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The Final Race

Page 24

by Eric T. Eichinger


  Professor A. P. Cullen, worn down by age and general camp life, made his way home to his family in England after the war. He led a mostly peaceful life, enjoying quiet times with his Lord, his loved ones, and his studies. He got a dog, and from time to time was known to speak Latin to him. He named the dog “Fido” from the Latin fide, “faithful.”

  Dr. Kenneth McAll fondly remembers many quiet mornings of prayer shared with Eric Liddell. Those regular devotions were “the key to everything,” he was quoted as saying. In time he returned to England and began a practice with his wife. They lived quietly and peacefully, yet Kenneth could not seem to shake his fascination with the events he had observed in China regarding the intersection of medicine and spirituality. This fascination led him to further study psychology, and ultimately he authored the book Healing the Family Tree. His objective remained to help people get in touch with God and to learn to live completely under his direction.

  Nurse Annie Buchan returned to Scotland in poor health around Christmas 1945, after her release from Weihsien. Annie was set on going back to China, and although she wasn’t able to settle in northern China, she became matron of the Union Hospital in Hankow. She returned to Scotland for good in 1950. She was matron at the Colony for Epileptics near Glasgow until 1955. She helped to form a local committee in Peterhead for World Refugee Year (1959–1960).

  Stephen Metcalf was strongly influenced by Eric and committed himself to serve as a missionary to the Japanese. Metcalf arrived in Japan in November 1952 and entered the OMF International Language School and ultimately ended up planting new churches. He happily married and had five children. He and his family were responsible for the successful establishment and consolidation of new churches in several towns. All his years Stephen treasured the running spikes Eric gave him.

  On Valentine’s Day 2002, Eric Liddell’s roommate Joe Cotterill married his second wife, fellow Weihsien detainee Joyce Stranks, who had been with Eric at the time of his final seizure. Joe married his first wife, the late Jeanne Hills, while the couple was still interned by the Japanese. In March 2017, Cotterill and Stranks celebrated Joe’s one hundredth birthday with a cake, a toast, origami peace cranes, a card from Britain’s Queen Elizabeth (whom Cotterill had met years earlier), and a special trumpet solo of “Finlandia” by Peter Bazire, who had played outside Eric’s hospital.

  Rev. Dr. Norman Howard Cliff earned an MPhil at Open University in Buckinghamshire and a PhD at Buckingham University. At his latter graduation, he was capped by Margaret Thatcher. Rev. Dr. Cliff went on to write seven books and a thesis titled “A History of the Protestant Movement in Shandong Province—1859–1951.”

  The Weihsien prison camp internees were released from their Japanese captivity in August 1945. United States B-29 Liberators flew overhead, and paratroopers floated down in dramatic fashion. It took months for many of the Chefoo students to be reunited with their parents, some of whom had left China and returned to England, not knowing the fate of their children. Others took trains and carts pulled by mules and walked across mud-slick China to reunite with parents that many of them had not seen in five years or more. The vast majority of those interned at Weihsien would never forget the way Eric Liddell inspired them in his own unique yet powerful way.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I WOULD BE GRAVELY REMISS if I did not thank Patricia, Heather, and Maureen (Liddell). It has been one of the absolute biggest privileges of my life getting to know each of you through this endeavor. Your willingness with time and resources has been as comforting as it has been thrilling. Thank you from the depths of my heart for your enthusiasm and patience.

  More thanks to Eva Marie Everson—for adjusting to my alliteration, tossing out all of my grammatical garbage, and neatly folding all of my linguistic laundry, and for your—ahem—dedication.

  Thanks to:

  Rebeca Seitz (SON Studios)—for the appreciation of chasing after big vision, the ability to see potential, and the courage to take a chance.

  Jonathan Clements (Wheelhouse Literary Group)—the consummate advocate.

  Jon Farrar and the team at Tyndale House Publishers—for your devotion to your craft, professionalism, and attention to detail.

  Howie Klausner—for asking me, “Why do you want to write?”

  Jeannie Hughes—for eleventh-hour photo scans, “urgent” e-mail correspondence, and daily laughs.

  The saints at Zion Lutheran Church, Kalamazoo, Michigan, for providing me with a firm foundation.

  The saints at Bethel Lutheran Church, Clearwater, Florida, who have created an oasis of a working environment for me.

  David McCasland, a historian of historians, and all those like him who have planted a literary garden from which to pluck.

  Major thanks to all of my family and friends who have endured me and encouraged me through this process.

  And to Jesus—who makes all this possible.

  Rev. Eric Eichinger

  Early Days

  A family visit during a furlough from China (Top, L to R: Eric, sister Jenny, brother Robert; Middle: parents Mary and James; Bottom: brother Ernest)

  1922

  Eric winning a race

  1923

  I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.

  PHILIPPIANS 3:14

  English Amateur Athletic Association Championships at Stamford Bridge

  1923

  Eric being paraded through the streets of Edinburgh after his gold medal victory

  JULY 17, 1924

  Crossing the finish line at the British Empire versus United States of America relay in London

  JULY 19, 1924

  I run the first 200m as hard as I can. Then, for the second 200m, with God’s help, I run harder.

  ERIC LIDDELL

  A Family Man

  Eric and Florence with their wedding party

  MARCH 27, 1934

  Eric’s sense of humor on full display at a friend’s wedding

  1934

  Eric holding Patricia outside their home in China

  WINTER 1935

  Eric, dressed for work in Tientsin

  1938

  Siaochang mission outpost where Eric lived and worked with his brother Robert while his family stayed in the safer town of Tientsin

  LATE 1930s

  In the dust of defeat as well as the laurels of victory there is a glory to be found if one has done his best.

  ERIC LIDDELL, quoting an inscription at the University of Pennsylvania

  Eric relaxing in family home

  LATE 1930s

  Christ for the world, for the world needs Christ!

  ERIC LIDDELL

  Eric Liddell

  1940s

  Family picnic on furlough in Carcant, Scotland

  1940

  Florence Liddell in Toronto with her three daughters: Patricia, Heather, and Maureen

  NOVEMBER 1941

  Patricia and Heather admiring their new baby sister, Maureen

  1941

  Final Words

  Handwritten Red Cross 25-word transmission from Eric to Florence

  AUGUST 24, 1944

  Final message from Eric Liddell, received by Florence after hearing of his death

  FEBRUARY 21, 1945

  ABOUT THE AUTHORS

  Eric Eichinger loves to share the “glory story” of Christ in creative ways. He earned a BA in theatre from Michigan State University, where he also ran varsity track and field. Upon graduation, he served two years as a youth worker in New York and two more years with LCMS World Mission in China, where he met his wife, Kara.

  With a developed passion in missions, Eric earned a four-year Master’s of Divinity degree at Concordia Seminary, Saint Louis, Missouri. In 2006 he was ordained into the Office of Holy Ministry in the Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod at his home congregation of Zion Lutheran in Kalamazoo, Michigan, by the Rev. Dr. Paul Maier.

  During his eleven years in the ministry, he also serve
d six years as a pastoral counselor for the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League of the Florida/Georgia district. He is currently senior pastor at Bethel Lutheran Church in Clearwater, Florida, and also coaches track and field at First Lutheran School in Clearwater.

  Eric and Kara enjoy their family life and occasionally see each other while raising their three children and breaking in their maverick dachshund, Doppelbock. Amid work and family, Eric also enjoys writing, film, deciphering U2 riffs on the guitar, running, cheering for any Detroit sports team, and dressing his children in Michigan State green and white on college game-day Saturdays. Eric notes that most of these activities increase in enjoyment when good coffee is included.

  Eva Marie Everson is an award-winning, bestselling author of over thirty fiction and nonfiction titles, including Five Brides, The Road to Testament, The Cedar Key series, The Potluck Club series (with Linda Evans Shepherd), God Bless Us Every One, Reflections of God’s Holy Land (with Miriam Feinberg Vamosh), and others. She is the president of Word Weavers International, the director of Florida Christian Writers Conference, and a member of a number of writers’ organizations. She and her husband make their home in Central Florida where they are owned by a small black doxie.

  God & Churchill

  Perceived as a failure for much of his life, Churchill was the last person anyone would have expected to rise to national prominence as prime minister and influence the fate of the world during World War II. But Churchill persevered on a mission to achieve his purpose. God and Churchill tells the remarkable story of how one man, armed with belief in his divine destiny, embarked on a course to save Christian civilization.

  C. S. Lewis—A Life

  In C. S. Lewis—A Life, Alister McGrath, prolific author and respected professor at King’s College of London, paints a definitive portrait of the life of C. S. Lewis. After thoroughly examining recently published Lewis correspondence, Alister challenges some of the previously held beliefs about the exact timing of Lewis’s shift from atheism to theism and then to Christianity. He paints a portrait of an eccentric thinker who became an inspiring, though reluctant, prophet for our times.

  Available wherever books are sold.

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