WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama is putting a symbolic twist on a time-honored tradition, taking the oath of office for his second term with his hand placed not on a single Bible, but two — one owned by Martin Luther King Jr. and one by Abraham Lincoln.
The inclusion of King's Bible is
particularly significant since the inauguration comes on Jan. 21, the
federal holiday in honor of the civil rights leader, who delivered his
“I Have a Dream” speech 50 years ago at the Lincoln Memorial. Obama will
be facing the memorial as he takes the oath. King's Bible, which his
children say he used early in his career as a preacher, has never been
part of a presidential inauguration.
The
selection of the pair of Bibles is richly symbolic of the struggle for
equality in America, beginning with Lincoln's emancipation of the slaves
through King's civil rights movement and ultimately to Obama becoming
the nation's first black president.
Inaugural planners
say Obama plans to place his left hand on the stacked Bibles held by
first lady Michelle Obama as he raises his right hand to repeat the oath
administered by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts. It hasn't
been determined which will be on top with Obama's hand actually resting
on it, but King's is larger so it may need to be on the bottom.
‘TRAVELING BIBLE’
Obama
used the Lincoln Bible while taking the oath four years ago — the first
time it had been used since the 16th president's inauguration in 1861.
Obama's inaugural committee says that the president plans to use the
first lady's family's Bible for a private swearing-in at the White House
on Sunday, Jan. 20. Public presidential inaugurations traditionally
aren't held on Sundays, even though the Constitution states that a
president's new term begins automatically at noon on the 20th.
King's children
describe their father's King James version as his “traveling Bible” that
he took as part of a collection of books he carried with him while
constantly on the road and used for inspiration and preparing sermons
and speeches. His daughter Bernice King says her father marked the pages
with several dates from May 1954, the same month he delivered his first
sermon at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala.
'SOURCE OF STRENGTH'
“We
know our father would be deeply moved to see President Obama take the
oath of office using his Bible,” King's children said in a statement
provided by the inaugural committee.
“His traveling Bible
inspired him as he fought for freedom, justice and equality, and we hope
it can be a source of strength for the president as he begins his
second term.”
Obama also plans to
honor King throughout his inaugural weekend, beginning by asking
Americans to volunteer in their communities on Saturday, Jan. 19, to
honor the civil rights leader's legacy of service. The King family plans
to participate. Inaugural planners also say there will be a float
honoring King in the parade to the White House after the swearing-in
ceremony.
Though there is no
constitutional requirement for the use of a Bible while taking the oath,
George Washington began the tradition with a Bible hastily grabbed from
St. John's Masonic Lodge No. 1 for his swearing-in on April 30, 1789,
in New York. Since then, presidents have typically chosen Bibles with
historical or personal significance, many using family heirlooms. Obama
is not the first president to select two Bibles — Harry Truman did so in
1949, Dwight Eisenhower in 1953 and Richard Nixon in 1969.
ROBINSON BIBLE
Some
presidents kiss the book after completing the oath. Sometimes the Bible
is open to meaningful passages, such as President George W. Bush's
choice of Isaiah 40:31 — “Those who hope in the Lord will renew their
strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not
grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.”
The Lincoln Bible is
part of the Library of Congress collections. The Supreme Court clerk
bought the Bible, bound in burgundy velvet with a gold-washed white
metal rim and heavily gilded edges, especially for Lincoln's
swearing-in.
The first lady's Robinson family Bible was a gift from her late father,
Fraser Robinson III, to his mother, LaVaughn Delores Robinson, on
Mother's Day 1958. The first lady's grandmother was the first black
female manager of a Moody Bible Institute's bookstore, and her son's
present was her favorite, inaugural planners say.
They also say Vice
President Joe Biden will use a Bible with a Celtic cross on the cover
that has been in his family for 120 years. Biden has used the Bible
every time he's been sworn into federal office, back to his entry in the
Senate 40 years ago.
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