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Atheism and skepticism are not coterminous

What is the message of this billboard?

As Hemant Mehta as well as various news outlets are pointing out,
the message is that atheists, however much they may think of themselves
as ultra-skeptical and critical thinkers, aren’t always. Having “skeptics” or “freethinkers” in the name of your organization or in your self-description doesn’t mean it fits all of the time, if at all.

You see, the quote is not an authentic quote from Thomas Jefferson.

Anyone
who is familiar with the Jefferson Bible would probably have realized
the need to investigate the quote’s authenticity. Jefferson didn’t
discard the entire Bible. He took scissors to the Gospels, cutting out
miracles and the like but leaving those things that he thought had
“redeeming features.”

And so it is perhaps not surprising that a widely found version of the quotation online reads “I do not find in orthodox
Christianity one redeeming feature.” That would be a more plausible
quotation to come from Jefferson. But even so, there is no evidence that
he ever said it in that form either.

In addition to this recent episode involving a billboard with a
spurious quotation making the point, Jefferson himself provides evidence
that skepticism is not coterminous with atheism. Jefferson apparently
did not altogether refrain from using the epithet “Christian” in
reference to himself, and while Deist also seems apt to many, Jefferson would perhaps have preferred the term “Unitarian.”

Whether you are religious or atheist, Deist, Unitarian, or
traditional theist, it is a mistake to assume that you are above the
need for caution, skepticism and critical thinking.

Originally posted at Exploring Our Matrix.

James F. McGrath

James F. McGrath teaches New Testament at Butler University. 

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