For for this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead The thought that Christ was ready to judge the great company of the dead, as well as those who were living when the Gospel was preached by His messengers, leads the Apostle back to the truth which had been partially uttered when he had spoken of the work of Christ in preaching to "the spirits in prison." The question might be asked, How were the dead to be judged by their acceptance or rejection of the Gospel when they had passed away without any opportunity of hearing it? He finds the answer in the fact that to them also the Gospel-message had been brought. Those who were disobedient in the days of Noah are now seen by him as representatives of mankind at large. Of some of these his Lord Himself had taught him that if they had seen the wonderful works which attested His ministry and mission, "they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes" (Matthew 11:21). Was it not a natural inference from those words, confirmed by what had been revealed to him as to the descent into Hades, that that opportunity had been given?

that they might be judged according to men in the flesh The contrast between "flesh" and "spirit" stands parallel to that in chap. 1 Peter 3:18. The "dead" had the Gospel preached to them that they might be judged by a judgment, which was remedial as well as penal, in that lower sensuous nature in which they had sinned. They were judged "according to men," or better, after the manner of men, by the laws by which all men are judged according to their works, but the purpose of that judgment, like that of the judgments that come upon men in this life, was to rescue them from a final condemnation. The whole passage presents a striking parallelism to St Paul's "delivering men to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus" (1 Corinthians 5:5), to his words "when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be condemned with the world" (1 Corinthians 11:32). Following what we have learnt to call the ideas of analogy and continuity, the Apostle teaches that death does not change altogether the nature and the purpose of the Divine Judgments, and that purpose is that they "according to God," in a manner determined by His will and wisdom, should live, in the highest sense of life (John 17:3), in that element of their nature which was capable of knowing God and therefore of eternal life. Such seems the simple natural interpretation of the words. It is not to be wondered at, perhaps, that the same dogmatic prepossessions which led men to explain away the true meaning of Christ's preaching to "the spirits in prison," should have biassed them here also, and that the same school of interpreters should have taken the "dead" as meaning "dead in trespasses and sins," and referred the "preaching of the Gospel" to the work of the Apostles, and the "judgment according to men" to their sufferings on earth.

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