In the Fullness of Time: God's Sovereign Advent
Isaiah 9:2-7 • Luke 1:46-55
The sovereign timing of God, the already/not-yet tension of the kingdom, and Christ as the fulfillment of all covenant promises
Reformed / Presbyterian
The sovereignty of God and doctrines of grace
The Fullness of Time
The Cosmic Clockwork
Consider the precision: Daniel's prophecy of "seventy sevens" (Daniel 9:24-27) pointed to the exact generation when the Messiah would come. Micah pinpointed the town. Isaiah specified the method of birth. God did not leave the incarnation to chance. He programmed it with the precision of a master watchmaker assembling a movement with a thousand gears. Each gear — each empire, each decree, each genealogical line — was positioned centuries in advance. When the final gear clicked into place, the baby was born. Sovereignty is not a doctrine. It is the operating system of the universe.
Source: Daniel 9:24-27 / Prophetic timeline
The Already and the Not Yet
Covenant Hope: The Unbreakable Promise
Applications
- 1Meditate on God's sovereignty over timing. The "fullness of time" means God has an appointed moment for every promise in your life. Trust His timeline.
- 2Practice living in the already/not-yet. Name one thing that is "already" true because of Christ and one thing you are still waiting for. Let both inform your worship.
- 3Trace the covenant line this Advent. Read one covenant passage each week: Genesis 12 (Abraham), 2 Samuel 7 (David), Isaiah 9 (prophets), John 1 (fulfillment).
- 4Light your candle with covenant confidence. The same God who kept every messianic promise will keep every promise He has made to you.
Prayer Suggestions
- Sovereign Lord, You sent Your Son in the fullness of time — not a moment too early, not a moment too late. Teach us to trust Your timing.
- God of the already and the not-yet, we live in the tension. Already redeemed, not yet glorified. Give us patience and hope in the overlap.
- Covenant-keeping God, Your promises are yea and amen in Christ. All of them. Every one. Help us rest in the security of Your unbreakable word.
- Come, Lord Jesus — the second time. We wait for the consummation of all things. Until then, we light our candles and we trust. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Arrival (2016)
In Arrival, Dr. Louise Banks learns to see time non-linearly — past, present, and future all visible at once. She makes her choices knowing their outcomes, embracing the painful ones because the love is worth the cost. God sees time this way. The incarnation was not a reaction to sin — it was the plan before time began. Every moment of darkness in Israel's history was visible to God, and every moment was leading toward the appointed hour when the fullness of time would arrive. Advent teaches us to trust the One who sees the end from the beginning.
3 Voices
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Galatians 4:4 — "When the fullness of time had come." Not a moment too early. Not a moment too late. Sovereignty is not a doctrine. It is the operating system of the universe.
If you are living in the already/not-yet — already redeemed but not yet whole — you are exactly where Advent says you should be. The tension is the plan.
God waited four hundred years between Malachi and Matthew without a single prophet. Four centuries of divine silence. And we panic after four weeks of unanswered prayer.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What does "the fullness of time" mean in Galatians 4:4?
It refers to God's sovereign appointment of the exact moment for the incarnation. The Roman Empire (roads, peace, common language), the prophetic silence (hunger for God), and the covenant timeline all converged at the precise moment God had decreed. Nothing was accidental.
How does the already/not-yet framework apply to Advent?
We celebrate the first advent (already happened) while awaiting the second advent (not yet). This tension shapes Christian hope: we are already redeemed but not yet glorified, already victorious but not yet free from suffering. Advent teaches us to live faithfully in the overlap.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the advent (hope & waiting) sermon.