Verse explainer
The verse is a song of praise to God — not a self-affirmation, and 'fearfully' means with awe-inspiring reverence, not merely 'amazingly.'
I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works; and that my soul knoweth right well.
BSBI praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Marvelous are Your works, and I know this very well.
The plain meaning
Psalm 139 is David's sustained meditation on a God who is inescapably present — knowing his sitting and rising, his thoughts from afar, his words before he speaks them (vv. 1–6). By verse 14, David turns that awareness into worship: the intricate body God knit together in secret (v. 13) is reason to praise the Maker, not to celebrate the made. The Hebrew pair 'fearfully and wonderfully' points outward — toward the reverence and wonder God's work commands — not inward toward the creature's worth as a freestanding fact. The 'marvellous works' in the same breath are God's works, of which the human body is one example. This is a doxology, a declaration of what God has done, voiced by someone who is moved to his core by it.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Gill dwells on the intricate construction of the body — bones, muscles, arteries, nerves, and fibres all knit together in the hidden 'dark shop of nature' — and sees David praising God precisely because such exquisite craft, done entirely out of human sight, could only be the work of God. The wonder belongs to the Craftsman, not the vessel.
Spurgeon reads the verse as a movement from self-knowledge to God-knowledge: David does not stop at amazement over his own frame but immediately ascribes the marvel to God. For Spurgeon, 'marvellous are thy works' is the point the whole verse is building toward — the body is an exhibit, and God is the exhibition.
Barnes notes that 'fearfully' carries the sense of something that strikes one with awe and reverence — as one would feel standing before a great and holy power — and 'wonderfully' indicates what surpasses ordinary human understanding. Together they describe the reaction proper to the observer of God's handiwork, not simply a synonym for 'impressively.'
The word behind it
'Fearfully,' from yare' — to fear, to stand in awe of. It is the same root used for the fear of God throughout the Psalms and Proverbs. The word describes something that produces reverent dread, not merely admiration. When David says he is 'fearfully made,' he means his body is the kind of thing that should stop you in your tracks with awe before God — not that he is simply remarkable or impressive.
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