{"id":995,"date":"2013-05-11T17:10:32","date_gmt":"2013-05-11T21:10:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/?p=995"},"modified":"2013-07-17T21:11:21","modified_gmt":"2013-07-18T01:11:21","slug":"basso-not-profundo","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/basso-not-profundo\/","title":{"rendered":"Basso Not Profundo"},"content":{"rendered":"<figure id=\"attachment_997\" aria-labelledby=\"figcaption_attachment_997\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\" style=\"width: 410px\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/my_dinner.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-997\" title=\"My Dinner with Andre\" src=\"http:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/my_dinner.jpg\" alt=\"My Dinner with Andre\" width=\"400\" height=\"225\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/my_dinner.jpg 400w, https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/my_dinner-300x168.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 400px) 100vw, 400px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"figcaption_attachment_997\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Yeah. Well, you see \u00e2\u20ac\u201c Well, Andre, you know, if you want to know my actual response to all this \u00e2\u20ac\u201c do you want to hear my actual response? (Wallace Shawn in My Dinner with Andre)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">To be frank, Diana Butler Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s book <em>Christianity after Religion: The End of Church and the Birth of a New Spiritual Awakening<\/em> (NY: HarperOne, 2012) made my skin crawl. I see in it a hybrid of the worst of evangelical pietism and politically correct liberalism (\u00e2\u20ac\u0153progressivism\u00e2\u20ac\u009d). Not that it is unique in that. I have cringed at the same trend among seminarians and clergy for many years now. Her larger goal is to chronicle the steep decline of institutional \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Churchianity,\u00e2\u20ac\u009d whether evangelical, liberal Protestant, or Roman Catholic, and to herald a tectonic shift toward a people\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Christianity that is better described (and often self-described) as <em>spiritual<\/em> rather than <em>religious<\/em>. She offers oodles of sociological data, but it immediately becomes clear her aim is more prescriptive than descriptive. Her description is correct, I think, but, unlike Professor Bass, I do not see in these trends a Hegelian-like movement of the Absolute Spirit. The mere fact that it is happening doesn\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t mean it is the ineluctable will of God, which fanatics and ideologues think they know.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong><em>Christianity for the Tender-Minded<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Professor Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s program seems to me to mirror the foolish policies of the current administration: it owes a great and massive theological debt and has long since run out of any intellectual capital with which to pay it. She affirms the increasing unwillingness of Christians young and old to swallow the catechism they have long been spoon-fed. So far, I\u00e2\u20ac\u2122m with her. She then appeals to the great Wilfred Cantwell Smith (<em>The Meaning and End of Religion<\/em>, 1964).and others to suggest that belief was never really the point anyway. I even agree with that: as Tillich said, \u00e2\u20ac\u0153ultimate concern\u00e2\u20ac\u009d would seem to be the core of the thing. But then again no one ever valued pat, glib belief without a depth of commitment behind it. Isn\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t it more of a distinction between \u00e2\u20ac\u0153necessary\u00e2\u20ac\u009d and \u00e2\u20ac\u0153sufficient conditions\u00e2\u20ac\u009d? I mean, you can have worthless faith that is merely skin-deep, and you can have heart-felt faith that makes a difference. What remains to be seen, however, is whether you can have the concern without the belief. Remember Hebrews 11:6b: \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d It is not some kind of a qualification without which you are not entitled to seek God, like claiming a man has to be circumcised to be saved (Acts 15:1). It is a simple matter of a logical premise: why would you seek what you don\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t believe exists?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Well, Professor Bass urges us to replace the <em>what<\/em> with the <em>how<\/em>, content with style or technique. The old German Pietists (Spener, Tersteegen, Count Zinzindorf) knew that hollow orthodoxy was useless and that true belief had to be grounded in the \u00e2\u20ac\u0153heart-warming\u00e2\u20ac\u009d experience of faith. But Dr. Bass cannot mean only this, since she is prescribing the \u00e2\u20ac\u0153how\u00e2\u20ac\u009d as the remedy for <em>doubt<\/em>, implying that the cognitive assent to theological propositions is just not where it\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s at. Yet all her gushy talk of seeking and finding Jesus in a soup kitchen or a prayer session or a quilting bee obviously implies some sort of \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Jesus is God\u00e2\u20ac\u009d Christology, doesn\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t it? Unless she is just using the name \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Jesus\u00e2\u20ac\u009d as a catch-all term for the divine presence that she (thinks she) feels. In that case, she has, as Francis Schaeffer used to say, reduced theology to \u00e2\u20ac\u0153connotation words.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Similarly, Bass appeals to scriptural texts as some kind of norm again and again. Does not this <em>how<\/em> presuppose a very definite <em>what<\/em>? And the belief in a coming Kingdom of God that will spread justice and peace over all the earth\u00e2\u20ac\u201dthat doesn\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t presuppose a definite belief that something\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s going to happen? If not, then what on earth is the point? The urgency that Christians try to behave like Jesus\u00e2\u20ac\u201ddoes this not simply take for granted that the gospel portrait of Jesus represents the real Jesus? And that Jesus is for some (theological) reason the norm? Otherwise, why not Frodo? Or is there much of a difference in Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s self-described \u00e2\u20ac\u0153romantic\u00e2\u20ac\u009d Christianity?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Certainly her use of scripture, stories of Abraham as well as Jesus, is as ahistorical and as touchy-feely as Rich Warren\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s. She psychologizes and historicizes the biblical characters and makes them into pop-psychological object lessons. The depiction of Jesus as a first-century Leo Buscaglia overseeing the self-realization of his disciples (cf., Peter\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Caesarea Philippi confession, according to Bass: \u00e2\u20ac\u0153You are the One for whom my heart has waited!\u00e2\u20ac\u009d) is comical. Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Christianity is not only \u00e2\u20ac\u0153romantic,\u00e2\u20ac\u009d i.e., artsy and emotion-colored; it is the stuff of women\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s talk shows. Bass represents only the latest stage of the subjective sentimentalizing of religion described by Ann Douglas in <em>The Feminization of American Culture<\/em> (1978).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">In all this, Bass means to cater to Christians who can no longer suppress their doubts. But plainly what she proceeds to do is simply to take God, Jesus, the whole thing, for granted. Her implicit message is not: \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Here, friend, let me remove your burden of having to believe the unbelievable.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d That was the approach, e.g., of John A.T. Robinson. <em>Honest to God<\/em>, 1963). It is rather \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Let\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s just forget about critical thinking, and then your doubts will not bother you.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d This is to make a methodology, even a fetish, of intellectual flimsiness.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">I say she owes a great theological debt because her approach is parasitic upon a version of belief, namely evangelical Christianity, that she is rejecting. It certainly appears that the atonement upon the cross has as little role in her thinking as it does in Process Theology or New Thought. Yet she wants people to \u00e2\u20ac\u0153encounter Jesus\u00e2\u20ac\u009d as if he were the same old imaginary friend that is so central to traditional fundamentalism. You supposedly don\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t have to believe in the resurrection, but she wants you to experience the power of the resurrection as she did in a chat with an ecumenical council of local bank tellers one morning. Schaeffer was right: all she has left is connotation words.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong><em>The Relevance of an Implausible Ideal<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But maybe that\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s not quite all. Bass is very confident that Christians must pursue the agenda of Political Correctness, especially the code-slogan of \u00e2\u20ac\u0153social justice\u00e2\u20ac\u009d which amounts, finally, despite the cosmetic denials, to Socialism: forced income redistribution and a shut-down of Capitalism. These strategies, the policy of the current administration, are wrecking the economy. Political liberalism is already a sheer-faith position, forged in the mind-game laboratories of academia where paper ideology is king. Like-minded politicians legislate these ideologies, demanding that the stubborn facts of economic reality shall obey them. They \u00e2\u20ac\u0153call things that are not as though they were\u00e2\u20ac\u009d and expect creation <em>ex nihilo<\/em>. It is like an old science fiction parody by L. Sprague de Camp in which Congress got together to rescind the Law of Gravity, and everything began to float off into space! The joke, of course, is that one cannot regulate the \u00e2\u20ac\u0153laws\u00e2\u20ac\u009d of nature, try as one might. But this is what Socialist ideologues seek to do. And when their economies, for instance, of Eastern Europe, are ruined by this strategy, they have their rationalizations at the ready\u00e2\u20ac\u201djust like Harold Camping and the Jehovah\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Witnesses when their predictions of the Second Coming fall through\u00e2\u20ac\u201dagain and again. Jim Wallis used to say that the criterion for Christian action was not success but obedience. One might paraphrase that maxim this way: what counts is not results but rationalizations.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Liberalism is, I say, already a religious faith, though secular liberals do not seem to realize it. Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s type of \u00e2\u20ac\u0153progressive Christianity\u00e2\u20ac\u009d makes the religious character of it explicit, though insofar as they are eroding the theology that might justify it, her social justice Christians are becoming just as arbitrary. But they have not yet made the connection that if one cannot count on a miracle-working deity to pull a miraculous harvest out of a hat in the Millennium, there is no pay-off. But maybe they are planning for that, judging from their pious talk of \u00e2\u20ac\u0153living simply.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d They are blithely embracing a strategy that must grind the economy to a halt, since makers of consumer goods would be left idle and poor. But this is okay with Bass and her fellows, since they (like all liberals) are deep down ascetics anyway and want everyone else to join the fun.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Let me pause to mention Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s \u00e2\u20ac\u0153romantic\u00e2\u20ac\u009d approach to realizing the kingdom through token efforts, conscience-salving efforts I should say, to \u00e2\u20ac\u0153make a difference\u00e2\u20ac\u009d re world hunger by shopping at Whole Foods, etc. Here we are witnessing magical thinking akin to that of the Melanesian Cargo Cults, whose confused adherents knew that Westerners were doing something right, judging from their manifest prosperity and military power, so they marched and drilled in the public square with broom-handle rifles and chattered into orange-crate radios, hoping these childish mimicries would cause the European god Jesus to bring them a boatload of Western goods. The gestures of the PC righteous are just as futile. I remember seeing those STOP APARTHEID NOW bumper stickers and thinking, \u00e2\u20ac\u0153I\u00e2\u20ac\u2122ll be sure to take care of that the very next chance I get.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d I recall seeing a sign posted on a Society of Friends meeting hall that read PEACE SITE. My thought: \u00e2\u20ac\u0153That\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s a relief\u00e2\u20ac\u201dno first strike from the Quakers!\u00e2\u20ac\u009d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong><em>The Velvet-Covered Brick of Liberalism<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But the strategies of Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s progressive Christians do not stop at that. They are plainly disciples of the current administration and its prevaricating messiah. They identify Democratic victories at the polls with the Fourth (or Fourth and a Half) Great Awakening and the indefatigable march of its Kingdom of God agenda. Are they na\u00c3\u00afve or just duplicitous in decrying Religious Right theocracy schemes, while advocating for their own zero-tolerance Leftist theocracy? From Harvey Cox to Jim Wallis to Diana Bass, they are surer than mortals have a right to be that they know what God is up to in the world, and thus they feel no qualms about legislating <em>that<\/em>. Would that they would heed the wisdom of the Apostle Paul: \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Now we see in a glass darkly.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d Or even the wisdom of Paul Simon: \u00e2\u20ac\u0153God only knows. God makes his plans. The information\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s not available to the mortal man.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Not to open Pandora\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Box yet farther, but I just cannot fathom how self-proclaimed Christians of any stripe can have the slightest sympathy with the pro-abortion ideology when their own Lord and Savior narrowly escaped King Herod\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s abortion clinic. But Bass blithely lumps Operation Rescue activists in with the Tea Party, whom, in accord with the Obama media line, she caricatures as \u00e2\u20ac\u0153nativists.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d The glib identification of the liberal agenda with the onward-marching will of God is just staggering. Here the smug arrogance of secular progressivism is reinforced by the pious zealotry of evangelical triumphalism. The worst of both worlds.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">At one juncture in <em>Christianity after Religion<\/em>, author Bass shrugs off the anticipated reader suspicion that she is just stuck in nostalgia for her radical-chic evangelical college days. Forgive me if I think that is precisely what has happened. She has resolved to keep her Sunday School piety, come hell or high water, even as she saws off the epistemological limb it is hanging from. She imbibed sophomoric \u00e2\u20ac\u0153social justice\u00e2\u20ac\u009d slogans, mixing them with the seeming sophistication of C.S. Lewis and G.K. Chesterton, hence her \u00e2\u20ac\u0153romanticism.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d It is a stance that disdains reality for a comfortable, self-congratulatory fantasy world of Prius-drivers and Obama voters. She and her fans are mired in the \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Young Evangelicalism\u00e2\u20ac\u009d set forth by my old pal Richard Quebedeaux in his 1974 manifesto. Those were heady days. I was thrilled to embrace the dream. But it is long since time to put away childish things.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong><em>The future\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s so bright I have to wear shades &#8212; or is it just dark?<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">What would maturity mean? It would mean a \u00e2\u20ac\u0153great awakening\u00e2\u20ac\u009d from the pleasant dreams of both evangelicalism and progressivism. It would amount to the \u00e2\u20ac\u0153great noon\u00e2\u20ac\u009d of Nietzsche, when religious crutches are cast away with the vigor of someone who thinks he has been healed by Ernest Angley or Peter Popov.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Dr. Bass is right on target when she highlights the onrushing of religious and inter-religious pluralism in America. As classmates, roommates, office mates, team mates, and marriage mates drop the old religious barriers that traditionally divided them (and personal acquaintance is an irresistible battering ram to those tottering walls), I believe that Americans will of necessity cease to make their inherited religions their primary (or even secondary) identifiers. Since, as Rousseau said, \u00e2\u20ac\u0153It is impossible to live at peace with those we regard as damned,\u00e2\u20ac\u009d \u00c2\u00a0people will allow their religious identities to recede into the background, right next to their ethnicities. It will be something to appreciate, even to cherish, but no longer the main thing, just as the Law of Moses, which is the very Word of God in the Old Testament, has become merely \u00e2\u20ac\u0153the customs of the Jews\u00e2\u20ac\u009d in the Book of Acts.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Pluralism next begets secularism, as it already has in our pluralistic republic, where the \u00e2\u20ac\u0153sacred canopy\u00e2\u20ac\u009d (Peter Berger) of our laws is not the Bible or the Koran, but rather a purely pragmatic social compact that keeps us off each others\u00e2\u20ac\u2122 toes. And then there is modernity with its scientific worldview. Technology with the access to once-forbidden heresies that it provides has already eroded traditional religiosities in various parts of the world. It was such influences from the secular West that spawned Islamo-Fascism as one of Anthony Wallace\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Revitalization Movements. Usually such reactions are doomed at the outset, since, if the horse hadn\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t already escaped the barn, the frantic rancher wouldn\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t be wishing he had locked it and resolving to keep it locked from now on. Until recently I expected that Islamo-Fascism would pass like a destructive hurricane and be gone, clearing the way for world peace to arrive through the eventual adoption of democratic Capitalism and the free market. When people have abundance, a condition made possible for the first time in human history by the very same Capitalism now deemed Politically Incorrect, there will be no need for war.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">But now I see that bright prospect endangered. It appears that America is haplessly following \u00e2\u20ac\u0153progressive\u00e2\u20ac\u009d Europe into the financially suicidal path of the socialistic welfare state. It is like the character in Stephen King\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s horror story \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Survivor Type\u00e2\u20ac\u009d who survived as long as he could amputate and consume his own flesh. Progressives are following the wrong biblical precedent, that of the primitive church in Jerusalem, which pooled and redistributed its members\u00e2\u20ac\u2122 resources, bringing collective bankruptcy in its wake and causing them to hit Paul\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s churches up for hand-outs.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The moral decadence of our society is manifested in our abortion mills and the increasing toleration of infanticide as well as the judicial system\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s indifference to child rape and murder. But moral decadence can take the form of inflated morality as much as a deflation of it, as witness the courts\u00e2\u20ac\u2122 compassionate preference for the murderer over his victim. Liberalism erases distinctions between the predator and his prey when it opposes the execution of the former, as his life is imagined to have equal value with that of the latter. Consider the tragic moral confusion in Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s anecdote about the Amish community who embraced the murdering dog who killed their own children. Nietzsche could have asked for no truer example of the slave morality of sniveling Christianity. Once we declare universal forgiveness we lower the standard of responsibility for ourselves and others. If I don\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t hold you responsible, you won\u00e2\u20ac\u2122t hold me responsible. \u00e2\u20ac\u0153We\u00e2\u20ac\u2122re all sinners, after all.\u00e2\u20ac\u009d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Environmentalists consider humans the enemy of \u00e2\u20ac\u0153the planet\u00e2\u20ac\u009d and unapologetically advocate policies that will make us pesky humans suffer. Add to that the ludicrous attempt to dress animals up in the suits and cravats of \u00e2\u20ac\u0153rights\u00e2\u20ac\u009d when they certainly accord none to each other in the nature of the case. (We must be humane to animals, but it is an obligation of our own character, not of their imagined rights.) Think of the myopic madness of pacifism which only facilitates the victory of an aggressor. Morality has gotten way out of hand here, becoming dangerously counterproductive.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/bookgraphic_bass.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft\" title=\"Christianity after Religion - Bass\" src=\"http:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/bookgraphic_bass.jpg\" alt=\"Christianity after Religion - Bass\" width=\"281\" height=\"400\" \/><\/a><\/strong>All this denotes a rot that is hollowing out our resolve to survive. We face a virulent foe in worldwide Islamo-Fascism, and we are too cowardly even to admit the threat exists. We call it \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Islamophobia\u00e2\u20ac\u009d when anyone dares decry the dangers of Islamo-Fascism. We are too lazy and faithless to prevent Jihadist states from gaining nuclear weapons. We have made ourselves weak and spineless, hoping that international problems will just go away, that our enemies will be as slow to act as we are. If there is a second Shoah, a nuclear one this time, well, that will be too bad. We will put on our required mourning clothes and say, \u00e2\u20ac\u0153Never again! And this time we\u00e2\u20ac\u2122re not kidding!\u00e2\u20ac\u009d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">There is a chance that the Islamist hurricane will destroy Western Civilization because we will have proven ourselves unworthy of surviving it. To use Garrett Hardin\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s once-controversial analogy, the one person in the lifeboat whose tender conscience bids him jump overboard to make room for another will only have succeeded in ensuring that there is no longer any conscience in the lifeboat. If medieval barbarism against women, homosexuals, and freethinkers should one day prevail, the effete and na\u00c3\u00afve \u00e2\u20ac\u0153romantics\u00e2\u20ac\u009d and \u00e2\u20ac\u0153progressives\u00e2\u20ac\u009d will have abetted the process. But that will be all right with them. It will give them a chance to play the martyr, an essential role in the aesthetic of victimhood.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>To be frank, Diana Butler Bass\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s book Christianity after Religion: The End of Church and the Birth of a New Spiritual Awakening (NY: HarperOne, 2012) made my skin crawl. I see in it a hybrid of the worst of evangelical &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/basso-not-profundo\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-995","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/995","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=995"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/995\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=995"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=995"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com\/zblog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=995"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}