The US Constitution is the supreme law ratified on June 21, 1788, and took effect on March 4, 1789. The purpose of the American Constitution is to form a just society that ensures the security and prosperity of its members. The US Declaration of Independence was ratified on July 4, 1776, by the Second Continental Congress. This document aims to announce the independence of the Thirteen Colonies from British rule and proclaim them as sovereign states. Thomas Jefferson’s Letter to the Danbury Baptists was written in 1802 to express the urgent need to ensure the religious liberty of American citizens and emphasize the necessity to separate the church from the state. The present paper analyzes and compares the three introduced documents. The Constitution and the Declaration of Independence are essential documents that shape the fundamental rules and features of the American government and society. The Declaration was created ten years before the Constitution and could be regarded as “almost part of the Constitution itself” (McClellan, 2000, p. 122). The Declaration is the founding document of the US, whereas the Constitution is not (Barnett, 2019). The first reason for this is that the critical idea of the Declaration is the independence and sovereignty of states. This idea was later reflected in the American Constitution which declares the US as an independent and sovereign nation. The second reason for the importance of the Declaration for the Constitution is that it legally justifies the “armed resistance to the crown” that abused “the rights of the people of the United States” (Barnett, 2019, p. 23). The US Constitution borrows that idea by stating its responsibility to defend the citizens from external attacks. The cornerstone of modern American society is the equality of all citizens, regardless of their gender, religion, and race. However, this idea is relatively new and was not well-discussed in the Declaration and the initial version of the US Constitution. Even though the Declaration claims that all men are equal, scholars believe that phrase means only that citizens of former British colonies must enjoy the same rights as Englishmen (McClellan, 2000). Furthermore, the notion of equality was added to the American Constitution only in the 1970-s in the Equal Rights Amendment. The most important common feature of both documents is the emphasis on the independence of American society and its unity. Both documents ignore the issue of equality because, in the late 18th century, this topic was not relevant. Thus, to a great extent, the Constitution is based on the Declaration of Independence. Even though Thomas Jefferson’s Letter of 1802 to the Danbury Baptists is not an official document, it is essential for forming American culture and government the way we know it. In the letter, the third American president emphasized separating church and state (Todd, 2021).
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