Friday, 20 July 2012

He That Honours Me, I Will Honour

‘I wonder if I’m doing the right thing?’ Doubts clouded his mind. But only for a moment. ‘No, no, I’m sure I’m right’. And so the decision was reached. Sunday was the Lord’s Day and Eric Liddell (1902 – 1945) would not be running for his country in the 100 metres at the Paris Olympics.
Instead, Liddell was entered for the 400 metres, an event he had not previously trained for and for which he was given no hope of winning. So much so, despite getting through the heats, he had the outside lane at the final, and hence had no idea how the other runners were doing.
In his hand before the race was a note. It was given to Eric by the athletics masseur who attended to the British team and read: ‘In the old book it says “he that honours me, I will honour.” Wishing you the best of success always.’
As the gun went off on the afternoon of 11th July 1924, Liddell was away at a 100 metre pace. No one believed he could keep it up, but as he entered the home straight, running with his head up, he seemed to be increasing his lead! He crossed the line in first place with a new world record time of 47.6 seconds.
The Olympic motto is ‘faster, higher, stronger’. What was to follow the Olympics showed Liddell to be all of these. He had proved his speed. As he travelled to China as a missionary, he was to prove his strength, serving the Chinese people and refusing to leave as the Japanese invaded during the Second World War. And finally, as he died in an internment camp in China of a brain haemorrhage, he was taken higher.
Fifty-six years after the 1924 Paris Olympics, Scotsman Allan Wells won the 100 metres at the 1980 Moscow Olympics. When asked after the victory if he had run the race for Harold Abrahams, the last 100 metre Olympic winner from Britain (in 1924) who had died two years previously, Wells replied, ‘No, … I would prefer to dedicate this to Eric Liddell’.
There is a memorial headstone on the site of the former internment camp in China, recognising Liddell’s service to China. The scripture reference reads "They shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary."
As we approach the 2012 Olympics in London and the film ‘Chariots of Fire’ is re-released, we do well to remember a man for whom running was so closely linked to a faith for which he died.
Further Reading:

Eric Liddell: Pure Gold by David McCasland
The Flying Scotsman by Sally Magnusson

Further viewing:

Chariots of Fire, produced by David Putnam, 1981

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Sea Change

Ten years on, and what had he achieved? Seemingly so little. Across the way, morning services were continuing. Hundreds of well dressed men and women singing of their salvation but without the least idea of the needs across the other side of the world.
It was a frequent vision for Hudson Taylor (1832 – 1905) - him standing on a rock trying to pull thousands of dying Chinese out of the swirling sea. As he stood on the beach at Brighton that day, Sunday, 25th June, 1865, with the noise of the waves in his ears, he heard another sound- that of God speaking to him afresh. Gone was the doubt, away went the frustration. He began to believe that God could do a work through him, even him. A literal sea-change moment.
That evening Taylor wrote ‘I wandered out on the sands alone, in great spiritual agony; and there the Lord conquered my unbelief…. There and then I asked for twenty-four fellow workers, two for each of eleven inland provinces which were without a missionary.’ And so began the China Inland Mission.
Taylor and his team of over 800 missionaries were to reach the whole of China with the message of salvation through Christ.
A moment in time on a Brighton beach. It was enough for a lifetimes’ work.
Writing home on one occasion he said ‘If I had a thousand pounds China should have it—if I had a thousand lives, China should have them. No! Not China, but Christ. Can we do too much for Him? Can we do enough for such a precious Saviour?’
May we each of us have a ‘Brighton moment’. May we each of us know God’s call on our lives.
Further reading: