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Eric
Liddell
Running The Race
On April 6, 1923, in a small town hall in Armadale, Scotland,
Eric Liddell spoke for the first time of his faith in Christ.
Eighty people came to hear Scotland's famous runner give his testimony.
"Shyly, he stepped forward and for a few seconds surveyed
his waiting audience, then he began," writes Catherine Smith
in her biography, Eric Liddell..
"There was no lecturing, no fist thumping on the table, no
wagging or pointing a finger to stress a point, no raised voice
to impress on them what he thought they should be doing. In fact,
it wasn't a speech at all. It was more of a quiet chat, and in
his slow clear words, Eric for the first time in his life told
the world what God meant to him. "He spoke of the strength
he felt within himself from the sure knowledge of God's love and
support. Of how he never questioned anything that happened either
to himself or to others. He didn't need explanations from God.
He simply believed in Him and accepted whatever came." News
of Liddell's talk was reported in every newspaper in Scotland
the next morning. God was preparing Liddell to honor Him, and
his testimony still reverberated today.
"The
Lord Guides Me"
Liddell was an unorthodox sprinter. Coming out of trowel-dug starting
holes, Liddell ran with abandon, head tilted toward the skies,
knees thrust upward to his chin, feet rising high from the ground.
Before each race, Liddell shook hands with each competitor, offering
his trowel to fellow runners who struggled to dig their starting
holes in cinder tracks with their cleats. When asked how he knew
where the finish line was located, he replied in his deliberate
Scottish brogue, "The Lord guides me."
As word of his faith in Christ spread through England, many wondered
if he would display the same zeal on the track. Liddell silenced
any skeptics in the AAA Championships in London in July 1923,
by winning the 220-yard dash and the 100-yard dash. His time in
the 100 stood as England's best for thirty-five years.
He won the Harvey Cup for the best performance of the meet and
readied himself for the Paris Olympics in the summer of 1924.
"I'm
Not Running"
Liddell waited excitedly for the posting of the Olympic heats
for the 100 meters and the 4X100 and 4X400 relays, his best events.
He was stunned upon learning the preliminary dashes were on Sunday.
"I'm not running," he said flatly and then turned his
attention to train for the 200-meter and 400-meter dashes.
He considered Sunday to be sacred, a day set apart for the Lord;
and he would honor his convictions at the expense of fame. On
Sunday, July 6, Liddell preached in a Paris church as the guns
sounded for the 100-meter heats. Three days later, he finished
third in the 200-meter sprint, taking an unexpected bronze medal.
He quietly made his way through the heats of the 400 meters but
was not expected to win. Shaking hands with the other finalists,
he readied for the race of his life.
Arms thrashing, head bobbing and tilted, legs dancing, Liddell
ran to victory, five meters ahead of the silver medalist. "The
Flying Scotsman" had a gold metal and a world record, 47.6
seconds. Most of all, Eric Liddell had kept his commitment to
his convictions of faith.
"It's
Complete Surrender"
The next year, Liddell returned to China, where he had been born
to missionary parents, as a teacher and missionary. In 1932, he
was ordained as a minister and married in 1933. He ministered
pleasantly and plainly, often traveling on bicycle, braving constant
fighting between Chinese warlords and Japanese in their growing
conquest of China. His decision to share Christ in isolated communities,
forcing him to leave his wife and children behind, was the result
of insistent prayer. "Complete surrender" was his description
of this attitude.
In March of 1943, Liddell, along with other Americans and British,
entered a Japanese internment camp. He was appointed math teacher
and supervised a sports program. He arose each morning to study
his Bible and was the cheer of the camp. But his health deteriorated
rapidly. A brain tumor ravaged his body with severe headaches.
Shortly after his forty-third birthday in January 1945, Liddell
collapsed. His last words, spoken to a camp nurse, were, "It's
complete surrender." All of Scotland mourned upon learning
of his death. Heaven rejoiced.
Run
The Race
Eric Liddell ran, spoke, and lived with great faithfulness and
solid commitment to Christ. The movie, Chariots Of Fire, chronicled
his faith, influencing yet another generation for Jesus Christ.
You do not have to be famous or skilled to make a difference for
Christ. God asks only that you serve Him faithfully and wholeheartedly
in whatever you do.
God has "appointed you, that you should go and bear fruit,
and that your fruit should remain" (John 15:16).
Honor God in all you do, and He will honor your obedience with
a life that counts for eternity. "Complete surrender"
to Christ is total victory.
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