
Jude 1.8-13.
And I suspect the reason Jude kept referring
In my experience, when a person’s quoting myths instead of bible, not only do they
Jude 1.8-10 KWL - 8 Of course these people who dream of flesh stain themselves.
- They reject authority. They slander the well-thought-of.
- 9 When the head angel Michael was debating with the devil over Moses’s body,
- it didn’t dare bring a charge of slander, but said, “Lord rebuke you.”
- 10 These people don’t understand such things, and slander them.
Nope, we don’t have a copy of where the Michael-debating-Satan story comes from. The early church father Origen believed it’s from a book called The Ascension of Moses. De Principiis 3.2.1 We think we have a copy of that book, but our copy doesn’t include that story. Maybe Origen was wrong; maybe we have the wrong book; maybe our copy of the book is missing a chapter; doesn’t matter. Plenty of Pharisee myths include heavenly courtroom cases, with Satan as adversary and other popular angels as defenders. Some of our own, too: Stephen Vincent Benét’s 1936 short story “The Devil and Daniel Webster” has a lot of parodies in popular culture.
So when these ancient misbehaving Christians claimed, “It’s okay to tear Christian leaders a new one when they’re wrong… after all, Michael ripped Satan a new one in The Ascension of Moses,” Jude came right back at ’em with, “Nope; you read that story wrong. Michael didn’t ‘rip Satan a new one.’ Satan fought dirty, but Michael behaved itself, and resisted the temptation to act like an ass. Not so much you.”
A lesson plenty of Christians nowadays have definitely not followed.