The spirits in prison is a recurrent but minor subject in the writings of Christianity. The concept has its origins in Platonism, and it is introduced in the Phædrus with the idea that the soul is imprisoned within the body.
In Plato's Phædrus, Socrates likens the soul of the body to be as imprisoned as an oyster is bound to its shell during the discourse on metempsychosis with Phaedrus.
The subject takes its starting point from chapter 3 of the First Epistle of Peter:
However, the Greek word ÃÂàÃÂñù ('), used in 1 Peter 3:20, may also be translated as "person" and not as "soul". The latter represents both the inner self and its status after corporal death, whereas in this verse it is used as a synonym of the Jewish word nephesh, in a holistic sense and without any metaphysical dualism. The word psyche is applied by St. Peter uniquely to humans and not for animals.
According to Augustine of Hippo the spirits are the unbelieving contemporaries of Noah, to whom the spirit of Christ in Noah preached, or to whom the pre-existent Christ himself preached.
Unitarians such as Thomas Belsham consider that the spirits in prison were simply gentiles in the prison of ignorance to whom Christ preached through his apostles.
Wayne Grudem (1988) identifies five commonly held views on the interpretation of this verse:
These views revolve around the identity of the spirits in prison, the time in which the preaching took place, and the content of the preaching:
This is also found in Thomas Aquinas' Summa Theologica (3,52,2). A variant of this view is the view of the Rev. Archibald Currie (1871) that Christ through Noah preached to "the spirits in prison", meaning the eight persons interned in the Ark as in a place of protection.
The Anglican Edward Hayes Plumptre, Dean of Wells, in The Spirits in Prison starting from the verse in Peter argued for revival in the belief in the harrowing of Hell and the spirit of Christ preaching to the souls of the dead in Hades while his body was in the grave.
This is a variant of the harrowing of Hell idea, except that Christ only proclaims triumph.
This view originates with Robert Bellarmine (1586) and has been followed by some Catholic Church commentators in relation to a belief in Purgatory.
Support for the understanding that the spirits in prison are angelic beings and not people is thought to be confirmed by II Peter 2:4âÂÂ5 and Jude 6, which refer to rebellious angels punished by God with imprisonment. Just like I Pet. 3, II Pet. 2 also refers to the time of Noah's flood, including the number of people saved in the ark. However, the text in 2 Peter uses a different word for the location of the angels than I Peter does. in 2 Peter 2, the word used is tartaroo, otherwise known as Tartarus. In I Peter 3:19, the word is phylake (which can also be anglicised as Phylace), meaning prison.
Friedrich Spitta (1890), Joachim Jeremias and others suggested that Peter was making a first reference to Enochic traditions, such as found again in the Second Epistle of Peter chapter 2 and the Epistle of Jude. Stanley E. Porter considers that the broad influence of this interpretation today is due to the support of Edward Selwyn (1946).
The concept that the dead await a general resurrection and judgment either in blessed rest or in suffering after a particular judgement at death was a common first century Jewish belief (see Lazarus and Dives and bosom of Abraham). A similar concept is taught in the Eastern Orthodox churches and is reflected in some Early Church Fathers, and was championed by John Calvin (who vigorously opposed Luther's doctrine of soul sleep).
In The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, this verse is used in conjunction with 1 Peter 4:6 to support the belief that in the three days between Christ's death and resurrection, he visited the spirit world and set in motion the work of teaching the gospel to those who did not receive it during mortality, providing them the opportunity to repent and accept saving ordinances performed on their behalf in Latter-day Saint temples.
In Islamic tradition, a place called Sijjin is known to be the prison of unbelieving souls. It is also the place of Satan and his fellow devils. Quran exegete Tabari (839âÂÂ923 CE) commented on sijjin: "it is the seventh and lowest earth (underworld), in which Satan (Iblis) is chained, and in it are the souls (arwah) of the infidels (kufar), while Suyuti (c. 1445âÂÂ1505 CE) describes it as place of Iblis and his soldiers (Iblis wa junudihi) with the infidels imprisoned.