Jumat, 13 September 2013

Ebook For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr

Ebook For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr

So, it will certainly not force your time to always invest the time for this type of guide. Just few times in a day, and also you could get what the various other readers mean. In this case, For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr is provided in soft data system. You can download and get guide from the web link connecting that is given. It will not be made complex. You will go conveniently to locate guide and also begin to read.

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr


For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr


Ebook For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr

Don't you think that reviewing publications will offer you a lot more advantages? For all sessions and also kinds of publications, this is taken into consideration as one way that will lead you to obtain finest. Each publication will have various declaration as well as various diction. Is that so? Exactly what about the book qualified For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr Have you heard about this book? Come on; do not be so lazy to understand more concerning a publication.

We know that you are also fan of the author of this book. So, it will not be worse for you to pick it as recommendation. For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr, as one of the vital books to review can be thought about as a book that gives you something suggested. You could take the comparable topic from other publication, but the one that could provide you far better perception is this book. This problem will actually influence you to serve the reliable option.

The book can be organized to have such ideas that might alter things to keep in mind. One is that excellent writer constantly offer the inspiring flow, great lesson, and excellent web content. And also just what to give up For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr is greater than it. You could define how this publication will certainly gain as well as meet your desire about this related subject. This is the method exactly how this publication will affect people to love it a lot. After locating the reasons, you will certainly love increasingly more about this book and writer.

It is so very easy, isn't it? Why do not you try it? In this website, you could also discover various other titles of the For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr book collections that may be able to help you discovering the very best remedy of your job. Reading this publication For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr in soft file will certainly likewise ease you to get the source quickly. You may not bring for those books to someplace you go. Just with the device that consistently be with your all over, you can read this publication For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr So, it will certainly be so quickly to complete reading this For The Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey From Olympic Champion To Modern Martyr

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr

Product details

#detail-bullets .content {

margin: 0.5em 0px 0em 25px !important;

}

Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 13 hours and 41 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Audible.com Release Date: May 10, 2016

Language: English, English

ASIN: B01DPVAJ7O

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

If you've seen the wonderful movie Chariots of Fire, you know about Eric Liddell, the Olympic sprinter from Scotland. But if that's all you know about Liddell, you're missing the rest of the story. In For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Jour from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr, Duncan Hamilton tells Liddell's full story.The first third or so of For the Glory covers Liddell's early life, university days, and his running career. Hamilton refers to the movie several times, pointing out the occasional differences between film and reality. Hamilton does not minimize Liddell's sacrifice not to run the 100 meters at the 1924 Paris Olympics, which he skipped because the trials were on a Sunday, but he does correct the record, which is a bit different from what is portrayed in Chariots of Fire.Where For the Glory really earns attention is Hamilton's description of Liddell's life after the 1924 Olympics. He raced for a bit after Paris, but by 1925 he was on his way back to China, the country of his birth, where his parents had been missionaries. Liddell taught school, taught Sunday School, and preached. In 1934 he married the daughter of Canadian missionaries.Conditions for missionaries and other expatriates became more dicey and complicated after the Japanese occupation of China. Liddell sent his family away to Canada while he made the heart-wrenching decision to stay in China. Ultimately, the Japanese interned him and many other non-Chinese in a large camp, where he lived out his years. He died there of a brain tumor shortly before the end of the war.Hamilton emphasizes both Liddell's spiritual legacy and his legacy of service. Liddell longed to know God and help others know him. He wrote a book on spiritual disciplines that is still available today. On prayer, he wrote that Christians should always have a designated time of prayer in the day. He was known in the internment camp to be up earlier than anyone each morning, spending time in prayer. He wrote, "Anyone who, neglecting that fixed hour of prayer, [will] say he can pray at all times but will probably end in praying at no time."Certainly one would be hard-pressed to question Liddell's commitment to service, given his choice to live and serve in China. But during his time in the internment camp, that commitment became widely known. All around the camp he was known as a tireless worker, a peace maker, an honorary uncle to the youth of the camp, one who truly led by his service. When he passed away, the whole camp mourned for days.Hamilton sums up Liddell's legacy like this: "Valorous lives like his--which must be calculated in terms of value rather than length--encourage us to make our own lives better somehow. In his case that's because everything he did was selfless, each kind act bespoke for someone else's benefit." Liddell saw his Olympic fame as a means by which God gave him opportunities to service. His eyes were always on a higher prize; he knew that "the glory of gold was nothing in this world compared to the glory of God."Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the complimentary electronic review copy!

There are some historical figures who stand out because of their amazing accomplishments and there are some who stand out because of the depth of their character. There are a select few who stand out for both accomplishment and character, and prominent among them is the Flying Scotsman, Eric Liddell. Liddell accomplished great feats of athleticism, then left behind fame and fortune to pursue a much higher calling in the dangerous mission field of China. He did it all with the highest character, living a life that was very nearly unblemished before it came to an untimely end in a Japanese prison camp. His story has been told through books, movies, and documentaries, and it has just been told anew through Duncan Hamilton’s For the Glory: Eric Liddell’s Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr, easily my new favorite. Hamilton has woven together a brilliant, beautiful, stirring look at an incredible man.As far as I can tell, Hamilton does not profess to be a Christian and this gives him a different perspective on Liddell than most (or all) of his prior biographers. Many of Hamilton’s other works focus on sports so perhaps it was Liddell the athlete that first drew him. Yet as he focused on the athlete he necessarily had to focus on his character and the faith that generated it. His work, then, tells far less of Liddell’s inner man and far more of his words, his works, and the way others encountered and perceived him. Hamilton is especially keen to liberate Liddell from the way most of us know him—the film Chariots of Fire. Though that film was plenty good, it left those who viewed it with a skewed perspective of its hero. “Most of us are smart enough to realize that filmmakers who pick history as their subject tinker with the veracity of it. But our perception of an event or of a person still becomes inextricably bound to the image presented to us. So it is with Chariots of Fire. So it is with Liddell. We’ve ceased to see him. We see instead the actor Ian Charleson, who played him so compassionately.” Hamilton remedies this by giving us Liddell as he was. And that is something special.There were a number of elements that made this biography stand out to me, the first of which was Hamilton’s telling of the 1924 Olympics and especially of Liddell’s gold medal triumph. He tells this in such a way that you can almost see it, you can almost feel the electricity of the crowd, you can almost hear them roar. It’s brilliant. And yet he is sure to circle back at the end of the book, to Liddell’s final race. Liddell was suffering deeply in this time, yet wanted to do something fun for the people who were with him in that Japanese prison camp. He ran one last race which, because of his failing body, he could not win. “Seen in the terrible light of what awaited him, this race is Liddell’s best and unquestionably his bravest. Where his initial speed came from, and how he managed to sustain it for so long, is unfathomable. The courage he summoned to run at all is extraordinary, a testament to his will. Liddell never competed again, and those privileged to see his farewell to athletics appreciated only retrospectively the absolute miracle he performed in front of them. The dying man had lost, but to them he was still the champion.”Another element that stood out was the depth of the criticism that faced Liddell when he refused to complete his race on Sunday. The press maligned him and friends turned on him. He was regarded as daft and unpatriotic. Yet he let his character speak for itself, even as the games began."No one was further removed from the bright young thing and the anything-goes bohemian than Eric Liddell. And an easy, but horribly flawed, assumption was made about him because of his character. His expression of religious faith was perceived as a sign of innate weakness. Because of his decision not to compete on a Sunday, Liddell was dismissed as a pacifist in top competition—a man with a soft center. The notion was ludicrous. Once, pointedly asked how he won races so often against the odds, Liddell answered: “I don’t like to be beaten.” On the track Liddell knew where to find the opposition’s jugular—and he also knew how to rip it out. Paris was a test of temperament for Liddell long before it became a test of speed, requiring qualities no one could coach: fortitude, integrity, forgiveness, stoicism, will. You either possessed these or you didn’t."He did in great measure.And then there is the account of what Liddell did with his fame. “There have always been personalities who hide only where the press and the photographers are certain to find them and plunge into fame, letting its riptide carry them away. Liddell wasn’t one of them. Fame was only worthwhile because it made him much more likely to be listened to. He wasn’t one of those Bible-thumping preachers who, good book in tow, had to wander peripatetically in search of audiences. The audiences came to him. The problem was finding meeting halls big enough to accommodate them.” He did not seek fame, it sought him. And he used it to tell others about Jesus. But then he also left it behind to serve God in obscurity and great danger so he could tell even more people about Jesus.And then there is the account of Liddell’s death and the mark it left not only on his family but on the whole community in that prison camp. Hamilton portrays Liddell as living an almost unbelievably good life that was followed by an agonizingly tragic death. His death came after much physical weakening and suffering but also much mental anguish. Not only was he separated from those he loved most, but he fell into a deep depression at least in part because doctors had told him his physical symptoms were a sign of mental weakness, that he was going through a nervous breakdown. He “felt inexplicably guilty about it [telling friends].” He said, “There is just one thing that troubles me … I ought to have been able to cast it all on the Lord and not have broken down under it.” He died without knowing the truth, that he had a malignant brain tumor that was destroying him from within. Still, he died as he lived, professing his love for God and his dependence upon him. His last words were fitting: “It’s complete surrender.”Hamilton’s telling of Liddell’s life is uniformly positive, perhaps because he simply couldn’t find any major blemishes. It’s almost like he finds himself shocked at the sheer goodness of his subject. His telling occasionally reflects a little bit of antagonism toward certain Christian organizations and includes a couple of unfortunate word choices and cultural references. But these are only minor quibbles with what is otherwise a brilliant book—one of 2016’s must-read biographies.I will let Hamilton speak once more as he reflects on the life he spent so much time studying. “Valorous lives like his—which must be calculated in terms of value rather than length—encourage us to make our own lives better somehow. In his case that’s because everything he did was selfless, each kind act bespoke for someone else’s benefit. He believed entirely that those to whom ‘much is given’ are obliged to give ‘much in return’—and should do so without complaining about it. In adhering to this, he never demanded grand happiness or great comfort for himself. He grasped only for the things that mattered to him: worthwhile work and the care of his family.” May he inspire us to live such simple, meaningful, surrendered lives.

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr PDF
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr EPub
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr Doc
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr iBooks
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr rtf
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr Mobipocket
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr Kindle

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr PDF

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr PDF

For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr PDF
For the Glory: Eric Liddell's Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr PDF

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar