For twenty weeks (there are twenty sermons in this book), Fred Craddock was my preacher (I am a pastor — I read a sermon of his every Saturday night until finishing the book).
It is hard to think of something to say in review of The Cherry Log Sermons that has not already been said: The storytelling is remarkable, Craddock’s inductive style keeps you engaged and wondering where he is going with it all, and the messages are profound, yes, but profound in their simplicity. Craddock was not preaching in hopes of having his sermons published. He was preaching to a congregation, offering them messages about how to live a life with and in obedience to God.
It’s that contextual nature of the sermons I want to applaud in review. The gospel is the gospel. Scripture is Scripture. The preacher has an obligation to study and preach the Scripture in context. As Craddock says in his book As One Without Authority, however, the preacher also has an obligation to keep his or her congregation in context, too. The Cherry Log sermons are preached in context to the people of Cherry Log Christian Church. Craddock shares with his congregation in the final sermon in this book, “Every Monday morning I take out the church roll, and here I go, praying for you” (115). These messages are saturated in prayer for a specific people in a specific place and time. Many preachers have read and will read this book, and I hope what stands out to them is what stands out to me: this is what sermons preached in love and in context sound like. I hope to go and do likewise.