Answer:
Assuring that the harms of the British Government wouldn't be repeated
Explanation:
I assume you mean the American Revolution by back then, and the reason that freedom of religion was so important (as well as many other Bill of Rights amendments) was to assure that the harms of the British Government (detailed in the Declaration of Independence) could not be repeated. Many people fled to America to escape the religious oppression of the Church of England, as it was both very strict on what religions were allowed and very closely entangled with the British Government, hence the separation of church and state in America.
The answer is 2/3rds of the employees
Answer:
If this had not been done, we would not have the government that we do. In fact, the Articles of Confederation described a different government in an equal level of detail, and those articles had also been ratified by the people. If the Articles had not been ratified, that government would not have existed. We wrote, and ratified the Constitution because we tried the Articles of Confederation and found that they did not work.
Without the constitution, we have nothing.
Without a Constitution of some kind you either have no government, or a crazy autocratic one.
It is then we must turn to the witnesses of faith: to Abraham, who "in hope. . . believed against hope";51 to the Virgin Mary, who, in "her pilgrimage of faith", walked into the "night of faith"52 in sharing the darkness of her son's suffering and death; and to so many others: "Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith."53