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                                          <h1 style="margin: 0px 0px 10px; text-align: left; color: rgb(0, 61, 74); line-height: 100%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 34px; font-weight: normal; display: block;">An
                                            Evening with Barbara Walters</h1>
                                          
<div>She was born to
                                            non-practicing Jewish
                                            parents. Because her father
                                            owned a series of night
                                            clubs from Boston to Miami,
                                            she grew up in the company
                                            of show business
                                            celebrities. She attended
                                            Sarah Lawrence College in
                                            Bronxville, New York,
                                            graduating in 1953 with a
                                            degree in English. The
                                            “glass ceiling” was very
                                            much intact in that year
                                            largely determining what a
                                            woman could do or be. By
                                            refusing to accept those
                                            limits, this woman, Barbara
                                            Walters, was among the first
                                            to smash those barriers.
                                            Every woman in America is in
                                            her debt today. Christine
                                            and I had the pleasure of
                                            spending one evening
                                            recently listening to some
                                            of her life story at Drew
                                            University, the wonderful
                                            school in my community that
                                            enriches my life in so many
                                            ways. Ms. Walters was the
                                            featured speaker at the
                                            Thomas H. Kean Lectureship,
                                            named for New Jersey’s
                                            former governor, who was
                                            also Drew’s president for
                                            six years.</div>

                                          
<div>The lecture hall awaiting
                                            Barbara Walters’
                                            presentation at Drew was
                                            packed. The president of
                                            Drew, Dr. Vivian Bull,
                                            introduced her with typical
                                            and characteristic grace.
                                            Ms. Walters had earlier that
                                            day been given a Drew
                                            sweatshirt. Clearly this had
                                            happened to her many times
                                            before on other campuses,
                                            but, professional that she
                                            is, she made that Drew
                                            audience believe that this
                                            was the most elegant gift
                                            imaginable, by interpreting
                                            that sweatshirt as having
                                            conferred on her alumna
                                            status. The audience,
                                            purring with approval, was
                                            in the palm of her hand for
                                            the rest of the evening.</div>

                                          
<div>This remarkable woman then
                                            began to share with her
                                            audience the insights she
                                            had gained into many of the
                                            people whom she had
                                            interviewed. In one single
                                            program, she had brought
                                            together Anwar Sadat of
                                            Egypt and Menachem Begin of
                                            Israel. At some point in her
                                            career all of the major
                                            players in the Middle East
                                            had been her guests,
                                            including Muammar Gaddafi,
                                            Saddam Hussein, Bashar
                                            al-Assad and King Hussein.
                                            When one focuses on Europe,
                                            she has had one on one
                                            interviews with Margaret
                                            Thatcher, Boris Yeltsin and
                                            Vladimir Putin. Crossing the
                                            Atlantic to America, we
                                            discover that she has
                                            interviewed every president
                                            and first lady of the United
                                            States since Richard Nixon.
                                            Moving into show business,
                                            people ranging from pop star
                                            Michael Jackson to classical
                                            actress Katherine Hepburn
                                            have sat opposite her on her
                                            program. She traveled to
                                            China with Richard Nixon on
                                            the journey that opened
                                            China to the West, a moment
                                            that historians still refer
                                            to as one of President
                                            Nixon’s signal
                                            accomplishments. In the sex
                                            scandal that embroiled the
                                            White House during the
                                            incumbency of President Bill
                                            Clinton, Ms. Walters
                                            conducted an interview with
                                            Monica Lewinsky that was
                                            watched by 74,000,000
                                            viewers, setting a record
                                            that still stands for the
                                            largest audience ever to see
                                            a single television program.
                                            She became such a cultural
                                            icon that other shows would
                                            caricature her with the
                                            certain knowledge that the
                                            audience knew her so well
                                            that she would be
                                            immediately recognized. One
                                            thinks of Gilda Radner’s
                                            take-off on her as “Baba
                                            Wawa,” which set a mark for
                                            Saturday Night Live’s
                                            treatment of a celebrity
                                            that was not approached
                                            again until SNL’s Tina Fey
                                            did her Sarah Palin takeoff
                                            in 2008.</div>

                                          
<div>For more than 40 years,
                                            Barbara Walters stood at
                                            that place in the media
                                            world where the daily news
                                            comes together with mass
                                            communications. So
                                            successful was Ms. Walters
                                            in this arena that on one
                                            occasion when she shared an
                                            interview with Walter
                                            Cronkite, the dean of
                                            American newscasters, Mr.
                                            Cronkite expressed great
                                            anxiety, asking his staff
                                            when the interview was over:
                                            “Did Barbara get more
                                            information than I did?” She
                                            changed forever the sexist
                                            perception that television
                                            news required a male
                                            presenter. Every female
                                            television host on both
                                            network and cable television
                                            today is in her debt.</div>

                                          
<div>It was not always easy; no
                                            struggle for equality ever
                                            is. When Barbara Walters,
                                            armed with her freshly
                                            conferred English degree
                                            from Sarah Lawrence College,
                                            began to search for
                                            positions in journalism, she
                                            experienced the limiting
                                            stereotype that the only
                                            role in which prospective
                                            employers could imagine a
                                            woman filling was that of a
                                            secretary. She was
                                            frequently asked in job
                                            interviews: “How fast can
                                            you type?”</div>

                                          
<div>Yes, even Barbara Walters
                                            had to start in that
                                            secretarial role. After a
                                            few months as a secretary,
                                            however, she applied for and
                                            got an entry level position
                                            in television as an
                                            assistant to a publicity
                                            director for WRCA TV, the
                                            NBC affiliate in New York
                                            City. For this talented
                                            woman, this opportunity was
                                            the nose of the camel under
                                            the tent. She was on her way
                                            and what most believed was a
                                            firm “glass ceiling” was
                                            about to be challenged and
                                            cracked.</div>

                                          
<div>She suffered many
                                            indignities along the way.
                                            In time she moved to CBS
                                            News as a writer of news
                                            copy, then to NBC’s “Today
                                            Show,” once again as a
                                            writer. At that time, the
                                            working assumption in the
                                            industry was that a woman
                                            did not posses the necessary
                                            “gravitas” to deliver the
                                            news. The Today Show,
                                            however, discovered that
                                            they had a vast female
                                            audience remaining after the
                                            men departed for the “hunt”
                                            each day. So the Today Show
                                            decided to do a daily
                                            “women’s segment.” Barbara
                                            Walters became the writer
                                            and producer for that
                                            segment. In that role she
                                            acquired the nick name, “The
                                            Today Girl,” a title
                                            conveying the same insult
                                            black adult males felt when
                                            they were called “Boy!”
                                            Barbara Walters persevered,
                                            however, and as a result.
                                            her role on the Today Show
                                            began to grow. By 1963, she
                                            had achieved the status of
                                            co-host with Hugh Downs, but
                                            she was never given the
                                            title or the salary her male
                                            co-host was paid.</div>

                                          
<div>When Hugh Downs left in
                                            1969, those responsible for
                                            choosing his successor never
                                            once consulted Barbara
                                            Walters about his
                                            replacement. In 1971 Frank
                                            McGee was hired at twice the
                                            salary that Barbara was
                                            paid. With the help of her
                                            lawyer, she did have a
                                            clause added to her contract
                                            stating that if and when Mr.
                                            McGee ever left the program,
                                            she would officially become
                                            the co-host with the next
                                            male lead. Frank McGee died
                                            two years later and Barbara
                                            Walters was finally
                                            recognized with the title
                                            and salary that made her
                                            truly equal. The mountain
                                            had been climbed and she
                                            became the first female
                                            co-host of a morning news
                                            program in America.</div>

                                          
<div>In 1976, she became the
                                            first woman co-anchor of a
                                            network evening news
                                            program, joining Harry
                                            Reasoner on ABC’s Evening
                                            News. Reasoner, who had
                                            previously hosted this
                                            program alone, resented her
                                            intrusion. It was not so
                                            much resentment of Barbara
                                            Walters, but of the newly
                                            perceived need to have both
                                            a male and a female in the
                                            anchor chairs.</div>

                                          
<div>At 75 years of age after
                                            being not only co-anchor of
                                            the Evening News, but also
                                            chief correspondent and host
                                            for 20/20, she left ABC,
                                            going out in a blaze of
                                            glory. In her last year on
                                            20/20 she interviewed
                                            Hillary Rodham Clinton,
                                            Fidel Castro and Martha
                                            Stewart!</div>

                                          
<div>Ms. Walters lived in that
                                            generation when for women
                                            marriage, family and career
                                            collided. Neither the world
                                            of journalism nor the world
                                            of business had yet fully
                                            understood the conflict that
                                            every modern professional
                                            woman faces when she refuses
                                            to sacrifice marriage and
                                            the raising of children to
                                            the demand of professional
                                            success. Barbara Walters
                                            exemplified that conflict.
                                            She was married four times,
                                            but only to three men, since
                                            she was married and divorced
                                            from the same man on two
                                            different occasions. She had
                                            only one child and that by
                                            adoption. She opened the
                                            doors, however, and today’s
                                            professional women
                                            increasingly live in a world
                                            that understands far better
                                            the issues that modern
                                            career women face.</div>

                                          
<div>I look at my four
                                            daughters, all of whom are
                                            in demanding careers in the
                                            fields of finance, law,
                                            science and medicine. Two of
                                            them know what it is to be
                                            professionally engaged for
                                            60-70 hours a week. They
                                            have all made significant
                                            sacrifices to be able to do
                                            what they do. These
                                            daughters have also seen the
                                            world grow more
                                            understanding of women.
                                            Those who are married have
                                            supportive husbands, who see
                                            parenting as a joint venture
                                            to say nothing of cooking,
                                            vacuuming, shopping and
                                            doing the necessary errands
                                            that every household needs
                                            to keep functioning. In her
                                            generation, Barbara Walters
                                            had none of these supports.</div>

                                          
<div>I look at the Christian
                                            Church, traditionally a
                                            bulwark of sexism, and I see
                                            women being welcomed
                                            increasingly into all roles
                                            of leadership. There are
                                            still barriers. The Roman
                                            Catholic Church,
                                            Christianity’s largest,
                                            still regards women as
                                            somehow biologically unfit
                                            for ordination. In a church,
                                            which claims papal
                                            infallibility and in which
                                            power flows from the pope to
                                            the bishops to the priests
                                            and finally to the laity
                                            this means that until women
                                            are ordained, they will
                                            remain powerless in that
                                            church. Separate but equal
                                            is always separate, it is
                                            never equal.</div>

                                          
<div>The attempt of males to
                                            subjugate women, to force
                                            them back into the
                                            traditional boxes of male
                                            oppression is seen today in
                                            American politics in the
                                            debate over funding
                                            reproductive health issues
                                            and in attacks on Planned
                                            Parenthood. It is also seen
                                            in male attitudes. Witness
                                            the former CIA director
                                            Michael Hayden suggesting
                                            that Senator Dianne
                                            Feinstein was “too
                                            emotional” about her desire
                                            to see the Senate’s report
                                            on CIA abuse and torture
                                            released to the public; Mike
                                            Huckabee, a potential GOP
                                            presidential candidate,
                                            still wanting to lecture
                                            women on “controlling their
                                            libidos,” and Chris
                                            Christie, New Jersey’s
                                            governor, wanting to blame
                                            his former assistant,
                                            Bridget Kelly, for his
                                            George Washington Bridge
                                            problems, asserting that her
                                            “personal life had impaired
                                            her judgment,” and
                                            gratuitously revealing
                                            inappropriate details about
                                            Ms. Kelly in the process</div>

                                          
<div>Thanks to people like
                                            Barbara Walters, we have
                                            come a long way, but sexism
                                            is deep and real. I suspect
                                            that if one of our major
                                            political parties nominates
                                            a woman for president, the
                                            opposing party will seek to
                                            destroy her, unable to cope
                                            with that ultimate
                                            transition in power.</div>

                                          
<div>They will fail because the
                                            world has moved beyond that
                                            mentality, but they will
                                            still try. Sexism will
                                            ultimately die. I give
                                            thanks to Barbara Walters
                                            for driving a few more nails
                                            into its coffin.</div>

                                          
<div>~John Shelby Spong</div>

                                          
<div>Read the essay online <a style="color: rgb(68, 135, 207); font-weight: normal; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://johnshelbyspong.us2.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b51b9cf441b059bb232418480&id=88d40d893f&e=0471473479" target="_blank">here</a>.</div>

                                        </div>

                                      </td>
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                                  <tbody>
                                    <tr>
                                      <td valign="top">
                                        
<div style="text-align: left; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); line-height: 150%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 16px;">
                                          <h2 style="margin: 0px 0px 10px; text-align: left; color: rgb(68, 135, 207); line-height: 100%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 30px; font-weight: normal; display: block;">Question
                                            & Answer</h2>
                                          
<div>Patrick Turner, via the
                                            Internet, writes:</div>

                                          <h4 style="margin: 0px 0px 10px; text-align: left; color: rgb(68, 135, 207); line-height: 100%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 22px; font-weight: normal; display: block;">Question:</h4>
                                          
<div>I enjoy your writings very
                                            much. The question I have
                                            is: Why are the gospels
                                            arranged in the order they
                                            are rather than the order in
                                            which they were written?
                                            After reading a fair amount
                                            of your writings and now
                                            some of your new book about
                                            John, (<em>The Fourth
                                              Gospel: Tales of a Jewish
                                              Mystic</em>) I began to
                                            wonder if the gospels are
                                            arranged as they are due to
                                            their paralleling, to some
                                            degree, the development of
                                            Christianity? My point:
                                            Matthew is the most Jewish,
                                            then Mark not so much, Luke
                                            more
                                            Hellenistic/mythological and
                                            finally John which is not
                                            only advanced theology and
                                            mystical, but can be read as
                                            anti-Semitic, the very
                                            opposite of Matthew. It is
                                            possible that the council of
                                            Nicea, which arranged the
                                            canon, recognized John as
                                            anti-Semitic and was unaware
                                            of the theory you embrace
                                            about this book being about
                                            different factions within
                                            Judaism? Did they want to
                                            show two very different
                                            points of view at very
                                            different locations in the
                                            canon?
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div> </div>

                                          <h4 style="margin: 0px 0px 10px; text-align: left; color: rgb(68, 135, 207); line-height: 100%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 22px; font-weight: normal; display: block;">Answer:</h4>
                                          
<div>Dear Patrick,
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>Thank you for your letter
                                            and your question. When the
                                            Canon of the New Testament
                                            was being drawn up, I doubt
                                            if people knew the order in
                                            which the books were
                                            written. I also doubt that
                                            they followed your
                                            suggestion of moving from
                                            the gospel that was the most
                                            Jewish to the gospel that
                                            was perceived as
                                            anti-Jewish. I suspect it
                                            had more to do with the
                                            popularity of the various
                                            gospels in various parts of
                                            Christianity and with
                                            accidents associated with
                                            timing.
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>If one scans early church
                                            records, it is clear that
                                            Matthew was the most popular
                                            gospel; Mark appeared
                                            truncated by comparison.
                                            Indeed, it was thought that
                                            Mark was a kind of “Reader’s
                                            Digest” or shortened version
                                            of Matthew. Matthew had a
                                            birth story and a
                                            resurrection narrative that
                                            Mark did not have. Matthew
                                            expanded the story of Jesus
                                            being tempted in the
                                            wilderness by giving content
                                            to the temptations and by
                                            supplying the biblical texts
                                            that Jesus used to reject
                                            those temptations. Matthew
                                            drew the portrait of Jesus
                                            as “The New Moses” and added
                                            much teaching material that
                                            Mark did not include. One
                                            finds, for example no Sermon
                                            on the Mount in any other
                                            gospel.
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>When John’s gospel emerged,
                                            near the end of the first
                                            century, it challenged
                                            Matthew’s popularity and the
                                            two of them became the most
                                            influential of the gospels.
                                            John’s star was destined to
                                            rise in Christian history,
                                            although a recent poll about
                                            people’s favorite books in
                                            the Bible still places
                                            Matthew ahead of John with
                                            Luke third and Mark bringing
                                            up the rear. If we were to
                                            put the gospels in the order
                                            of their writing they would
                                            line up Mark, Matthew, Luke
                                            and John. The biggest debate
                                            in scholarly circles today
                                            is about the date of Luke.
                                            Some scholars now advocate
                                            dating Luke as late as 140
                                            CE. I disagree with that,
                                            but I am fascinated by their
                                            arguments.
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>Matthew also in the minds
                                            of early church leaders best
                                            reflected the transition
                                            from the Old Testament to
                                            the New Testament, which may
                                            have been a factor in
                                            letting it open the New
                                            Testament. He wrote his
                                            account of Jesus by wrapping
                                            Jesus deeply into the Hebrew
                                            Scriptures. “This was done
                                            that it might fulfill that
                                            which was spoken by the
                                            prophets” was a familiar
                                            line in Matthew.
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>The gospels were placed at
                                            the beginning of the New
                                            Testament, although all of
                                            them were written well after
                                            the authentic letters of
                                            Paul. I think it was done
                                            this way because it was
                                            believed that the gospels
                                            described the life of Jesus,
                                            while the epistles described
                                            life in the Christian Church
                                            after the time of Jesus.
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>The Pauline Epistles were
                                            organized according to
                                            length for the most part,
                                            that is why Romans is first
                                            and Philemon is last. When
                                            the Canon of the New
                                            Testament was finalized
                                            fourteen epistles were
                                            attributed to Paul. Today
                                            modern scholarship has cast
                                            great doubt on the Pauline
                                            authorship of half of them.
                                            The genuine Pauline epistles
                                            (and in the order in which
                                            they appear to have been
                                            written) are: I
                                            Thessalonians, Galatians, I
                                            Corinthians, II Corinthians,
                                            Romans, Philemon and
                                            Philippians. The epistles
                                            that are generally dismissed
                                            as the work of Paul today
                                            are: II Thessalonians,
                                            Colossians and Ephesians.
                                            The epistles that are all
                                            but universally dismissed as
                                            Pauline today are I Timothy,
                                            II Timothy, Titus and
                                            Hebrews. I laid all of this
                                            out in much greater detail
                                            in my book: <em>Re-Claiming
                                              the Bible for a
                                              Non-Religious World</em>.
                                            I hope this helps.
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>My best,
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>
                                          </div>

                                          
<div>John Shelby Spong</div>

                                        </div>

                                      </td>
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                                </table>
                                
                                
                                <table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="20">
                                  <tbody>
                                    <tr>
                                      <td valign="top">
                                        
<div style="text-align: left; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); line-height: 150%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 16px;">
                                          <h2 style="margin: 0px 0px 10px; text-align: left; color: rgb(68, 135, 207); line-height: 100%; font-family: Georgia; font-size: 30px; font-weight: normal; display: block;">Announcements</h2>
                                          
<div><span style="font-size: 24px;">Bishop
                                              Spong is a guest lecturer
                                              at Pacific School of
                                              Religion this Summer for 5
                                              days.</span><br>

                                            <br>

                                            <br>

                                            <strong><span style="font-size: 18px;">Topic: <em>The
                                                  Fourth Gospel: Tales
                                                  of a Jewish Mystic</em></span></strong><br>

                                            <br>

                                            <span style="font-size: 18px;">Dates
                                              and Times:  July 14-18 (1
                                              wk), 9:00am-1:00pm</span><br>

                                            <br>

                                            PACIFIC SCHOOL OF RELIGION
                                            PSR,<br>

                                            Chapel, 1798 Scenic Avenue
                                            Berkeley, CA US<br>

                                            <br>

                                            Credits: 1.5 academic
                                            credits / 2.0 CEUs (20
                                            contact hours)<br>

                                            <br>

                                            Course Number: NT-2221 (for
                                            credit) or NT-0001 (for
                                            CEUs)<br>

                                            <br>

                                            <a style="color: rgb(68, 135, 207); font-weight: normal; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://johnshelbyspong.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b51b9cf441b059bb232418480&id=3d4e926d14&e=0471473479" target="_blank"><img width="200" height="310" align="right" style="margin: 5px; border: currentColor; width: 200px; height: 310px; text-transform: capitalize; line-height: 14px; font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; text-decoration: none; display: inline;" src="https://gallery.mailchimp.com/b51b9cf441b059bb232418480/images/3D_cover_Spong_fourth_gospel.jpg"></a>Description: This
                                            class will lift the Gospel
                                            of John out of the Bible in
                                            general and away from the
                                            other gospels, in
                                            particular, so that it can
                                            be studied in its own
                                            integrity. We will identify
                                            the unique themes found in
                                            the Fourth Gospel and seek
                                            to understand those themes
                                            in the light of the context
                                            of the history of the late
                                            first century when this
                                            gospel was being written.
                                            This means we will spend
                                            some time analyzing the
                                            different patterns of
                                            thought revealed in the
                                            Fourth Gospel, from the low
                                            Christology of the earlier
                                            part of this book to the
                                            higher Christology of the
                                            latter parts. We will
                                            speculate on the number of
                                            authors that might be
                                            revealed in the analysis.
                                            The course will proceed by
                                            breaking John’s Gospel into
                                            its constituent parts and
                                            studying each in turn.<br>

                                            <br>

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