The Fullness of
the Time
When the fullness of the
time was come, God sent forth His
Son,
to redeem them that were
under the law, that we might receive
the adoption of sons. Galatians
4:4,5.
The
Saviors coming was foretold in
Eden. 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. Those who first received it
died without the sight. From the days
of Enoch, the promise was repeated
through patriarchs and prophets,
keeping alive the hope of His
appearing, and yet He came not. The
prophecy of Daniel revealed the time
of His advent, but not all rightly
interpreted the message. Century
after century passed away; the voices
of the prophets ceased. The hand of
the oppressor was heavy upon Israel,
and many were ready to exclaim,
The days are prolonged, and
every vision faileth. Ezekiel
12:22.
But like
the stars in the vast circuit of
their appointed path, Gods
purposes know no haste and no delay.
Through the symbols of the great
darkness and smoking furnace, God had
revealed to Abraham the bondage of
Israel in Egypt, and had declared
that the time of their sojourning
should be four hundred years.
Afterward, He said,
shall they come out with great
substance. Genesis 15:14.
Against that word, all the power of
Pharaohs proud empire battled
in vain. On the self-same
day appointed in the divine
promise, it came to pass, that
all the hosts of the Lord went out
from the land of Egypt. Exodus
12:41. So, in heavens counsel
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. Providence had directed
the movements of nations, and the
tide of human impulse and influence,
until the world was ripe for the
coming of the Deliverer. The nations
were united under one government. One
language was spoken, and was
everywhere recognized as the language
of literature. From all lands, the
Jews of the dispersion gathered to
Jerusalem to the annual feasts. As
these returned to the places of their
sojourn, they spread throughout the
world the tidings of the
Messiahs coming.
At this
time, the systems of heathenism were
losing their hold upon the people.
Men were weary of pageant and fable.
They longed for a religion that could
satisfy the heart. While the light of
truth seemed to have departed from
among men, there were souls who were
looking for light, and who were
filled with perplexity and sorrow.
They were thirsting for a knowledge
of the living God, for some assurance
of a life beyond the grave.
As the
Jews had departed from God, faith had
grown dim, and hope had well nigh
ceased to illuminate the future. The
words of the prophets were
uncomprehended. To the masses of the
people, death was a dread mystery;
beyond was uncertainty and gloom. It
was not alone the wailing of the
mothers of Bethlehem, but the cry
from the great heart of humanity,
that was borne to the prophet across
the centuries, - the voice heard in
Ramah, lamentation, and
weeping, and great mourning, Rachel
weeping for her children, and would
not be comforted, because they are
not. Matthew 2:18. In the
religion and shadow of death,
men sat unsolaced. With longing eyes,
they looked for the coming of the
Deliverer, when the darkness should
be dispelled, and the mystery of the
future should be made plain.
Outside
the Jewish nation, there were men who
foretold the appearance of a divine
instructor. These men were seeking
truth, and to them the Spirit of
Inspiration was imparted. One after
another, like stars in the darkened
heavens, such teachers had arisen.
Their words of prophecy had kindled
hope in the hearts of thousands of
the Gentile world.
For
hundreds of years the Scriptures had
been translated in to the Greek
language, then widely spoken
throughout the Roman Empire. The Jews
were scattered everywhere, and their
expectation of the Messiahs
coming was to some extent shared by
the Gentiles. Among those whom the
Jews styled heathen were men who had
a better understanding of the
Scriptures prophecies concerning the
Messiah than had the teachers of
Israel. There were some who hoped for
His coming as a deliverer from sin.
Philosophers endeavored to study into
the mystery of the Hebrew economy.
But the bigotry of the Jews hindered
the spread of the light. Intent on
maintaining the separation between
themselves and other nations, they
were unwilling to impart knowledge
they still possessed concerning the
symbolic service. The true
Interpreter must come. The One all
these types prefigured must explain
their significance.
Through
nature, through types and symbols,
through patriarchs and prophets, God
had spoken to the world. Lessons must
be given to humanity in the language
of humanity. The Messenger of the
covenant must speak. His voice must
be heard in His own temple. Christ
must come to utter words which should
be clearly and definitely understood.
He, the author of truth, must
separate truth from the chaff of
mans utterance, which had made
it of no effect. The principles of
Gods government and the plan of
redemption must be clearly defined.
The lessons of the Old Testament must
be fully set before men.
Among the Jews, there were steadfast
souls, descendants of that holy line
through whom a knowledge of God had
been preserved. These still looked
for the hope of the promise made unto
the fathers. They strengthened their
faith by dwelling upon the assurance
given through Moses, A Prophet
shall the Lord your God raise up unto
you of your brethren, like unto me;
Him shall ye hear in all things
whatsoever He shall say unto
you. Acts 3:22. Again, they
read how the Lord would anoint One
to preach good tidings unto the
meek, to bind up the
brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to
the captives, and to declare
the acceptable year of the
Lord. Isaiah 61: 1,2. They read
how He would set judgment in
the earth, how the isles should
wait for His law, how the
Gentiles should come to His light,
and kings to the brightness of His
rising. Isaiah 42:4; 60:3.
The
dying words of Jacob filled them with
hope: The scepter shall not
depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver
from between his feet, until Shiloh
come. Genesis 49:10. The waning
power of Israel testified that the
Messiahs coming was at hand.
The prophecy of Daniel pictured the
glory of His reign over an empire
that should succeed all earthy
kingdoms; and, said the prophet,
It shall stand forever.
Daniel 2:44. While few understood the
nature of Christs mission,
there was a widespread expectation of
a mighty prince who should establish
his kingdom in Israel, and who should
come as a deliverer to the nations.
The
fullness of the time had come.
Humanity, becoming more degraded
through ages of transgression,
calling for the coming of the
Redeemer. Satan had been working to
make the gulf deep and impassable
between earth and heaven. By his
falsehoods, he had emboldened men to
sin. It was his purpose to wear out
the forbearance of God, and to
extinguish His love for man, so that
He would abandon the world to satanic
jurisdiction.
Satan
was seeking to shut out from men a
knowledge of God, to turn their
attention from the temple of God, and
to establish his own kingdom. His
strife fro supremacy had seemed to be
almost wholly successful. It is true
that in every generation God had His
agencies. Even among the heathen,
there were man through whom Christ
was working to uplift the people from
their sin and degradation. But these
men were despised and hated. Many of
them suffered a violent death. The
dark shadow that Satan cast over the
world grew deeper and deeper.
Through
heathenism, Satan had for ages turned
men away from God; but he won his
great triumph in perverting the faith
of Israel. By contemplating and
worshiping their own conceptions, the
heathen had lost a knowledge of God,
and had become more and more corrupt.
So, it was with Israel. The principle
that man can save himself by his own
works lay at the foundation of every
heathen religion; it had now become
the principle of the Jewish religion.
Satan had implanted this principle.
Wherever it is held, men have no
barrier against sin.
The
message of salvation is communicated
to men through human agencies. But
the Jews had sought to make a
monopoly of the truth which is
eternal life. They had hoarded the
living manna, and it had turned to
corruption. The religion which they
tried to shut up to themselves became
an offense. They robbed God of His
glory, and defrauded the world by a
counterfeit of the gospel. They had
refused to surrender themselves to
God for the salvation of the world,
and they became agents of Satan for
its destruction.
The
people whom God had called to be the
pillar and ground of the truth had
become representatives of Satan. They
were doing the work that he desired
them to do, taking a course to
misrepresent the character of God,
and cause the world to look upon Him
as a tyrant. The very priests who
ministered in the temple had lost
sight of the significance of the
service they performed. They had
ceased to look beyond the symbol to
the thing signified. In presenting
the sacrificial offerings they were
as actors in a play. The ordinances
which God Himself had appointed were
made the means of blinding the mind
and hardening the heart. God could do
no more for man through these
channels. The whole system must be
swept away.
The
deception of sin had reached its
height. All the agencies for
depraving the souls of men had been
put into operation. The Son of God,
looking upon the world, beheld
suffering and misery. With pity, He
saw how men had become victims of
satanic cruelty. He looked with
compassion upon those who were being
corrupted, murdered, and lost.
They had
chosen a ruler who chained them to
his car as captives. Bewildered and
deceived, they were moving on in
gloomy procession toward eternal
ruin, - to death in which is no hope
of life, toward night to which comes
morning. Satanic agencies were
incorporated with men. The bodies of
human beings, made for the dwelling
place of God, had become the
habitation of demons. The senses, the
nerves, the passions, the organs of
men, were worked by supernatural
agencies in the indulgence of the
vilest lust. The very stamp of demons
was impressed upon the countenances
of men. Human faces reflected the
expression of the legions of evil
with which they were possessed. Such
was the prospect upon which the
worlds Redeemer looked. What a
spectacle for Infinite Purity to
behold!
Sin had
become a science, and vice was
consecrated as a part of religion.
Rebellion had struck its roots deep
into the heart, and the hostility of
man was most violent against heaven.
It was demonstrated before the
universe that, apart from God,
humanity could not be uplifted. A new
element of life and power must be
imparted by Him who made the world.
With
intense interest, the unfallen worlds
had watched to see Jehovah arise, and
sweep away the inhabitants of the
earth. And if God should do this,
Satan was ready to carry out his plan
for securing to himself the
allegiance of heavenly beings. He had
declared that the principles of
Gods government make
forgiveness impossible. Had the world
been destroyed, he would have claimed
that his accusations were proved
true.
He was
ready to cast blame upon God, and to
spread his rebellion to the worlds
above. But instead of destroying the
world, God sent His Son to save it.
Through corruption and defiance might
be seen in every part of the alien
province, a way for its recovery was
provided. At the very crisis, when
Satan seemed about to triumph, the
Son of God came with the embassage of
divine grace. Through every age,
through every hour, the love of God
had been exercised toward the fallen
race. Notwithstanding the perversity
of men, the signals of mercy had been
continually exhibited. And when the
fullness of time had come, the Deity
was glorified by pouring upon the
world a flood of healing grace that
was never to be obstructed or
withdrawn till the plan of salvation
should be fulfilled.
Satan was
exulting that he had succeeded in
debasing the image of God in
humanity. Then Jesus came to restore
in man the image of his Maker. None
but Christ can fashion anew the
character that has been ruined by
sin. He came to expel the demons that
had controlled the will. He came to
lift us up from the dust, to reshape
the marred character after the
pattern of His divine character, and
to make it beautiful with His own
glory.