Deal or No Deal
Firstly, the question was ‘Should we be in or out of the European Union?’ - and the referendum said ‘Out’. Then it was ‘When do we come out?’ - and that has been fixed for October 31st this year. Now the debate is whether we can make a deal with our European partners or simply cut ourselves adrift without one.
All three points have generated much argument, often very heated, split public opinion and led to public protests and Parliamentary wrangling about constitutional procedures. Some people are highly indignant that we have not already left the European Union, some are determined to try to reverse the original decision so that we do not leave and many are simply fed up with the whole Brexit thing and just want it finished, one way or the other.
Although the fervent Brexiteers argue that we don’t need a deal and everything will be much better if we just leave the EU, others maintain that we need to have a deal to avoid chaos and confusion in the months, even years, after we leave. The problem is that no one can agree on what that deal should be. Each person has a different idea and the deal which has been laid out is not acceptable to many.
I said that ‘Deal or No Deal?’ is not only the most crucial question of the moment but that it always will be, and for each and every person. So many people don’t believe they need a ‘Deal’ for they believe that, at the end of this life on earth, there is a guaranteed place for everybody in a paradise somewhere where we all become angels or stars, irrespective of how we have lived or in whom we have put our faith.
The only place where everything is perfect – where ‘ God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain ’ (Rev.21.4) - is in God’s presence in His eternal Kingdom. But God is holy and nothing unholy can stand in His presence. Unfortunately, that includes each one of us for ‘ all have sinned and come short of the glory of God ’ (Rom.3.23). There’s nothing we can do to correct that position.
But God is a God of love and mercy and offers us a Deal. God’s part of the deal was to send His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, to pay the price for our wrongs by dying on the Cross and make us right with God through the forgiveness of our sins. Our part of the deal is to accept Jesus as our Saviour, be sorry for what we have done wrong and follow Jesus as our Lord, living by His standards.
Many turn their back on such a ‘Deal’. They choose ‘No Deal’ or want to write a ‘Deal’ to suit themselves, as the politicians have been doing in Parliament. However, there is only one ‘Deal’ on the table, the one summed up in perhaps the most famous verse in the Bible, ‘ For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life ’ (John 3.16). Now that’s a ‘Deal’ worth accepting! Where do you stand - ‘Deal’ or ‘No Deal?’
One last thought – for those who do not believe in God. If there is no God, who has ordained that there is that perfect place for us, that paradise we all aspire to, after our life on earth is ended?








