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Where was Jesus for the three days between His death and resurrection?
Question: "Where was Jesus for the three days between His death and resurrection?"
Answer: 1 Peter 3:18-19
states, "For Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the
unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but
made alive by the Spirit, through whom also he went and preached to the
spirits in prison." The phrase, "by the Spirit," in verse 18 is exactly
the same construction as the phrase, "in the flesh." So it seems best to
relate the word "spirit" to the same realm as the word "flesh." The
flesh and spirit are Christ's flesh and spirit. The words "made alive by
(in) the spirit" point to the fact that Christ's sin-bearing and death
brought about the separation of His human spirit from the Father (Matthew 27:46). The contrast is between flesh and spirit, as in Matthew 27:46 and Romans 1:3-4,
and not between Christ's flesh and the Holy Spirit. When Christ's
atonement for sin was completed, His spirit restored the fellowship
which had been broken.
First Peter 3:18-22
describes a necessary link between Christ's suffering (verse 18) and
His glorification (verse 22). Only Peter gives specific information
about what happened between these two events. The word "preached" in
verse 19 is not the usual word in the New Testament to describe the
preaching of the gospel. It literally means to herald a message. Jesus
suffered and died on the Cross, His body being put to death, and His
spirit died when He was made sin. But His spirit was made alive and He
yielded it to the Father. According to Peter, sometime between His death
and His resurrection Jesus made a special proclamation to "the spirits
in prison."
To begin with, Peter referred to people as "souls" and not "spirits"
(3:20). In the New Testament, the word "spirits" is used to describe
angels or demons, not human beings, and verse 22 seems to bear out this
meaning. Also, nowhere in the Bible are we told that Jesus visited hell.
Acts 2:31
says that He went to "Hades" (New American Standard Bible), but "Hades"
is not hell. The word "Hades" refers to the realm of the dead, a
temporary place where they await the resurrection. Revelation 20:11-15
in the NASB or the New International Version give a clear distinction
between the two. Hell is the permanent and final place of judgment for
the lost. Hades is a temporary place.
Our Lord yielded His spirit to the Father, died, and at some time
between death and resurrection, visited the realm of the dead where He
delivered a message to spirit beings (probably fallen angels; see Jude 6)
who were somehow related to the period before the flood in Noah's time.
Verse 20 makes this clear. Peter did not tell us what He proclaimed to
these imprisoned spirits, but it could not be a message of redemption
since angels cannot be saved (Hebrews 2:16). It was probably a declaration of victory over Satan and his hosts (1 Peter 3:22; Colossians 2:15). Ephesians 4:8-10 also seems to indicate that Christ went to “paradise” (Luke 16:20; 23:43)
and took to heaven all those who had believed in Him prior to His
death. The passage doesn’t give a great amount of detail about what
occurred, but most Bible scholars agree that this is what is meant by
“led captivity captive.”
So, all that to say, the Bible isn’t entirely clear what exactly Christ
did for the three days between His death and resurrection. It does seem,
though, that He was preaching victory over the fallen angels and/or
unbelievers. What we can know for sure is that Jesus was not giving
people a second chance for salvation. The Bible tells us that we face
judgment after death (Hebrews 9:27),
not a second chance. There isn't really any definitively clear answer
for what Jesus was doing for the time between His death and
resurrection. Perhaps this is one of the mysteries we will understand
once we reach glory.
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