarding the bottom line, in places like as Connecticut, where residents have regularly crossed borders to make Sunday purchases under less restrictive laws, the local economy stands to gain. Otherwise, it seems likely that many consumers will merely spread their (decreasing) purchases over seven days instead of six. Some store owners might even decide that it isn't cost-effective to open on Sundays, considering the extra staffing required.
Regarding culture, the impact of vanishing blue laws could be larger. A study in New Mexico in 2006 found a sharp increase in drunken driving on Sundays after that state dropped its Sunday ban on packaged alcohol sales. A broader study published by MIT and Notre Dame economists in 2008 found that the repeal of blue laws led to decreased church attendance, decreased donations to churches, and increased alcohol and drug use among religious individuals. These wide-ranging effects cannot easily be pinpointed to specific causes, but one of the latter study's authors, Daniel Hungerman, suggested to Christianity Today that blue laws might have been fulfilling their original intent, to keep people pious.
Whatever the outcome of contemporary legal wrangling, we have surely wandered far from the picture presented by Alice Morse Earle in her 1909 book The Sabbath in Puritan New England: "Sweet to the Pilgrims and to their descendants was the hush of their calm Saturday night, and their still, tranquil Sabbath, - sign and token to them, not only of the weekly rest ordained in the creation, but of the eternal rest to come."
For more reading:
Sarah H. Wright, "The Cost of Repealing Blue Laws", MIT News, May 21, 2008.
Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra, "Blue Law Special," Christianity Today, Jan. 2007, p. 21
Other news links:
Paige Bowers, "Will the Recession Doom the Last Sunday Blue Laws?" Time, February 22, 2009.
Jenna Hiller, "Proposal to Allow Sunday Liquor Sales on Table," TWEAN News Channel 8, Austin, Texas.
Jenny Overman, "Lancaster 'Blue Laws' May Be Suspended," Fort Mill Times, February 10, 2009.
Image: God Reposing, illustration by Vasiliy Koren (ca. 1640-early 1700s) from first engraved Russian BIble, Moscow, via Wikimedia Commons.






Comments
I grew up Seventh-day Adventist and remember during my high school years attending (with a Jewish classmate) a Tucson city council debate about a proposed Sunday-closing law. We were prepared to argue that such laws were unfair to seventh-day sabbatarians who needed to open their businesses on Sundays to compensate for loss of Saturday business. We weren't given the chance to speak, but, fortunately, the ordinance didn't pass.
Posted By: David Neff | February 27, 2009 10:58 AM
I live in New York, and I remember well when stores began to open on Sundays originally from 12-5 only. Gradually, the distinction between Saturday and Sunday selling eroded until we now have seven days a week of constant traffic and the enslaving consumerist frenzy. There was something orienting about a quiet Sunday. When I visit friends in a Pennsylvania Old Order Mennonite community, Sunday is markedly different from other days of the week. Church in the morning, dinner at noon, then quiet relaxing and reading or visiting family and friends. When we gave up the observance of the Sabbath, we as Americans, gave up the freedom to just sit and wait upon God.
Posted By: Susan Gill | February 28, 2009 3:18 PM
In the early 1980's, I was on the faculty at Asbury College in Wilmore, KY, south of Lexington. Nothing was open on Sunday. A convenience store was built across from the college, and proposed to open on Sundays--and did, despite the president of the college speaking in a college chapel opposing it, and urging all of us not to patronize it. It thrived. As the town was 5 miles from anywhere you could get a restaurant meal, and if you drove to church in another town you couldn't get gas or anything else on Sunday, the president was urging a level of restraint that was impractical at best. I admired his conviction; I deplored his impracticality. The moral to me was: pick your battles, and recognize that a "Christian" perspective doesn't look the same to everyone, even other Christians.
Posted By: Richard Sherry | March 1, 2009 6:15 AM
What is the writer talking about? You have always been able to buy cars in Illinois on Sunday. I know because that is when I went car shopping when I lived there.
Posted By: Chuck | March 12, 2009 11:11 AM
Blue Laws are completely impractical and archaic! They are a vain attempt by the Christian Right to control the lives and practices of others whom they otherwise don't have any right to control. The advantages of repealing all blue laws nationally are numerous: first, they allow consumers who normally work 6 days a week now to enjoy the luxury of going to make a car or motorcycle or beer purchase on Sunday. This will increase revenues to the States without raising taxes. This will increase convenience for all. If I want to get stoned cold drunk before 8am or 11am church service one Sunday morning, then by God, I will go buy a bottle on Saturday night and start right in first thing Sunday morning, and all the blue laws in the world won't stop me! Same thing for voting restrictions- with the way most Americans vote in politicians today, I think we'd do a better job if most of us were drunk prior to entering the voting booths! By the way, I am a non-drinker, I am standing up for the rights of all to live sanely and conveniently and in accordance with modern times without having the will of the religious nutcases pushed down our collective throats!
Thanks for listening, your feedback is welcome....
Posted By: Jerry Hawkins | April 20, 2009 4:29 PM
A good book that documents Sunday blue laws since the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great and the reasons people have used to promote Sunday blue laws is by Professor David Laband. Check it out here: www.sundaybluelaws.org
Posted By: Andrew Jones | September 27, 2009 4:04 AM
The sad reality of the whole matter is the BIBLICAL FACT that the Sabbath day of our God and creator is not Sunday (Daniel 7:25 Hebrews 4:8). Biblical truth will never be suppressed by man-made logic derived from the enemy who seeks to steal, kill and destroy. What a joyous day it will be when the prophecy of Malachi 4:1 is fulfilled!
Posted By: Nikki | December 6, 2009 2:26 PM
I would like to be notified on any and all research on the Sunday Blue Laws. Thank you, Sincerely, Rita C. Payne
Posted By: Rita C. Payne | June 27, 2010 1:25 AM