Yes, that's definitely a succinct summation of Jung's Answer to Job, and while it certainly rubbed many normative Christian commentators the wrong way, I personally found myself unimpressed with their criticisms. However, that may be more to do with my own approach to scriptural texts; I don't see them as inerrant or as historical, but literature open to a number of meaningful interpretations, especially in light of the fact that their original authors are altogether absent. Something I appreciate about Jung's reading is his use of the drama of the book of Job to describe the process of waking up to the ways in which one inflicts suffering upon oneself (in a very real way, both Job and the accuser are parts of Yahweh), and how self-awareness and integration of unconsidered parts of oneself are the road to repairing that suffering. It certainly isn't for everyone, but I did enjoy it personally.