In the final hours of His earthly life, Jesus of Nazareth uttered words that have echoed through two millennia of Christian reflection. Suspended between heaven and earth, His body wracked with pain, He cried out in Aramaic, the language of His mother and His people: “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?, ”My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? (Matthew 27:46, ESV). The bystanders, hearing the guttural Aramaic syllables forced through a dying man’s parched throat amid the chaos of the crowd, mistook the cry. “This man is calling for Elijah,” some said (Matthew 27:47, ESV). The phonetic similarity makes perfect sense in context: in Aramaic, “Eli” (my God) carries the same opening sounds as Eliyahu, the prophet Elijah’s name. A single syllable shift in the noise and dust of Golgotha turned divine lament into a desperate summons for the fiery prophet of old. Yet Jesus was not summoning Elijah. He was praying Psalm 22, the very psalm that begins with the raw agony of abandonment and ends with triumphant proclamation to generations yet to come.
This was no accidental quotation. Jesus deliberately anchored His final public theological statement in a Psalm that frames human existence from the womb forward and backward, from the intimate knowledge of God before birth to the proclamation of His righteousness to a people yet unborn. In doing so, He declared that personhood, dignity, and divine relationship begin not after birth but at the very moment life stirs in the womb. Life is not a human achievement to be earned or a societal grant to be bestowed; it is God’s sovereign claim from the first breath of existence. The psalm Jesus prayed opens with God’s pre-birth knowledge and closes with its gaze fixed on the future. Both the psalm and the Gospels insist: God knows us before we know Him, claims us before we can claim Him, and commissions us to tell His story long after we are gone.
Psalm 22 stands as one of the most profoundly Messianic texts in the Hebrew Scriptures. Attributed to David yet prophetically fulfilled in the suffering Servant, it moves from lament to trust to victory. Its structure mirrors the arc of redemption: forsakenness (verses 1–21), remembrance of God’s faithfulness (verses 9–11), and ultimate triumph (verses 22–31). Jesus embodied the entire psalm, but verses 9–10 form its theological heartbeat in the midst of suffering. The English Standard Version renders them with stark clarity:
Yet you are he who took me from the womb;
you made me trust you at my mother’s breasts.
On you was I cast from my birth,
and from my mother’s womb you have been my God. (Psalm 22:9–10, ESV)
These words are not a poetic flourish. They are exegetical anchors, drawing on precise Hebrew vocabulary to affirm God’s active, personal involvement from conception onward. Let us linger over the original language, phrase by phrase, to uncover the depth of what David, prophetically voicing the Messiah, declares.
The verse opens with כִּֽי־אַתָּ֣ה גֹחִ֣י מִבָּ֑טֶן. The conjunction כִּי functions adversatively here, a pivot from the mocking crowds of verse 8 to the faithful remembrance of God’s character: “Yet you are He…” It is a defiant turn toward covenant loyalty amid apparent divine silence. אַתָּ֣ה, You, are placed emphatically, underscoring the personal address to the covenant God. The rare participle גֹחִ֣י (from a root occurring only here in this form) conveys the active divine agency of drawing forth or bringing out from the womb. It evokes the physical, visceral act of birth itself, God as midwife, extractor, protector. Not passive observation, but intimate intervention. The prepositional phrase מִבָּ֑טֶן specifies “from the belly/womb,” using בֶּטֶן, a term that denotes the maternal womb with visceral concreteness, the very site of embryonic formation. God is not distant; He is the One who orchestrates the transition from hidden womb-life to visible existence.
The next line deepens the intimacy: מַ֝בְטִיחִ֗י עַל־שְׁדֵ֥י אִמִּֽי. Here, the Hifil participle מַבְטִיחִי (from בָּטַח, to trust, to be secure) means “you caused me to trust” or “you made me lie secure.” It is causative: God Himself instills the infant’s instinctive reliance. The image of שְׁדֵ֥י אִמִּֽי, “my mother’s breasts,” grounds the trust in the most primal of human dependencies: nursing, nourishment, the warmth of maternal embrace. This is not abstract theology; it is embodied covenant. Even in the vulnerability of infancy, trust is not self-generated but divinely imparted. God nurtures faith before words or conscious choice exist.
Verse 10 intensifies the claim: עָ֭לֶיךָ הָשְׁלַ֣כְתִּי מֵרָ֑חֶם. The Hofal perfect הָשְׁלַ֣כְתִּי derives from שָׁלַךְ, a verb rich with nuance, to cast, to throw, to hurl. In other contexts, it can imply rejection or exile, yet here it conveys total dependence: “I was cast upon You.” Like an infant flung into the arms of a parent, utterly reliant. מֵרָ֑חֶם, “from the womb”, repeats the birthing imagery, this time with רֶחֶם, another term for womb that emphasizes mercy and compassion (the same root as “womb” and “compassion” in Hebrew thought). The declaration culminates: מִבֶּ֥טֶן אִ֝מִּ֗י אֵ֣לִי אָֽתָּה, “from the womb of my mother, my God are You.” The possessive אֵלִי (“my God”) echoes the opening cry of the psalm, closing the circle. From the earliest moment of existence, the relationship is personal, possessive, and unbreakable.
This exegesis reveals a profound anthropology. The Psalm does not locate personhood at viability, quickening, or birth. It locates it at the womb, בֶּטֶן, רֶחֶם, where God is already “my God.” The same God who knits together in secret (Psalm 139:13–16) here claims covenant identity before any human awareness. Jeremiah 1:5 echoes the theme: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you.” The Hebrew יָדַע implies intimate, relational knowledge, not mere foreknowledge. Personhood begins where God’s knowing and claiming begin.
Jesus, hanging on the cross, made this His prayer. One of His final acts was to remind the world that the God who drew Him forth from Mary’s womb is the same God who would not abandon Him in death. The incarnation itself, God taking on flesh in the womb, validates this claim. The virgin birth was not a biological footnote; it was the ultimate affirmation that life in the womb bears the full image of God. The One who was “cast upon” the Father from birth now casts Himself upon the Father in death, trusting that prior grace will not be wasted.
The plea that immediately follows in verse 11 seals the logic: “Be not far from me, for trouble is near; for there is none to help” (Psalm 22:11, ESV). The Forsaken One does not abandon God because He feels abandoned. Instead, He appeals to the very history of divine faithfulness from the womb as leverage for present deliverance. As Charles Spurgeon observed, “That Child now fighting the great battle of his life, uses the mercy of his nativity as an argument with God. Faith finds weapons everywhere. He who wills to believe shall never lack reasons for believing.” The sufferer argues from past grace to present crisis: if You were my God from the womb, You cannot forsake me now when trouble presses, and no human helper remains.
This movement from remembrance to plea carries immense pastoral weight. In seasons of felt forsakenness, chronic illness, relational betrayal, spiritual dryness, or the valley of the shadow, we too can pray these words. The God who sustained us through infancy sustains us through agony. The same hands that drew us from the womb hold us in the grave. Edge cases abound: the believer who never knew earthly parental care, the orphan, the one abandoned at birth. Even then, the psalm insists, God was present. גֹחִי, He drew you forth. הָשְׁלַכְתִּי, you were cast upon Him. No human failure voids divine claim.
Yet Psalm 22 does not end in the womb or on the cross. Its gaze turns prophetically outward. Verses 30–31 declare:
Posterity shall serve him;
it shall be told of the Lord to the coming generation;
they shall come and proclaim his righteousness to a people yet unborn,
that he has done it. (Psalm 22:30–31, ESV)
The Hebrew here is luminous. זֶרַע (“posterity” or “seed”) speaks of descendants, the ongoing line of faith. יְסֻפַּר implies recounting, proclaiming with intentional narrative. The phrase “a people yet unborn” translates לְעָם נוֹלָד, literally “to a people that shall be born.” The verb נוֹלָד (from יָלַד, to bear or bring forth) mirrors the birthing language of verses 9–10. The Psalm that began with God drawing the speaker from the womb now ends with a proclamation to those still in the womb of future generations. The circle closes beautifully: from the unborn Messiah in Mary’s womb to the unborn hearers of the Gospel two thousand years later, and beyond.
The final declaration כִּי עָשָׂה, “that he has done it”, resounds with resurrection triumph. On the cross, Jesus cried, “It is finished” (John 19:30), echoing this very phrase. The work is accomplished. The righteousness proclaimed is not abstract; it is the finished work of the crucified and risen King. Posterity serves because the seed of the woman has crushed the serpent’s head. The Gospel is not merely historical; it is proleptic, reaching forward to every unborn soul who will one day hear and believe.
This framing carries profound implications across multiple dimensions. Theologically, it dismantles any notion that life or dignity accrues gradually. Personhood is not emergent; it is bestowed by the Creator who knows and claims from conception. Philosophically, it challenges utilitarian ethics that weigh fetal value against maternal autonomy or societal burden. Pastorally, it offers comfort to parents grieving miscarriage: that child was known, claimed, and already “cast upon” the Father. Culturally, in an age of reproductive technologies, selective reduction, and debates over personhood, the psalm stands as a quiet yet insistent witness. God’s knowledge precedes our technology; His claim outlasts our courts.
Consider the nuances. Not every person experiences conscious trust from the womb, yet the Psalm’s language is universal in its application to the Messiah and, by extension, to all who are “in Him.” David wrote from personal experience of God’s faithfulness through trials, yet the Holy Spirit superintended prophetic layers pointing to Christ. The Psalm’s structure, lament, trust, victory, models resilient faith: remember the womb, plead in trouble, proclaim to the unborn. Related considerations include the full counsel of Scripture: the sanctity of life in Exodus 21, the prenatal leaping of John the Baptist (Luke 1:41), and the potter’s hand in Jeremiah 18. Edge cases, severe fetal anomalies, and maternal life-threatening conditions do not negate the principle but call for prayerful wisdom, never discarding the divine image.
Spiritually, this text invites personal appropriation. Have you ever felt cast off, forsaken? Remember: from your mother’s womb He has been your God. In seasons when prayer feels like shouting into the void, appeal to nativity grace. For those raising children, model trust from the cradle, teaching that God’s claim began before their first cry. For the Church, the call is clear: proclaim His righteousness to the coming generation and to those yet unborn, through faithful teaching, pro-life advocacy rooted in compassion, and a Gospel-centered culture that values every womb.
Jesus chose this psalm as His final public act because it encapsulates the entire redemptive story. He who was taken from the womb trusted the Father at Mary’s breasts, was cast upon Him from birth, and from Mary’s womb knew God as His own. On the cross, He replayed that trust in the ultimate dark night. And because He did, posterity serves, the coming generation is told, and a people yet unborn will proclaim: He has done it.
In the noise of our own Golgothas, personal, cultural, global, may we echo the same prayer. From womb to cross to empty tomb to unborn generations, the God who knew us before birth will not abandon us in death. He who drew us forth will carry us home. And the story will be told, again and again, until every tongue confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father, beginning in the womb and extending into eternity.