Running the race

looking to Jesus for ultimate victory

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36 min read
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159 pages 1985

About This Book

There is a continuing fascination in the life of Eric Liddell (1902-1945). He remains one of the best-known and best-loved of all British sportsmen. In the award-winning movie, Chariots of Fire (1981), his success in the 400m at the 1924 Olympic Games in Paris was powerfully portrayed. He was known as the 'man who would not run on a Sunday' and captured the imagination of a generation by his Christian character and by sacrificing fame and fortune to become a missionary in China, before his passing in a Japanese internment camp in 1945. This book is not a full biography of Eric Liddell. It is largely a sporting biography which weaves in to it Liddell's background, Christian position and subsequent missionary work. The author is the leading authority on Scottish track and field history and is presently a Presbyterian minister in Scotland. He was acquainted with Liddell's first biographer, D.P. Thomson, to whom he gave some assistance in the production of the earliest full biography of Liddell (1970). Whilst the book is in the nature of a 'personal tribute, ' it is from one who can speak with some authority on both the sporting side and Christian aspects of Eric Liddell's life, as a Scotsman, a former athlete and rugby player, an athletics historian and an evangelical Christian.

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