In the present article, the author examined the function that images of the feminine play in Carl Gustav Jung’s Response to Job, focusing specifically on the apocalyptic figure of the “Woman Clothed with the Sun” and her relationships with the Sophia, found in wisdom literature, and with Mary. It is shown how Jung develops the particular mythopoetic exercise of the Response by involving the feminine in celestial marriages capable of giving birth to ever more complete expressions of the archetypal Self. In the conclusion, the author established a comparison between the prefigurations of the Jungian text and our present.