Galatians 3:26--4:7 · Sons of God
The Fullness of Time
Galatians 4:4-7
Sermon
by Scott Suskovic
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Throughout the New Testament, there are numerous verses that say something about fulfillment. Jesus said, "These are my words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things which are written about me in the law of Moses and the prophets and the psalms must be fulfilled" (Luke 24:44). On the cross, Jesus said, "I am thirsty" (John 19:28). He said this in order to fulfill the scriptures. Paul wrote, "But when the fullness of time had come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law ..." (Galatians 4:4). The fullness of time. What does that mean?

There are roughly 300 prophetic references written over a 1,000-year period about the Messiah in the Old Testament that narrow the field down to the true identity of the Messiah. First, there is the bloodline. From Abraham to Isaac to Jacob to Judah to David, the bloodline has a strong and definite line. However, by judging the overpopulation of Bethlehem during the census, those in the line of David are very numerous.

Second, there are the prophecies. Of those who are descendants of David, the prophecies concerning him narrow the field even more. We know that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem (Malachi 5:2), betrayed by a friend with whom he breaks bread (Psalm 41:9), for thirty pieces of silver (Zechariah 11:12), abandoned by his disciples (Zechariah 13:7), die a death similar to crucifixion including pierced hands and feet pierced (Psalm 22), his clothes will be gambled away (Psalm 22:18), not a bone was broken (Psalm 34:20), though his side will be pierced (Zechariah 12:10), he will die among thieves and sinners (Isaiah 53:12), pray for his persecutors (Isaiah 53:12), buried in a rich man's tomb (Isaiah 53:9), whose death took on all the sins of the world (Isaiah 53).

Many authors have outlined in more detail how all 300 prophecies of Jesus point to only one man. The sheer statistical possibilities that land directly on Jesus are staggering. But I want to look at the phrase Paul uses that Jesus came "at the fullness of time." Paul isn't referring to the fulfillment of the prophecies but how God brought forth Jesus at just the right time in history.

At the fullness of time. What does that mean? It means what Jeremiah 33:14 promises that "The day will come, says the Lord, when I will do for Israel and Judah all the good I have promised them. At that time I will bring to the throne of David a righteous descendant and he will do what is just and right throughout the land." What does that mean? It means what John proclaims in 1:14 "So the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth. And we have seen his glory, the glory of the only Son of the Father." What does that mean? That means our God was not passively waiting for a break in the action to bring forth his Son, but God actively set forth his hand in world history to bring about the coming of his Son in a window of time in all of recorded history of about fifty years. Let me explain.

For these prophecies to come true, it was going to happen in the Middle East. In other words, we probably don't have to study Chinese or ancient Australian Aborigines to find the Messiah. This was going to take place in the Middle East. The question was, "When?"

I don't have to tell you that this area of the world has had more wars, more blood spilled than perhaps anywhere else on earth. But there was a short, fifty-year window, in which the Messiah could appear.

The stage was set in 587 when the Babylonians captured Jerusalem and sent Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego into captivity in what is now Iraq. For forty years, the Jews were held in captivity until Cyrus of Persia freed them forty years later. Many of the Jews returned to Israel under the leadership of Nehemiah to rebuild the walls. However, most scattered throughout all of Asia Minor. This will be important 500 years later.

The Greeks conquered this area in 333 BC. What they brought was a unity of language and a hunger for philosophy. By the time of Jesus, everyone was speaking primarily Greek. Hebrew was a dead language. Communication wasn't a problem. And there was a hunger for new teachings, new learning, new philosophies. Keep those two things in mind.

Around 60 BC, Rome conquered this area and several things happened. First, the peace of Rome extended from the middle of Europe, down the Italian Peninsula through Turkey and Greece and into the Middle East. This included some 55 million inhabitants. With no danger of war, roads were established for safe and quick travel — all roads literally lead to Rome. There was homogeneity throughout the Roman empire that the language and culture from the east could be heard, understood, and experienced all the way to the west. As for religion, the emperor demanded that everyone in the Roman empire worship the emperor. The only exception was granted to the Jews. They were stubborn, they were resilient and they were on the fringe of the empire and not seen as a major threat.

While Rome experienced peace and prosperity, Judaism was in crisis. In the first century BC, four distinct sects of Judaism emerged: the Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, and the Zealots. To the Jew, there were major distinctions between these four. To the Romans, they were all lumped together as Judaism, an exception to emperor worship. These four sects continued until between 70 AD when Rome sacked Jerusalem and 90 AD at the Council of Jamnia.

When Christianity arose with the death and resurrection of Jesus, Christians worshiped side by side with the Jews for about fifty years. The Jews saw them as a fifth sect within Judaism but Rome did not see Christianity as a separate religion. It was almost as if Christianity lay hidden in the womb of Judaism until it was birthed. For in 90, the Jews kicked the Christians out of the synagogues and Rome recognized them as a separate religion. However, by then, Christianity could not be contained. Because of the unity of language, the hunger for new teaching, the peace of Rome, the road system, the homogeneity — Christianity spread like wildfire. Why did it spread so quickly? Remember who Paul first went to in his missionary journeys? To the Jews and synagogues. Why were there so many Jews and synagogues throughout all of Asia Minor? Go back 500 years ago when Cyrus of Persia freed the Jews from Babylon. Instead of returning to Israel, they scattered throughout this region, creating strategic outposts and dry kindling so that when Christianity ignited, it spread like wildfire throughout the Roman empire. Forty years after it began in a land in which there was no mass communication, Christianity became a dominant force in the Roman empire to warrant an all-out persecution by the state.

That's the fullness of time to which Paul refers. It is a short, fifty-year window in all of history that the Messiah could have been born. God not only fulfilled all the prophecies from the Old Testament in Jesus but from the foundation of the world, set the historical events in motion so that at the fullness of time his Son would be born.

No other person in all of history has affected the world to the extent of Jesus Christ. No matter who you say he is, no other religion, person, philosophy, empire, or anything else has had this impact. And to think his ministry lasted only three years. He never wrote a book, had no formal education, traveled less than 300 miles, and held no public office. He died penniless, humiliated, and alone. We know very little about his life. What we know most is the day of his death. And yet today, about two billion people call him Lord.

Do you see? This world is not spinning out of control or ruled by chaos. Ours is not a distant God who passively sits back waiting to be found. Ours is a God deeply committed to our eternal life and willingly manipulated world events, set in motion each piece of the puzzle, and announced his promise to you that in the fullness of time, God sent his Son, born of a woman, subject to the law to buy freedom for us who were slaves to the law, so that he could adopt us as his very own children. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany: Maybe Today, by Scott Suskovic