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Fullness of Time



Jesus declared at the opening of His public ministry: “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Mark 1:15). While the angels announced the birth of Christ with their tidings of peace (Luke 2:14), God was declaring that His promises were being fulfilled. The apostle Paul interprets this fullness of time as the time when God’s people could at last claim their promised inheritance. Prior to this time they were like minor children but now in Christ as mature children they had received the full rights to their promised inheritance (Gal. 4:1–7).

After the first man and woman sinned, God made clothing out of skins, and He clothed them (Genesis 3). Through the sacrifice of an animal, God provided a way of redemption in the garden. It was pointing to the Son of God who would be sacrificed as the sinless man for the sin of all the world. When Adam and Eve first heard the promise, they looked for its speedy fulfillment. They joyfully welcomed their first-born son, hoping that he might be the deliverer. But the fulfillment of the promise tarried. From the days of Enoch the promise was repeated through patriarchs and prophets, keeping alive the hope of His appearing, and yet He did not come. The prophecy of Daniel revealed the time of His advent. Century after century passed away; generation after generation looked for the Messiah and died without the sight. Then the voices of the prophets ceased. With longing eyes they looked for the coming of the Deliverer longing to see the day when the darkness would be dispelled, and the mystery of the future should be made plain. But like the stars in the vast circuit of their appointed path, God's purposes know no haste and no delay. So in heaven's council the hour for the coming of Christ had been determined. When the great clock of time pointed to that hour, Jesus was born in Bethlehem. “When the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son." (Galatians 4:4).

God’s gift to us is a relationship that is built on love. That is why the world is drawn to the idea that Christmas should be a time to love others in the most memorable ways possible. Christmas offers us the great gift of time or opportunity. It is not a gift that you can work for nor it can be bought at the mall. Christmas is the time to make a gift that turns love into action. It is the time to write a note to a long lost friend or a relative. This is the season to bake good cookies and sing some Christmas carols and make love visible through relational giving.

There was a shah who ruled Persia. He used to roam around the nation in disguise to find out the problems of his people. One day he met a person whose job was heating water for the people in a public bath rooms. He sat in a dark room by himself and did his job honestly. The shah visited this person frequently and started sharing his food. The man was taken over by the love and generosity of this stranger. One day the stranger told him he is the Shah, the ruler of Persian Empire and asked that he can ask for any gift he wants. The poor man was choked with tears and told the Emperor, “There is no greater gift than the Emperor coming down to this dark room with me and sharing your time with me.” The greatest gift is God 'coming down from heaven' and living with us. “Word became flesh and lived among us” (John 1:14). No gift is worth anything if not given out of love. “God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten son that whosoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).

Blessings

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