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Religion

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cleanhippie

(19,705 posts)
Tue Aug 14, 2012, 01:10 AM Aug 2012

The Life & Morals of Jesus of Nazareth [View all]

Otherwise known as the Jefferson Bible.

Done with his official work for the day, Thomas Jefferson sat in the new presidential mansion in Washington in 1803 and opened his Bible--not to pray, but to cut. He scoured the text for Jesus' greatest teachings, sliced out his favorite portions, and glued them into an empty volume. He called it "The Philosophy of Jesus." That book was lost to history.

In 1819, he started over and created a new version called "The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth," commonly referred to now as the Jefferson Bible. This volume was kept largely secret and passed among Jefferson's relatives until 1895, when it was discovered by the librarian at the Smithsonian. In 1904, it was published by Congress. (Cleanhippie comment: Can you imagine if it had remained secret and was discovered in recent times! It would NEVER have been published by Congress.)

What follows is, for the first time online, the complete Jefferson Bible--plus links to many of his key deletions. You'll see that Jefferson cut out miracles and signs or declarations of Jesus' divinity. As you read through the Jefferson Bible, click on the little scissors icons and you'll see what Jefferson deleted.

http://www.beliefnet.com/resourcelib/docs/62/The_Jefferson_Bible_The_Life__Morals_of_Jesus_of_Nazareth_1.html
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awesome veganlush Aug 2012 #1
This is exactly what I was referring to about a month ago Tumbulu Aug 2012 #2
Is it thin? cleanhippie Aug 2012 #3
no. i have copy. but it smallish. pansypoo53219 Aug 2012 #4
The one I bought is a lovely ~1" thick nicely bound book Tumbulu Aug 2012 #8
It has one of the saddest endings in literature. rug Aug 2012 #5
Eh? I'm fairly certain that there is lots of literature where the main character dies Warren Stupidity Aug 2012 #6
This is not Shane. rug Aug 2012 #7
I thought the ending of "old yeller" was the saddest ending ever. Warren Stupidity Aug 2012 #9
"That isn't profoundly sad, it is liberating." cleanhippie Aug 2012 #10
Liberating from what? rug Aug 2012 #11
That's the only thing in his writing that I really remember Leontius Aug 2012 #12
"Death hangs over thee: whilst yet thou livest, whilst thou mayest, be good." rug Aug 2012 #14
Yes and no as, he says if those who have no belief in eternal life have no fear of death Leontius Aug 2012 #16
I find fear of death easier to shed than the sadness and loss of death. rug Aug 2012 #17
Wait what? Warren Stupidity Aug 2012 #13
Sorry, I charge for them now. rug Aug 2012 #15
fair enough Warren Stupidity Aug 2012 #18
It is possible to do both. rug Aug 2012 #20
Maybe public shaming works after all. trotsky Aug 2012 #21
Is that what you try to do? rug Aug 2012 #22
Trying to appeal to your human decency sure hasn't worked. trotsky Aug 2012 #23
I'll try to be better. rug Aug 2012 #24
Good documentary on this... onager Aug 2012 #19
this was on last week.... madrchsod Aug 2012 #26
Thanks. Good to see more people aware of it. But you should also know this. SarahM32 Aug 2012 #25
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