Simply an opinion, sorry.
First of all, let’s admit that St. Jerome did translated the verse in question as “SHE shall strike at your head”. So, does this mean that the Catholic Church teaches that Mary “alone” will crush the head of Satan? Well, the Catholic Church teaches that Genesis 3:15 is the Proto-Evangelium – the first prophecy of the Messiah; and thus the actual Person Who crushes the head of the serpent is Christ Himself. So, it’s silly to claim that the Catholic Church teaches otherwise.
Then there is the story of Jael in Judges 5, which reads:
Blessed among women be Jael, blessed among tent-dwelling women. He asked for water, she gave him milk; in a princely bowl she offered curds. With her left hand she reached for the peg, with her right, for the workman’s mallet. She hammered Sisera, crushed his head… (Judges 5:24-26)
A similar pre-figurement is seen in the Book of Judith, Chapter 13, where Judith, a beautiful Jewish widow, delivers Israel from the Assyrians by gaining access to the enemy’s camp and beheading the Assyrian commander, Holofernes (Judith 13:8).
So, this recurring Biblical theme is the reason why St. Jerome preferred to translate Genesis 3:15 as “she will crush thy head”. A matter of emphasis. However, this was always with the clear understanding that it was the Seed of this woman Who was actually the cause of the enemy’s destruction.
So, St. Jerome didn’t “mistranslate” anything at all.
As for Western statues (and other icons) depicting Mary crushing the serpent’s head beneath her feet, … Tell me, … Doesn’t Sacred Tradition recognize Mary as an image of the Church itself? It sure does, right: Revelation 12:1-3, etc. So, if you have a problem with Mary being depicted crushing the serpent’s head, please explain Romans 16:20, which reads:
…then the God of peace will quickly crush Satan UNDER YOUR FEET.
…That is, the “feet” of the Church. So, if not only the Messiah Himself (Genesis 3:15) crushes the head of Satan, but ALSO His Church, why do you have a problem with His mother (i.e., the first member of this Church and the very image of it) crushing the head of Satan? Clearly, if you wish to agree with Scripture, you must accept the Catholic (and Eastern Orthodox) “both-and” understanding of Genesis 3:15, as opposed to this non-Traditional, Protestant thought prosess which you’ve acquired.
“ipsum” in Genesis 3:15 is very significant and cannot be ignored. It allows both interpretations (he or she) as being acceptable by Catholics. But IMHO, “she” is still the only logical choice.
Re: the JPS (Jewish Publications Society) has it in verse form as follows:
I will put enmity
Between you and the woman
And between your offspring and hers;
They shall strike at your head
And you shall strike at their heel
See what JPS does here? To make this work they are ignoring the SINGULAR number of the verb “she shall strike” and the noun “her heel” in bar 3. They recognize (I have pointed out) that the respective “seeds” in bar two represent collective nouns, not individual persons. Despite the obvious grammar of the 3rd bar, they make the same mistake that everyone modern exegete makes: they CHANGE the enmity in bar 3 to enmity between the serpent and the seed of the woman even though in bar 2 it is CLEARLY enmity between their respective seeds.
A more dynamic interpretation is necessary based on literary form, not on the text itself which IMHO is either corrupted (i.e., LXX & Masoretic Text) or unclear (Hebrew sans nikud).
Look, this is what the Protestants want the verse to read like:
I will put enmity
between you (A) and the woman (B)
between your (A’) seed (C) and her (B’) seed (D)
he (E) will strike at your (A’) head
and you (A) will strike at his (E’) heel.
(E) is a singular masculine pronoun in the 3rd bar which comes out of nowhere and has no referent in the earlier text. It cannot refer to the woman’s seed (D) because (as the JPS Version and Revelation 12:17 clearly show) that is a “they” not a “he”. The only single person mentioned in the first 2 bars who is opposed to the serpent is the woman.
In this version, “seed” could represent a single individual and it would make sense to have bar 3 as you prefer it. In this version, bar 2 bridges into bar 3 and justifies the currently preferred reading by switching the enmity to one between the serpent and the woman’s seed. If that were the text in Hebrew, I would support to the currently preferred interpretation of the “experts”. BUT THAT IS NOT WHAT THE TEXT OF BAR 2 SAYS!
The critical point is that bar 2 does not allow us to infer a direct enmity between the serpent and the seed of the woman. Bar 2 only re-states the enmity between the serpent and the woman. It does not introduce a new protagonist against the serpent. As such there is no justification for introducing a new antagonism in bar 3. Bar 3 is merely reiterating the same antagonism between the serpent and the woman from bars 1 & 2.
St Jerome and the Catholic Church are agreed of this and we shall know on THAT DAY when God will reveal everything to us. article by Art Sippo, Catholic Legate
Peace