{"id":4155,"date":"2020-08-02T14:23:54","date_gmt":"2020-08-02T18:23:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=4155"},"modified":"2020-11-08T13:31:59","modified_gmt":"2020-11-08T18:31:59","slug":"blinded-by-the-light","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/blinded-by-the-light\/","title":{"rendered":"Blinded By the Light"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>This week, Rev. Ken continues our Spiritflix series with a message about the movie Blinded By the Light &#8211; a film where the main character is asking the question &#8220;How do I fit in?&#8221; Rev. Ken talks about how this film reminded him of the eulogy President Obama gave for John Lewis, calling us to a &#8220;Vibrant, big-hearted, tolerant America of perpetual self creation.&#8221; He also reflects on the importance of the Bruce Springsteen lyric &#8220;No one wins unless everybody wins.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Blinded By the Light<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>[00:00:00]<br>The following is a message from Wellspring&#8217;s congregation.<br>[00:00:04]<br>Hi, everybody. It&#8217;s good to be with you again today, and I hope that this message, the service this morning finds<br>you&#8217;re doing well, like I think actually millions, maybe tens of millions of people.<br>[00:00:17]<br>Early on in the month of July, I ordered for the first time Disney plus. And I did it for one specific reason, and that<br>was to see the filmed version of the stage play Hamilton. Now, as it turns out, I came for Hamilton and stayed for<br>Pixar, but that&#8217;s a separate conversation for another time. I haven&#8217;t seen Hamilton live and seen on Broadway or<br>touring. And my wife and I a couple of years ago, we decided, you know, did something we do on a regular basis.<br>Once a year, we go up to New York City, stay overnight, see friends, get some food. New York is where I&#8217;m from.<br>It&#8217;s always nice to get back there. And we decided that we also we feel ready to spend a ludicrous amount of<br>money on a Broadway play. And there were two choices. One was Hamilton and the other was excuse me,<br>Springsteen on Broadway. And our reasoning went like this. Hamilton will probably be here for a very long time.<br>There will be a touring version. It can be played by all kinds of actors and actresses, whereas Springsteen on<br>Broadway is just Springsteen. On Broadway, there is no replacement. There is no other person to play Bruce<br>Springsteen. And so we went to see Springsteen on Broadway and we never looked back with any regrets<br>whatsoever.<br>[00:01:31]<br>It was entirely worth the money and the investment. It was one of my most favorite place I&#8217;ve ever seen and I have<br>seen a lot of plays in my life. Some of you know that Springsteen on Broadway is Bruce kind of telling his life story<br>in words and even more because he&#8217;s Bruce Springsteen in music. And one of the things he does is he will play<br>some of his songs and he&#8217;ll intersperse stories throughout. And so he opens Springsteen on Broadway with one of<br>his first songs that kind of started to make him famous. It&#8217;s called Growing Up. It&#8217;s from his first major studio album,<br>recording Greetings from Asbury Park. And he does about the first couple verses and chorus. And then he goes into<br>more of a spoken word piece. And I&#8217;m going to read that to you right now. Except the thing is this Springsteen on<br>Broadway, he actually curses a lot more in that in that show that he does on a lot of his records. And and if you&#8217;ve<br>been around Wellspring&#8217;s for a while, you know, I don&#8217;t you know, I&#8217;m not averse at all to to a good curse word.<br>[00:02:33]<br>However, something feels a little bit different now that I&#8217;m kind of coming into your homes. I recognize I have<br>dialed way, way back on the cursing and some of you might miss it. And some of you are grateful for that. So, you<br>know, that&#8217;s your experience, not mine. You do what you want with it. So I&#8217;m going to read this to you. And<br>throughout this message, there are a few things where there are some curse words and I&#8217;ll just kind of bleep those<br>out or pick a different word. So Bruce starts to say, now, everybody, everybody has a love hate relationship with<br>their hometown. It&#8217;s just built into the equation of growing up. If you take me, I&#8217;m Mr. Born to Run. I&#8217;m Mr. Thunder<br>F-in&#8217; Road. I was born to run, not to stay in my home. New Jersey. It&#8217;s a death trap. It&#8217;s a suicide rap. I had to get<br>out. I got to hit the highway. I&#8217;m a road runner, man. I got the white line fever in my brain. I&#8217;m going to bring my<br>girl and I&#8217;ve had enough of the stuff this place dishes out. I&#8217;m going to run, run, run. And, well, I&#8217;m never coming<br>back.<br>[00:03:36]<br>And Bruce pauses, I currently live 10 minutes from my hometown and then he concludes, but born to come back,<br>who would have bought that stuff?<br>[00:03:54]<br>It&#8217;s a great way that he begins the story of Springsteen on Broadway, because it&#8217;s about this tension all throughout<br>his life. He&#8217;s in his 70s now and he&#8217;s doing a lot of reflecting on who he&#8217;s been and who he was and the stories that<br>he&#8217;s told and who he wants to be in the later stages of his life, kind of gathering up the pieces of himself and that<br>tension between going out and coming back.<br>[00:04:20]<br>What it is to leave home and what it is to return home changed with maybe a different deeper appreciation and<br>different eyes for seeing home.<br>[00:04:35]<br>Today&#8217;s Spiritflix message, the series we do in the summer about the stories that we watch on our screens and the<br>wisdom within those stories. It is a Bruce Springsteen story. It&#8217;s named for one of those songs, Blinded by the Light<br>on that first album of his, except it&#8217;s set far away from Asbury Park, New Jersey, or even from the United States. It&#8217;s<br>based on a true story. It&#8217;s based on a memoir by a writer named Sarfraz Manzoor. Now, he grew up in a small town,<br>depressed town, a struggling working class town as a first generation son of immigrants from Pakistan. Now, this is<br>a story that&#8217;s been changed, even his name was changed, the main character in Blinded by the Light is a young<br>man named Javaeed. Javeed is 17 years old. And like a lot of 17 year olds, he has no idea where he belongs in the<br>world. He&#8217;s an aspiring writer, but his parents were economically terribly struggling. His father has just lost a job in<br>his factory, the job that barely kept them in kind of the middle class. He&#8217;s lost his job and his mom has to take on<br>extra, extra, extra work, sewing and repairing garments. And they&#8217;re barely holding on. And David has this vision of<br>himself as a writer, as an artist.<br>[00:05:58]<br>And he is also.<br>[00:06:01]<br>An immigrant to a country that lets him know in many ways he is not welcome there. This is set in 1987, this story,<br>and this is when some of, you know, authoritarian movements, the big one, what we would call maybe they&#8217;re alt,<br>right. The you know, the you will not replace us. Jews will not replace us crudely ugliness we&#8217;ve seen, especially in<br>the last few years, in a heightened way in this country. Well, that was called the National Front in 1987. And it was<br>viciously racist and anti-immigrant. And to be Pakistani in this time, especially in a place an hour from London, was<br>to be a vulnerable person. And so Javeed really feels this tension between the family that he feels he&#8217;s pulling away<br>from and the wider world that because of who he is, because of his identity, because of his race, his nationality, his<br>ethnicity and his religion as a Muslim.<br>[00:06:56]<br>Whether he belongs in that wider English society as well.<br>[00:07:02]<br>Now, one of his fellow South Asian students who is not even that close with when the movie begins, he kind of runs<br>into him in the hall and they bump into each other and out of this guy&#8217;s Walkman. Remember, it&#8217;s nineteen eighty<br>seven out of this guy&#8217;s Walkman pops a Bruce Springsteen cassette. And eventually Javeed starts to ask, who&#8217;s the<br>guy? And his friend says, Bruce is the direct mind to all that is true in this blanking world. And David, here&#8217;s Bruce<br>Springsteen, and he feels that for the first time, someone has understood his story, the economic struggles and the<br>struggles to fit in, even with their very different identities and nationalities. In the midst of this life in which he has<br>all these tensions and pressures and the threat of violence and the threat of harassment because of the racism that<br>surrounds him and the tension with his family who want him to be one thing, something respectable, like a doctor<br>or lawyer, to go to university to become that.<br>[00:08:07]<br>But no, he really wants to be a writer.<br>[00:08:12]<br>This is a coming of age story, it&#8217;s a totally unsubtle movement, essentially unsubtle movie as one of the reasons I<br>love it. I mean, Bruce has some subtle songs, but as someone who has seen him in concert, I don&#8217;t know, 15, 16,<br>17, 18 times, I lost count. By now, Bruce is not beloved for his subtlety. He&#8217;s beloved how big an open and inclusive<br>his heart is and how even in the in a stadium of 70000 people, he can make it feel intimate.<br>[00:08:45]<br>Bruce, I think, understands and he tells the stories that struggle of what it is to fit in. To know who he is and where<br>he belongs in this life and how does he make room for the parts of himself that he feels maybe are not worthy?<br>Bruce has been very open about his struggle with his own years growing up in his fraught, difficult, at times abusive<br>relationship with his father, who he wasn&#8217;t quite sure really loved him and his father&#8217;s undiagnosed mental health<br>disorder. And the fact that Bruce Bruce has had to wrestle with his own mental health, his own depression, as he<br>has aged into himself over the years.<br>[00:09:23]<br>So between Javeed and Bruce, David, a much younger person, 17 years old. Wanting to know who am I? Whose am<br>I? Where do I fit in? And if I don&#8217;t fit into the categories that already exist, how might I create or be a part of<br>creating a new world in which I and others can belong?<br>[00:09:55]<br>Like I said, this isn&#8217;t a terribly subtle movie, they will show on a screen covid when he takes a trip to Asbury Park,<br>New Jersey, which is kind of the apex of this movie. And he&#8217;s had a falling out with his father. And they will play on a<br>screen Independence Day, which is a beautiful, very sad song about Bruce separating from his own father. And<br>they&#8217;ll play that and you&#8217;ll know it kind of mirrors of David&#8217;s feeling. Like I said, it&#8217;s not subtle, but it&#8217;s big hearted.<br>[00:10:20]<br>And I think that big heartedness in the life of this country right now is so important. One of the things this movie<br>made me think of was President Obama&#8217;s eulogy for John Lewis just a few days ago, just this past week, in which he<br>said that what John Lewis did, what he called us to was a vision of a big hearted, tolerant, vibrant America of<br>perpetual self creation.<br>[00:10:49]<br>A vibrant, big hearted. America tolerant. Of perpetual self creation. This is what blinded by the light is all about.<br>Even if it&#8217;s not set in America.<br>[00:11:09]<br>I think back to my first semester in the grad program that I completed last May of twenty nineteen in a very<br>different world, I think one of the first classes I took and it was all about some of the kind of core ethical<br>commitments of what it is to be a social worker or what it is to have a social degree, whether we&#8217;re working on the<br>macro level on policy or whether, you know, we&#8217;re working kind of more intimately with people on the micro level.<br>And the professor I remember he said, you know, we have this commitment to cultural competence and that&#8217;s<br>bigger than just social work. But he said, you know, cultural competence is important.<br>[00:11:49]<br>But I want to say something else is even more important, cultural humility.<br>[00:11:55]<br>Such a profoundly important spiritual commitment, you know, becoming an I don&#8217;t know at all the kind of person<br>who is really open to the world around them and because of who they are and how we connect in our core values,<br>that we&#8217;re open to continuous change and growth, he said. It&#8217;s not just about cultural competence, which is<br>knowing knowledge about other people who might be different from yourself, he says. It&#8217;s about culture, humility,<br>he said, because that keeps you connected with other people in an interested way, an empathetic way, a<br>compassionate way.<br>[00:12:31]<br>And that can&#8217;t help but change us in some very profound ways.<br>[00:12:36]<br>All the things I love about this professor, he&#8217;s one of my my most favorites that I had during this entire three year<br>degree that I did.<br>[00:12:44]<br>He started to tell his story.<br>[00:12:46]<br>A story of many different parts, a young man who who grew up in Latin America, in South America, and a young<br>man who knew that he was gay, and a young man whose family was not from long time in South America, but<br>actually was of Middle Eastern descent, a man who would come to America and marry a white Anglo man and a<br>man who, as he shared with us, the professor did, was very, very close to his grandmother growing up.<br>[00:13:21]<br>And where he&#8217;s from.<br>[00:13:24]<br>And he said one day she kind of revealed to him that for many, many decades, she in this Catholic country that<br>they were from, she had always been kind of a secret Buddhist.<br>[00:13:37]<br>I love the way he wove all the parts of himself together and model that for us, this invitation to know ourselves fully<br>and embrace the parts of ourselves, that&#8217;s what blinded by the light is all about, because if we can do that and be<br>at home in ourselves, then we can be more at home in the world and the complexity of the world and the way in<br>which the world asks us to grow. With a profound sense of psychological, interpersonal, relational integration.<br>[00:14:13]<br>Not integration is just some legal concept, some kind of static thing, but integration, welcoming all the parts of who<br>we are individually and of other people as well, to into a kind of dynamic creativity, a trusting of emergence in<br>which we are being what we have not yet been and which we will never stop becoming.<br>[00:14:38]<br>This comes back to the end of Blinded by the Light, it is a very touching movie. I found it to be a movie that brought<br>tears to my eyes a more than one occasion.<br>[00:14:50]<br>And it&#8217;s after it has kind of separated from his father. They&#8217;ve had a real falling out and they&#8217;re not talking. And<br>David has been kind of moved out of the house and he&#8217;s won an award, the award that&#8217;s going to allow him to go to<br>Asbury Park, New Jersey. It&#8217;s based on something that he wrote.<br>[00:15:11]<br>It&#8217;s going to allow him to go to the place where the boss is from and Javeed gives this speech just has just as he&#8217;s<br>about to in high school and go to university and his parents because it is a big hearted cinematic movie. There is<br>that moment where they show up and he didn&#8217;t expect them to show up. And he offers these words quoting Bruce.<br>He says no one wins unless everybody wins. You can see that David is starting to understand that if he is to cut off<br>part of who he is, to become another part of who he is, the price will be too much. And his parents show up and his<br>father for the first time really gets to see who his son is.<br>[00:16:02]<br>And tears are in his eyes, and afterward he says to his son, kind of like with a blessing, son, write your stories, son.<br>Write your stories. But don&#8217;t forget ours.<br>[00:16:20]<br>Don&#8217;t forget ours.<br>[00:16:24]<br>Beautiful message, I think, universalist message universalism that says there is a love so special we don&#8217;t need to<br>be special to be loved.<br>[00:16:34]<br>And if we don&#8217;t go around having to compare and contrast ourselves to other people all the time, but can integrate<br>the different parts of who we are, we naturally create space and permission for other people to do that for<br>themselves. And in that we give voice to that love that holds us all that old universalist and still as fresh as this<br>morning&#8217;s news truth.<br>[00:16:57]<br>Son, write, your stories, yes, but don&#8217;t forget ours.<br>[00:17:02]<br>Invite the whole of who you are home.<br>[00:17:08]<br>This is such a profoundly important message of this movie for this time, I think particularly of being an American,<br>but just being someone who was alive at this time. If we want to be truly big hearted. If we want to be ongoing and<br>self creating, but not stuck in a back then or again, but a now and in an emergence that trust that we can grow into<br>a way of being that we have not yet been and make space for that look, that is more wide. One of the most<br>powerful things that I read in the wake of this summer&#8217;s uprising. The reaction to the death of Brianna Taylor and<br>Floyd. And, of course, more.<br>[00:18:02]<br>Was written by Michael W. Twitty, who is a chef I&#8217;m a foodie, is one of my favorite chefs, but he&#8217;s even more he&#8217;s a<br>culinary historian and he says that what he does is he collects and cooks the histories of his people in the diaspora.<br>[00:18:22]<br>You see, Michael W. Twitty is black and gay and queer and Jewish. And he apologizes for no part of who he is and<br>he welcomes it all, and he models that for us as well to the different parts of who we are.<br>[00:18:39]<br>And he wrote a beautiful, searing, angry, profoundly loving, calling to account, calling into new ways of being blog<br>post called a scolding in seven pieces. And I want to read to you from it. Michael Twitty says, I understand that I will<br>always be queer by color and sexuality and faith and philosophy in your eyes, and I celebrate that because I am<br>every color in the rainbow. Otherwise I really have zero FS to give whether or not you love me back. I have my work<br>to do grace, compassion, peace, love and all that other good old time religion stuff. And I don&#8217;t have time to waste.<br>This place, he says, meaning America, this place is not a thing to be squandered. You say we should unify around<br>the symbols of obfuscation born in slavery and native removal and manifest destiny. And I say no, we can choose<br>new ways to be one, understanding how much our blood has crossed.<br>[00:19:43]<br>We are deliciously impure.<br>[00:19:48]<br>If you are not multicultural and kissed by otherness and soaked in the world of your neighbor, you have wasted<br>your opportunity to be an American, to be part of an accidental planned experiment. The glory here is not in<br>melting, but melting by learning from each other and having no boundaries on opportunities. And to have those<br>opportunities, black people cannot be the canaries in the American coal mine any longer.<br>[00:20:20]<br>Black lives matter, and if they do not, there is no reason to dream in American.<br>[00:20:29]<br>Oh, I love that phrase.<br>[00:20:32]<br>The capacity to dream in American not as a cheap grace thing, but as a deep, enriching, profound thing. And kind<br>of reality that even a movie not even set in America testifies to.<br>[00:20:49]<br>The kind of truth that blinded by the light speaks to.<br>[00:20:54]<br>It is the call over and over again.<br>[00:20:59]<br>To have our lives transformed. By the ongoing power and energy of love. That energy and that power truly divine.<br>An ending unfinished and inviting us. To take our place in its way, we are seeing now what the opposite of that way<br>of living does and the pain and the trauma and all the suffering that comes from it. So may we keep changing in<br>the name of these deepest aspirations of our hearts? May we take the shape of love in our lives?<br>[00:21:45]<br>Amen, and may you live in blessed.<br>[00:21:51]<br>I would ask you if you would unite your heart with mine in prayer.<br>[00:22:03]<br>Divine Force and Flo. Spirit of this breath right here, right now, filling us up and asking us to empty ourselves right<br>in the next moment. Our bodies can teach us what it is to make space for the different parts of who we are. That<br>are great, glory is not sameness. Our great, glorious connection. Between ourselves, within ourselves, may we be a<br>space making people. I mean, we allow ourselves to grow wide, to grow very, very wide with love. And take on the<br>shape of the world that we hope to exist.<br>[00:23:04]<br>If you enjoy this message and would like to support the mission of Wellspring&#8217;s, go to our Web site. Wellspring&#8217;s,<br>you you log that&#8217;s Wellspring&#8217;s the letters. UU dot ORG.<br>END OF TRANSCRIPT<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This week, Rev. Ken continues our Spiritflix series with a message about the movie Blinded By the Light &#8211; a film where the main character is asking the question &#8220;How do I fit in?&#8221; Rev. Ken talks about how this film reminded him of the eulogy President Obama gave for John Lewis, calling us to a &#8220;Vibrant, big-hearted, tolerant America of perpetual self creation.&#8221; He also reflects on the importance of the Bruce Springsteen lyric &#8220;No one wins unless everybody [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4068,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","ctc_sermon_topic":[145],"ctc_sermon_book":[],"ctc_sermon_series":[130],"ctc_sermon_speaker":[122],"ctc_sermon_tag":[],"class_list":["post-4155","ctc_sermon","type-ctc_sermon","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","ctc_sermon_topic-belonging-connection","ctc_sermon_series-spiritflix","ctc_sermon_speaker-rev-ken-beldon","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\/4155","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=4155"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4155\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4157,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4155\/revisions\/4157"}],"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=4155"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_topic","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_topic?post=4155"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_book?post=4155"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_series?post=4155"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_speaker?post=4155"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_tag?post=4155"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}