Even as a devout Christian I found the book of Job ludicrous.
An all loving, all righteous God makes a BET with the Devil, allowing him to physically and psychologically torture an innocent man, to the point a despair and sickness, in order to prove that the man will not turn on his torturer.
He allows the Devil to KILL Job's entire family, ruin his life and render him to be wracked in pain and sickness.
BUT because Job is still a slave to his fear of god at the end of all this, god gives him a new wife and family, cures him and gives back his possessions, so that's all right then...Except for the people who are dead for the sake of this little ego trip.
It is the epitome of deviant scriptural evil, utterly disgusting.
To be honest, when I was a Christian, I saw this as simply a metaphor for being a mere mortal. I suppose my mind just rejected the notion that women are unclean as so ridiculous, that I had to come up with some other interpretation.
To be fair (and no, I don't know why I bother), the Bible also says that sin came into the world by one MAN (Romans 5:12). So it spreads the shame and blame around equally in that sense, I guess.
More broadly the whole notion that sin is a thing-in-itself somehow rooted in the physical world and particularly in our bodies -- this "stain of sin" that we'll never fully get rid of apart from death -- is the thread of Christian asceticism that runs through scripture. The disgust is not solely for women, it is for physicality and biology itself. We are filthy with sin, therefore, anything that physically proceeds out of one's body is an opportunity for self-loathing since it's symbolic of the stain of sin. Where women come into it is that the Bible was written by men, so they would of course focus on those biological products associated with pesky women, who also caused the fall by convincing Adam to eat from the forbidden tree, etc.
I understand that among the Jewish believers, the book of Job is the most controversial. The idea that god would burden and plague a man to that extent just to win a wager, has always been a moral problem for thinking people.
Just like the rest of the bible it is all fairy tales and myths.
I did notice that the subtext of the scripture above is demeaning to women, by implying that women are by nature unclean. I hope that wasn't the point you intended to make with the post.
The point was that in the Abrahamic faiths women are thought to be unclean and less worthy than a man.
??? Why are you quoting the Bible. It's not even true, so why bother.
Then why study mythology?
@Reignmond That meme isn't presenting the quote as mythology..more like condemnation and misogyny.