On April 11, 2026, the Lake Union Conference Public Affairs and Religious Liberty Department hosted “Two Freedoms, One Nation: Religious and Civil Liberty at 250” on the campus of Andrews University, urging attendees to remain alert in defending religious liberty and freedom of conscience.

The divine service message by John Lomacang, Illinois Conference pastor and Three Angels Broadcasting Network host, formed the centerpiece of the day. In his sermon, “The Final Battle Over Conscience,” Lomacang argued that modern crises are conditioning society for a future conflict over worship and religious liberty.

Left to Right: Jennifer Gray Woods, Dan McGrath, Justin Spady and Vialo Weis. [Photo by Katie Fellows]

Opening with a personal account from Sept. 11, 2001, Lomacang recalled how he and his wife were on a flight from London to the United States when it was diverted to Canada after the attacks. “America changed drastically,” he said, describing the fear, suspicion and expanded security that followed.

From there, Lomacang said America is moving toward the prophetic scenario of Revelation 13. “We are all on the same toll road… America is on the toll road to fulfilling the prophetic vision of Revelation 13,” he said. He framed the deeper issue as one of personal choice and conscience. “Who owns the power of choice? Who has the right to control our choices?” he asked.

Lomacang pointed to 9/11 and the COVID-19 pandemic as examples of how crisis can accelerate social and political change. “Don’t allow crisis to go to waste,” he said, warning that urgency can justify lasting restrictions. He said such moments can shift public expectations from liberty toward security and compliance.

Left to Right: Kevin Burton, Melissa Reid, Timothy Golden, Jason O’Rourke and Jennifer Gray Woods. [Photo by Katie Fellows]

The day-long event also included a Sabbath School program featuring PARL directors from across the Lake Union. Using the weekly lesson as a starting point, panelists explored God’s character as love and the implications of that truth for human dignity, freedom of conscience and respect for individual decision-making. Speakers emphasized that the church’s commitment to religious liberty extends beyond its own members and includes defending freedom for all.

He also described cultural flashpoints such as vaccines, abortion, LGBTQ issues, race and climate as “wedge issues” that deepen division and prepare society to yield on future religious questions. “You can unite people that disagree through wedge issues,” he said. He closed by warning that calls for rest, unity and renewal could eventually become tools of coercion. Quoting Acts 5:29, he urged believers to settle their convictions now: “We ought to obey God rather than men.”

Left to Right: Natasha Richards, Shane Anderson, John Lomacang, Trevor O’Reggio and Jennifer Gray Woods. [Photo by Katie Fellows]

In the afternoon, two additional panels deepened the discussion. One, made up of theological scholars, highlighted the close connection between religious liberty and civil liberty and the importance of protecting both. The second examined the Seventh-day Adventist Church’s historical engagement with civil liberties, noting both examples of principled leadership and areas where the church has fallen short, while pointing to present efforts to advocate for freedom.

Lake Union Public Affairs and Religious Liberty Director Jennifer Woods said she hopes attendees left with “a deeper awareness of these issues and a renewed commitment to defend those foundational freedoms.”


Lake Union Herald staff