I do, since he wrote it for political reasons only.
"Although today Jefferson's Danbury letter is thought of as a principled statement on the prudential and constitutional relationship between church and state, it was in fact a political statement written to reassure pious Baptist constituents that Jefferson was indeed a friend of religion and to strike back at the Federalist-Congregationalist establishment in Connecticut for shamelessly vilifying him as an infidel and atheist in the recent campaign. James H. Hutson of the Library of Congress has concluded that the President "regarded his reply to the Danbury Baptists as a political letter, not as a dispassionate theoretical pronouncement on the relations between government and religion."[4]
Yet in reality:
"Throughout his public career, including two terms as President, Jefferson pursued policies incompatible with the "high and impregnable" wall the modern Supreme Court has erroneously attributed to him. For example, he endorsed the use of federal funds to build churches and to support Christian missionaries working among the Indians. The absurd conclusion that countless courts and commentators would have us reach is that Jefferson routinely pursued policies that violated his own "wall of separation."
http://www.heritage.org/research/re...changed-church-state-law-policy-and-discourse
That's interesting. But the wall of separation is there mostly to ensure that the rights of religious minorities are not trampled upon by the majority. Jefferson may have contradicted himself in terms of providing funding here and there, but the message of basic rights being given to all equally stands.
Jefferson, and the rest of the founders, all also contradicted themselves when they said that all men have a right to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness by owning slaves. But you don't see people clambering to re-institute slavery, do you?
You don't need to tell me how the activist Court has usurped their authority and invented constitutional authority where there was none.
I'd agree that it has happened, but to say that is the norm isn't accurate