For Unto Us, a Child is Born… :: by Britt Gillette

December 25th is Christmas, the traditional day when Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus. This time of year, movies, TV shows, lawn nativities, music, and Christmas plays tell the story of the baby in the manger. Almost everyone knows this story. It’s the story of Joseph, Mary, baby Jesus, the shepherds, and the wise men. But how many people realize the events of Jesus’ birth were foretold hundreds of years in advance?

That’s right. Hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus, God foretold the place of the Messiah’s birth. He also told us about many of the events surrounding His birth, including the exact window of time in which He would be born. When Jesus fulfilled these prophecies, they revealed His true identity to the world. Are your friends and family aware of this? If not, Christmas is the perfect opportunity to tell them about these prophecies and to share the gospel with them.
The Prophecies of His Birth

Here are just a few of the messianic prophecies fulfilled by Jesus:
1) His Place of Birth – Hundreds of years before Jesus was born, the prophet Micah revealed the birthplace of the Messiah – Bethlehem. He said while Bethlehem is only a small village, a ruler of Israel whose origins are from the distant past will come from her (Micah 5:2).
The book of Matthew tells us Bethlehem is the birthplace of Jesus. When the Roman Emperor demanded a census be taken throughout the empire, people were required to return to their ancestral towns to register. As a descendant of King David, Joseph was required to go to Bethlehem, taking his wife Mary with him (Luke 2:1-5). While they were there, Jesus was born in Bethlehem (Matthew 2:1).
2) The Miraculous Means of His Birth – Once again, hundreds of years before Jesus was born, the prophet Isaiah relayed a message from God to King Ahaz. In His message, God promised to send a miraculous sign. And what was the sign? A virgin would give birth to a child. Needless to say, this is something that had never happened before. Isaiah said the child would be named “Immanuel,” which means “God is with us” (Isaiah 7:14).

According to the book of Matthew, Jesus fulfilled this prophecy as well. His mother, Mary, was engaged to be married to Joseph. But while she was still engaged, she became pregnant through the power of the Holy Spirit. Joseph considered breaking the engagement, until an angel appeared to him in a dream and told him the child was conceived of the Holy Spirit. The angel said to name Him Jesus because He would save people from their sins (Matthew 1:18-21).
3) The Details of His Ancestry – Almost two thousand years before the birth of Jesus, Jacob said the Messiah would come from the family of Judah (Genesis 49:10). Both the book of Matthew and the book of Luke reveal the lineage of Jesus, showing Him to be a descendant of Judah (Luke 3:23-38, Matthew 1:1-17).
 
More than a thousand years before Jesus, God promised David He would place one of his descendants on the throne. He said the royal line of David would live on forever and ever (Psalm 132:11-12). Three hundred years later, Jeremiah said God would raise up a righteous king who rules with wisdom from the line of King David (Jeremiah 23:5-6, 33:15). Both of these prophecies refer to the Messiah, and once again, both the Book of Matthew and the Book of Luke confirm Jesus is a descendant of King David (Luke 1:32-33, Matthew 1:1-17).
 
4) Great Kings Will Present Him with Gifts – A thousand years before the birth of Jesus, Solomon predicted the Western kings of Tarshish and the eastern kings of Sheba and Seba would bestow gifts upon the Messiah (Psalm 72:10). After Jesus was born, wise men from the east followed a star in the sky to Bethlehem. When they arrived and saw Jesus, they bowed down to worship Him. Paying Him homage and tribute, they opened their treasure chests and gave Him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh (Matthew 2:1-2, 11).
5) He Will Be Called Out of Egypt – Seven hundred years before the birth of Jesus, Hosea said the Messiah would be called out of Egypt (Hosea 11:1). Jesus fulfilled this prophecy as well. The Book of Matthew tells us an angel appeared to Joseph and told him to flee to Egypt because King Herod was trying to kill the newborn child. So Joseph, Mary, and Jesus fled to Egypt. After Herod died, the angel once again appeared in Joseph’s dream and told him it was safe to take Mary and Jesus back to Israel (Matthew 2:13-20).

6) He Will Bring Light to Galilee – Hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus, Isaiah said a time would come when Galilee of the Gentiles which lies between the Jordan and the sea would be filled with glory. A light would shine for the people who walk in darkness, for a child will be born and His name will be Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:1-7). In other words, the Messiah would appear in Galilee.

Jesus fulfilled this prophecy too. After leaving Egypt, Jesus grew up in Nazareth. This small town was located in the province of Galilee between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. Later in life, Jesus began His ministry in Galilee, preaching first in Nazareth and then in Capernaum (Matthew 4:12-17). Today, He is known far and wide as “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace.”

7) The Exact Timing of His Birth – During the Babylonian captivity, the angel Gabriel visited the prophet Daniel. He told Daniel precisely 483 years would pass from the time the command is given to rebuild Jerusalem until the Messiah comes (Daniel 9:25). This means the Messiah had to appear at that particular time in history. Did this happen? Yes.

According to the Bible, the command to rebuild the Temple was given in 457 B.C. (Ezra 7:11-26).  And 483 years later brings us to A.D. 27 – the precise moment in time when Jesus began His ministry. No one before or after Jesus could possibly fulfill this prophecy. And history records that Jesus is the only one on earth at that time who fulfilled all the messianic prophecies. This means Jesus is the only one who ever has and ever can fulfill them.

In addition, Gabriel said after this time, the Messiah will be killed, “appearing to have accomplished nothing” (Daniel 9:26). This is exactly what happened to Jesus. He was crucified (John 9:18), and at first, it appeared His ministry accomplished nothing. Yet history reveals otherwise.
Conclusion
Fulfilled prophecy is evidence Jesus is the Messiah. Is it any wonder Christianity spread so quickly in the first century? Many of those alive in the earliest days of Christianity witnessed the fulfillment of the messianic prophecies (Acts 2:32). This is why Paul used the scriptures as his primary tool for evangelism (Acts 17:2). Remember, the New Testament was not yet a part of the Bible. The scriptures included only the Old Testament. So how did Paul teach about Jesus from the Old Testament? By showing others how Jesus fulfilled the messianic prophecies!

Not only was Jesus born at the right time, in the right place, and under the right circumstances – His entire life, from beginning to end, was a fulfillment of prophecy. Jesus gave sight to the blind (Isaiah 35:5-6). He raised the dead (Daniel 12:2). A friend betrayed Him (Psalm 41:9) for the exact sum of 30 pieces of silver (Zechariah 11:12). His enemies pierced His hands and feet (Psalm 22:16) and divided His clothes (Psalm 22:17-18). His friends buried Him in a rich man’s tomb (Isaiah 53:9), and three days later, He rose from the dead (Psalm 16:10).

The Christmas story is a story of fulfilled prophecy. It’s the story of the birth of the Savior of the world – our Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace.
Britt Gillette is author of the free ebook Coming to Jesus: One Man’s Search for Truth and Life Purpose as well as Signs of the Second Coming: 11 Reasons Jesus Will Return in Our Lifetime. Receive his booklet: 7 Signs of the End Times for free when you sign up for his monthly newsletter.
 

And the Gospel Will Be Preached… :: by Britt Gillette

A little less than 2,000 years ago, a Galilean man in the small province of Judea made one of the most bold and astounding prophecies in all of human history. He claimed His personal message of hope and redemption would be preached to the ends of the earth. When He made this claim, He was a Jewish carpenter on the outskirts of the ancient Roman Empire.

Even in nearby Jerusalem, only a small number of people had heard His message. His followers were ordinary – a handful of fishermen and tax collectors. He didn’t hold high office. He wasn’t a member of high society. He wasn’t a celebrated military conqueror, and he didn’t live in a palace. In fact, at first glance, there was little about Him to indicate such a thing was possible.

Nevertheless, Jesus of Nazareth didn’t back away from His claim. Responding to questions about the end of the age, Jesus told His followers to look for a specific sign. He said His message, known as the Gospel or “Good News” would be preached throughout the entire world. Not just the surrounding towns or the nearby nations. The whole world. Jesus said His message would be preached far and wide so that every nation would hear it. And then? And then the end would come (Matthew 24:14).

Think about that. What a bold statement. A man of seemingly limited means proclaims His message will reach the ends of the earth. This is before the telegraph. Before radio. Before television and the Internet. This is long before any form of mass communication. In those days, messages spread mostly by word-of-mouth, and written communication traveled at the speed of sailboats and horses. Yet Jesus was clear. His message would spread to the four corners of the earth.

I wonder what His followers thought when He said this? The idea must have been daunting. The Roman Empire, which was their known world at the time, included 60 million people spread over 1.3 million square miles. The idea of reaching all those people must have seemed impossible. And keep in mind, their idea of the world was limited. To them, the world consisted almost entirely of the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. That’s the only world they knew. The first followers of Jesus knew nothing of North America, South America, Australia, Japan, and large parts of Asia and the pacific.

Think about that. The almighty Roman Empire had yet to reach the ends of the earth. But a Jewish carpenter would? What do you think the people of His day thought? What kind of odds would they have placed on such a man spreading His message to the whole world? I think most of them would have bet against it. After all, the odds were against it. In fact, outside of Jesus and a handful of His followers, I doubt anyone believed it.

Yet one man outside of Jesus and His inner circle did consider the possibility. And in doing so, he showed the world exactly who Jesus is.

Gamaliel’s Argument

Not long after the resurrection of Jesus, the Jewish high priest and his officials arrested Peter and the apostles. When they refused to stop preaching in the name of Jesus, the high council decided to kill them. But one man among them objected. His name was Gamaliel, a Pharisee and expert in religious law. We later find out he was a mentor to Paul (Acts 22:3). This is what he said:

“Men of Israel, take care what you are planning to do to these men! Some time ago there was that fellow Theudas, who pretended to be someone great. About 400 others joined him, but he was killed, and all his followers went their various ways. The whole movement came to nothing. After him, at the time of the census, there was Judas of Galilee.

He got people to follow him, but he was killed, too, and all his followers were scattered. So my advice is, leave these men alone. Let them go. If they are planning and doing these things merely on their own, it will soon be overthrown. But if it is from God, you will not be able to overthrow them. You may even find yourselves fighting against God!” (Acts 5:34-39)

In his wisdom, Gamaliel knew if the message of Jesus came from God, then any forces aligned against it would fail. In other words, if Jesus was who He said He was, His message would spread to the ends of the earth.

The Power of the Gospel

The message Peter and the apostles preached was this: “Jesus is the Messiah” (Acts 5:42). Gamaliel was right to say if this message is from God, then those opposed to it would fail to stop it. History shows they failed. Why?

Because Jesus is the Messiah. That’s the very reason the Gospel spread so quickly in the early church.

The people of that time knew for a fact Jesus arrived at the precise time in history when the Messiah was supposed to come (Daniel 9:25). They knew Jesus opened the eyes of the blind and the ears of the deaf (Isaiah 35:5). They knew He suffered on the cross for their sins (Isaiah 53). They knew His Roman executioners gambled for His clothes (Psalm 22:18).

They knew Judas betrayed Him for thirty pieces of silver (Zechariah 11:12), and they knew He was buried in a rich man’s tomb (Isaiah 53:9). How did they know all of this? Because they were witnesses! Jesus fulfilled messianic prophecy after messianic prophecy. He was and is the Messiah, and as Gamaliel noted, no power on earth could possibly stop the spread of that message.

Today, those first century witnesses are gone, yet the Gospel continues to spread. Why? Because Jesus transforms lives. He redeems sinners and tax collectors. He reforms prostitutes, drug addicts, and alcoholics. He humbles the proud and strengthens the weak. He gives hope in a hopeless world.

An Overlooked Sign

Two thousand years later, the Gospel is preached in every nation, the Bible is translated in hundreds of languages, and the message of Jesus is delivered by thousands of ministries through radio, cable TV, satellite, and the Internet. Every day, missionaries carry the Gospel to people who have never heard it before.

But as amazing as this is, many people take it for granted. They don’t see the worldwide spread of Christianity as a big deal. But it is. For the first 1,500 years after Jesus, you could only find a few Christians outside of Europe, western Asia, and the Mediterranean. The Gospel wasn’t preached in China. It didn’t make it to Japan. You couldn’t hear it in North America, South America, or Australia. It simply wasn’t heard worldwide.

Even after 1,900 years of Christianity, many regional world populations had yet to hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ. But today? Today, only a tiny minority of the world’s seven billion people haven’t heard the Gospel. Nearly 2,000 years ago, a Jewish carpenter said His message would be preached to the entire earth. That’s bold. Our generation is about to see His bold claim become reality. The words of Jesus are coming true right before our eyes. And this time, we are the witnesses.

Now, think about this. Do you remember the second part of Jesus’s prophecy? That’s right. This was a two-part prophecy by Jesus. He said when the whole world hears His message, He’ll return. He said when we see what we’re seeing right now, He’s coming back:

“And the Good News about the Kingdom will be preached throughout the whole world, so that all nations will hear it; and then the end will come” (Matthew 24:14).

You can count on Jesus. When Jesus makes a promise, you can be sure His Word will become reality. We can see the first part of His prophecy coming true. We are eyewitnesses. The message of Jesus is reaching the whole world. And when it does, He promises to return. Because you can count on Jesus’s Word, you can on this – He’s coming. And Jesus is coming soon!


Britt Gillette is author of the free ebook Coming to Jesus: One Man’s Search for Truth and Life Purpose as well as Signs of the Second Coming: 11 Reasons Jesus Will Return in Our Lifetime.