Are We Still Worthy of What They Declared?

Published: June 29, 2026

By Jim Lichtman
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Painting: John Trumbull

For the most part, my high school history classes consisted of names, dates, documents, and battles. What I’ve learned since then — through historians like Doris Kearns-Goodwin, David McCullough, Ken Burns, and others — is that history comes alive when we discover the human stories behind the events.

One of those stories belongs to John Hart of New Jersey, a farmer and signer of the Declaration of Independence. After he put his name to that document, Hart was forced to flee as British and Hessian troops moved through New Jersey. He hid in forests and caves while his children sought safety with relatives and friends. Seen that way, the final sentence of the Declaration no longer feels like a formal closing. It feels like the plain truth of what those men were prepared to risk:

“And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”

Adopted by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, those words were not merely rhetorical. They were a personal commitment by the signers to risk everything for the cause of American independence.

Over the course of three commentaries, I’ll explore a larger question: What kind of resolve did it take to bring America into being — and do we still possess it?

Part One: Willed into Existence.

The American experiment began in division and doubt. The colonies were not united; they were uneasy. Some still hoped for reconciliation with Britain. Others feared war more than tyranny. No one knew whether rebellion would bring liberty or ruin. Before there was a declaration, there was hesitation. And before there was conviction, there was uncertainty.

The birth of this nation was not inevitable. It was willed into existence.

For more than a decade, grievances accumulated. The distance between London and the colonies was measured not just in miles, but in an ever-widening sense that the colonists were being governed without being heard.

Yet even then, independence was not the obvious solution. Many colonists still considered themselves loyal British subjects. The idea of severing ties with the Crown felt radical, even dangerous. In some cases, it set neighbor against neighbor. The Revolution carried enormous risk: economic collapse and the possibility that the entire effort would end not in liberty but in ruin.

By the summer of 1776, debate could no longer be postponed. Blood had already been shed at Lexington and Concord. In Philadelphia, delegates to the Continental Congress argued not only with Britain, but with each other. Some urged patience. Others pressed for separation.

A declaration of independence was not a symbolic gesture. It was a public act of defiance against the world’s most powerful empire. To sign such a document was to invite charges of treason, not a negotiated misunderstanding. Once declared, independence could not be undeclared.

What we now remember as destiny was, at the time, an enormous gamble. The men who would soon sign their names were not insulated idealists. They were merchants, lawyers, farmers, and tradesmen. They were men with families, property, and futures to lose. They understood precisely what failure would cost. That made their decision all the more remarkable and urgent. Not because they were fearless, but because they acted despite fear.

“Join, or Die” was not just a slogan. It was a line in the sand.

Independence was not declared by colonists certain of victory. It was declared by a people convinced that liberty required resolve. They understood that rights are not self-executing and that self-government demands character. Their gamble succeeded because they were willing to stake “our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor” on an idea.

Five days before the 250th anniversary of our democratic republic, surrounded by our own disagreements and doubts, we would do well to ask whether we still possess that kind of resolve.

And the character to sustain it.

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