Monday, September 1, 2025

The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible on Genesis 3:15

  

3:15 I will put enmity: A crucial verse in Genesis, which some think is an etiology that explains the origin of man’s instinctive fear of snakes. More likely the proverbial antagonism between men and snakes was evoked for the purpose of symbolizing man’s ongoing struggle against sin and evil which is personified by the serpent (cf. 4:7; Sir 21:2). In any case, neither interpretation captures the full meaning of the text, which foretells the eventual triumph of the woman and her offspring over Satan after a protracted period of hostility. your seed: The devil’s accomplices in doing evil, including wicked men, who constitute his spiritual offspring (Jn 8:44). In Genesis, Cain and his line of godless descendants are the first to fulfill this role (4:8, 17-24; 1 Jn 3:12). her seed: The righteous descendants of the woman, initially linked with Abel (4:4) and the godly line of Seth (4:26; 5:6-32). he shall: The Hebrew could be read individually (“he shall”) or collectively (“they shall”). The earliest known Jewish interpretation of this text takes the offspring of the woman to be an individual man (Gk. autos, “he” in the Greek LXX). bruise: Or, “crush” (as in Job 9:17). Victory over the satanic deceiver is assured: the serpent will sustain a fatal head injury, while the woman’s offspring will suffer only a biting on the heel. At least one Jewish tradition connects this triumph with the coming of a messianic king (Palestinian Targum). * Christian tradition gives this text a messianic interpretation (Christ is the individual who tramples the devil understood: Heb 2:14; 1 Jn 3:8; St. Irenaeus Against Heresies 3, 23, 7), an ecclesiological interpretation (the Church is the offspring that shares in his victory: Rom 16:20; Rev 12:17), and a mariological interpretation (Mary is the promised woman who bears the Redeemer: Vatican II, Lumen Gentium 55). This passage has long been called the “first gospel” (Lat. Protoevangelium) and stands out as the first revelation of God’s mercy in Scripture (CCC 410-11). (The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, ed. Scott Hahn and Curtis J. Mitch [San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2024], 63)

 

Further Reading:


Examining Taylor Marshall's Claims Concerning Genesis 3:15