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12/30/12 Dake's Bible EXPOSED!

Dake's Bible EXPOSED!


The Jesus Of The Dake Annotated Reference Bible

by Jeff Spancer

From time to time, this article can be found online. However, the article moves
around so much that it often is hard to find - and certainly hard to keep up with
the address changes. Therefore, we are also reproducing it below.

Finis Jennings Dake (1902-87) was a Pentecostal pastor, teacher, and author
whose most influential work is the Dake's Annotated Reference Bible. This study
Bible, containing notes on the entire Old and New Testaments, was first published
in 1963. The Dake Bible is considered the top "Pentecostal Study Bible" by many. In
fact, the Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements says, "His 'notes'
became the 'bread and butter' of many prominent preachers and the 'staple' of
Pentecostal congregations." Dake is very important within Pentecostal/Charismatic
circles.

Dake was a man devoted to the study of the Word of God. In fact, the back
cover of one of his books says, "His supernatural ability to flawlessly quote
Scripture earned him a reputation as the 'Walking Bible.'" Dake himself claims a
supernatural knowledge of the Bible that came soon after his conversion—even
before he began to study the Word of God. Dake asserts:

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.

It has been said that he put more than 100,000 hours into Scripture study during
his career. The commentary notes in the Dake Annotated Reference Bible are
certainly the main fruit of his work. The preface to this extensive study Bible
states, "The purpose of this work is to give in ONE volume the helps a student of

the Bible needs from many books—Bible commentaries, Atlas, Dictionary, complete
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the Bible needs from many books—Bible commentaries, Atlas, Dictionary, complete
Concordance, Dispensational Truth, Topical Text Book, Bible Synthesis, Doctrines,
Prophetic Studies, and others." This volume certainly follows through with its
promise. It is a massive collection of facts, figures, and encyclopedic findings
contained in "nearly 9,000 informative headings . . . , 500,000 cross references
throughout 35,000 notes and comments . . . , 3,400 note-columns—over 8,000
outlines on a great variety of subjects, and 2,000 illustrations."

The fact is clearly seen that Mr. Dake put much work into this reference tool.
However, there are severe problems with the theology contained in this work.
For instance, heresies abound concerning subjects such as the nature and attributes
of God, Soteriology, and Christology—just to name a few. Furthermore, many
word-faith teachers, such as Benny Hinn and Kenneth Copeland, have verifiably
used Dake as a source of their quizzical doctrines. The scope of this paper,
however, is not a complete, systematic analysis of the Dake Annotated Reference
Bible, but an analysis of what it says about Jesus.

It must be stated that Finis Jennings Dake and those who follow his teaching
are not yet considered a cult. However, much of the teaching in Dake's Bible is
considered cultic because it falls far outside the walls of orthodox Christianity. To
be sure, there are many heretical claims concerning Jesus found in this study Bible.
And with about 30,000 Dake Bibles being sold each year, this is a subject that
needs to be addressed. This exploration of Dake's teaching on Jesus will be
subsumed under two broad topics: Dake and the Trinity, which will exegete Dake's
teaching about the very nature of Jesus before He was Incarnated into a body of
flesh, and Dake and the Incarnation, which will present Dake's teaching about the
Incarnation of the Second Person of the Trinity.

DAKE AND THE TRINITY

The trouble with the Jesus of the Dake Bible begins long before His birth in
Bethlehem. Dake's aberrant view of Jesus begins with an incorrect theology of the
Trinity and the very nature of God. And since Jesus is the eternal Second Person of
the Trinity who possesses the very nature and attributes of God, we are certainly
concerned with what Dake teaches about this subject.

Finis Dake's teachings on the Trinity are assuredly not considered orthodox. In
fact, his dogma on the subject is positively cultic. His deviation from the orthodox
doctrine of the Trinity stems from his perversion of the term "Person." In his book
God's Plan for Man, Dake tells us that a "person" is "a rational being with bodily
presence, soul passions, and spirit faculties." In other words, a person is a being
with a body. With this in mind, we turn to Dake's definition of the Trinity:
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What we mean by Divine Trinity is that there are three


separate and distinct persons in the Godhead, each one
having His own personal spirit body, personal soul, and
personal spirit in the sense that each human being, angel, or
any other being has his own body, soul and spirit.

In view of Dake's definition of "person," this quotation is claiming three


"beings" in the Trinity which is undeniably Tritheism. Similarly, in his book God's
Plan for Man, Dake says:

There are over 500 plain scriptures that refer to the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as being THREE SEPARATE AND
DISTINCT PERSONS, each with His own personal body, soul,
and spirit in the sense that all other persons have them. . . .
If two or three persons are referred to in all these passages
and they are called God, then we must understand them as
referring to this many divine persons, as we do when the
same statements are made of two or three persons of the
human race.

Dake's Trinity is clearly three separate, distinct Beings, each called God. Dake
states that it is a "fallacy" to believe "that there is only one person or one being
called God." He also claims that it is a "fallacy" to believe "that there is a
difference in meaning of three human persons and three divine persons." In other
words, just as each human person is a separate and distinct being, each member of
the Trinity is a separate and distinct Being unified only in purpose or goal. Allow
me to depict Dake's view in this way: According to Dake, if we were to go to
heaven and see the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, there would be three
different Beings bodily present on three different thrones, just like three kings
would be seated on three distinct thrones on earth. The members of the Trinity
are separate, distinct Beings. Dake argues from the analogy of man as created in
God's image:

Is God bodiless? If so we can conclude that man is also


bodiless. Is God only one being made up of several persons
or beings in the one being? If so, we can conclude that man
is one person or being made up of many.

The obvious conclusion to which Dake is trying to lead his flock is that God is
three separate beings—the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit—and each of these
beings has His own personal body, soul, and spirit. What about the "oneness" of
God? The Bible certainly claims that, in some sense, God is one (Deut. 6:4-6). Dake
explains that the three separate Beings in the Trinity are one in unity or purpose:
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The word one means one in unity as well as one in number. .


. . There is one God the Father, one Lord Jesus Christ, and
one Holy Ghost. Thus there are three separate persons in
the divine individuality and divine plurality. . . . As
individual persons each can be called God and collectively
they can be spoken of as one God because of their perfect
unity. The word God is used either as a singular or a plural
word, like sheep.

Dake believes that the oneness of God is in the fact that "these three (beings)
are in absolute unity and 'are one' as believers are supposed to be (John 17:11, 21-
23)." Thus, the Godhead is three separate beings, a plurality like "sheep," who are
one in unity, the same way that the body of Christ is one in unity—a collection of
persons with the same goal or purpose. Therefore, the unity of the one God,
according to Dake, is not ontological oneness shared by three persons, as
orthodoxy claims, but a functional unity found in purpose or direction.

Moreover, Dake, expounding his theology to its logical conclusion, believes the
Bible distinctly teaches God has a body. The "Walking Bible" claims:

He (God) has a personal spirit body, shape, form, image and


likeness of a man, bodily parts such as, back parts, heart,
hands and fingers, mouth, lips and tongue, feet, eyes, hair,
head, face, arms, loins, and other bodily parts. He has
bodily presence and goes place to place in a body like all
other persons. He has a voice and countenance. He wears
clothes, eats, dwells in a mansion and in a city located on a
material planet called heaven.

It is not surprising that Dake, whose teaching implicitly denies the Trinity by
redefining it, can also be found explicitly denying the orthodox doctrine of the
Trinity. He claims that the writers who support the orthodox doctrines of the
nature of God and the Trinity exhibit "the modern trend to make God too mystical
to understand." He goes on to teach that the orthodox understanding of the spirit
nature of God and the Trinity is "foolish and unscriptural, to say the least."
Furthermore, Dake charges that the Trinitarians "make such ridiculous propositions
about God that it is impossible to comprehend them." The problem that the
Trinitarians have, claims Dake, is that they fail to take the Bible literally when it
speaks of God having bodily parts. Dake asserts "The expressions which tell us that
God has bodily parts are real and literal and not figurative."

In summary, the Jesus of the Dake Bible, before the Incarnation, was one of
three divine Beings who composed the Trinity. Each of these separate, distinct
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Beings has His own body (legs, arms, head, lips, etc.), soul, and spirit and are
unified only in purpose or direction. We now move our focus from Dake's view of
the Trinity onto the Incarnation of the Second Person of the Trinity—Jesus Christ.
Dake's unusual understanding of the Trinity and the nature of God lays the
foundation for his deviant doctrine of the Incarnation.

DAKE AND THE INCARNATION

Finis Dake teaches several disputable doctrines concerning the Incarnation of


Jesus. First, he denies the eternal Sonship of Jesus Christ by teaching that Jesus
became the Son of God when He was born into flesh at Bethlehem. Second, Dake
teaches that Jesus became the Christ at His baptism. To put it another way, Jesus
was not the Christ from all eternity, but was appointed with the office of Christ at
His baptism. Third, Dake denies the deity of Jesus by stating that He totally
emptied Himself of the attributes of God when He came to earth.

Eternal Sonship

The first doctrine to be examined in this section is Finis Dake's position on


Jesus as the eternal Son of God. In essence, Dake asserts that Jesus was not the
Son of God from all eternity, but became the Son of God when He was incarnated.

Dake begins by defining the word "son." In his note on John 1:14 ("the Word
was made flesh"), Dake alleges that, "This made Him God's Son, for sonship in
connection with Jesus Christ always refers to humanity, never to deity." To put it
another way, Dake is saying that the title "Son of God" does not refer to Jesus as
God, but Jesus as man. This definition of the term Son of God is found throughout
Dake's writings. In an extended footnote on Luke 1:35, Dake argues for his position
in great detail:

Sonship with Christ always refers to humanity, not to deity.


As God, He had no beginning; was not begotten or He would
have had a beginning as God; and was not God's Son. But as
man, He had a beginning, was begotten, and was God's Son.
. . . Multiplied problems increase and become unanswerable
with Scripture if we hold to the theory of eternal sonship,
but all questions are clear when we accept the plain
statements of Scripture that sonship refers to humanity and
not to deity.

Dake believes that Jesus, the Second Person of the Trinity became the Son of

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God when he was conceived in Mary's womb. The Pentecostal pastor contends that
the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem "was when God had a Son through Mary. This
happened on a certain day, 'This day I have begotten thee,' and therefore, we
cannot say that God had a Son before this time." Dake concludes his argument
against the Eternal Sonship of Jesus by stating:

As man and as God's Son He was not eternal, He did have a


beginning, He was begotten, this being the same time Mary
had a Son. Therefore, the doctrine of eternal sonship of
Jesus Christ is irreconcilable to reason, is unscriptural, and is
contradictory to itself. . . . The word Son supposes time,
generation, father, mother, beginning, and conception. . . .
If sonship refers to deity, not to humanity, then this person
of the Deity had a beginning in time and not in eternity.

The Christ

In the same way that Dake denies the Eternal Sonship of Jesus, he also denies
that Jesus was the Christ from all eternity. Dake teaches that, just as Jesus
became the Son of God, He became the Christ. It was God who "anointed" Jesus to
be the Christ at a certain point in Jesus' earthly life.

In the very first note found in the New Testament of Dake's Bible, Dake sets
the stage for his teaching about the "Christ." Concerning the title "Christ," Dake
contends, "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."

Dake's book God's Plan for Man contains the same teaching, but takes it a step
further by telling us the exact point in Jesus' thirtieth year that He was anointed
"the Christ":

The word "Christ" literally means "anointed" and is a name


applied to Jesus when He became the anointed of God.
Jesus became the anointed of God or Christ 30 years after
He was called Jesus. . . . History records that the time He
became the "Anointed" was at His baptism.

Dake concludes his argumentation that Jesus became the Christ at His baptism
with an explanation for all the passages that seem to say that Jesus was Christ
from eternity. He comments:

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Passages such as Luke 2:26; Gal. 3:17; 1 Pet. 1:11 should be


understood in the same sense as we would say that President
George Washington was a surveyor. He was not this when
he was president, but since he became president we could
speak of any event of his life before he became president as
what President Washington did. So it is with Christ. Since
He became God's Christ we can now speak of Christ doing
certain things even before He was anointed.

Therefore, according to Dake's understanding of the term "Christ," there was a


time when Jesus was not the Christ. Then, when Jesus was thirty He was
baptized, and at that time, God anointed Him as the Christ. Also, Dake holds that
any passages that seem to refer to Jesus as being the Christ before His baptism are
merely using the term retroactively.

The Deity of Jesus

After reading the content above, it probably is not shocking that Finis Jennings
Dake in some way denies the deity of Jesus Christ. He does this, however, not in
an explicit, obvious way, but implicitly. Many times in his notes on the New
Testament, Dake affirms that Jesus is God in the flesh. But, a close examination of
some of his claims about Jesus reveals that Dake, in effect, denies the deity of
Christ by some of the deductions he makes about certain passages.

For instance, in Dake's notes on Philippians 2:5-11, the passage about Jesus
making Himself "nothing" in the Incarnation, Dake denies that Jesus was God while
He was here on earth. On the one hand, concerning the self-emptying of Jesus, or
the kenosis of Christ, Dake correctly surmises, "Of what did Christ empty Himself?
It could not have been His divine nature, for He was God not only from all
eternity, but God manifest in flesh during His life on earth." But on the other hand,
Dake contradicts his first statement by saying, "Christ emptied Himself of . . . His
divine attributes and outward powers that He had with the Father from eternity."
In other words, Jesus became man by becoming something less than God. His
divine attributes were displaced by human attributes when He transformed Himself
into, or was "limited to the status of a man." Thus, the Incarnation is a subtraction
from His divine nature. Dake clearly expresses this in his book God's Plan for Man:

The various doctrine books teach that Christ possessed all


the glory, nature, and attributes of God during His earthly
life just as much as when He was in the form of God. They
give us proof for their conclusion that Christ had:

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1. Omnipotence (Matt. 8:16, 26-27; Luke 4:35-41; 5:25; 7:14-


15; 8:54-55; Eph. 1:20).

2. Omniscience (Mark 2:8; Luke 5:4-5, 22; 22:10-12; Jn. 1:48;


2:24-25; 4:15-19, etc.).

3. Omnipresence (Matt. 18:20; 28:20; Jn. 3:13; 14:20; 2 Cor.


13:5; Eph. 1:13).

4. Eternity (John 1:1; 17:5; 8:58; Mic. 5:2; Col. 1:17; Heb.
13:8; 1 Jn. 1:1).

5. Immutability (Heb. 1:12; 13:8).

Upon examination of these passages it can be seen that not


one passage teaches that Christ had or used these attributes
of Himself while on earth. . . . The true Biblical teaching of
the kenosis of Christ is that in taking human form He
divested Himself of His divine attributes. . . .

Dake assuredly believes Jesus was divested of His divine attributes, and thus,
had no divine powers or characteristics. Therefore, Dake must necessarily
conclude "He (Jesus) had no power to do miracles until He received the Holy Spirit
in all fullness." Dake also argues that Jesus "did not claim the attributes of God, but
only the anointing of the Holy Spirit to do His works." Furthermore, Dake says, "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." To
put it another way, Dake believes that the only way Jesus, a mere man, could do
miracles was by the anointing of the Holy Spirit who performed all the miracles
through Him.

To support this premise, Dake states, "All scriptures related to His earthly life
(the miracles, etc.) can be explained as referring to the exercise of the gifts of
the Spirit and not natural attributes." The Holy Spirit was the miracle worker in
the pages of the four Gospels, and Jesus was merely the instrumental agent, or
willing accomplice. Dake emphasizes this point by this reasoning:

Is it necessary for God to be anointed with the Holy Spirit to


do what He is naturally capable of doing? If it became
necessary to anoint Jesus during His earthly life, then it
proves He did not retain His former glory and attributes
which He had from all eternity when He emptied Himself to
become like men in all things.

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ANSWERING DAKE

It is not difficult to discern that Finis Dake on the subject of Jesus falls far
outside the confines of Christianity. In this section, I will provide brief apologetic
answers to the teachings of Dake, thereby proving that the Jesus of the Dake
Annotated Reference Bible is not the Jesus of Christianity.

ANSWERING DAKE'S DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY

As stated above, Finis Dake's view of the Trinity is actually an implicit denial of
the Trinity by way of redefining the term "Trinity" into Tritheism. Dake's Trinity is
not composed of one Being, or nature, consisting of three Persons, but three
separate and distinct Beings, each a separate and distinct God: the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit, who are one only in purpose.

Monotheism vs. Tritheism

Dake, who claims that he gets all of his teachings from a plain, literal reading
of the Bible, results with the decidedly unorthodox claim of three separate,
distinct beings in the Godhead. This cannot be true. I will argue against Dake's
Tritheism from two different angles: reason and revelation, which both show that
it is not possible for there to be more than one Being in the Godhead.

Philosophical Arguments for Monotheism. Three arguments for the existence


of only one God were forwarded by Catholic philosopher and theologian Thomas
Aquinas. The first of Aquinas' arguments is from the simplicity of God. God's
simplicity is the attribute that states God is not composed of parts in His being,
and is, thus, indivisible. To put it another way, God cannot be divided into parts.
Aquinas argued that God must be one because to be more than one, there must be
parts, and simple beings have no parts. Therefore, God is one.

St. Thomas also argued for monotheism from the position that God is infinite in
His perfection. For if there were more than one God, there would have to be
some difference between them. In other words, one would have what the other
one lacks. But an absolutely perfect Being cannot be lacking in any perfection—a
being that lacks is not a God. If Beings do not differ in any perfection, they would
not differ at all. And to not differ in anything at all is to be the same. Therefore,
there can be only one God. Tertullian, in his writings against Marcion, illustrates:

That which shall be valid as the highest greatness, that must


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stand unique and must have no equal, in order not to cease


to be the highest essence. . . . But as God is the supreme
essence our ecclesiastical truth has with justice declared: If
God is not One then there is no God.

The third argument Aquinas advanced was from the unity of the world. He
stated that there is a diversity of things in the world. But this diversity of things is
"seen to be ordered to each other since some serve others." In other words, the
diverse world has an ordered unity. Therefore, concludes Aquinas, there must be
One who accomplished or created the order among diverse things. The
philosophical argumentation of Aquinas combined with the biblical proof below
provide powerful evidence for the existence of only one absolutely perfect Being,
the God of the Bible.

A Theological Argument for Monotheism. In concert with philosophical


argumentation, the Bible reveals God as one Being in distinction to Dake's three. It
is a foundational doctrine of both the Old and New Testaments that there is only
one God. For instance, the first chapter of the Old Testament is an apologetic for
the existence of one God. Some see the creation account in Genesis 1 as an early
apologetic against all the polytheistic creation accounts. Further, Deuteronomy
6:4, the Jewish Shema, states, "Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is
one!" In Isaiah 44:6 God says, "I am the First and I am the Last; Besides Me there is
no God." Moreover, Isaiah 43:10 declares that God is one in the claim, "Before Me
there was no God formed, Nor shall there be after Me." It is undeniable that the
Jews were strict monotheists. In fact, much of the Old Testament, especially the
book of Isaiah, is a warning against abandoning the one true God to chase after
false gods. To be sure, it was because of the Israelites stubborn determination to
serve false gods that the one true God sent them into exile in Babylon as
punishment.

The New Testament also affirms monotheism. The Apostle Paul, himself a strict
monotheistic Jew, reacted strongly against Gentile polytheism with powerful
declarations of the existence of only one God. In 1 Corinthians 8:4 Paul states, "We
know that an idol is nothing in the world, and that there is no other God but one."
Furthermore, in Ephesians 4:6 Paul states that there is "one God and Father of all,
who is above all, and through all, and in you all." Finally, Paul declared in 1
Timothy 2:5, "For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the
Man Christ Jesus." There are many other Scriptures in the New Testament that
teach that there is only one Being called God (cf. Mk. 12:32; Acts 7:35; Rom. 3:30;
1 Cor. 8:6; Jas. 2:19). These Scriptures combined with those from the Old
Testament show beyond doubt that the teaching of the Bible, from cover to
cover, is Monotheism. Therefore, Dake's postulation that the Bible teaches three
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Beings that are each a God is absolutely false and foreign to reason and revelation.
Dake's error will be made more clear by examining the Christian doctrine of the
Trinity.

The Orthodox Doctrine of the Trinity

The contention found in the writings of Finis Dake that God is three separate
beings who are one only in purpose is heretical and certainly not compatible with
Christianity. Dake denies the doctrine of the Trinity, which is one of the essential
doctrines of the Christian Faith, by redefining it as Tritheism. However, a look at
the Christian definition of the Trinity will expose Dake's tritheistic teachings as
cultic. In fact, Dake's teaching on the Trinity is very close to the Mormon Trinity.

A concise definition of the Trinity can be stated as one God who eternally
exists in three persons, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. God is one in
nature, or essence, and three in person. This is in distinction to Dake's views that
God is three Beings that are one in purpose only. To put it another way, God is
one in one sense, His nature or essence, and He is three in another sense, His
personage. These separate persons are equal, have the same attributes, and are
equally worthy of worship, adoration, and faith. It is the distinction between
essence, or being, and person that Dake fails to make. This distinction keeps the
doctrine from violating the law of non-contradiction and, thus, being heretical.

The affirmation that God is one in essence and three in person is really an
affirmation that God is one What and three Whos. His What (What He is) is His
essence, nature, or being, while His Whos (Who He is) are the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit.

Notice that the three Whos (Persons) all share the same What (Essence). So
God is a unity of essence with a plurality of persons. Each person is different, yet
they share a common nature. We affirm one God who is three in person, one of
whom is the Son, Jesus. It was only the Son who took on a human nature, and
thus, has a body. Therefore Dake's claim that each member of the Trinity has a
body is false. For the Bible states that God is spirit (John 4:24), and a spirit does
not have flesh and bones (Luke 24:39). Furthermore, if God has a body, that would
necessarily mean that He is not omnipresent or eternal. A body would confine Him
to one place at one time. Yet, the Bible declares that God is both omnipresent and
eternal. Therefore, Dake is fatally mistaken in his teaching that God has a body.

What about those passages that seem to teach that God has a body or different
body parts? Those passages contain a literary device called anthropomorphisms. An
anthropomorphism is "a figure of speech whereby the deity is referred to in terms
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of human bodily parts or human passions. To speak of God's hands, eyes, anger, or
even love is to speak anthropomorphically." The biblical picture of God is an
immutable, eternal, infinite Being. Yet, having a body would compromise all of
these characteristics. Thus, the references in the Bible to God's bodily parts and
activities are clearly figures of speech. Dake's denial of anthropomorphic
references to God is the very heart of his theological misgivings and the source of
much of his heresy.

The Christian understanding of the Trinity is certainly not "foolish" as Dake


charges. Yet, as I have shown, Dake's understanding of the Trinity as Tritheism is
nowhere close to the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. In addition, Dake's
understanding of God as having a body is certainly theologically and philosophically
flawed as well. Therefore, based on this doctrine alone, Dake and his disciples
should be classified into the kingdom of the cults along with Mormons who teach
the same thing about the Trinity—three separate and distinct gods who have
bodily parts.

ANSWERING DAKE'S DOCTRINE OF THE INCARNATION

Eternal Sonship

The doctrine of eternal Sonship "declares that the second person of the triune
godhead has eternally existed as the Son." This is in opposition to the teaching of
Dake, who denies the eternal Sonship of Jesus by saying that Jesus became the
Son of God when He was placed into the womb of Mary. This is formally known as
"Adoptionism," which was condemned by the Plenary Council of Frankfurt in 794 A.
D. The eternal Sonship of Jesus will be proved by demonstrating the biblical
meaning of the term "Son of . . ." and by showing clear scriptural evidence that
Jesus was the Son before the Incarnation. Thus Dake's position will be verified as
false.

The Meaning of "Son of. . . ." Dake comes to erroneous conclusions about the
eternal Sonship of Christ by beginning with the wrong definition of the term "Son
of God." As we have seen, he holds that sonship refers to the humanity of Jesus
Christ and not the deity. This is simply untrue. The term "son of . . ." as used in
the Old Testament often refers to the exhibition of certain characteristics in a
person. Thus, the terms "son of valor" (1 Sam. 14:52) or "son of wise ones" (Isa.
19:11) mean that the person exhibits valor or wisdom. Furthermore, the term "son
of . . ." is used to show that the person possessed the same nature as his father.
For instance, Numbers 23:19 tells us, "God is not a man, that he should lie: neither
the son of man, that he should repent. . . ." The term "son of man" in that verse is
used to show that God does not possess the nature of a man. Consequently, when
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Jesus is referred to as the "Son of God" it is a direct assertion that he exhibits the
characteristics and nature of God. He is as fully divine as the Father.

The Sonship of Jesus, in contradistinction to the allegation of Dake, is a


declaration of His deity. Jesus is the Son of God in that He is God—He possesses
the nature and attributes of God. Jesus certainly claimed this by referring to
Himself as the "Son of God." The Jews certainly understood that Jesus was making
Himself ontologically equal with God when He did this. In John 19:7, the Jews told
Pilate concerning Jesus, "We have a law, and according to our law He ought to
die, because He made Himself the Son of God." The reaction of the Jews was the
desire to kill Jesus for making Himself "equal to God" (John 5:18; 10:28-36; 19:7)
by claiming to be the Son of God. Therefore, the term "Son of God" when used of
Jesus indicates His absolute deity. This was the finding of the Nicene Council,
which, according to theologian Charles Hodge, declared that Jesus "is the Eternal
Son of God, i.e., that He is from eternity the Son of God."

Scriptural Proof that Jesus was the Son before the Incarnation. By examining
the Semitic meaning of the term "Son of . . .", it is clear that the Son of God is not
something Jesus became, but something He is in His very nature or being. In
opposition to Dake, the Scriptures teach that Jesus was the Son of God before His
Incarnation. For example, Hebrews 1:2, Colossians 1:16, and John 1:3 tell us that
"all things" were created by the Son. This implies that Jesus was the Son of God
prior to Creation, which is long before His birth in Bethlehem. Furthermore, the
New Testament shows Jesus was Son of God before Bethlehem by the language
used when interacting with others. In the famous exchange between Martha and
Jesus after the death of her brother Lazarus, Jesus asked, "I am the resurrection
and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And
whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this?" To this
Martha declared, "Yes, Lord, I believe that You are the Christ, the Son of God,
who is to come into the world." This statement by Martha "reflects a sense of
movement of the Son of God—from the realm of heaven and eternity to the realm
of earth and time." Likewise, in John 3:16-17, it is stated that God gave His Son
and God sent His Son into the world. Apologist Ron Rhodes argues:

Recall the discussion with Nicodemus in John 3, for instance,


when he (Jesus) said: "For God so loved the world that He
gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in him
shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send
His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save
the world through him" (John 3:16-17, italics added). That
Christ, as the Son of God, was sent into the world implies
that he was the Son of God before the Incarnation.
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The orthodox Christian position on Jesus' Sonship is that He is the Son of God
from all eternity. This is because the term "Son of God" is a reference to His deity,
proving that Jesus is one in nature with the Father. It is also a clear teaching of
the Scripture that Jesus was the Son before the Incarnation. Therefore, Dake's
position that Jesus became the Son when He was incarnated should be rejected.
Professor and theologian John F. Walvoord sums up the doctrine of eternal
Sonship:

The consensus of the great theologians of the church and


the great church councils is to the effect that Christ has
been a Son from eternity; and the theory that He became a
Son by Incarnation is inadequate to account for the usage of
the term. . . . The Scriptures represent Christ as eternally
the Son of God by eternal generation. While it must be
admitted that the nature of the generation is unique, being
eternal, sonship has been used in the Bible to represent the
relationship between the first Person and the second
Person. . . . The scriptural view of the sonship of Christ, as
recognized in many of the great creeds of the church, is
that Christ was always the Son of God.

The Christ

Not only does Dake assert that Jesus became the Son of God, he also teaches
that Jesus became the Christ at His baptism. As with Dake's view of Sonship, his
view of Jesus as the Christ can be soundly refuted when examined in light of the
biblical record. I will do this by first showing what it means for Jesus to be the
Christ, and second, by showing that Jesus was the Christ before His baptism.

The Meaning of the "Christ." The term "Christ," meaning "anointed one," is the
Greek equivalent to the Hebrew term "Messiah." "Messiah" and "Christ" refer to the
same person—Jesus. Furthermore, the Old Testament is clear that the coming
Messiah is to be none other than Jehovah Himself. Norman Geisler clearly
demonstrates this point:

Jehovah is called "king" (Zech. 14:9) and it is the "angel of


Jehovah" who will redeem them (Isa. 63:9). Jehovah is the
"stone" and yet the Messiah is to be the rejected "stone" (Ps.
118:22). The Messiah is spoken of in the Old Testament as
"Lord" when it is written, "Jehovah saith unto my Lord" (Ps.
110:1), a passage which the New Testament writers apply to
Christ (Acts 2:34, 35). Isaiah provided a messianic challenge
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to the Jews, saying, "Behold your God!" (40:9). Indeed,


there is no clearer messianic passage on the deity of Christ
than Isaiah 9:6: "For unto us a child is born . . . and his name
will be called 'Wonderful, counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting
Father, Prince of Peace.'" With these predictions the New
Testament writers concur, declaring Jesus to be "Emmanuel"
(which means God with us) (Matt. 1:23, from Isa. 7:14). In
brief, the Old Testament Messiah was Jehovah and the New
Testament writers identify Jesus with the Old Testament
Messiah.

It is a clear teaching of the Old Testament that the Messiah is God Himself and
Jesus is the God-Man who is the Messiah/Christ. According to this information, the
obvious conclusion one must draw is that Jesus, the Christ, has been the Christ
from all eternity. Therefore, since He was forever the Christ, He could not have
become the Christ at His baptism as Dake claims.

Jesus as the Christ before His Baptism. It is rather simple to show in the Bible
that Jesus was the Christ before His baptism. The Bible is clear that Jesus did not
become the Christ, but He was the Christ from the beginning. For instance, in
Luke 2:11, when the angel announced the birth of Jesus to the shepherds in the
field, he said to them, "Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you;
he is Christ the Lord." This shows that Jesus was Christ long before He was
immersed in the Jordan. Furthermore, Luke 2:26 records the instance when Mary
and Joseph took Jesus to the temple soon after His birth. There a man named
Simeon declared Jesus was the Christ. This was because God had promised Simeon
that "he would not die before he had seen the Lord's Christ." Moreover, the
Apostle Peter explains that we were all redeemed "with the precious blood of
Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. He indeed was
foreordained before the foundation of the world" (1 Pet. 1:19-20a). In this
passage, Jesus is clearly portrayed as being Christ the Lamb before creation. Paul
concurs with Peter in 2 Timothy 1:9-10, as he explains that we were saved "not
according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace which was
given to us in Christ Jesus before time began, but has now been revealed by the
appearing of our Savior Jesus Christ." Again, Jesus is portrayed as being the Christ
before time began. Furthermore, the Incarnation was a revealing or "appearing" of
the Savior Jesus Christ. This implies He was the Savior and Christ before He was
revealed or appeared in the Incarnation.

Since the biblical record is clear that the Christ was to be God in the flesh,
and that Jesus was called the Christ long before His baptism—even before the
beginning of time, it is reasonable to infer that Jesus was the Christ, from all
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eternity. Thus, Dake's aberrant teaching should be rejected.

The Deity of Christ

Finis Dake undeniably denies the deity of Christ. In his teaching of the kenosis
of Christ, Dake has stripped Jesus of every divine attribute He had before the
Incarnation and created a mere man that was "anointed" by the Holy Spirit in order
to do miracles. Dake's assertions are blatantly false. What happened when Jesus,
the Second Person of the Trinity, came to earth as a man? The orthodox Christian
answer to this question will prove Dake to be a false teacher that has more in
common with the kingdom of the cults than the Kingdom of God.

The Doctrine of the Incarnation. The teaching of the Christian Church about
the Incarnation of Christ has been attacked by heresies throughout the centuries.
Dake's heretical view of the Incarnation is merely one among many. To answer
Dake's claim that Jesus gave up all of the attributes of God in order to become
man, I will present the orthodox teaching concerning the Incarnation of the Second
Person of the Trinity. This will expose Dake's view of the Incarnation as flawed.

Jesus Christ is the eternal, immutable, infinite God—the Word who became
flesh—two thousand years ago in Bethlehem. This is one of the deepest and most
beautiful truths in Christian theology. The Incarnation has been defined as "the act
whereby the eternal Son of God, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, without
ceasing to be what He is, God the Son, took into union with Himself what He
before the act did not possess, a human nature, and so He was and continues to be
God and man in two distinct natures and one person, forever." The Council of
Chalcedon (A. D. 451) stated that the one person of Jesus Christ possessed "two
natures without confusion, without change, without division, without separation,
the distinctiveness of the natures being by no means removed because of the
union, but the properties of each nature being preserved."

Orthodox Christian theologians have never claimed that God gave up His
divine attributes and "became" a man as Dake suggests. God cannot "become"
anything because He is pure actuality, with absolutely no potentiality for change.
He is immutable, therefore, cannot change. The Incarnation is not an instance
where God shed His attributes and changed into man. There was absolutely no
change in the divine nature of the Son in the Incarnation. However, the Son of
God did take on the nature of man in addition to his divine nature. Consequently,
there are two natures, a divine nature and a human nature, present in one person,
Jesus Christ, the God-Man. It can be said, therefore, that the Incarnation of God
into human flesh is not a giv ing up of divinity or divine attributes, but the taking
of an additional nature of man in union with divinity. In his book Knowing God, J.
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I. Packer explains that the Incarnation is not a subtraction of deity, but an addition
of humanity:

The Word had become flesh: a real human baby. He had not
ceased to be God; he was no less God then than before; but
He had begun to be man. He was not now God minus some
elements of His deity, but God plus all that He had made His
own by taking manhood to Himself. He who made man was
now learning what it felt like to be man.

The main problem with Dake's theology of the Incarnation is his separation of
the attributes of God from His divine nature. There is a major flaw in Dake's
premise that Jesus gave up all the attributes of God, yet held on to His divine
nature. In short, this statement contradicts itself. This is because the divine
attributes of God "are essential characteristics of His being. Without these
qualities God would not be what He is—God." In other words, without the
attributes that He possesses, God would not be God. God minus even one divine
attribute equals non-God. Apologist and author Norman Geisler explains that, "God
is by his very nature an absolutely perfect being. If there were any perfection that
he lacked, then he would not be God." Theologian R. L. Reymond concurs by
pointing out, "Divine attributes are not, however, characteristics separate and
distinct from God's essence that he can set aside when he desires." Since Dake's
Jesus gave up all His divine attributes, then Dake's Jesus is not God. Dake's
problem stems from the fact that he is altogether mistaken when he asserts that
God's attributes can be divorced from His being and God still be God.

Philippians 2:5-11 and the Kenosis of Christ. If the Incarnation is the taking on
of an additional nature of man by the divine Second Person of the Trinity, what
can be made of Philippians 2:5-11, which teaches that Jesus "emptied" Himself in
some way when He came to earth as man? Dake holds that the meaning of the
passage is that Jesus emptied Himself of all of His divine attributes. This is
patently false because, as we have seen above, if Jesus lost or gave up even one
divine attribute, then He immediately ceased to be God. Therefore, in the
Incarnation, Jesus, God in the flesh, kept each and every attribute of divinity.
What was it, therefore, that Jesus "gave up" when He "made Himself of no
reputation, taking the form of a bondservant, and coming in the likeness of men"
(Phil. 2:7)?

Apologist and professor Ron Rhodes provides insight to this often debated
issue. In his book Christ Before the Manger, Dr. Rhodes suggests three areas in
which Jesus "emptied" Himself when He took on the additional nature of man. He
explains:
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Paul's statement that Christ made himself "nothing" in the


Incarnation (Phil. 2:7) involves three basic issues: the veiling
of his preincarnate glory, a voluntary nonuse of some of his
divine attributes, and the condescension involved in taking
on the likeness of men.

Jesus Veiled His Preincarnate Glory. The first way in which Jesus made
Himself "nothing" is that He veiled His preincarnate glory. This is the glory Jesus
spoke of in John 17:5, "And now, O Father, glorify Me together with Yourself, with
the glory which I had with You before the world was." The glory is Christ's divine
power and majesty. He necessarily had to veil His glory because if He did not, He
could not have interacted with man as He did. Dr. Rhodes comments on this point:

Had Christ not veiled his preincarnate glory, mankind would


not have been able to behold him. It would have been the
same as when the apostle John, over fifty years after
Christ's resurrection, beheld Christ in his glory and said: "I
fell at his feet at though dead" (Rev. 1:17); or, as when
Isaiah beheld the glory of Christ in his vision in the temple
and said, "Woe to me! I am ruined!" (Isa. 6:5a; see John
12:41).

Though His glory was veiled, Jesus occasionally gave His followers a glimpse of
it. Just before He raised Lazarus from the dead, Jesus said to Martha, "Did I not
say to you that if you would believe you would see the glory of God?" (Jn. 11:40).
Here, as throughout the New Testament, Jesus exhibits the very power of God.
Furthermore, on the Mount of Transfiguration, Jesus pulled back the veil and
revealed His radiant glory to Peter, John, and James (Mt. 17:2-5). Additionally,
when Jesus appeared to Saul on the road to Damascus in His glory, Saul fell to the
ground and went blind (Acts 9:1-9). Thus, it was necessary that Jesus veil His glory
most of the time so that He could dwell among His own. John the Apostle summed
it up this way, "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld
His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth"
(John. 1:14).

Jesus Submitted to a Voluntary Nonuse of His Divine Attributes. The second


category suggested by Rhodes through which Christ made Himself "nothing" is a
voluntary nonuse of His divine attributes. This is the heart of the disagreement
with Dake. He claims that the attributes were cast off, but this cannot be the
case, because to cast off even one attribute would be a forfeiture of deity for
Christ. Instead of relinquishing His divine attributes, Christ limited the use of
them. However, Jesus did use His divine attributes from time to time. Rhodes

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explains:

Though Christ sometimes chose not to use his divine


attributes, at other times he did use them. For example, on
different occasions during his three-year ministry, Jesus
exercised the divine attributes of omniscience (that is, all-
knowingness—John 2:24; cf. 16:30), omnipresence (being
everywhere-present—John 1:48), and omnipotence (being
all-powerful, as evidenced by his many miracles—John 11).

Thus, it is clear that Jesus did not "give up" His deity, or divine attributes, in
any form or fashion. The Incarnation is not a case of giving up anything, but the
taking on of an additional nature—a human nature—by which Jesus can be said to
be fully God and fully Man.

Jesus Condescended by Taking on the Likeness of Men. Finally, Jesus made


Himself "nothing" by condescending to take on the likeness, or form, of man. By
this, Jesus was truly human. Jesus spoke of Himself as a man (John 8:40), and the
New Testament certainly recognizes His full humanity. For instance, Jesus claimed
to possess typical human traits as a body and soul (Mt. 26:26, 38). It is also said of
Him that He developed in mind and body as a normal human does (Lk. 2:40). Jesus
also evidenced the limitations of humanity in that he became tired (Jn. 4:6),
thirsty (Jn. 19:28), and hungry (Mt. 4:2). Thus, it can be truly said that "the Word
became flesh." Jesus, the Son of God, took to Himself the nature of man. This is a
remarkable and loving condescension for the eternal Second Person of the Trinity.

Though Jesus "made Himself nothing," in the Incarnation, this, in no way,


involved the giving-up of His divine nature or divine attributes as Dake suggests. In
opposition to Dake, reformed theologian Louis Berkhof writes concerning the fact
that the "Word became flesh":

The verb egeneto in John 1:14 (the Word became flesh)


certainly does not mean that the Logos changed into flesh,
and thus altered His essential nature, but simply that He took
on that particular character, that He acquired an additional
form, without in any way changing His original nature. He
remained the infinite and unchangeable Son of God.

CONCLUSION

The above research only scratches the surface of the heresy that is contained
within the pages of the Dake Bible. Dake's view of Jesus, from His teaching of the

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preincarnate nature of Christ to his teaching of Christ Incarnate, is filled with
contradictions, confusion, and doctrinal chaos. The Jesus of the Dake Annotated
Reference Bible is demonstrably not the Jesus of the Bible. What makes this so
troubling is that Dake and his aberrant teachings are accepted within the confines
of the orthodox Christian community. In fact, never have I seen so much heresy
contained in the teaching of one man, and that man still be considered Christian.
The reason for this is either ignorance of what Finis Jennings Dake actually taught
or a church that is so biblically illiterate that it cannot tell Living Water from
deadly poison. If more believers were informed about Dake's heresies regarding
such topics as the nature of God, the Trinity, the Incarnation, and the deity of
Christ, then the Dake Annotated Reference Bible would quickly fall off of the
best-seller chart and into a place where it belongs—the garbage bin, alongside
other best-selling editions that promote principles that can be at home only in the
kingdom of the cults. It is my desire to be a voice used by the Lord to help
accomplish this feat.

ENDNOTES

1. Stanley M. Burgess and Gary B. McGee, Dictionary of Pentecostal and


Charismatic Movements (Grand Rapids: Regency Reference Library, 1988), 235. An
edition containing the entire New Testament, Psalms, Proverbs, and Daniel was
published in 1961.

2. Ibid.

3. Ibid.

4. Finis Jennings Dake, Heavenly Hosts: A Biblical Study of Angels (Lawrenceville,


GA: Dake Publishing, 1995).

5. Finish Jennings Dake, A True Story [article on-line]; available from


http://www.dake.com; Internet; accessed 10 June 1997.

6. Ibid.

7. Finis Jennings Dake, The Dake Annotated Reference Bible (Lawrenceville, GA:
Dake Publishing, 1961), preface. The Dake study Bible is divided into 3 sections:
The Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Concordance. Each section is
numbered separately (i.e., the New Testament page numbers do not begin where
the Old Testament page numbers left off, but with the number 1). Therefore, any
reference from the Dake Bible must include the page number as well as the section
(Old Testament, New Testament, Concordance). Old Testament will be referred to
as "OT," the New Testament will be referred to as "NT."
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8. Ibid.

9. For example, Dake claims that God has a body and lives on heaven, which is a
physical planet. He states "The Bible declares that God has a body, shape, image,
likeness, bodily parts, a personal soul and spirit, and all other things that constitute
a being or a person with a body, soul, and spirit. . . Heaven itself is a material
planet having cities, mansions, furniture, inhabitants, living conditions, etc."
(Dake's Annotated Reference Bible: New Testament, 280; cf. Old Testament,
622).
Many Word-Faith teachers, such as Kenneth Copeland and Benny Hinn, teach
the very same thing. For instance, Kenneth Copeland teaches that God is a "being
that stands somewhere around 6'-2", 6'-3", that weighs somewhere in the
neighborhood of a couple of hundred pounds, little better, has a [hand] span of
nine inches across" ("Spirit, Soul, and Body I" Fort Worth, TX: Kenneth Copeland
Ministries, 1985, audio-tape #01-0601, side 1). Copeland also states that "Heaven
has a north and south, and an east and a west. Consequently, it must be a planet"
(Ibid.). Dake's teaching is demonstrably very influential among Word-Faith
teachers with regards to this topic and many others.

10. For example, Dake clearly teaches a works-salvation. On numerous occasions


throughout the voluminous notes of the text, Dake gives many conditions of
receiving eternal life. For instance, on page 100 of the New Testament, the note
for John 6:27 is entitled "23 Conditions of Eternal Life." The 23 conditions one must
meet to get eternal life, according to Dake, are:

Come to Christ Sow to the Spirit.

Eat His flesh-drink His blood. Fight the good fight.

Labor. Be sober and hope to the end for


it.

Reap - win souls. Endure temptations

Hate (love less) the life in this Let the promise of it remain in
world. you/ continue in Christ

Know God and Christ. Love everybody.

Enter right gate. Keep yourself in the love of God.

Cause no offense. Overcome sin.

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Keep commandments. Be faithful unto death.

Forsake all. Believe and obey the gospel.

Live free from sin. Be born again, hear Christ, and


follow Him.

Continue in well doing and seek


eternal life

The only condition one must meet to obtain eternal life, according to the Bible, is
"Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ." The difference between Dake's soteriology and
biblical soteriology is that one must work to earn salvation in Dake's theology.
According to the Bible, however, all the work for salvation has been done on the
cross by Jesus. When He said, "It is finished," in John 19:30, he was referring to
this very thing. Subsequently, all one must do to receive the free gift of eternal
life is to believe, or trust, in Jesus and the finished work on the cross. Needless to
say, the Gospel according to Dake is not the Gospel according to Jesus and the
Apostles (cf. Galatians 1:6-10).

11. Even a cursory study of the Dake Study Bible reveals that the theology in the
study notes and the theology of the Word-Faith movement are almost identical.
For instance, beliefs that are found in both Dake and the Word-Faith movement
are: 1) God has a body and lives on a planet called heaven. 2) Each member of the
Godhead has his own body, soul, and spirit. 3) Man is a little duplicate of God,
having the same attributes and powers. 4) Health and wealth are provided in the
atonement, thus, it is the will of God in every case that the Christian be healed of
disease as it is the will of God that the Christian be wealthy. These are only a few
of the similar doctrines that are shared by Dake and the Word-Faith theologians.
Because of this, I believe that the Dake Bible should be renamed the "Word-Faith
Study Bible."

12. A cult is a group that denies one or more of the essentials of the Christian
Faith (The Trinity, the Virgin Birth, the Deity of Christ, the Physical Resurrection,
Salvation by Faith Alone in Christ Alone, and the Second Coming). After completing
the research for this paper, I am fully convinced that Dake and his disciples,
namely the Word-Faith Movement, should be considered a cult. This is because
Dake and company deny such essentials as the Trinity, the Deity of Christ, and
Salvation by Faith Alone in Christ Alone. In fact, Dake's view of the Nature of God
(see footnote 9) is very close to the Mormon position on the Nature of God. It is
my opinion that the Christian apologetic community either needs to classify
Dake/Word-Faith as a full-blown cult, or we owe the Mormons an apology.

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13. Dake, Dake Bible NT, 50.

14. Ibid., 280. An old saying is, "Whatever the parent does in moderation, the
children will do in excess." This can be clearly seen in a sermon by Benny Hinn. He
says:

I feel revelation knowledge already coming on me. . . . God


the Father is a person, God the Son is a person, God the
Holy Ghost is a person, but each of them is a triune being by
himself. If I can shock you and maybe I should, there are
nine of them. . . . God the Father is a person with his own
personal spirit, with his own personal soul and his own
personal spirit body. You say, 'I never heard that.' Well, do
you think you're in this church to hear things you've heard
for the past 50 years? You can't argue with the Word, can
you? It's all in the Word (Benny Hinn, quoted in G. Richard
Fisher and M. Kurt Goedelman, The Confusing World of
Benny Hinn [Kearney: Morris Publishing, 1995], 95).

Benny Hinn, in an interview with Charisma magazine admitted that he got this
teaching from the writings of Finis Jennings Dake. Speaking of the very quote
above, Hinn said, "In Finis Dake's book God's Plan for Man, he teaches that each
member of the Trinity has his own spirit, soul, and body. One Sunday when I was
speaking on the Trinity, I repeated that teaching. . . ." It should be noted that
much of the book God's Plan for Man was condensed and used as the notes in the
Dake's Annotated Reference Bible.

15. Finis Jennings Dake, God's Plan for Man (Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Bible Sales,
Inc., 1949), 498, emphasis in original. This massive work is described by Dake
Publishers as "designed as a correspondence course, God's Plan for Man is
equivalent to a three-year Bible college program. . . . sane, scriptural teaching for
intelligent people. . . . clear, well-arranged, and doctrinally sound" (Inside jacket
cover of God's Plan for Man). It is this volume that was condensed into the notes
of the Dake Annotated Reference Bible. What may be alluded to in the reference
Bible is often fully explained in God's Plan for Man.

16. Dake, Dake Bible NT, 280. It is important to the understanding of Dake's view
of the Trinity to remember that he uses the terms "person" and "being"
interchangeably. This statement militates against the monotheism of the Bible.

17. Ibid. As each human person is a separate and distinct being, each member of
the Trinity is a separate and distinct being who are unified only in purpose or goal.

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18. Ibid.

19. Ibid. Underlined words in original. Amazingly, Dake claims that the word God
can be used as a singular referent to one Person of the Godhead, or a plural
referent to all three, much like sheep or fish can be used as a singular or plural.
While it is true that the word for God in the Old Testament, Elohim, is a plural
word, it is not a reference to three separate, distinct beings. It is called a "plural
of majesty," and denotes the absolute sovereignty, power, and majesty of God.

20. Dake, God's Plan for Man, 500.

21. Ibid., 97, 96. It is interesting to note that he accepted his nickname, "The
Walking Bible," as a figure of speech. Otherwise, he would be advertising himself
as a being composed of many pieces of paper bound together between two
leather covers.

22. In short, the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity states that God is one in nature,
being, or essence (one in WHAT He is), and three in person (three in WHO He is).
Dake does not make a distinction between the terms "being" and "person" and
therefore, uses the terms synonymously. A "person" is a "being." Thus, when Dake
speaks of the Trinity as being three persons, he is making the claim that the
Trinity is three separate and distinct beings, which is the heresy called Tritheism.

23. Dake, God's Plan for Man, 53. This doctrine is certainly not a "modern trend." It
has been formally expressed for almost 2,000 years!

24. Ibid. The exact statement that Dake calls foolish and unscriptural is "It is clearly
revealed in Scripture that God is ONE BEING CONSTITUTED IN THREE PERSONS. . .
. God as a spirit is incorporeal, invisible reality; has no body or parts like human
beings; nothing of a material or bodily nature . . . God cannot be seen with the
material eyes; nothing on earth to resemble Him; without parts, without body,
without passions. . . . The image of God consists only in intellectual and moral
likeness; when God is spoken of as having hands, feet, eyes, hair, and other bodily
parts, these are figures of speech and mere human expressions trying to convey
some idea of God." (God's Plan for Man, 53, emphasis in original). These quotes
were gathered by Dake from "books on the great doctrines of the Bible that are
widely used," and speak of the orthodox understanding of the nature of God and
the Trinity. Thus, Dake separates himself and his teachings from orthodox
Christianity.

25. Ibid.

26. Ibid., 54.

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27. Dake, Dake Bible NT, 93.

28. Ibid., 57.

29. Ibid., 139.

30. Ibid.

31. Ibid., 1.

32. Dake, God's Plan for Man, 377.

33. Ibid.

34. In other words, Dake uses the term "Christ" much in the same way the term
"doctor" is used in the claim that "Dr. Norman Geisler once worked in a factory in
Michigan." He was not a doctor when he worked in the factory, but acquired the
degree at a later date. But when referring to his life before he became a doctor,
we still refer to him as Dr. Geisler. In the same way, Dake believes that any
reference that refers to Jesus as being the Christ before He was anointed at His
baptism is using the term in this way.

35. Dake, Dake Bible NT, 218.

36. Ibid.

37. Ibid.

38. Dake, God's Plan for Man, 386.

39. Dake, Dake Bible NT, 218.

40. Ibid.

41. Ibid.

42. Ibid.

43. Ibid.

44. Ludwig Ott, Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma (Rockford, IL: Tan Books and
Publishers, 1960), 32.

45. Peter Kreeft, ed., Summa of the Summa (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1990),
112.

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46. Lewis Sperry Chafer and John F. Walvoord, Major Bible Themes (Grand
Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1974), 40.

47. The philosophical law of non-contradiction states that "A" cannot be "A" and
"non-A" at the same time and the same sense. God is not one and three at the
same time and the same sense. We do not claim that God is one Being in three
Beings or one Person with three Persons. This is blatantly contradictory . We do
claim that God is one in being and three in person. He is one Being revealed in
three Persons. Therefore, the orthodox understanding of the Trinity is not a
contradiction as Dake claims. It is ironic that Dake uses the same arguments against
the Trinity as Jehovah's Witnesses and Mormons do.

48. Norman Geisler and Abdul Saleeb, Answering Islam (Grand Rapids: Baker Book
House, 1993), 265-66.

49. Omnipresence is that attribute of God by which He is everywhere present. He


is not localized on a planet called Heaven going to and fro in his body. He is an
everywhere present spirit. This is clearly seen in the biblical record is the
following Scriptures:

1 Kings 8:27: "But will God indeed dwell on the earth?


Behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot contain
You. How much less this temple which I have built!"

Psalm 139:7-8: "Where can I go from Your Spirit? Or where


can I flee from Your presence? If I ascend into heaven, You
are there; If I make my bed in hell, behold, You are there."

Jeremiah 23:24: "Can anyone hide himself in secret places,


So I shall not see him?" says the LORD; "Do I not fill heaven
and earth?" says the LORD."

Furthermore, the claim that God is eternal is to say that He is not temporal. God is
without beginning and without end, and without succession in a constant,
undivided "now." There is no past, present, or future with God—only a constant
"now." Time involves change—a before and an after—but God is changeless, and is
therefore, eternal, or beyond time. This is seen in the following Scriptures:

Psalm 90:2: "Before the mountains were brought forth, Or


ever You had formed the earth and the world, Even from
everlasting to everlasting, You are God."

John 8:58: "Before Abraham was, I AM."


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Hebrews 13:8: "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today,


and forever."

Another classic attribute that Dake implicitly denies by claiming the God has a
body is the Simplicity of God. This is the attribute that states that God is not
composed of parts and is thus indivisible. But a body is composed of parts and is
divisible. Anything that is composed of parts can be decomposed or divided.
Therefore a composed God is a God which can be decomposed, or die.
Furthermore, if God is composed of parts, this presupposes another composer.
One cannot compose one's self because one would have to exist prior to one's self
in order to compose one's self. Therefore, Dake's theology logically dictates that
there is another being who composed God.

Furthermore, Dake's God cannot be an Infinite God because a body is a finite


thing. An infinite body is an oxymoron. A body, by nature, is confined to one place
at one time. Therefore it cannot be infinite in any sense of the term. Dake's
contention that God has a body goes against reason and the entire revelation of
God.

50. Merrill C. Tenney, ed., The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible,
Vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1976), 177.

51. George W. Zeller and Renald E. Showers, The Eternal Sonship of Christ
(Neptune, NJ: Loizeaux Brothers, 1993), 26. The following chart is found on pages
10-11 in Zeller and Showers' book and it emphasizes the contrast between the
orthodox Christian view of the Sonship of Jesus and Dake's view of the Sonship of
Jesus:

ETERNAL SONSHIP INCARNATIONAL SONSHIP (Dake)

He was always the Son of God. He Before the Incarnation, He was not
is the eternal Son. the Son of God

"Son of God" is Who He Is "Son of God" is What He Became

His Sonship is essential to his true His Sonship is not essential to His
identity and cannot be divorced inherent identity.
from the person He is.

"Son of God" is who He is in His "Son of God" is merely a title and


being of beings. role that He assumed.

His Sonship directly relates to His His Sonship directly relates to His

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deity. Incarnation.

"Son of God" means equal with "Son of God" means subservient to


God, indicating likeness or God, less than God.
sameness of being.

God the Father has always been God the Father did not assume the
God the Father. title and role of Father until the
Incarnation.

Before the Incarnation the Son was Before the Incarnation God had no
ever in the Father's bosom. Son, nor was He the Father.

The Father/Son relationship has Before the Incarnation there was


eternally existed in the godhead. no Father/Son relationship in the
godhead.

The Father sent His Own Son into The One who would become the
this world (see John 3:16-17; Father sent the One who would
Galatians 4:4; etc.). become the Son into this world.

The triune God has eternally The triune God has eternally
existed in three persons—the existed in three persons, but not as
Father, the Son, and the Holy Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. These
Spirit. were roles that were assumed in
time.

52. Ott, Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma, 156.

53. Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology Volume 1 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans


Publishing Co, 1995), 471.

54. Ron Rhodes, Christ Before the Manger (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1992), 32.

55. Ibid., 31.

56. John F. Walvoord, Jesus Christ Our Lord (Chicago: Moody Press, 1969), 39, 41-
42.

57. Walter Elwell, ed. Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker
Book House, 1994), 711.

58. Norman Geisler, Christian Apologetics (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
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1976), 336.

59. Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, 555.

60. Ibid., 556.

61. J. I. Packer, Knowing God (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1973), 57

62. Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, 451.

63. Norman Geisler, Creating God in the Image of Man? (Minneapolis: Betheny
House Publishers, 1997), 28.

64. Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, 556.

65. Rhodes, Christ Before the Manger, 195.

66. Ibid., 196.

67. Lois Berkhof, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Co., 1993), 334.

SOURCE

Problems With The Dake Bible

The King James Bible Defended

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