Why Work-Free Sundays?
by Rose Marie Berger | June 2010
In March more than 70 organizations, including churches, labor unions, and civil society groups, met for the first European conference on work-free Sundays.
In March more than 70 organizations, including churches, labor unions, and civil society groups, met for the first European conference on work-free Sundays. “As a matter of principle,” stated the Conference of European Churches in a press release, “all citizens of the European Union (EU) are entitled to benefit from a work-free Sunday.” Research shows improvement in worker health, family life, and civil society engagement when there is a shared work-free day. “We need more civil society alliances to counter the economization of all life,” Ulrich Duchrow, theologian and co-founder of Kairos Europa, told Sojourners. “Sunday, originally the Sabbath, is a gift of the biblical faith in God, the liberator of slaves from exploitative labor, to all peoples of the earth.”

