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A couple of weeks ago the first Sunday reading was from the book of Job and our deacon, in his homily, said that Satan in Job was still one of God’s angels as he had not yet fallen/been cast out of heaven. I asked our pastor about this and he said the deacon was correct and my pastor emailed me the following quote from the Jerome Biblical Commentary, adding “which I think Catholic Biblical Scholars usually look to as a primary source.”
"…Yahweh is anthropomorphically represented as an Oriental monarch seated on his throne receiving the reports of his servants and issuing his commands. The servants, the agents through whom he governs, are the “sons of Elohim” originally conceived as lesser divinities but in Israelite theology reduced to the rank of Yahweh’s ministers. Among them is the Adversary (“the Satan”; not to be treated as a proper name), the prosecutor who spies on men’s wrongdoings and reports it to his master. (cf. Zech. 3:1 ff)He is not yet the devil of later Jewish and Christian theology… (page 470)
I replied that the CCC (#391) indicates that the fallen angel Satan was the tempter of Adam and Eve so how could he be “not” fallen in the book of Job. His reply was “Certainly our first parents existed before Job, but I don’t think that Job in the book of Job is necessarily an historical figure. Similarly, Satan, the devil, the spirit of evil – however you want to refer to “him” – seems to have existed at the time of our first parents.
My gut feeling is that the Jerome Bible Commentary is not in line with Church teaching. Is my gut right, or am I missing something?
"…Yahweh is anthropomorphically represented as an Oriental monarch seated on his throne receiving the reports of his servants and issuing his commands. The servants, the agents through whom he governs, are the “sons of Elohim” originally conceived as lesser divinities but in Israelite theology reduced to the rank of Yahweh’s ministers. Among them is the Adversary (“the Satan”; not to be treated as a proper name), the prosecutor who spies on men’s wrongdoings and reports it to his master. (cf. Zech. 3:1 ff)He is not yet the devil of later Jewish and Christian theology… (page 470)
I replied that the CCC (#391) indicates that the fallen angel Satan was the tempter of Adam and Eve so how could he be “not” fallen in the book of Job. His reply was “Certainly our first parents existed before Job, but I don’t think that Job in the book of Job is necessarily an historical figure. Similarly, Satan, the devil, the spirit of evil – however you want to refer to “him” – seems to have existed at the time of our first parents.
My gut feeling is that the Jerome Bible Commentary is not in line with Church teaching. Is my gut right, or am I missing something?