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CHRISTIAN
ATHLETE
REFUSES TO TAKE PART IN OLYMPICS
By Geoff Thomas
Chris Harmse of South Africa
is a hammer thrower. He holds the record on the African continent
for that event. A big man in every way he had qualified for the
South African team during a pre-Olympic event in Croatia on July
15. Then he discovered that the final of the hammer throw took
place a week next Sunday. A Christian, he agonized over his decision
before deciding that the Lord's Day was more important to him
than throwing the hammer for his country. Sam Ramsamy, the president
of the South Africa National Olympic Committee respected his decision.
Harmse is only the second Olympian to withdraw from the games
for religious reasons. One must go back to 1924 when the Scottish
sprinter Eric Liddell dropped out of the 100 meter race in Paris
because the final took place on the Sabbath.
Jonathan Edwards, England's world record triple jumper, and hope
for a gold medal in Sydney, began his athletic career by refusing
to take part in Sunday games. The son of a preacher, he is married
to a missionary's daughter. But he later changed his mind about
this, claiming a revelation had come to him encouraging him to
jump on the Lord's Day.
He says, "My relationship with Jesus and with God is fundamental
to everything I do. I have made a commitment and dedication in
that relationship to serve God in every area of my life including
Triple Jump. The most important news, though, is the gospel of
Jesus Christ. Many exciting things have happened to me in my life,
but the most crucial is that my sins have been forgiven and I
know God."
Eric Liddell managed to negotiate an unheard-of switch from the
100 meter race which he had been scheduled to run to the 400 meter,
for which he had not trained, later in the week. On July 11, 1924,
Liddell won that race and was showered with Olympic glory.
Instead of cashing in, Liddell turned his back on fame and fortune
and followed in his parents' footsteps, becoming a missionary
in China, where his most powerful contributions to God and to
his fellow humans were made.
Cal Thomas points out that in our day of focus groups and leadership
weakened by uncertainty of belief, Eric Liddell's example continues
to stand out. A fanatic might have demanded that others not run
on Sunday either and organized a group to enact legislation to
conform society to his point of view. Not Liddell. He just said
he wouldn't run. Some newspapers denounced him as a traitor to
his country and king. How quickly they changed their tune when
he won a gold medal. Had he yielded to temptation and compromised
his beliefs, we might never have heard of him again.
The account of the race in the July 12, 1924, Times of London
conveys the excitement of that day in Paris: "Liddell had
the outside berth - generally considered the worst place. ...
There was a perfect start, and from the first jump-off the pace
looked, and was, terrific. Two men of the six fell. ... But that
made no difference, for there was never more than one man in the
race, and it was the pace he set that fairly ran them off their
legs. Sweeping round into the straight Liddell led by four or
five yards, and increased his lead by a couple of yards more in
the run home. No one ever looked like catching him ... When the
time was given out ... and it was realized that, for the third
time in two days, the world's 'record' had been lowered, the Stadium
went insane ... ."
When Liddell left Edinburgh for China the following year, the
number of people wanting to bid him farewell was so large that
1,000 were unable to get in. Twenty years later he was taken prisoner
with other missionaries and Westerners and became one of 1,800
crowded into a Japanese camp. His personal space had shrunk to
three by six feet. Before his arrest, Liddell managed to get his
wife and two children to safety in Canada (Florence Liddell was
pregnant at the time with their third daughter, whom Eric would
not live to see). He died of a brain tumour on Feb. 21, 1945.
At the end of "Chariots of Fire," producer David Puttnam
put on the screen:
"Eric Liddell, missionary, died in occupied China at the
end of World War II. All of Scotland mourned."
Press accounts of the 1980 premiere of the film in Edinburgh told
of huge crowds. How fitting. The people of Scotland, who had shared
their native son with China, were welcoming him back and affirming
the note given to Liddell by his masseur before that 1924 race.
It referred to the Biblical passage 1 Samuel 2:30: "He who
honours Me, I will honour." And so He did. And so He still
does 75 years later.
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