Life & Work Magazine
Life & Work Magazine


1 mins

ERIC LIDDELL’S DAUGHTER SEEKS HER FATHER THROUGH FAITH

The daughter of Scottish Olympic gold medalist and missionary Eric Liddell has written a book seeking to know the father she never met through the faith that drove him.

Eric Liddell is most famous as the athlete who refused to run on a Sunday but went on to win gold in the Paris Olympics 400m, inspiring the film Chariots of Fire. However, he spent most of his adult life working as a missionary in China.

Maureen Liddell Moore, his third child, was three years old and living in Canada when he died in a Japanese internment Camp in China in 1945. Maureen’s mother, Eric’s wife, had been pregnant with her when she fled the Japanese invasion.

“God and Me” is a book of prose, poetry and art which Maureen used to become closer to her father.

Maureen said: “I knew early on that if I wanted to understand my father I would also have to get to know the God my father loved so well.

“This search led me on an unorthodox and surprising journey that turned my world upside down. I first fell in love with God when I discovered he has a huge sense of humour and I found myself totally surprised, in awe and laughing with relief.

“I wrote the book, hoping to touch hearts, expand minds and make people think about their concept of God, however they may perceive Him to be.”

Following Eric’s death, various memorials were set up in his name, including the Eric Liddell Centre, a care charity and major community hub in Edinburgh.

John MacMillan, CEO of The Eric Liddell Centre, said: “We are delighted to hear about Maureen’s new book about her father.

“Eric was a hero so it’s especially important we keep his memory alive by continuing our own work to bring communities together and all work together to tell the world about him and help empower and support people of all ages.”

God and Me is available through Amazon.

This article appears in the December 2017 Issue of Life and Work

Click here to view the article in the magazine.
To view other articles in this issue Click here.
If you would like to view other issues of Life and Work, you can see the full archive here.

  COPIED
This article appears in the December 2017 Issue of Life and Work