In addition, I also found it wildly ironic that the creation of man is alluded to at the end of The Fall of Angels. It seems that God intends for mankind to right the wrongs of the fallen angels and be the most perfect creation. However, immediately following is The Fall of Man in which the first of mankind is corrupted by Satan and essentially become just as much of a disappointment to God as Lucifer, though their sins differ (one being pompousness and the other being disobedience). I am left wondering then why all of creation (or at the very least the creation narrative) would end with mankind, which is seemingly another failure.
As I was reading the Genesis narratives, it immediately caught my attention that Lucifer and the Devil were having a conversation during one part of the story. The reason this piqued my interest is because I have grown accustomed to seeing Lucifer, the Devil, and Satan compacted into one being or idea. It therefore raises the question of why modern society has adjusted to the warped idea of these sinful/prideful creatures being one and the same rather than the more accurate and canonical notion of them existing apart from each other.