{"id":4129,"date":"2020-07-05T21:09:04","date_gmt":"2020-07-06T01:09:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=4129"},"modified":"2020-11-08T13:33:23","modified_gmt":"2020-11-08T18:33:23","slug":"the-willoughbys","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/the-willoughbys\/","title":{"rendered":"The Willoughbys"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>For this week&#8217;s SpiritFlix message, Rev. Lee preaches on the Netflix movie &#8220;The Willoughbys.&#8221; This movie is about a group of children who are mistreated by their parents, until a person with a higher standard of care shows up in their lives. What if we all held ourselves to a higher standard of care right now? It just might save someone&#8217;s life.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Willoughbys<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>[00:00:00]<br>The following is a message from Wellspring&#8217;s congregation. Good morning, everybody.<br>[00:00:06]<br>So are you ready for our week count? I feel like that&#8217;s somehow part of my job now. This is our 17th week. This is<br>our 17th week online here at Wellspring&#8217;s.<br>[00:00:21]<br>It&#8217;s July.<br>[00:00:25]<br>I can hardly believe it. And as I have been thinking back over this time that we&#8217;ve been gathering like this from a<br>distance, I&#8217;ve actually been appreciating something about the human mind that I knew, but that I&#8217;m having a real<br>direct experience of right now, which is its elasticity, you know, its ability to adjust and turn something that is<br>strange into something that we can do without having to think about it. I feel like that experiment has happened in<br>real time for me over these past 17 weeks. This is now somewhat routine. I know how it works. Right. I remember<br>early on in March and even in April for me and maybe you, due to feeling like almost everything I had to do<br>required at least half of my brain. Right.<br>[00:01:18]<br>Simple things. Decisions like what do I need from the grocery store? Should I go outside today? How if I&#8217;m trying to<br>do this part of my job, how do I do it when I am in my house, when I cannot go to the office, when I cannot see that<br>person? What happens if some kind of household appliance breaks? All right. Those kinds of things took up our<br>whole attention in the beginning, and now they require less extra thought.<br>[00:01:54]<br>It&#8217;s been 17 weeks. That&#8217;s one hundred and nineteen days. That&#8217;s a third of a year.<br>[00:02:03]<br>We&#8217;ve been living in the midst of a global pandemic under like under like unlike anything we&#8217;ve ever lived through<br>before.<br>[00:02:13]<br>For a third of a year, we have figured some things out.<br>[00:02:19]<br>We have figured out ways to work with this reality. I&#8217;m proud of us, especially here. We figured out this. We figured<br>out these online services. We&#8217;ve figured out other ways for Wellspring&#8217;s to connect during the week. We have<br>figured out how it works. At least I have one. The dishwasher repair guy has to come over during Covid. We figure it<br>out.<br>[00:02:42]<br>What networks of support we have to call on when we feel lonely.<br>[00:02:48]<br>We figured out how to do many of our jobs in safer ways and make sure that our bills are still getting paid.<br>[00:02:55]<br>And by the way, if you haven&#8217;t figured some of those things out, please let me know. That offer doesn&#8217;t expire. If<br>our congregation can help. We will.<br>[00:03:08]<br>But it&#8217;s interesting, I think just in the past two weeks or so, I&#8217;ve also started to see more and more of us talking<br>about a whole other kind of stress. A whole other kind of experience we&#8217;re having right now. Some people are<br>calling it decision fatigue. Decision fatigue happens when we have to make hard choice after hard choice, when we<br>have lots of information to assimilate. And right now, we&#8217;ve been doing that for a long time. And with the change in<br>Pennsylvania, with the change and different things that are closed, that are now open, we have this constant pull<br>now of new choices are previously shut down. Public life is being kind of reopened.<br>[00:03:54]<br>Right.<br>[00:03:55]<br>It&#8217;s sort of in fits and starts in little pieces and chunks. Sometimes it feels like it&#8217;s like a one step forward, two step<br>back reopening. There&#8217;s new information. There&#8217;s new risks and questions for us to weigh. For families with young<br>kids, especially, I&#8217;ve heard for teachers also and school system employees, there&#8217;s now like a deadline looming in<br>the fall.<br>[00:04:19]<br>There&#8217;s this question of what we will do in a few months with schools and for some workers, stay at home.<br>Flexibility from the beginning is ending or there are new pressures that are leading to new rounds of furloughs or<br>layoffs. And meanwhile, the news about the outlook of all of this, it still seems like it&#8217;s changing from week to week.<br>It says uncertain in some ways as it&#8217;s ever been.<br>[00:04:54]<br>But just in new ways, and I know it makes me tired. I hear that makes a lot of you tired.<br>[00:05:06]<br>One of the things that I feel with this tiredness, with this decision, fatigue, with this desire to just have somebody<br>else tell me how it&#8217;s going to go and what to do and how we&#8217;re gonna fix it. I recognize that it&#8217;s a longing for trust.<br>Trustworthy leadership. I wish in this moment that we had that sense that I did really feel in March that we were all<br>in this together, that we were all on the same page, that we were lost together, but that we were pulling in the<br>same direction. And yet I see now all of the mask debates, I hear about resistance out there to continuing<br>unemployment benefits, to keeping that going, to offering new rounds of support for small businesses. Honestly, I<br>even watch the press conferences sometimes from the White House, where it seems like one public official gets up<br>and says one thing and then the next person at the podium says another. That hope for us all to be on the same<br>page.<br>[00:06:19]<br>And pulling in the same direction and in this together, it feels farther and farther away. As we go.<br>[00:06:32]<br>Our SpiritFlix movie today might seem on the surface to have nothing to do with this. It&#8217;s part of this summer<br>message series we do each year where we find the deeper meaning in movies or TV shows. The stories on our<br>screens and the movie today is a family film. It&#8217;s an animated feature. But if you watched it, you know that it&#8217;s a<br>dark one, which might be your first clue to why. I feel like it relates a little bit to these times and this feeling. I&#8217;m<br>seeing the movie called The Willoughby&#8217;s. It&#8217;s a Netflix original. It&#8217;s sort of in the tradition, if you know it, of Lemony<br>Snicket s popular books, which are called a series of unfortunate events. It&#8217;s that kind of a movie, a relatable frame<br>also. Right. A series of unfortunate events could be the subtitle for the year 2020. In the movie, we meet this<br>family. The Willoughby&#8217;s a mother, a father and four children. And these four kids, they are in a tough spot.<br>[00:07:38]<br>They are not growing up in good conditions. Their parents neglect them.<br>[00:07:48]<br>These are parents who punish their children for having what they call childish needs, like food or sweaters and love.<br>Even in the frame of a brightly colored animated feature that is at times funny and silly, we watched these four<br>kids who are basically just trying to fight their way through a tough life, who are trying to find their way through<br>without any caring support from the adults around them.<br>[00:08:26]<br>Nobody to keep them together and pulling in the same direction.<br>[00:08:34]<br>And because they&#8217;re kids, you know, they have limited skills and knowledge available to them and they make some<br>pretty dangerous choices as they go along. Each of the Willowby children adapt to their experience in different<br>ways. But it&#8217;s Jane who is kind of a bookworm of the bunch. She is the one who comes up with the plan for how<br>they&#8217;re going to get out of this. The survival strategy that most of the film focuses on. You see, Jane has read all of<br>the fairy tales and from all of those fairy tales, she has taken the lesson that orphaned children are rescued. Right.<br>It&#8217;s all these orphan children who are the heroes of these fairy tales. They&#8217;re saved by princes and very<br>godmothers and all other kinds of magic that conspires to turn things out OK for them. And so Jane decides that the<br>Willoughby Children&#8217;s only hope is to do that, to become orphans, to get rid of their parents. So that&#8217;s what exactly.<br>Well, she&#8217;s not sure. But they&#8217;ll be saved somehow, I guess. Right. By the sheer force of their hopes. And by the<br>truth, of course, that they deserve to be saved. They deserve to be loved and well cared for. And they know that<br>they have that seed inside of them. There&#8217;s probably lots of things that you could take from this movie and maybe<br>lots of ways that you could apply this story to our own longing for a trustworthy leadership in these fractured times<br>that we&#8217;re living in. But what I noticed was the way that the Willoughby&#8217;s story serves as a reminder all throughout<br>that hope is so vital to driving us to get through challenging times. But that hope is only half of the story.<br>[00:10:42]<br>Jane and Tim and Barnaby A and Barnaby B the twins. They don&#8217;t actually ever get their wish to become orphans,<br>but they do hatch a plan. A plan that sends their parents on a trip all around the world and they get that very<br>cathartic home alone type scene right where they jump on their parents bed and they slide down the banisters and<br>they roll themselves up in carpets and they arrange things just the way they like them. And they have that<br>giddiness of new found freedom where they think it&#8217;s all going to be OK. But reality comes crashing in as soon as<br>it&#8217;s time for dinner and they realize they have no way to find food.<br>[00:11:28]<br>Their hope that they will be saved by someone who truly cares from that for them, though, that does come true.<br>And it unfolds slowly, not in one burst of a moment or an experience of newfound freedom, but through a series of<br>choices that unfold over the rest of the film, beginning with the arrival of a nanny named Linda, a nanny who<br>actually was hired by the neglectful Willoughby parents who at least knew that they had to provide the bare<br>minimum of care when they left their children at home. But Linda, it turns out, has a much higher standard for what<br>care really means.<br>[00:12:21]<br>And it&#8217;s that it&#8217;s that human being holding in herself, that higher standard of care. That&#8217;s what ends up saving the<br>kids in this story.<br>[00:12:34]<br>Yes. It&#8217;s also the magical rainbow powered dirigible, and you know, the song Jane sings when you&#8217;re stranded on<br>the mountain at the end of the movie and all that kind of stuff. But those are just the kids movie plot devices that<br>are moving us along at the end of the day in this story. What saves the kids is the fact that a woman named Linda<br>comes into their life who has a higher standard in herself for what care really looks like it really means. One of the<br>reviews online of this film. It comes from a woman named Vicky Peterson. She&#8217;s a trauma recovery coach and<br>herself a survivor of childhood abuse. She blogs for The Mighty, which is an excellent Web site. If you&#8217;ve never<br>heard of it, it&#8217;s an online community for people facing physical and mental health challenges and for their<br>caregivers. The mighty.<br>[00:13:31]<br>I recommend it.<br>[00:13:35]<br>Vicky Peterson watched this movie through the lens of her own experiences and her training, and she points out<br>that the movie make some mistakes. First of all, it certainly flattens a lot of important nuance for kids who might<br>relate to the storyline. Perhaps most most dangerously, she says, even despite the real problems with the foster<br>care system in America, it doesn&#8217;t help real kids in difficult situations to portray orphan services as villains in the<br>movie.<br>[00:14:09]<br>And she says.<br>[00:14:12]<br>As an adult survivor of childhood abuse and neglect. She says, My heart aches for the kids who are struggling in<br>homes like this right now. There are plenty of reasons why quarantine is tough for so many. But she says for these<br>children, it is especially hard. And more than ever, these kids need to know that they are seen and that they<br>matter. And there are people who care. So in this sense, the release of the Willoughby&#8217;s is timely.<br>[00:14:49]<br>She says the kids who see themselves in these kids and these characters, they need encouragement right now.<br>[00:14:57]<br>They need to hear more than ever that they&#8217;re not alone.<br>[00:15:02]<br>Not everyone has a nice nanny to step in and save the day.<br>[00:15:08]<br>Most don&#8217;t.<br>[00:15:12]<br>But it points to the truth. She says that what they do need, it is a support system and they do need opportunities as<br>they grow to find chosen family.<br>[00:15:24]<br>Just as we all do to decide who will have the honor of loving and cherishing them for life. It is what we all deserve.<br>We feel about now a support system, one that really helps when our own lives go sideways or when we are<br>overwhelmed and that ability to choose who will love us and who we will love in return.<br>[00:16:02]<br>In this moment, I believe that we can hold that same higher standard that Linda brings into these kids lives and ask<br>ourselves what care is really supposed to mean. What does it mean to take care of each other? What does it mean<br>to care about another person?<br>[00:16:34]<br>We can ask those questions.<br>[00:16:38]<br>We don&#8217;t have to follow the lead of the unsatisfying words or inaction of the people we see around us or on our TV<br>screens. In the context of this pandemic, that can mean talking about what it really means to support workers, the<br>economy, businesses, what does it really mean to support people who&#8217;ve been laid off, people who are essential<br>workers? What does care actually look like? What would it look like to hold our health care system to a higher and<br>more inclusive and more universal standard of care? What might not just get him back to normal, but real care look<br>like for families struggling with these impossible decisions about balancing work and school and safety in the<br>months ahead?<br>[00:17:40]<br>What does real care look like for all of us amidst these new questions on our minds? I hope about policing and race<br>in this country.<br>[00:17:54]<br>What does it look like to hold a higher standard of care for our neighbors who are black and brown? Higher maybe<br>than the norm around us, higher maybe than what we inherited or. Than what the leaders who we see on TV seem<br>to be saying. What could it do in this world for us to be more like Linda? Even if the kids, the Willowby children, the<br>people around us don&#8217;t expect it to hold a higher standard for what care really looks like. It might just help to save<br>somebody who is in trouble.<br>[00:18:40]<br>Who is casting out with hope on their end? Their half of the story?<br>[00:18:48]<br>What would it look like to meet that hope with real care? Came across another resource as I was preparing this<br>message. Actually, Reverend can send it to me. That&#8217;s how I came across it. It&#8217;s from a therapist and an educator<br>named Lindsay Brozman.<br>[00:19:10]<br>Lindsay created this tool.<br>[00:19:13]<br>It&#8217;s a pretty solid tool, I think, that can help us figure out how to take care of the little ones that we might have in<br>our life in this time. A Kovik kids activity book. It&#8217;s designed for kids ages four through 10. But honestly, I&#8217;m halfway<br>there to decide how to fill it out for myself. But it&#8217;s certainly good for little ones. The exercises in the book are built<br>around research that identified something called p, c e&#8217;s.<br>[00:19:42]<br>You might have heard of ACEs or Aces.<br>[00:19:45]<br>Those are adverse childhood experiences. I know we&#8217;ve talked about them at Wellspring&#8217;s before. They are a list of<br>challenging experiences that kids sometimes go through and they are correlated in research now to challenging<br>outcomes as adults, not just in mental health, but in physical health, in in things like financial status, in all kinds of<br>measures of success. The things that happen to us in childhood have an impact if they are not addressed and<br>healed. And so these protective childhood experiences, these pieces are also research identified for any kids who<br>experience something that is challenging or traumatic in childhood. The seven P.S. E&#8217;s are correlated with positive<br>outcomes in adults. They serve as a protective factor. They buoy resilience and recovery and help kids cope and<br>heal and thrive, even if they&#8217;ve been through something difficult.<br>[00:20:43]<br>And right now we have all been through something difficult. Lindsay Broman describes why she created this<br>workbook on her Web site. She says you might be asking why now? Right. Isn&#8217;t quarantine over?<br>[00:21:06]<br>Well, she says, you remember that feeling early in quarantine like time didn&#8217;t exist. And like the days went by in a<br>blur. I do. Right. We all saw that meme, right. That it was the the four hundred ninety fifteenth of March.<br>[00:21:25]<br>That was how we felt. Right.<br>[00:21:27]<br>Well, she says that&#8217;s trauma. When something is too big, too much or too intense to be able to take in and digest,<br>often there&#8217;s difficulty recalling time before or anticipating time after.<br>[00:21:51]<br>Yeah, that&#8217;s trauma.<br>[00:21:56]<br>Those are Lindsay&#8217;s words, but they hit home with me. I know that this is why I find it comforting to track how<br>many weeks it&#8217;s been.<br>[00:22:07]<br>It&#8217;s a way of organizing things in my mind, remembering where we&#8217;ve been, where we are, and making sense of<br>what&#8217;s happened, because I, like all of us, have lived through a collective trauma. Lindsay goes on. She says,<br>Whether or not quarantine is in the past for your family or for you, it may still be very much in the present, in our<br>minds and in our bodies. So she says you can use this activity book with your kids.<br>[00:22:44]<br>It&#8217;s a tool. It&#8217;s a frame maybe to write your family&#8217;s story and then review that story, maybe even like a bedtime<br>story on a regular basis, or come back to it and help kids organize all the messy chaos of the pandemic into a linear<br>story of safety and resiliency.<br>[00:23:13]<br>I did look at the book. It&#8217;s a good resource. I recommend it.<br>[00:23:17]<br>And wouldn&#8217;t it be nice for all of us to have a caring person in our lives?<br>[00:23:25]<br>To have a Linda or Lindsay Brahmin or just a good, loving parent who could help us organize all the messy chaos of<br>the pandemic into a linear story of safety and resiliency. I believe we deserve that. And I actually do believe we will<br>one day. But I also know that hope is only half the story. We can hope for this pandemic to stop threatening all of<br>our lives.<br>[00:24:07]<br>We can hope for it to end. We can hope for it to reorder our priorities and the process and help us build a more<br>compassionate world where we&#8217;re better able to care for each other in hard times. We can hope for all of those<br>things.<br>[00:24:22]<br>But I feel like I see clearly more than ever how hope is only half of the story.<br>[00:24:32]<br>Our faith has always asked us to be people who hold hope in one hand.<br>[00:24:42]<br>And deeds and practices and action in the other.<br>[00:24:52]<br>If we want this world to be made more whole, our lives to be made more whole, then some portion of us. Probably<br>most of us. Right. Need to walk the talk. We need to walk the talk of this extravagant and abundant bloodedness<br>that we proclaim is all of our birthright that belongs to all people. Some of us are gonna have to be, Linda.<br>[00:25:25]<br>I&#8217;m sure all the people in Linda and our congregation are loving this message, by the way, but some of us are going<br>to be that person.<br>[00:25:32]<br>We&#8217;re gonna have to be the person who doesn&#8217;t just shake our heads and point a finger, who doesn&#8217;t just get angry<br>about it on Facebook, that we can do that, too. That&#8217;s fine.<br>[00:25:44]<br>But the person who steps in.<br>[00:25:49]<br>The person who holds a higher standard of what care really looks like and who acts on it.<br>[00:26:00]<br>I know we&#8217;re tired. I&#8217;m tired, too.<br>[00:26:06]<br>I&#8217;ve learned, though, as I&#8217;ve grown that when I feel tired or frustrated or fatigued, the tempting, easy thing is to<br>keep following the track I&#8217;m on, to keep doing what I&#8217;m expected to do or what I&#8217;m used to do. And it gets me<br>nowhere. It gets me more tired and more frustrated and more fatigued when I mindlessly just roll on a head. With<br>care from other people who&#8217;ve supported me, I&#8217;ve learned over time that when I feel tired or frustrated or fatigued,<br>that&#8217;s usually my body&#8217;s way of signaling that it is not time to mindlessly push ahead. It&#8217;s time to stop.<br>[00:26:50]<br>Paradoxically, the last thing I want to do to stop and ask a harder question, a deeper question, what am I really<br>trying to accomplish? Instead of being frustrated, what is my real intention? What am I really hoping for?<br>[00:27:16]<br>And can I open up the blinders to ask, is there a better answer that might get me there rather than what seemed<br>like all of these traps of more spending, my wheels and more frustration that are laid out all around me?<br>[00:27:36]<br>Sometimes just stopping and asking those questions makes you a saving grace to somebody else.<br>[00:27:45]<br>By taking the pressure off of the people around you, the people in your house, the people who are looking to you for<br>answers.<br>[00:27:55]<br>Sometimes the people who ask those kinds of questions are good leaders.<br>[00:28:02]<br>Good caregivers, Lindas.<br>[00:28:07]<br>Willing to be kind and imperfect and vulnerable and lost together.<br>[00:28:15]<br>But to show up for each other. Anyway.<br>[00:28:21]<br>Simply because we trust that we are worthy and we are worthy of showing up for each other, of being seen and<br>that we&#8217;re all worthy of being cared for.<br>[00:28:37]<br>Hope is an important half of the story.<br>[00:28:43]<br>And when it is met, that halfway point by real care, as the narrator said in the movie, we may not get those<br>moments exactly what we wish for, but we do get what we need.<br>[00:29:02]<br>Amen. And may you live in blessing.<br>[00:29:09]<br>I invite you all to take a moment on my refrigerator, turns on in the background, it&#8217;s working. Take a moment to<br>close your eyes. Now your head, maybe relax your shoulders and join me in the spirit of prayer.<br>[00:29:28]<br>God of our hearts.<br>[00:29:34]<br>Mystery beyond our understanding.<br>[00:29:40]<br>We are people who are tired. Some of us are anxious. Uncertain about what&#8217;s coming. And we are people who hold<br>some kernel of hope.<br>[00:29:57]<br>We know we have some kernel of hope within us.<br>[00:29:59]<br>If we woke up this morning and turned this turn this video on and are going about our day.<br>[00:30:10]<br>We have that light still inside of us. That spark. That spark of hope is not the same thing as optimism. It&#8217;s not the<br>same thing as knowing that something&#8217;s going to be OK. That spark of hope is the thing with light within us that<br>trust that something is good. No matter how it turns out, the spark of hope, trust that.<br>[00:30:39]<br>This life is worth tending. And nurturing and working on together.<br>[00:30:51]<br>We remember that we are good and worthy of those things. And that so is every single person we encountered.<br>[00:31:02]<br>Now, we are all worthy of the care, all the care that we can give.<br>[00:31:08]<br>And receive and return.<br>[00:31:12]<br>And may we remember in these confusing times, no matter how more difficult or challenging or easier they get,<br>may we always remember to act from that place?<br>[00:31:30]<br>For these prayers, I&#8217;ve spoken and for the prayers that all of the people with us this morning carry on their hearts.<br>We say Amen.<br>[00:31:41]<br>If you enjoyed this message and would like to support the mission of Wellspring&#8217;s, go to our Web site. Wellspring&#8217;s<br>you. You. Dot org. That&#8217;s Wellspring&#8217;s. The letters U U dot. O R.G.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>For this week&#8217;s SpiritFlix message, Rev. Lee preaches on the Netflix movie &#8220;The Willoughbys.&#8221; This movie is about a group of children who are mistreated by their parents, until a person with a higher standard of care shows up in their lives. What if we all held ourselves to a higher standard of care right now? It just might save someone&#8217;s life. The Willoughbys [00:00:00]The following is a message from Wellspring&#8217;s congregation. Good morning, everybody.[00:00:06]So are you ready for our [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4068,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","ctc_sermon_topic":[144],"ctc_sermon_book":[],"ctc_sermon_series":[130],"ctc_sermon_speaker":[123],"ctc_sermon_tag":[],"class_list":["post-4129","ctc_sermon","type-ctc_sermon","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","ctc_sermon_topic-families","ctc_sermon_series-spiritflix","ctc_sermon_speaker-rev-lee-paczulla","ctfw-has-image"],"featured_image_urls":{"medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-300x300.png","large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1024x1024.png","thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-150x150.png","medium_large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-768x768.png","post-thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-720x480.png","saved-section":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1236x1050.png","saved-banner":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1236x400.png","saved-square":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-720x720.png","saved-square-large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1024x1024.png","saved-square-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-160x160.png","saved-rect-medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-480x320.png","saved-rect-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-200x133.png"},"appp_media":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4129","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/ctc_sermon"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4129"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4129\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4132,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4129\/revisions\/4132"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/4068"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4129"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_topic","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_topic?post=4129"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_book?post=4129"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_series?post=4129"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_speaker?post=4129"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_tag?post=4129"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}