What’s Right with Preaching Today?: The Enduring Influence of Fred B. Craddock
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About this ebook
To honor Craddock's legacy, Mike Graves and Andre Resner invited ten leading voices in homiletics to identify something that is right about preaching today. In addition, they issued a call to a wide variety of people to contribute stories about Fred's impact on their lives and ministries. Twenty-seven remembrances of Fred are included here throughout the book.
If you appreciate effective and engaging preaching--as either a preacher or listener--the essays and remembrances here will speak to you and provide encouragement about preaching's present and future.
With contributions from:
Ronald J. Allen
Barbara K. Lundblad
Alyce McKenzie
Debra J. Mumford
Luke Powery
Andre Resner
Richard Ward
Dawn Ottoni-Wilhelm
Paul Scott Wilson
Thomas G. Long
Thomas G. Long is Bandy Professor of Preaching and coordinator of the Initiative in Religious Practices and Practical Theology at Candler School of Theology, Emory University. His other books include The Witness of Preaching and Accompany Them with Singing — The Christian Funeral.
Read more from Thomas G. Long
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What’s Right with Preaching Today? - Thomas G. Long
What’s Right with Preaching Today?
The Enduring Influence of Fred B. Craddock
Edited by Mike Graves and André Resner
Foreword by Thomas G. Long
What’s Right with Preaching Today?
The Enduring Influence of Fred B. Craddock
Copyright ©
2021
Wipf and Stock Publishers. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers,
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Cascade Books
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
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paperback isbn: 978-1-4982-9501-7
hardcover isbn: 978-1-4982-9503-1
ebook isbn: 978-1-4982-9502-4
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Names: Graves, Mike, editor. | Resner, André, editor.
Title: What’s right with preaching today? : the enduring influence of Fred B. Craddock / Edited by Mike Graves and André Resner.
Description: Eugene, OR: Cascade Books,
2021
| Includes bibliographical references.
Identifiers:
isbn 978-1-4982-9501-7 (
paperback
) | isbn 978-1-4982-9503-1 (
hardcover
) | isbn 978-1-4982-9502-4 (
ebook
)
Subjects: LCSH: Craddock, Fred B., Jr.,
1928–2015.
| Preaching.
Classification:
BV4207 .W50 2021 (
paperback
) | BV4207 (
ebook
)
11/23/20
Table of Contents
Title Page
Foreword
Introduction
Bless You, Fred
Chapter 1: Diversity is Diverse
My Day With Fred Craddock
Listen to How Everyday Folks Put Things Into Words
The Straight-Edged Pointer Finger
Chapter 2: God’s Little Farm
Think About It
Finding Fred Craddock
Chapter 3: Seeing the Word
The Day I Preached Before Dr. Craddock
Passing on the Itch
Chapter 4: The Role of the Preacher’s Experience in the Sermon
The Most Important Thing I Learned From Fred Craddock
Form Shapes the Listener’s Faith
Chapter 5: One Thing Right About Preaching is the Way our Teaching and Learning Contexts Challenge Growth
He Knew Me Very Well
The Problem of Calfhood
Fred Said Yes
Chapter 6: The Turn to the Listener
Too Busy to Go Hear this Fred Craddock Guy . . .
It’s Not a List; Don’t Call it a List . . .
This Sermon Only Works If . . .
Chapter 7: Invocation Vocation
A Pivotal Person
And then I saw the Lamb . . . so I stayed.
Chapter 8: Recentering Preaching
My Last Minute Lion’s Club Speech
Fred Craddock Has No Peer
On Fixing a Broken Sermon
Chapter 9: Finding Soul
in Delivery
I Remember Fred Craddock
My Stories ‘Get Tumbled’
Chapter 10: Homiletics as a Behind-the-Scenes Prompter of Preaching
Tell the Good Christian Folk the Truth from Your Soul and You’ll be All right
Fred B. Craddock and Preaching the Bread of Life
On Hearing Fred Craddock
Conclusion
One More Craddock Story
Acknowledgments
Essay Contributors
To Fred B. Craddock,
his life, his preaching, and his written and spoken legacy—
he continues to be one of the things most right with preaching
Sometimes I listen to a sermon that has all kinds of things wrong with it, and I’m deeply moved.
—Fred Craddock
Foreword
If a moon, rather than circling a single planet, were to spin its orbit around two equal-sized planets, its track would form an ellipse. This book, in its own way, is an ellipse, because it traces its path around two equally significant foci: the foci of the question what is right about preaching? and the foci of the life and ministry of one of America’s most transformational preachers, Fred B. Craddock.
As for what is right about preaching?: the phrase recalls another transformational American preacher, Harry Emerson Fosdick. Fosdick was perhaps the most celebrated preacher of the first half of the twentieth century (it is a humbling thought to realize that Fosdick was so prominent in his day that he was featured on the cover of Time magazine twice, but that most twenty-somethings today have never heard of him, and they are perhaps not too much aware of Time magazine either). Fosdick’s preaching was so popular that the general public was admitted to the cavernous Riverside Church, where he held forth from the pulpit, on a ticket-only basis.
Fosdick was the perfect jazz age
preacher, and he had figured out that restless, post-World War I Americans were tired of traditional sermons full of moral harrumphs cantilevered off stern biblical and theological orthodoxy. The hunger was for sermons that spoke directly to the heart and the will of individual hearers, that helped them wrestle with the everyday challenges of a society in flux, that solved problems rather than expounded doctrine. In July, 1928, Fosdick published a provocative essay in Harper’s magazine, sensationally titled What Is the Matter with Preaching?,
which constituted a major take-down of the customary sermonizing of the day. Only the preacher proceeds upon the idea that folk come to church desperately anxious to discover what happened to the Jebusites,
Fosdick famously jabbed. The result is that folks less and less come to church at all.
¹
Seventy-five years later, Mike Graves, one of the editors of this volume, assembled a group of writers, mostly preaching professors, to return to Fosdick’s question. The result was What’s the Matter with Preaching Today?, a diagnosis by a team of specialists about what ailed the American pulpit, not in the roaring twenties but at the beginning of a new and fraught century.
This present book, What’s Right with Preaching?, is not just the flip side of the earlier question. It is, rather, the product of a gradual recognition that, as the butane torch of secularity blisters away the varnish of civic religion, what remains ironically reveals the beauty and courage of the life of faith and of acts of obedience and devotion, including preaching. In contrast to Fosdick’s day, when a member of the clergy could make the cover of Time just for doing an impressive job in the pulpit, much of what is right about preaching today is that men and women still have the pluck and nerve to do it, that as numbers decline and the church grows smaller and seemingly less influential, preachers with little social support still stand up to preach and to allow themselves to be fools for Christ.
Baseball statisticians have recently come up with a new measure of a player’s value and effectiveness, wins above replacement
(ominously abbreviated as WAR). The statistic purports to quantify how many more games your team would win with a certain player on the squad over just an average Joe bench sitter. Needless to say, WAR proves that your favorite team would be better off with Babe Ruth in right field, Willie Mays in center, and Ted Williams in left, than with the three guys, whoever they might be, currently patrolling the outfield. Who wouldn’t trade in a flash for Ruth, Mays, and Williams? They would bring to any team an impressive wins above replacement.
Maybe this works in baseball, but I hope no one ever tries to develop a WAR stat for preachers. If a congregation in Nebraska could somehow trade its current preacher for a pulpit star, say a Chrysostom or a Harry Emerson Fosdick or a Gardner Taylor, would there be an uptick in WAR? The question is all wrong. The fact is that some woman or man who loves this flock has, with prayer and perspiration, crafted a sermon that seeks to speak a word from God to these people in this place and on this day is irreplaceable. What we now see, that we could perhaps not see as clearly in a time when the church was more powerful culturally, is that good preaching is small and locally sourced—this congregation, this neighborhood or town, this preacher, these concerns—and that this is much of what is right about preaching.
And that brings us around to the other focus of this ellipse, the other reference point of this book: Fred B. Craddock. It is said that in an elliptically shaped room, the acoustics are such that if someone whispers at one end of the oval it can be heard perfectly by someone at the other end. Just so, to speak in this book of what’s right about preaching at one focal point resonates fully with Fred B. Craddock at the other, and vice versa. In a preaching career that spanned over a half century, Craddock blazed a genuinely new trail in sermon construction and preaching style and, in so doing, impacted not only his own generation of preachers but also the future of preaching. His preaching was good
in the sense that the gospel news he preached is also good.
There has been much discussion and debate about what exactly made Fred B. Craddock such an excellent preacher. Some have pointed to his mastery of language, others to his near miraculous skill as a storyteller, and still others to his ability to unleash the power of biblical texts. To this list of undeniable virtues, many others could be added. I wish to suggest one more: in a positive way, Craddock made an asset of the local and the small.
In part this smallness and localness was a function of place. Andy Griffith’s Mayberry
was fashioned from his memories of his hometown, Mt. Airy, North Carolina. Garrison Keillor’s Lake Wobegon
was woven out of strands of Keillor’s experiences in Stearns County, Minnesota, where he lived as a young and struggling writer. Likewise, standing behind many a Craddock sermon are his humble origins in depression-era Humboldt, Tennessee. Even when the locale of West Tennessee was not visible, it was there in the background. Craddock’s sermons do not happen in the abstract, they are peopled with real characters and salted with concrete events. People have conversations in barbecue joints, working-class husbands and home-bound wives have arguments about money at the family table, young men sit on the hoods of cars smoking cigarettes in the supermarket parking lot. Welcome to Humboldt.
The risk, of course, is nostalgia, and Craddock’s sermons sometimes do include references that seem lost in time—a child boards a school bus carrying a lunch bucket,
and his mother wears a chenille bathrobe and has her hair rolled in pink curlers. But the power in this is that Craddock crafts a landscape small enough for the listener to imagine the gospel happening in everyday terms. In his own essay for What’s the Matter with Preaching Today? Craddock pictured three widows, Naomi, Orpah, and Ruth, huddled under dark veils, weeping and searching for a future,
² and we are, of course, in the biblical book of Ruth, but we are also standing beside a grave at the cemetery in Humboldt or in every other town, wondering from whence hope may arise. What is of vital importance [in sermons],
Craddock wrote, is that those who come to see God at work in the lives of persons not too unlike themselves will be open to the presence and power of God among them.
³
One Sunday some years ago, as I was pulling on my robe and preparing to serve as the guest preacher
in a church somewhere, my eye was drawn to some artwork on the wall. I was in the pastor’s office, and mounted over a sofa was a drawing of first-century Jerusalem. It was so realistically done and so exacting in detail, it looked more like an aerial photograph than a piece of art. Everything familiar was there—the temple, the gates, the pool of Siloam, everything. Suddenly I realized that I knew that city, had been to that city, had walked those streets, had moved down from the Mount of Olives across the Kidron Valley and upward to the temple mount. Of course, I had done no such thing. I had lived in old Jerusalem only as an act of imagination, invited there by preachers and Sunday school teachers in my youth. What Craddock described—seeing God at work in the lives of persons not too unlike myself—had happened to me through the preaching and telling of the gospel stories.
Part of the value of imaginative narrative, Paul Ricoeur taught us, is that it projects in front of it a world
and beckons us to enter that world, to imagine ourselves walking around in it, making decisions and coming to grips with who we are and what we are summoned to do. Eventually, of course, we must leave the narrative and return to our real world, but we do so changed. We have been somewhere, and we are different for it. In addition, the strong narrative substrate in Craddock’s preaching, both in the stories told and the dramatic plot structure of many of his sermons, effects a reality that has shape and purpose, where people really do have agency, actions really do have consequences, and things really do have an ending, over against a world in which identity is threatened and malleable, where both goodness and evil seem random, and events flow on seemingly without rhyme or reason.
The narrative shape of Craddock’s sermons may seem to be yet another streak of nostalgia, a wistful longing for meaning in an episodic world where all efforts at stable meaning get deconstructed. But in the hands of an able preacher like Craddock, the shape that gives meaning to life comes, as only it can, as the gospel, as divine gift. A few years ago, the theologian Gilbert Meilaender wrote a review of ethicist Stanley Hauerwas’s autobiography, Hannah’s Child. He crafted it in the form of a personal letter to his old friend Hauerwas, and near its conclusion he said,
In the end, of course, I cannot say whether you have really succeeded in finding what you were seeking in this memoir: the pattern that gives shape and unity to your life. Without in any way diminishing the pleasure I have had in reading what you have written, may I say finally that it matters not whether you’ve found it. The God who alone, as Augustine says, can catch the heart and hold it still knows us better than we know ourselves. He will not fail to detect the pattern and finish the story.⁴
God alone gives the finished story. A similar conviction is at work in Craddock’s preaching. His sermons have beginnings, middles, and ends. We enter a small and manageable world where events happen, plots have twists and things become complicated, but then things are resolved (even if it is the listener who finally crafts the resolution). The result is that the vast claims of the gospel get presented at the scale of everyday living. The good news is heard not in the voice of a distant angel, but in the conversation at table between the passing of the mashed potatoes and the biscuits, and big concepts like justice
and peace
get expressed in tangible and accessible terms, such as the painful memory of watching a proud African American man, in the pre-civil rights south, be forced to eat his sandwich on the curb of the street outside of the restaurant where he had purchased it.
This is local but universal, small but encompassing. It is part of what Fred Craddock left us as a legacy and part of what he taught us about what’s right about preaching.
Thomas G. Long
Bandy Professor Emeritus of Preaching
Candler School of Theology
Emory University
Bibliography
Craddock, Fred B. Preaching: An Appeal to Memory.
In What’s the Matter with Preaching Today?, edited by Mike Graves
, 59–74
. Louisville: Westminster John Knox,
2004
.
Fosdick, Harry Emerson, What is the Matter with Preaching?
Harpers Magazine, July
1928
. harpers.org/archive/
1928/07/
what-is-the-matter-with-preaching/.
Graves, Mike, ed. What’s the Matter with Preaching Today? Louisville: Westminster John Knox,
2004
.
Meilaender, Gilbert. A Dedicated Life.
First Things
203
(May
2010
)
17
.
1
. Fosdick, What Is the Matter with Preaching?,
135
.
2
. Craddock, Preaching,
73
.
3
. Craddock, Preaching,
73
.
4
. Meilaender, A Dedicated Life,
17
.
Introduction
A Little Christian Twitch
Mike Graves
Among his many stories, Fred Craddock tells one about being in the Kansas City airport when he struck up a conversation with a fellow from the University of Utrecht in The Netherlands. The man was writing a book based on a study about the influence of the conversations between doctors and nurses in the presence of patients under anesthesia. He discovered that if the medical staff were negative and grumpy, the patient in recovery was often depressed and pessimistic. If the doctors and nurses were upbeat and cheerful, the patient was more likely to be euphoric, even recover more quickly. When the time came for Fred to catch his plane, the man asked, Are you a doctor?
Fred said, Oh, no, I’m a preacher. But if it’ll work in surgery, it’ll work in the sanctuary.
Reflecting on that event, Craddock added, So when I go somewhere to speak, and people are asleep, it doesn’t bother me, because I know that several days later they may get a little Christian twitch. They won’t know what caused it, but I’ll know.
⁵
Fred really didn’t have to worry about people falling asleep during his sermons, not the way some preachers might. As early as 1971, in his groundbreaking book, As One Without Authority, he pioneered the idea that not just the preacher’s stories should be interesting, but the whole sermon. He called it inductive preaching,
and it was a clarion call for preachers to take the listeners seriously. He noted among other things how in traditional forms of preaching there was no contributing by the hearer.
He added, If the congregation is on the team, it is as javelin catcher.
⁶ Ouch!
Fred Craddock was only a couple months old when in July of 1928 Harry Emerson Fosdick published his famous essay, What Is the Matter with Preaching?
The much-celebrated preacher of Riverside Church in New York City was one of the first persons to suggest that the trouble was how preachers neglected the listeners, their concerns as well as their hopes and dreams. He wrote, One obvious trouble with the mediocre sermon, even when harmless, is that it is uninteresting.
On the seventy-fifth anniversary of that article, I edited a collection of essays, reprinting Fosdick’s original article, and enlisting eleven leading voices to name what they considered to be wrong with preaching today. Fred Craddock was one of those contributors, and he began his piece by reminding readers that he was only two months old when the article first appeared. He wrote, Warm milk and a dry diaper were enough for me, thank you. In fact, twenty-two years passed before I read the article. It was on the required reading list for a seminary class, P301. Needless to say, I was impressed.
⁷
It is remarkable to consider how in many ways Craddock would hold and eventually embody the answer to Fosdick’s question. If the New York City preacher had started the so-called turn toward the listener, publishing his essay in Harpers Magazine of all places, the native of little old Humboldt, Tennessee, would run with the idea like no one ever had. The literature in preaching has been pursuing the idea ever since.
Craddock’s As One Without Authority is credited with launching the New Homiletic,
⁸ and although he named the first chapter The Pulpit in the Shadows,
he was not interested in focusing solely on the negative. That 1971 classic begins, We are all aware that in countless courts of opinion the verdict on preaching has been rendered and the sentence passed. All this slim volume asks is a stay of execution until one other witness be heard.
⁹
The heart of his testimony came in the next chapter, The Pulpit in the Spotlight,
which begins, In the words of judgment against the pulpit are to be heard the first stirrings of new life for preaching . . . Those of us vitally concerned with preaching, perhaps possessed of unjustified hope, tend to interpret the measure of the depth to which the pulpit has fallen as also the measure of the height to which it should and can rise.
¹⁰
Perhaps more than anyone before him or since, Craddock chose to focus on what is right with preaching, resulting in what he called that little Christian twitch.
Of course the normal question posed in preaching books, or at least implied, is, How come our preaching doesn’t work? In that 2004 collection of essays I called it a timeless question.
One might say that a focus on what’s wrong is the very warp and woof of the homiletical fabric. Every title in the field either starts with a negative assessment, or presumes such. If something wasn’t wrong with preaching, why even bother writing about the subject?
When I first approached persons who might contribute to this project, most of us were in sunny southern California—San Diego, to be precise, attending the annual meeting of the Academy of Homiletics, a gathering of nearly 200 teachers of preaching from around the world. We sat on sun-drenched balconies, drinking coffee and eating pastries during our morning breaks, catching up with each other’s lives and sharing what we were working on at the time. When I mentioned this project, the intrigue was obvious on my colleagues’ faces. Most of them knew the earlier work on what’s the matter.
Here was its flipside, so to speak. But within seconds, the intrigue turned to bafflement. No one came out and said it in so many words, but if I’d been playing poker, it was obvious they didn’t like the cards in their hand. The subject was intriguing in the abstract, but what would they possibly say is right with preaching today? One leading voice eventually said as much in an email.
It is true, professors of preaching major in what’s wrong. Not just in the books we write, but even in our teaching of preaching. For example, many of us use a pattern for debriefing after a student preaches in class, what is sometimes referred to as a critique sandwich.
This should sound familiar to most preachers. We start with the good news, specifically the question, where did you hear the good news in this sermon? And we end with more good news, affirmations of what worked well. But in between is the real meat
of the critique sandwich, what didn’t work so well. In my own teaching I try to put a positive spin on this aspect, asking instead, What would you like to hear more of next time?
Spin it all you want, seminarians recognize this is what was wrong with their sermon on that day.
If the meat
of critique time in seminary is the bad news, this book is about the bread on either side of that meat, the good news of preaching that can be the very bread of life for those who gather to listen. What is there worth celebrating in the preaching life of Christ’s church? Are there developments in homiletics that should be lifted up, even celebrated? If one of the purposes of preaching, maybe the main purpose, is to offer good news for those gathered on Sundays, is there a good word as well for those who prepare those sermons? If what’s wrong is a timeless question,
maybe what’s right is a timely one.
In this volume André Resner and I have enlisted the help of colleagues, each tasked with the assignment of offering an encouraging word about preaching. Collectively, they offer an amazing array of positive perspectives. Ronald J. Allen celebrates the many kinds of diversity now at work in preaching in the postmodern setting—diversity according to gender, race, ethnicity, culture, biblical interpretation, theological family, congregational context, personality, sermon form, and more. In my own essay I explore the connections between the parable of the Sower and gospel preaching, how it’s true that some of the seed falls among thorns and such, but some of it falls among fertile soil, yielding a significant but modest crop. Barbara Lundblad, noting how Fred Craddock painted pictures with words, invites preachers to consider the power of imagery in the biblical text as well as our world. If there is anything that marked the preaching of Fred Craddock, it was his constant use of personal experience to proclaim the gospel. To that end, Alyce McKenzie looks not just at the personal experience of the preacher but experience in general, the everydayness of life itself so often lacking in sermons. Debra Mumford considers the seriousness with which seminary students approach the task, signaling its importance in ministry. Luke Powery notes the fact we still pray before and/or after we preach says something theologically important about the preaching we do, that this is a spiritual happening.
Extending the diverse range of the essays, co-editor André Resner takes us back to one of the most fundamental and foundational aspects of the preaching task, namely the contemporaneous speaking of gospel in conversation with the witness of biblical texts. Using a threefold taxonomy of gospel, he helps preachers think about what their theological presuppositions are with regard to the good news and how those serve preachers in reading the Bible for preaching. Mary Donovan Turner directs our attention to how our interpretations of biblical texts are shaped by our own contexts, calling for a level of humility on the part of us preachers and inviting us into conversation with those who read differently. Richard Ward focuses on how training in sermon delivery
has matured, being tutored and in deeper conversation with theology, not just rhetorical theory. Dawn Ottoni-Wilhelm celebrates the turn toward listeners in recent homiletical theory and practice, and their active participation in the preaching of the good news. Paul Scott Wilson lifts up homiletics, the academic discipline that focuses on the study of preaching, and how it enables teachers of preaching to hold one another responsible for scholarly engagement of key biblical, theological, and social issues, how it encourages interdisciplinary discussion, and how it foments creative discussion.
Wilhelm’s emphasis on the turn toward listeners
should not be missed, for it lies at the heart of Fosdick’s original essay and Craddock’s later work. For that reason, this book is not just for preachers but for those who listen to them as well. Each of the contributors has been asked to lift up something right with preaching, and to do so in conversation with preachers and listeners alike. Those who listen can get more out of preaching when they understand the task more fully, and those who preach can benefit from listener insights. In keeping with this emphasis on listeners, we also invited personal remembrances of Fred by those who heard him preach, clergy as well as laity. You might think of them as a different kind of Craddock story.
Therefore, we offer these essays in hopes of accomplishing at least three things: celebrating what is happening in preaching these days; initiating a conversation about preaching between listeners and preachers (seminarians and seasoned ministers alike); and offering a word of encouragement for the whole church. During a time of a global pandemic, a word of encouragement seems especially fitting. Unfortunately, the essays and remembrances in these pages were compiled prior to our current situation, although thankfully the conclusion to this volume does address the current situation.
Sundays come and Sundays go. Sermons are preached, often without much fanfare. Yet the good news of the gospel goes forth, doing its work. In the words of the King James Version, Jesus says once again to all of us, Be of good cheer.
Bibliography
Craddock, Fred B. As One Without Authority. Rev. ed. St. Louis, MO: Chalice,
2001
.
______. Craddock Stories. Edited by Mike Graves and Richard F. Ward. St. Louis, MO: Chalice,
2001
.
______. Preaching: An Appeal to Memory.
In What’s the Matter with Preaching Today?, edited by Mike Graves
, 59–74
. Louisville: Westminster John Knox,
2004
.
Fosdick, Harry Emerson. What Is the Matter with Preaching?
Reprinted in What’s the Matter with Preaching Today?, edited by Mike Graves,
7–21
. Louisville: Westminster John Knox,
2004
.
Randolph, David James. The Renewal of Preaching. Philadelphia: Fortress,
1969
.
5
. Craddock, Craddock Stories,
29
.
6
. Craddock, As One Without Authority,
46
.
7
. Craddock, Preaching,
59
.
8
. The term itself refers to the idea of sermons being events, not just static talks. The phrase was first coined by David James Randolph in his book The Renewal of Preaching. Craddock and so many others after him have always acknowledged Randolph’s work, who in turn noted the work of those who came before him, persons such as Donald G. Miller and P. T. Forsyth.
9
. Craddock, As One Without Authority,
3
.
10
. Craddock, As One Without Authority,
21
.
Bless You, Fred
A Remembrance
Robin Meyers
Fred Craddock was the single most important influence on my life as a preacher and teacher. Yesterday, I was preaching at West End United Methodist church across the street from Vanderbilt, where Fred studied New Testament, and I found out that Fred’s last public lecture was also given in that church. So I must say that he seemed especially present to me in that place, and honestly I don’t know how to express my gratitude