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Many years ago, I became leery of
the Dake's Bible, but never really understood why. The only
thing I could identify was that those who became strong in their
study of Dake also became arrogant and unteachable. If Dake said
it, then it really did not matter what anybody else said or what
the general difference was in other Scriptures. I basically quit
using the Dake's Bible about twenty years ago and simply put it
on the shelf.
Finally, I am beginning to learn why
the inspiration I experienced caused me to move away from Dake's
Annotated Reference Bible. I never saw the deceptive quotes that
I have recently discovered, probably because to begin with I
never used it much. As I have now learned, the Dake's Bible was
really the text of the Charismatics before there was a movement
called "Charismatic." Let me give you one Scripture that is
foundational to what Hagin, Copeland, Hinn, Crouch, etc. are now
teaching around the world.
This quote from Dake's Bible is the
very first New Testament note in the edition that I have owned
since the early seventies. The edition I am quoting from is the
sixth printing, December 1971.
"Gr. Christos, 'Anointed.' - Used in
N.T. 577 times. Like the name "Jesus" it has no reference to
deity, but to the humanity of the Son of God, who became the
Christ or the "Anointed One" 30 years after He was born of Mary.
God "made" Him both Lord and Christ. The Heb. Is 'Messiah'." (Dake's
Annotated Reference Bible, Finis Jennings Dake, published by
Dake Bible Sales, Inc, Lawrenceville, Georgia, New Testament, p.
1.)
No Biblically solid minister or
Bible student would accept the quote above. It is rank heresy
and must be totally rejected or our view of Jesus Christ as the
eternal Son of God is compromised. To suggest that Jesus became
the Christ or the "Anointed One" thirty years after His birth is
to commit heresy. This is an ancient heresy that is called "adoptionism."
Kenneth Scott Latourette stated in his book, History of
Christianity, Volume I, the following:
"Others, called the Ebionites,
maintained that Jesus was merely a man, a prophet, a spokesman
for God, as were the great Hebrew prophets of the past. Although
some of them accepted the virgin birth of Jesus, others are said
to have taught that Jesus was the son of Joseph and Mary, that
at His baptism Christ descended upon him in the form of a dove,
that he then proclaimed the unknown Father, but that Christ who
could not suffer, departed from him at his crucifixion." (Latourette,
page 121-122, Harper Collins).
This is a dividing of the natures of
Jesus Christ, rather than the established truth of the unity of
His Son of God and Son of Man natures. He was both Son of God
and Son of Man at every point in His incarnation. Iraneaus spoke
of this in his book, Against Heresies And Knowledge Falsely So
Called. He stated, "Certainly the Gnostics confess with their
tongues the ONE Jesus Christ, but in their minds they divide
Him." (Iraneaus; ADVERSUS Haeresies III.16.1). His two natures
cannot be divided.
John R. Stott, in a commentary on
the letters of John addressed this great truth.
"We need therefore to find an
interpretation of the phrase which makes water and blood both
historical experiences which he passed and witnesses in some
sense to his divine/human person. The . . . most satisfactory
interpretation, first given by Tertullian does this. It takes
water as reference to Baptism of Jesus, at which he was declared
the Son and commissioned and empowered for His work, and blood
to His death, in which His work was finished. True, 'water' and
'blood' remain strange and surprising word symbols, and we can
only guess that they were thus used in the theological
controversy which had engulfed the Ephesian church. At least
this meaning of the expression tallies with what Iraneaus
disclosed of the heretical teaching of Cerinthus and his
followers. They distinguished between 'Jesus' and 'Christ'. They
held that Jesus was a mere man, born of Joseph and Mary in
natural wedlock, upon whom Christ descended at the baptism, and
from which Christ departed at the cross. According to this
theory of the false teachers, Jesus was united with the Christ
at the baptism, but became separated again before the cross. It
was to refute this fundamental error that John, knowing that
Jesus was the Christ, before, and during the baptism and cross,
described Him as 'the one who came by water and blood'." (Tyndale
NT Commentaries, LETTERS OF FIRST JOHN, J.R.W. Stott, pp.
180-181.)
The words of the angel to Mary
should settle this subject completely. The Scripture stated,
"And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall
come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow
thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God." (Luke 1:35).
This is further emphasized in St.
John's question of the Lord Himself, "Say ye of him, whom the
Father hath sanctified, and sent into the world, Thou
blasphemest; because I said, I am the Son of God? If I do not
the works of my Father, believe me not." (John 10:36-37).
He is, and was, eternally the Son of
God, anointed of the Holy Ghost. The doctrines of Hagin,
Copeland, Crouch, and Hinn, etc. are clearly associated with
this heresy. Paul Crouch, in a statement to Benny Hinn on TBN,
stated that Jesus received His divinity back when He ascended
out of hell after being born again. (See our video, TBN - The
Temple Of The Gods and Goddesses.)
As I write this article, I remember
a horrible crisis that occurred about twenty years ago in the
church where I now pastor. We had won a man to our church and he
had made wonderful progress in the study of Scripture and his
spiritual life. We elevated him to a very strong leadership
position and made him a key teacher in our Sunday School. He
then became involved in the Copeland doctrines and began to
teach the doctrine of unbiblical prosperity. One day, he proudly
began to argue to me that Jesus only became the anointed one at
His baptism and was not the divine Son of God until this point.
I immediately knew I had a serious problem.
When our church board met to solve
the problem, we asked him to either renounce this idea or resign
from his class. He refused and we dismissed him. Of course, he
went up the road a short distance and started his own church. We
lost a host of family members; all of which have never been
stable in their Christian life since that time. I remember that
the Dake's Bible had become his primary study Bible and the
arrogance that I now know was evident in Finis Dake had become
evident in this individual. He has never returned to the
stability and truth that he traded for the Charismatic
deception.
Facts About The Late Finis Dake
My method in trying to protect the body of Christ from deception
is to refrain from any personal attack on anyone, but to deal
with doctrine and Biblical truth. It seems appropriate to note
some matters that relate to Dake because they were certainly
part of the shaping of his ministry. My concerns are documented
with information on the web site owned by the Dake's Ministry or
from others, who have researched his personal life.
On the Dake web site there is an
article dedicated to Finis Dake himself prior to his death, in
which he stated some very remarkable things. Mr. Dake states, "I
was immediately able to quote hundreds of Scriptures without
memorizing them. I also noticed a quickening of my mind to know
what chapters and books various verses were found in. Before
conversion, I had not read one full chapter of the Bible. This
new knowledge of Scripture was a gift to me, for which I give
God the praise. From the time of this special anointing until
now, I have never had to memorize the thousands of Scriptures I
use in teaching. I just quote a verse when I need it, by the
anointing of the Spirit."
This is absolutely contrary to
Scripture and puts Dake, at least in his mind, on the same level
as the Lord Jesus Christ. Remember, the criticizers of Jesus
Christ stated, "How knoweth this man letters, having never
learned?" (John 7:15). This would certainly give rise to him
having an exalted opinion of himself and may have been one of
the reasons for his arrogance. No Bible writer, Old Testament
prophet, or New Testament apostle ever claimed such incredible
ability. There is no Scripture to support this kind of gift by
the Holy Ghost.
Research into Dake's background gives a picture of moral
carelessness in his early ministry. Here is a lengthy quote by
researcher, Les Brown.
"Finis Jennings Dake was born in
1902 and died in 1987. His son Finis, Jr. says it took Dake
seven years of constant work to complete the 35,000 notes
included in the 1,400-page Annotated Bible. It is a virtual
systematic theology and a compilation of Dake's views and
doctrines.
"Dake was ordained under the
Assemblies of God in Texas. For a time he did evangelistic work
in Oklahoma. He then moved to Zion, Illinois, where his fortunes
declined, following a scandal involving a 16-year-old girl.
"The May 27, 1936, issue of the
Chicago Daily Tribune reported that 'An indictment, returned
last February in Milwaukee, charges that on April 23, 1935, Dake
took Emma Barelli, 16 years old, of Kenosha, from her home town
to East St. Louis for immoral purposes.' (pg. 1). The following
day, the newspaper reported that Dake registered at hotels in
Waukegan, Bloomington, and East St. Louis with the girl under
the name Christian Anderson and wife. Dake, according to
government investigators, said he picked the girl up as she was
hitchhiking and she insisted he drive her to East St. Louis,
where he was to deliver Bible lectures in nearby communities.
Dake denied that any immoral action had taken place, claiming,
'I did take her there . . .but there was no immorality involved.
I wanted to get her a job.' (Chicago Daily Tribune, May 28,
1936, pg. 17).
"When Dake came to trial in February
1937, he placed himself on the mercy of the court by entering a
plea of guilty to the charge of violating the Mann Act. He was
sentenced to a six-month stay in the House of Corrections in
Milwaukee. Dake admitted to having 'petting parties' with the
girl, but again denied any improper relations had occurred
between him and the girl. The Waukegan News-Sun reported, 'Had
he been found guilty by a trial jury, Rev. Dake would have been
subject to a maximum sentence of 10 years in a federal prison
and a fine of $10,000.' (Feb. 10, 1937). Dake called the jail
sentence a 'vacation' and said he would use his incarceration as
an opportunity to preach to the prisoners and devote time to
writing a commentary on the Bible.
"The Assemblies of God severed its
relationship with Dake, and he later joined the Church of God,
Cleveland, Tennessee. It is not clear how his union with the
Church of God ended, but Dake eventually became independent of
any church."
Dake And Mormonism
There is an abundance of confusion in Dake's Bible and his other
writings. None can be worse than the quote we started this
expose' with, but other departures from truth certainly paint a
picture of confusion. His teachings on God the Father that are
found in his notes on the book of St. John are extremely
revealing. Read these words carefully.
"He is a person with a personal
spirit body, a personal soul, and a personal spirit, like that
of angels, and like that of man except His body is out of spirit
substance instead of flesh and bones.
"He has a personal spirit body;
shape; form; image and likeness of a man. He has bodily parts
such as, back parts, heart, hands and fingers, mouth, lips and
tongue, feet, eyes, ears, hair, head, face, arms, loins, and
other bodily parts.
"He has bodily presence and goes
from place to place in a body like all other persons.
"He has a voice; breath; and
countenance. He wears clothes; eats; rests; dwells in a mansion
and in a city located on a material planet called Heaven; sits
on a throne; walks; rides; engages in other activities.
"He has a personal soul with
feelings of grief; anger; repentance; jealousy; hate; love;
pity; fellowship; pleasure and delight; and other soul passions
like other beings.
"He has a personal spirit with mind;
intelligence; will; power; truth; faith and hope; righteousness;
faithfulness; knowledge and wisdom; reason; discernment;
immutability; and many other attributes, powers, and spirit
faculties." (Dake's Annotated Reference Bible, Finis Jennings
Dake, published by Dake Bible Sales, Inc, Lawrenceville,
Georgia, New Testament, pp. 96-97.)
I presume this is where Kenneth
Copeland got his Mormon doctrine of God being about 6'2" tall
and weighing about 220 pounds, with a hand span of nine inches.
Also, Benny Hinn is reported to have applied his teaching on
"Nine numbers in the Godhead" to Dake's Bible. He later
confessed that error and said he was joking with his
congregation.
Such ideas about God have no
relevance in the Scripture, although Dake gives multiple quotes
to back up this doctrinal commentary.
Dake Limits God's Eternal
Omnipotence
Here is an unbelievable commentary that is given within the
story of Abraham and his visit by the pre-incarnate Christ. He
suggests that God did not know what was happening in Sodom and
Gomorrah and came to find out. "Here we have another proof that
God receives knowledge of true conditions and becomes acquainted
with existing facts. This plainly teaches that God, as well as
men and angels, is limited to one place as far as the body is
concerned. The doctrine of omnipresence of God can be proved,
but not His omnibody. In His body He goes from place to place
like other persons. Abraham stood yet before the bodily presence
of God, but not before the bodily presence of the 2 angels
because they went to Sodom and were no longer bodily present." (Dake's
Annotated Reference Bible, Finis Jennings Dake, published by
Dake Bible Sales, Inc, Lawrenceville, Georgia, Old Testament, p.
15.)
It is totally unacceptable to limit
God, who is unlimited. He is omnipresent, omniscient, and
omnipotent. Dake's confusion arises from identifying this Divine
visitor as God the Father, instead of a pre-Incarnate appearance
of the Lord Jesus Christ. Our God has certainly manifested
Himself to different servants, but not His Divine essence. The
writer in the New Testament stated plainly, "No man hath seen
God at any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of
the Father, he hath declared him." (John 1:18).
Dake gets around this by saying,
"Our English 'seen' means to see with the eyes and also see with
the mind. That it means here to comprehend fully or understand
is clear from the fact that many men have seen God with the
eyes. The verse could read, 'No man has ever comprehended or
experienced God at any time in all His fulness, save the only
begotten Son...He hath declared Him.'" (Dake's Annotated
Reference Bible, Finis Jennings Dake, published by Dake Bible
Sales, Inc, Lawrenceville, Georgia, New Testament, p. 93.)
The False Concept of "Little Gods"
Dake not only was confused about the omnipotence of God, but he
also taught that man was a miniature of God. In conjunction with
Dake's commentary on the Book of Job, he wrote about the idea
called anthropomorphism. Under that heading, he said some
strange things. "Anthropomorphism is the ascription of human
bodily parts, attributes, and passions to God, and taking the
substantiating statements of Scripture to be literal, and not
figurative. In support of such teaching an appropriate question
is: If God did not mean all He said about Himself in over 20,000
scriptures then why did He say such things? They certainly do
not add to a true understanding of Him if the passages do not
mean what they say. Furthermore, why would God, in hundreds of
places, refer to Himself as having bodily parts, soul passions,
and spirit faculties if He does not have them? Would it be
necessary for Him to tell us He has such in order to reveal that
He does not have them? Would He not be more likely to say in
plain language that He does not have eyes, hands, mouth, ears,
and other bodily members?" (Dake's Annotated Reference Bible,
Finis Jennings Dake, published by Dake Bible Sales, Inc,
Lawrenceville, Georgia, Old Testament, p. 547.)
His entire statement above seems
childlike and basically ignorant of the revelation of Holy
Scripture. Why would someone reduce God down to the level of men
just because God speaks of Himself with words on our level? That
is God's method throughout Scripture when He uses our language
to convey His eternal truth. Because God said, "I saw you," does
not mean His eyes are limited to human shape and size. The Bible
said emphatically, "God is a Spirit: and they that worship him
must worship him in spirit and in truth." (John 4:24).
From this false concept, it is natural to move directly to the
next step. If God is man-like, then man must be god-like. Under
the same heading as above, Dake wrote about our god-like state.
"Truly He is not only all that man, angels, and other beings are
in this respect, but infinitely greater in everything; and man,
in reality, is simply a miniature of God in attributes and
powers." (Dake's Annotated Reference Bible, Finis Jennings Dake,
published by Dake Bible Sales, Inc, Lawrenceville, Georgia, Old
Testament, p. 587.)
This statement by Dake does not go
as far as saying what is now being promoted by modern
Charismatic leaders, but he does lay the foundation. His
promoting of God as a man with all the human attributes,
combined with the idea of us as miniature Gods, has been
stretched to the present deception of men as "little gods."
Dake Carries the Idea of Christ
Emptying Himself to a Dangerous Extreme
The Son of God did indeed empty Himself to become the Son of
man. What is extremely important is that this emptying was not a
forsaking of His eternal essence, but an emptying of manifesting
that essence. He was never void of His divine essence, but He
did limit Himself not to express them while depending wholly on
His Father and the Holy Spirit. Dake either did not understand
the above or he willingly rejected it. Here are some of his
statements on the subject: "Christ emptied Himself of His
authority in heaven and in earth, which was given back to Him
after the resurrection." "Christ emptied Himself of His divine
attributes and outward powers that He had with the Father from
eternity. He had no power to do miracles until He received the
Holy Spirit in all fullness. He could do nothing of Himself in
all His earthly life. He attributed all His works, doctrines,
powers, etc. to the Father through the anointing of the Holy
Spirit." "Isaiah speaks of the Messiah being born without
knowledge enough to know to refuse the evil and choose the
good." "Isaiah predicted that the Messiah would be born without
the tongue of the learned, without knowing how to speak a word
in season to help any soul, and that He would be wakened day by
day to increase in knowledge and wisdom." "He did not claim the
attributes of God, but only the anointing of the Spirit to do
His works." (Dake's Annotated Reference Bible, Finis Jennings
Dake, published by Dake Bible Sales, Inc, Lawrenceville,
Georgia, New Testament, p. 218.)
I have tapes in my library with
Crouch and Copeland on a TBN broadcast stating that Jesus never
claimed to be God. Those quotes sound almost like a word for
word expression right out of the Dake's Bible. These men and
women, from Dake to almost every key leader of the Charismatic
world, talk about Jesus out of both sides of their mouths. One
moment they seem to exalt Him properly, but then they say these
careless things that are utterly confusing. This gives a perfect
fulfillment of Jesus' very words in St. Matthew. Read these
words of the Lord Himself. "For many shall come in my name,
saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many." (Matthew 24:5).
Conclusion
Finis Dake's Bible is without question filled with questionable
commentaries. It is not the reading material for young, immature
Christians or undiscerning ministers. It has just enough truth
to make his error seem plausible and convincing. He surely has
convinced a host of modern day Pentecostals and Charismatics. No
one would suggest that he is singularly responsible for the
theological mess that floods these churches, but neither should
he be excused for his part. Often when a figure such as Dake is
dead, his teaching becomes even more powerful and accepted.
Godly men and women must return to the simple Word of God and
quit depending on popular figures to do their interpreting of
truth. The Bible will interpret itself if you will: "Study to
shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be
ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth." (II Timothy 2:15). |