{"id":5579,"date":"2021-12-21T16:05:37","date_gmt":"2021-12-21T21:05:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=5579"},"modified":"2021-12-21T16:05:37","modified_gmt":"2021-12-21T21:05:37","slug":"on-the-lookout","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/on-the-lookout\/","title":{"rendered":"On the Lookout"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Rev. Lee begins by talking about something small that&#8217;s been bringing her lots of joy: Noodle the pug and his bones\/no bones videos that have taken TikTok by storm. The Noodle videos are answering a craving for a simple joy. Rev. Lee also shares some periodic updates from her friend about her daughter, and what life is like as a 3 year old. She tells us about a book she&#8217;s looking forward to reading called &#8220;On Looking,&#8221; which gives the reader a chance to see the world through the eyes of different experts. she reminds us of the importance of working together in this uncertain and sometimes unjoyful time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">On the Lookout<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>[00:00:00] Speaker1<br>Good morning. Good morning, everybody. Boy, I am aware this morning that due to a bunch of different things that all kind of<br>happened at once, it has been a long time since I have been up here preaching with our congregation. And I was noticing it this<br>morning. I feel like I was actually a little bit like a tiger pacing in the back of the room like, OK, I get to be up here again. And to share a<br>service with all of you, so I am really glad to be here this week as we are as Jessica said, believe it or not. Less than a week from<br>Christmas as we close out our holiday message series inspired by the song that you just heard from our band, our message series<br>this joy. Now, all through this season, we have been asking all of our preachers in different ways, asking how can we connect to joy?<br>Especially in this life in this year. The second year that people have been selling novelty Christmas ornaments with dumpsters on<br>fire, right, we are really in a joy deficit. How even if our circumstances are hard, can we find a joy that we can rely on? For strength.<br>That we need now to face this world as it is. And those are big questions. But I want to start today with a small answer.<br>[00:01:37] Speaker1<br>With a very small thing. That, despite his size, is really reliably one of the things that has been bringing me joy this season. He&#8217;s a<br>little pug named Noodle. Yeah, that&#8217;s Noodle now I I have never met Noodle, and I&#8217;m guessing none of you have ever met Noodle<br>either, but some of you know him, how many of you know who this dog is? Oh my gosh, only one hand. Oh, I&#8217;m so happy that I get to<br>introduce you. Noodle has become something of an internet celebrity these past few months after his human roommate, a man<br>named John Graziano, started posting short videos of their morning routine him and noodle on Tik Tok. You see, Noodle is a senior<br>dog. Noodle has arthritis. Noodle is 13 years old. And as John puts it, some days Noodle wakes up and he just doesn&#8217;t really have<br>any bones like the internal skeleton is just not they&#8217;re not working that day. So John&#8217;s morning routine is to wake noodle up very<br>slowly, get them all snugly and warm, give them a little doggy massage and then ever so slowly and carefully lift noodle up onto his<br>four paws to see if he has bones that day. I&#8217;m going to ask Ted in our tech booth to play you an example of what this looks like.<br>[00:03:13] Speaker2<br>Good morning, everyone, and welcome back to yet another round of no bones, the game where we find out if my 13 year old pug<br>woke up with bones and as a result we find out what kind of day we&#8217;re going to have. Now I&#8217;ve got to be honest with you, it is raining<br>this morning. Noodle does not do the rain and I I just. We&#8217;ll see if he does bounce. No, Noodle. Oh, it gets me every time. Ok, so it&#8217;s a<br>no bones morning, no bones morning. I don&#8217;t think that&#8217;s bad news. I think it&#8217;s just something to keep in mind, like if today. Ok, so<br>yes, we try it again. And sure enough, no bones. So like if today was the day you were planning to call your sister and tell her you just<br>hate her husband, like today is not the day to do that. Just don&#8217;t do that.<br>[00:03:56] Speaker1<br>So once John started posting these videos on Tik Tok, noodles started to amass this huge, huge following like an oracle of some<br>kind for our times, right? People started tuning in every single morning to find out what kind of day it was going to be. It&#8217;s going to be a<br>no bones day where we all take it easy on ourselves, where we&#8217;re extra kind to one another. Leave the hard stuff like talking to your<br>sister about her husband for tomorrow. Or was it going to be a bones. day like this?<br>[00:04:30] Speaker2<br>Good morning, everyone, and welcome back to yet another round of no bones, the game where we find out if my 13 year old pug<br>woke up with bones and subsequently we find out what kind of day we&#8217;re going to have because his body has sort of become this<br>conduit of our good fortune. Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh, there are bones. There are bones today. Ok, all right. You know what that<br>means? Treat yourself today. Schmooze that judge. Buy those diamonds. Put that fried chicken on your salad. Don&#8217;t buy the<br>diamonds. You can be smarter with your money, but treat yourself today.<br>[00:04:58] Speaker1<br>So a bonus day is the time to tackle those big projects, right? Go out and get things done. Carpe diem. Now I am clearly not the only<br>person who found some joy in checking noodles forecast. Every morning, all kinds of people started writing songs about Noodle.<br>They started filming skits about noodle, making jokes, about calling in sick for work. Because obviously it&#8217;s a no bones day, right? We<br>can&#8217;t have that meeting. I even saw a photo online from a hospital where somebody hung a huge whiteboard in the nurse&#8217;s break<br>room to update the staff each morning so that everyone could act accordingly, right? What kind of bone&#8217;s day it was? So I have just<br>found Noodle to be a great little mascot for joy. In the season, because just like sometimes we have bonus days and no bone&#8217;s days,<br>some days we are feeling the joy. Some days we are able to see it and connect to it. And some days we&#8217;re just not. And that&#8217;s OK. I<br>think it really may be harder than ever, at least in my lifetime this year. Not just to have those days where there is not a close<br>connection with joy, but it&#8217;s it&#8217;s hard to feel like it&#8217;s far away and we don&#8217;t know when it&#8217;ll come back because after all that we have<br>been through, I feel and maybe you feel. A craving for simple joy. For some uncomplicated joy to feel good in a way that doesn&#8217;t have<br>an asterisks next to it, that doesn&#8217;t have to wear a mask to feel good in a way that doesn&#8217;t have to worry about sanitizing anything<br>afterwards.<br>[00:06:44] Speaker1<br>Joy, that doesn&#8217;t have to worry. Joy, that does not have to worry that our connection&#8217;s going to school, going to church, going to a<br>family gathering could harm us. We wish. And we long for that kind of simple, uncomplicated joy. And we are not finding it in the old<br>places. Many of us. But fortunately, even if we&#8217;re not finding it in those old places. We can notice that Joy does spread around in little<br>ways. That joy can be like pollen. That it flies through the air and it rests in crevices and little hitting corners. Because it wants to live.<br>It spreads around and it finds new ground to grow in. And so even while we are waiting and also working to bring joy back to those<br>places we love so much, we can still find joy in unexpected places and grow it from there. I&#8217;ll give you an example. How to find joy in<br>small things. It&#8217;s not from my life, so I&#8217;m changing names here actually to protect their privacy. But there is a friend of mine who writes<br>updates every now and then about her daughter on Facebook. Now, these are not big special updates of big special moments. This<br>is just something she does from time to time to catalog what life is like right now for her little girl.<br>[00:08:28] Speaker1<br>And I want to read this one to you from a couple of weeks ago. My friend said three is such a good age. I can hardly believe it. At 37<br>months. We can devour mountains of picture books. With Riley exclaiming in enthusiasm, genuinely when, say, the characters<br>decide to weave their spools of thread into a cloth, she says out loud to no one in particular. That&#8217;s a great idea. Assembling a marble<br>run is for her cause for jumping up and down glee. At 37 months, we can have conversations now. Riley gets distressed that the son<br>is missing. She does not want winter. When she comes home from preschool, she tells me about how her friend scratched her, but<br>then she said she was sorry and it made it better. Her toys like to ride around in a boot all together, she makes me something called<br>candy pies. She insists on picking out her own clothes, puts them on, looks in the mirror and says they aren&#8217;t cute for me enough and<br>picks out different clothes. Riley is enthusiastic about ice cream and pasta, oranges, white yogurt, bananas and chocolate. She tends<br>to pick a food and want tons of it for each meal, then want a completely different food for the next meal. And this is how a few days<br>ago she had five oranges for dinner. She loves counting and numbers and the alphabet, she spontaneously burst into song all the<br>time and sings them all the way through.<br>[00:10:20] Speaker1<br>Riley continues to insist that sharks and dinosaurs are too scary. She loves to keep her mask on her ears. And button her coat up all<br>the way and wear gloves and hats all bundled up. She loves to go to the drugstore to buy batteries. But after two blocks, she tells me<br>there are too many steps and she needs to be carried. She still thinks the verb for lugging a toddler in your arms is carry you as in<br>mommy, can you carry me? I mourn my friend said each baby idiosyncrasy that her language loses. She&#8217;s still self-identifies as a<br>baby. But she knows her name is Riley to. Her skin is gold, she says. But it turns pink when it gets cold. She&#8217;s particular about the<br>numbers of buses and likes to point out the numbers on the bus stops because she knows them. Even the bus stops that are actually<br>one our parking signs. Alas, there is still no one bus to her great disappointment, and the two bus does not seem to stop at every two<br>hour parking sign. I don&#8217;t know. My friend says. She&#8217;s just pretty great. She&#8217;s just pretty great. My friend clearly loves her daughter.<br>And that is why this note full of unremarkable moments caught my eye. Because it is so unremarkable, and it doesn&#8217;t even have<br>some big moral at the end of the story.<br>[00:12:08] Speaker1<br>It&#8217;s just paragraph upon paragraph of love. And noticing. An attention. And I think we all have something or someone that we do love<br>like that. Maybe it&#8217;s a person that&#8217;s fun to spend time with, even if we&#8217;re not doing anything fun. Maybe it&#8217;s a place. A place we love<br>where we feel at home that we know by heart. Maybe it&#8217;s a pet, a piece of artwork or a song, a band that we could listen to or spend<br>time with forever that we know backwards and forwards inside out. And that love. Can bring joy. Now, Joy, may not be the only thing<br>it brings. As Rodney said last week in his message, as Kathleen said and her message a few weeks ago, Beth Reverend, can all of<br>our preachers in this series have noted that joy can hold so much more than just the happy stuff. It is that happy stuff, but it&#8217;s also<br>something bigger around it. Our joy knows that full complexity of our circumstances, and yet those circumstances can&#8217;t remove that<br>joy. Can&#8217;t take it away. When we love with so much close attention. When we let ourselves. Take the time and the space to just<br>delight in whatever it is that we love. We grow more joy in that space. We feed and water it right, and it gets bigger. It takes up more<br>of that larger, more. With the tough stuff still there. But just like the balance of daylight and nighttime starts to change around this time<br>of year at solstice.<br>[00:14:14] Speaker1<br>Our love and attention can start to shift the balance of joy and pain. If we help it grow. You know, we&#8217;re trained to worry a lot. We are<br>trained, I think, to worry about whether or not we are loved in this society, whether or not we are receiving enough of that love,<br>whether we measure up and are good enough to be loved. I don&#8217;t think we are as well trained to love, unfortunately. And that&#8217;s a<br>shame, because as I&#8217;m pointing out here, I think that process that act of loving is not just a virtue that we should be aspiring to for<br>some high minded reason, it is also a joy creator. For us. And for the people around us. So whatever it is for you. You can tap into<br>that ability to cultivate joy. When you allow yourself, as the great poet Mary Oliver says, to let the soft animal of your body love what it<br>loves. To let the soft animal of your body love what it loves. There&#8217;s a book on my Christmas list, like I literally don&#8217;t have it yet, so full<br>disclosure, I haven&#8217;t read it, but I was excited as soon as I heard about it. Put it right on that Amazon wish list because it&#8217;s my kind of<br>thing. The book is called On Looking On Looking Eleven walks through expert eyes. The author is a woman named Alexandra<br>Horowitz.<br>[00:15:52] Speaker1<br>And the book has a pretty simple but really cool premise. In the first chapter, she takes a walk around a boring Old City block in her<br>town. And in that first walk, she just writes about what she notices, what she happens to see in this place where she lives. And it&#8217;s<br>kind of interesting, right? Someone walking around their own neighborhood taking notice of small things. But after that first walk. She<br>invites one by one, 10 different companions to walk that very same block with her. And each of those people is a specialist, an expert<br>in something. So in one chapter, she takes a walk around the block with an expert in typography, in fonts who points out all of the<br>different kinds of lettering on the city, signs around her and what they tell us about the history of how old that building is, how old that<br>business is, the history of the city and its development. In another chapter, she walks with an entomologist, a bug scientist who points<br>out a billion things she missed on her walk, all of these little signs of life everywhere that you can find in an urban ecosystem, some of<br>them are probably cockroaches, yes, but I bet there&#8217;s other things too. There&#8217;s a chapter where she walks with a sound engineer, one<br>with a geologist, one with a city planner. I mean, to me, this sounds like just a delightful celebration of Naderi, really, I&#8217;m just being a<br>nerd for something, right? And it points out how there are benefits to letting the soft animal of your body love what it loves right to<br>geeking out over something.<br>[00:17:43] Speaker1<br>Loving it unabashedly. One of the commentaries, one of the reviews on this book said, you know, people who like birds see cool<br>birds everywhere. People who love old architecture notice the magic all around them. I&#8217;m wondering today if you could name the<br>things that you know, that you love that you are a nerd for. I would love to see in the chat. Kathleen, what are you nerd for? History of<br>buildings, Kathleen raised her hand as soon as I said that, so I had to call on her. What are the things? Let us know in the chat that<br>you geek out over that you are a nerd for that you love. Maybe you love to find the best ice cream place in every town you visit, where<br>you collect tiny chicken statues, I don&#8217;t know who might do that or you&#8217;re always keeping an eye out for the color yellow or important<br>sights from the Revolutionary War in the area. Maybe you love stand up comedy. You&#8217;ve seen every Netflix special out there. It<br>doesn&#8217;t matter to me what it is, but I hope you know for you. What is something you love? Because if you know what that is, you can<br>be on the lookout for joy all the time.<br>[00:19:02] Speaker1<br>Joy makes all of this. More bearable. Unfortunately, it doesn&#8217;t make the bad things go away. The world around us is going to keep<br>throwing bad things our way in 2022. I hope they&#8217;re not the worst things we can imagine, but I can unfortunately promise you it&#8217;s not<br>going to be all roses. And we can&#8217;t just keep wishing. For it to go away. But we can recognize that fueling ourselves with joy is within<br>our power to some extent. When we end up loving this world a little more. We end up wanting to make it a little better. And that&#8217;s what<br>we need. All of us working together with as much energy as we can muster. And the good news is we don&#8217;t have to create it somehow<br>just by pushing ourselves, we can look for it because it&#8217;s out there. No matter how terrible the headlines, the cruelty, the despair. All<br>of us have a source of joy that no one can take from us. Hopefully, you have many sources, right, diversify your joy. That&#8217;s what they<br>say in investments, right? In economics. Some big ones. Some small ones, some fast acting ones. Some slow ones that grow over<br>time. Diversify your sources of sources of joy. Don&#8217;t put it all in one family member, one friend, one close relationship. Let it also be<br>dogs on the internet. Let it be hot beverages and birds in the sky and movies with your favorite actor in them, Don Cheadle, I don&#8217;t<br>know, I just took somebody but catalog the whole bunch of them for yourself.<br>[00:21:00] Speaker1<br>Oh, all the weird stuff on this Earth that you love. Make a list if you need to tack it right by your front door. So you can go out looking<br>each day. If that feels selfish or silly, please remember that it&#8217;s not because we need this fuel of our joy. The Yale Center for Faith<br>and Culture has a project they&#8217;ve been running the past few years about the theology of joy, where they talk about a lot of these<br>things. And one of the professors that they interviewed is a Baptist minister and theologian named Willie James Jennings. He said I<br>look at Joy as an act of resistance against despair and cruelty and its forces. Joy, as an act of resistance. Powering our ability to<br>engage suffering instead of ignore it if it doesn&#8217;t belong to us. And reminding us always that there is more than that suffering. The<br>challenges we faced can shift balance if we work at it just like the nighttime and the daytime. Every little piece of joy we cultivate and<br>share helps. It all helps. And it&#8217;s a good message for all of us at this time of year. As we get ready for the end of our service today for<br>the end of this season. As we watch that great cosmic balance of night and day at the solstice begin to shift once again.<br>[00:22:43] Speaker1<br>This is the time in the Christian liturgical calendar called Advent. It&#8217;s a whole season of waiting and watching. Before Christmas,<br>before the birth of Jesus, the arrival in the Christian tradition of God on Earth. In human form. In the season of Advent this year, one<br>of the first readings from Christian Scripture in the dictionary, the schedule of readings was from Jesus&#8217;s words in the gospel of Luke.<br>And every so often when I read ancient words, I realized that part of why they bring me comfort and I think why they bring so many<br>people comfort is because they remind me that we humanity have been in tough places before. And we are still here. In the reading,<br>Jesus says. There will be signs for you. Signs in the Sun and the Moon and the stars and on the Earth, distress among nations.<br>Confused by the roaring of the sea and the waves. People will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world. For<br>the powers of the heavens will be shaken. Sound familiar? He says when these things begin to take place. Stand up and raise your<br>heads. Look. Because your redemption is drawing near. Look at the fig tree, he says. And all the trees. As soon as they sprout<br>leaves, you can see and know that summer is coming. And when you see these things taking place, you will know that the Kingdom<br>of God, heaven on Earth.<br>[00:24:40]<br>Is near. Look.<br>[00:24:44] Speaker1<br>Be alert. So that your hearts are not weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of this life. Lest that day, catch<br>you unexpectedly. For joy and redemption will come. To us all. These are certainly times of challenge and struggle. And they&#8217;re also<br>our chance to grow new things. They&#8217;re a chance to remember that no one can take the source of our joy away from us because all of<br>us are potential sources of each other&#8217;s joy. All of us and not just us people, us plants, US animals, the sun and the sky, the Earth.<br>Whoever the creator is of all of this. All of us out here, even if we don&#8217;t know it, creating joy, leaving it right out in the open for others to<br>find. My wish for you this December and into the new year ahead is to remember this. To simply stay on the lookout. For joy sent to<br>the world. Amen. And may you live in blessing. Band&#8217;s going to come back up here. Two of the band members for our last song, and<br>in the meantime, I invite you to join me in the spirit of prayer.<br>[00:26:25] Speaker1<br>God of joy. Creator of everything that we see and know. And giver of our own lives. May we take a moment this morning to take in the<br>enormity of that? If we can just see and feel a sliver of the enormity of the fact that we did not do anything to be here. That we were<br>simply. Given onto this Earth. That our lives were a gift from somewhere else. And all we have to do is receive the days that we have.<br>We will make so many mistakes in those days. And we will also encounter the grace of so much goodness. May we remember that all<br>of it belongs? And that no one can take. The goodness and love that was given to us when we were created. I hope that each one of<br>us is able to feel. At least a sliver, maybe a whole full moon. Of the light of that joy. This week and in the weeks to come. For the<br>prayers, I&#8217;ve spoken and for the prayers that all of us gathered this morning, hold silently on our hearts. We say amen.<br>END OF TRANSCRIPT<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Rev. Lee begins by talking about something small that&#8217;s been bringing her lots of joy: Noodle the pug and his bones\/no bones videos that have taken TikTok by storm. The Noodle videos are answering a craving for a simple joy. Rev. Lee also shares some periodic updates from her friend about her daughter, and what life is like as a 3 year old. She tells us about a book she&#8217;s looking forward to reading called &#8220;On Looking,&#8221; which gives the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":5503,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","ctc_sermon_topic":[145,140,149,147,154],"ctc_sermon_book":[],"ctc_sermon_series":[167],"ctc_sermon_speaker":[123],"ctc_sermon_tag":[],"class_list":["post-5579","ctc_sermon","type-ctc_sermon","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","ctc_sermon_topic-belonging-connection","ctc_sermon_topic-mental-health","ctc_sermon_topic-mindfulness","ctc_sermon_topic-spiritual-practices","ctc_sermon_topic-world-events","ctc_sermon_series-this-joy","ctc_sermon_speaker-rev-lee-paczulla","ctfw-has-image"],"featured_image_urls":{"medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-300x169.png","large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-1024x576.png","thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-150x150.png","medium_large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-768x432.png","1536x1536":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-1536x864.png","post-thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-720x480.png","saved-section":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-1680x1050.png","saved-banner":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-1600x400.png","saved-square":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-720x720.png","saved-square-large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-1024x1024.png","saved-square-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-160x160.png","saved-rect-medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-480x320.png","saved-rect-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/11\/Joy-A-2021-FACEBOOK-200x133.png"},"appp_media":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/5579","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=5579"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/5579\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5580,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/5579\/revisions\/5580"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5503"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5579"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_topic","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_topic?post=5579"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_book?post=5579"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_series?post=5579"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_speaker?post=5579"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_tag?post=5579"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}