The Genome and the God Who Already Knew
In 2003, scientists completed the Human Genome Project — thirteen years of painstaking work by thousands of researchers across six countries to map the three billion letters of human DNA. When the results were announced, Francis Collins, the project's director, called it "the language in which God created life." The sheer complexity staggered even the scientists who had spent their careers studying it. Each person's DNA, if uncoiled, would stretch six feet long, yet it folds into a space smaller than the period at the end of this sentence.
But here is what stopped Collins in his tracks. Every freckle, every fingerprint whorl, every predisposition toward laughter or melancholy — all of it was written before a single heartbeat sounded. The code was complete before the child drew breath.
David understood this three thousand years before anyone owned a microscope. "You knit me together in my mother's womb," he wrote. "My frame was not hidden from you." The Hebrew word for "knit" is sakak — it means to weave together, the way a craftsman interlaces threads with deliberate care.
What it took humanity thirteen years and billions of dollars to merely read, the Almighty authored in the quiet darkness of every womb since the beginning of time. He did not discover you. He designed you. He does not observe your days from a distance — He discerns your going out and your lying down because He is the One who dreamed you into being.
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