Verse explainer
God knew you before you were fully formed — but the verse is about divine intimacy, not a fatalistic script that erases your choices.
Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them.
BSBYour eyes saw my unformed body; all my days were written in Your book and ordained for me before one of them came to be.
The plain meaning
David is meditating on how thoroughly God knows him — from the hidden darkness of the womb (vv. 13–15) to the open days of his life. The phrase 'yet being unperfect' (KJV) translates the Hebrew golem, an unfinished, embryonic form. Before a single feature was complete, God already saw it. The 'book' imagery is a poetic way of saying nothing about David's life is hidden from or overlooked by God — his days are held within divine awareness. The psalm is a song of wonder, not a technical statement about determinism. The surrounding movement (vv. 1–18) is relational: God searches, knows, surrounds, and holds. The point is intimacy and care, not mechanism.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Spurgeon reads the verse as one of the most tender expressions of divine care in the Psalter. God's eye rested on the unformed embryo with the same attentiveness as on the mature man — the 'book' is not a cold register but a record of fatherly regard. Spurgeon emphasizes that what moves David is not philosophical certainty about fate but the overwhelming sense of being personally and completely known by God from the very first moment of existence.
Barnes carefully distinguishes the two clauses: the first concerns God's sight of the embryo before it took shape; the second concerns 'all my days' — the whole span of life — being in God's awareness before any of them arrived. He notes the Hebrew idiom of the 'book' is a figure for complete and ordered knowledge, not a predestination proof-text, and that the psalm's intent is devotional awe at how intimately personal God's knowledge of each person is, from formation onward.
Calvin underscores that the psalmist's wonder arises from the contrast between his own hiddenness — shut away in the womb, not yet shaped — and God's clear and total sight. The 'book' language, for Calvin, expresses certainty of divine providence and care, meaning that nothing in a human life falls outside God's knowledge and ordering — but the pastoral force of the verse is comfort and awe, addressed to a God David already trusts and loves.
The word behind it
'Unformed substance' or 'embryo' — the word appears only here in the Hebrew Bible and refers to something rolled or wrapped together, incomplete, not yet given final shape. It is the root of the later Jewish legend of the Golem, an incomplete artificial being. Here it pictures the embryo before development is finished. This single word grounds the verse in the biological reality of formation, not abstraction — God's knowledge reaches into the most hidden and unfinished stage of human existence.
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