IN, OUT, OR WHERE?
Brexit started with 'in' or 'out', and now it is 'shake it all about'
I am writing this blog just after the UK Government has been defeated by one of biggest margins in history on its plan for Brexit. Now, many suggestions are being aired by different groups as to how Brexit can be achieved/prevented, depending on your point of view.
Brexit has become almost like the hokey-cokey - in, out, and now it's the 'shake it all about' to find a compromise to achieve the referendum decision of two years ago to take Britain out of the European Union. That will not be easy because of the very different ideas as to how far in or out we should be.
Compromise is defined as reaching a settlement of a dispute by mutual concession to reach an intermediate state between conflicting opinions, something very difficult to do when there are so many opinions, often firmly held. However, without a consensus, nothing will be resolved - we will either crash out of the European Union or delay the Brexit deadline date and continue the 'discussion' until everybody gets fed up with the process, a situation which may not be far off for most people.
The greatest compromise ever was made by God. There was no way in which men and women could make themselves acceptable to God and worthy of a place in His kingdom because of their failure to live up to the standards required. There was no way into the kingdom of heaven and His holy presence because 'all have sinned, all fall short of God's glorious ideal' (Romans 3.23[LB]). It was a case of never the twain shall meet, however much men and women think there is automatic entry into an eternal home in heaven when they die.
But God compromised. As we couldn't reach Him by our own efforts, He reached out to us in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ.
That was His part of the Great Compromise, stepping out of the glory of heaven to take human form and live a sinless life in our world. As Graham Kendrick's hymn says,
'From heaven You came, helpless babe,
entered our world, Your glory veiled,
not to be served but to serve,
and give Your life that we might live.'
That compromise took Jesus to the Cross.
But compromise involves both sides if it is to be real and effective. So what concession is required on our part? It is the simple one of accepting that the sacrifice of Jesus on the Cross is for our individual salvation, the forgiveness of our sins so we are presentable before a holy God, and then serving Him by the way we live.
Even if Brexit is a mess, there is no reason for our eternal destiny to be so. St Paul told the jailer at Philippi, 'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved.' If you make that concession, your part of the Great Compromise, and live in that belief, a heavenly future is assured.








