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Jefferson's Secret Bible (VIDEO)

First Posted: 02/20/2012 8:17 am Updated: 02/20/2012 8:21 am

The first presidential candidate to face attack for his religious beliefs was Thomas Jefferson, in the campaign against incumbent John Adams in 1800. Northern clerics branded Jefferson not only a deist, but an “atheist,” a “heretic” and a “Jacobin” of the French Revolution. “The election of any man avowing the principles of Mr. Jefferson would ... destroy religion, introduce immorality, and loosen all the bonds of society,” wrote one. Jefferson himself did little to push back against the rumors or contradict the inaccuracies. From his perspective, religion was purely a matter of personal concern, not the business of the public at large. After all, Americans had overthrown the institution of the monarchy, which proclaimed the head of state to be also the head of an established religion that all the king’s subjects were supposed to follow. By contrast, the American Presidency was a purely secular office. Why should the voters care -- or even know -- about a candidate’s private beliefs?

Today, historians try to piece together Jefferson’s religious beliefs from what little he wrote about it. Some of the best evidence lies in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, in the small volume that is often called “Jefferson’s Bible.” It is a book that Jefferson made himself in the years 1819-1820, when he was retired from public life. Starting with multiple printed copies of the New Testament, Jefferson literally cut and pasted excerpts of the text onto blank pages to create what he called “The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth.” He selected from the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John in order to compose a single biographical account of Jesus’s life. He included Jesus’s moral teachings, such as the Sermon on the Mount and the many parables recounted in the Gospels. At the same time, Jefferson left parts of the Gospels out of his compilation. Influenced by the Enlightenment, he omitted anything that seemed to him contrary to “Reason,” which included anything miraculous (as the loaves and the fishes) or anything that suggested Jesus himself was divine (the Annunciation and the Resurrection). Jefferson believed that those parts of the New Testament represented misunderstandings or mistakes made by Jesus’s disciples, or inaccuracies added later by authorities of the Christian church.

Jefferson’s experience of public religious controversy was one reason that he kept his book a purely private project. He had no intention of publishing it or even, as far as we know, of showing it to friends or family members. He made it for himself. “I never go to bed without an hour, or half an hour’s previous reading of something moral,” he told one correspondent. His library included many books of philosophy, but the wear on the pages -- he dog-eared his favorites -- suggests that this book was often read.

After Jefferson’s death, the book stayed in the hands of his family. Late in the 19th century, the librarian of the Smithsonian Institution tracked it down and purchased it for the national museum. The book first went on exhibition at the Atlanta Cotton Exposition of 1895. A few years later, the U.S. Congress ordered facsimiles of the book and distributed them to the two chambers. (The Senate supply lasted up into the 1950s.) Meanwhile, the original volume stayed at the museum, but it gradually became more brittle. The museum’s paper and book conservators have now painstakingly rescued it from deterioration. The book is on exhibition, together with the English language Testaments from which Jefferson cut out his excerpts. It is the work of Jefferson’s own hands and the product of his remarkable mind -- a mind that helped to shape the early American republic.

Harry R. Rubenstein
Barbara Clark Smith
Curators of the Smithsonian National Museum Of American History

"Jefferson's Secret Bible" premiers Presidents Day, Monday, Feb. 20 at 8PM ET/PT on the Smithsonian Channel.

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The first presidential candidate to face attack for his religious beliefs was Thomas Jefferson, in the campaign against incumbent John Adams in 1800. Northern clerics branded Jefferson not only a deis...
The first presidential candidate to face attack for his religious beliefs was Thomas Jefferson, in the campaign against incumbent John Adams in 1800. Northern clerics branded Jefferson not only a deis...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
sunshine14 02:29 PM on 02/20/2012
He did what Jesus taught us all to do and how to live among our fellow man.  We are to seek personally all Truths and not to accept or allow anyone to rule over one self personally, whether in ones own faith or personal choices in life. No one as Jesus taught us all should be forced to accept what others tell us to think or do in our own personal choices. Jesus said: Have YOU not read? Heard? Studied?  Read More...
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Pole
retired professor of History, Comparative Religion
12:29 PM on 07/19/2012
One theory I have read about Thomas Jefferson's editing efforts to create a bible/New Testament devoid of miracles and assorted portions of the Christian New Testament is that he aimed his revision to the Indian population. This theory stipulates that Jefferson wanted to present Jesus as an ethical teacher who Indians could follow. Another motivation may support Jefferson's own rational nature that followed the Deist position of a God not intimately involved in human affairs. I have a copy of this book in my collection. It presents no new information but what it doesn't include may speak volumes about this great man, Statesman, Scientist, inventor, politician and writer
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alicia Westberry
college student & Wordpress blog/ website owner
03:01 PM on 04/17/2012
This is an interesting bit of history and I'm glad it was preserved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jlmurt
06:38 PM on 03/26/2012
I think he should be called Slumberman.
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iknowscottyknows
05:34 PM on 03/18/2012
Jefferson considered Jesus a worthy moral teacher, yet Jesus claimed he was with God at the beginning of creation and claimed equality with God.

So he was either telling the truth, or was a liar or a madman. Since Jefferson rejected the words Jesus spoke about the miracles and his deity, he must have accepted the worthy moral liar or the worthy moral madman. That's interesting logic.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jlmurt
06:32 PM on 03/26/2012
Jesus probably didn't say that. That is what this is all about.
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Plankeye00
09:11 AM on 03/17/2012
Jefferson already read the Qaran diligently as president.

Why?

To do what any president should do. He wanted to know his enemy.

Look it up.
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jlmurt
06:34 PM on 03/26/2012
It was probably more towards loving his enemy if an enemy at all.
11:23 AM on 03/10/2012
Some lived up to morals of the bible and some didn't but that is humanity and that is what the bible says is wrong with humanity.
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iknowscottyknows
05:35 PM on 03/18/2012
None do. That's why Jesus came.
11:21 AM on 03/10/2012
They raised families to live om through them.
11:21 AM on 03/10/2012
The founding fathers did not go around aborting children either.
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jlmurt
06:36 PM on 03/26/2012
Scratch your arm and you'll kill more life than most abortions. Which by the way, God performs regularly.
11:19 AM on 03/10/2012
The bible and natural law proves certain things when it comes to some of the issues today.One issue same sex marriage naturally creates no children.The bible and natural law defends this.
11:15 AM on 03/10/2012
Just because history comes out and says he did not live up to the moral obligations of the teaching of the bible does not prove he thought of no benefit.
11:12 AM on 03/10/2012
Everyone gets their history from written documents to back up statements.If the jews new he did not exist they would not have just argued messiah ship and the divinity issue and still do.If Jefferson did not believe the moral teachings of jesus he would not of had his daughter enrolled in it in france.He would not of taken the time to create and clip his search into it.
11:04 AM on 03/10/2012
You don't believe a historical record yet you believe everything written on the founding fathers being all atheist or deist?From what documents?So documents supports the jefferson view but not jesus history?
11:01 AM on 03/10/2012
For many many years the existence of Jesus has been questioned but here is my question we know that the jews did not believe him to be messiah or divine,in fact this argument has gone on for centuries,if jesus did not exist they would have argued his existence as well.Why would they have disputed just messiahship?
10:53 AM on 03/10/2012
Facts point to this while he was in France.He did enroll her in a catholic institution.He did admit Jesus a worthy moral teacher.
10:51 AM on 03/10/2012
Jefferson's actions with his daughter seem to indicate that their was some benefit to the belief in christianity.