When you open Finis Dake’s Bible or read his book Heavenly Hosts, you enter a world that seems like something from a fantasy novel. Angels have physical bodies and can have babies. Demons control entire nations like puppet masters. Evil spirits reproduce sexually with human women. Satan rules from actual thrones on earth. This isn’t the sober, careful teaching of Scripture—it’s wild speculation dressed up as biblical truth. Dake takes the mysterious spiritual realm that the Bible describes with restraint and transforms it into an elaborate mythology that would make comic book writers jealous.
Dake, Finis Jennings. Heavenly Hosts. Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Publishing, 1995. [All subsequent citations to this work will be abbreviated as HH with page references where available.]
The danger of Dake’s speculation about angels and demons goes beyond just getting facts wrong. When we make up details about the spiritual world that God hasn’t revealed, we open doors to deception, fear, and false teaching. Dake’s elaborate system of demonic hierarchies and angelic reproduction doesn’t just add to Scripture—it contradicts it, creating a different religion altogether. What makes this especially dangerous for younger Christians is that Dake presents his wild ideas with such confidence that readers assume he must have special knowledge or deeper insight than other teachers.
What Dake Really Teaches: “Angels were created male, as their kind is maintained without the reproductive process… That angels have tangible spirit bodies with bodily parts, appear as men, and have performed acts equal to and surpassing those of the human male is clear from many passages” (Heavenly Hosts, Chapter 10). “A spirit being can and does have real, material, and tangible spirit form, shape, and size, with bodily parts, soul passions, and spirit faculties. Their material bodies are of a spiritual substance and are just as real as human bodies.”1
Let’s be clear from the start: Christians absolutely believe in angels and demons. The Bible teaches they are real spiritual beings created by God. Good angels serve God and help believers. Fallen angels (demons) rebelled with Satan and oppose God’s purposes. This is basic Christian teaching that all orthodox believers accept. But Dake goes far beyond what Scripture actually says, creating detailed teachings about the spirit world based on his imagination rather than God’s Word.
The Fantasy of Angels with Physical Bodies
One of Dake’s most shocking teachings is that all spirit beings, including angels and demons, have actual physical bodies. Not temporary forms they can take when appearing to humans, but permanent physical bodies with all the parts and functions of human bodies. This isn’t a minor detail—it’s the foundation for many of his other errors about the supernatural realm.
What Dake Claims About Angel Bodies
In his book Heavenly Hosts, Dake makes incredibly specific claims about angelic bodies. He doesn’t just say angels can appear in physical form (which the Bible does teach). He insists they have permanent bodies exactly like humans, only made of “spirit” material:
“Angels are real beings with spirit bodies. In fact, the only real difference between angels and the human race is that angels have spiritual bodies and are greater in power and personal attributes… They have wills and spirit bodies with bodily parts like men” (Heavenly Hosts, discussing the reality of fallen angels). In his Bible notes, Dake elaborates: “Angels, cherubim, seraphim, and all other spirit beings have spirit bodies and personal souls and spirits. They have been seen with the natural eyes of men over 100 times in Scripture.”2
Think about what Dake is really saying here. He claims angels have bodies with “bodily parts like men”—hands, feet, heads, and everything else. According to him, the only difference between us and angels is the type of material our bodies are made from. This completely misunderstands what the Bible means by “spirit beings.”
Dake goes even further in his Dake Bible notes. Commenting on passages about angels, he lists all the supposed body parts angels possess, treating every biblical metaphor as literal anatomy. When the Bible speaks symbolically of God’s “wings” providing shelter, Dake seems to think this means literal feathered appendages. When Scripture uses human language to describe angelic appearances, Dake assumes this reveals their permanent form.
Why This Contradicts Scripture
The Bible clearly distinguishes between spirits and physical beings. Jesus Himself made this distinction crystal clear after His resurrection. When the disciples thought they were seeing a ghost, Jesus said: “Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have” (Luke 24:39).
Notice what Jesus is teaching: spirits (ghosts) don’t have flesh and bones. That’s what makes them spirits! If angels had permanent physical bodies as Dake claims, they wouldn’t be spirit beings at all—they’d be physical beings like us, just made of different stuff.
The book of Hebrews makes this even clearer: “Are not all angels ministering spirits sent to serve those who will inherit salvation?” (Hebrews 1:14). The Bible explicitly calls angels “spirits,” not “beings with spirit bodies.” There’s a huge difference between these two ideas.
When angels appear in the Bible in physical form—like the three visitors to Abraham in Genesis 18—they are taking temporary physical form for a specific purpose. They can eat and drink and be touched during these appearances, but this doesn’t mean they always have bodies. It means God gives them the ability to manifest in physical form when needed for His purposes.
The Shocking Heresy of Sexual Angels
Building on his false teaching about angel bodies, Dake makes an even more disturbing claim: angels can and do engage in sexual activity. This isn’t just speculation about angelic nature—it’s a complete contradiction of Jesus’ own teaching and leads to horrifying conclusions about the spiritual realm.
Dake’s Teaching on Angel Sexuality
In Heavenly Hosts, Dake explicitly argues that angels are sexual beings capable of reproduction:
“Throughout Scripture angels are spoken of as men. No female angels are on record. It is logical to say then that the female was created specifically to keep the human race in existence. All angels were created male, as their kind is maintained without the reproductive process” (Heavenly Hosts, Chapter on “Angels Aren’t Sexless”). From his Bible notes: “That angels have tangible spirit bodies with bodily parts, appear as men, and have performed acts equal to and surpassing those of the human male is clear from many passages.”3
Wait, what? Dake says angels are all male and don’t reproduce, but then argues they can have sex with humans? This contradiction runs throughout his teaching. He wants angels to be sexual beings (to support his interpretation of Genesis 6) but also knows the Bible never mentions female angels or angel babies.
Dake directly addresses the main Bible verse that disproves his theory, but watch how he twists it:
“The one scripture used to teach that angels are sexless does not say they are. It simply states, ‘in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven’ (Mt. 22:30). The purpose of this verse is to show that resurrected men and women do not need to marry in order to keep their kind in existence” (Heavenly Hosts). Further elaborating in his Bible notes: “There is nothing in the resurrection to uncreate men and women. Christ remained a man after His resurrection and so will all other males.”4
This is a perfect example of Dake forcing his ideas onto Scripture. Jesus was answering a question about marriage in the resurrection. He said people won’t marry because they’ll be “like the angels.” If angels were sexual beings who could marry (as Dake claims), Jesus’ comparison makes no sense. The whole point is that angels don’t marry because they’re not sexual beings!
The Dangerous Genesis 6 Interpretation
Why does Dake insist angels are sexual beings? It all comes back to his interpretation of Genesis 6:1-4, where the “sons of God” saw the “daughters of men” and took them as wives. This passage has been debated for centuries, with three main interpretations:
- The Sethite View: The “sons of God” were descendants of Seth (the godly line) who married “daughters of men” from Cain’s line (the ungodly line).
- The Royalty View: The “sons of God” were human rulers or nobles who took multiple wives.
- The Angel View: The “sons of God” were fallen angels who somehow mated with human women.
Dake dogmatically insists on the angel view and builds elaborate theology on it:
“Both testaments of the Bible teach that some angels committed sex sins and lived contrary to nature. Genesis 6:1-4 give the history of such sinning. In 2 Peter 2:4 we have the statement that angels did sin before the flood and for their sin were cast down to hell to be reserved until judgment… If Sodom and Gomorrah and other cities committed fornication ‘in like manner’ as the angels, then it is clear that the sin of angels was fornication” (Heavenly Hosts). From his Bible notes: “Both testaments of the Bible teach that some angels committed sex sins and lived contrary to nature. Gen. 6:1-4 gives the history of such sinning. In 2 Pet. 2:4-5 we have the statement that angels did sin before the flood and for their sin were cast down to hell to be reserved until judgment.”5
Notice how Dake takes ambiguous passages and makes them absolute. He claims “both testaments teach” this when actually it’s his interpretation of unclear texts. The passage in Jude he references talks about angels leaving their “proper dwelling” or “first estate”—it doesn’t explicitly say they had sex with humans. Dake further claims: “The fact that some angels ‘kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation’ (Jude 6) to commit sin makes it understandable how a sex sin could be accomplished by them.”6
The Biblical Problems with Angel-Human Hybrids
Dake’s interpretation creates massive theological problems:
1. It Contradicts Jesus: As we’ve seen, Jesus clearly taught that angels don’t marry. Dake tries to get around this by saying they don’t marry “in heaven” but could on earth. This is scripture-twisting of the worst kind.
2. It Violates Creation Order: God created everything to reproduce “after its kind” (Genesis 1). Humans produce humans. Dogs produce dogs. Angels are a completely different order of being. The idea that angels and humans could produce offspring violates God’s creation boundaries.
3. It Creates Salvation Problems: If angel-human hybrids (called Nephilim) existed, what would be their spiritual status? Could they be saved? Did Jesus die for half-angel beings? The Bible never addresses these questions because such beings never existed. Yet Dake states: “It was the purpose of Satan and his fallen angels to corrupt the human race and thereby do away with pure Adamite stock through whom the seed of the woman should come.”7
4. It Misunderstands “Sons of God”: While the phrase “sons of God” does refer to angels in Job, it also refers to humans throughout Scripture. Luke 3:38 calls Adam “the son of God.” Believers are called “sons of God” in John 1:12. The context of Genesis 6, which emphasizes human wickedness, strongly suggests human “sons of God.”
The Myth of Territorial Demon Kingdoms
Another area where Dake’s speculation runs wild is his teaching about demonic organization and territorial control. While the Bible does mention evil spiritual forces and their influence, Dake constructs an elaborate system of demon kingdoms with specific rulers, boundaries, and hierarchies that goes far beyond Scripture.
What Dake Teaches About Demon Territories
In his various writings, Dake presents demons as organized into military-style kingdoms with clear command structures. He takes the few biblical references to spiritual warfare and builds them into a complex mythology:
From Dake’s notes: “They rule nations (Mt. 4:8-9; Dan. 10)… They are organized into principalities and powers to war on saints (Rom. 8:38; Eph. 6:10-18; 1 Pet. 3:22)… Organized into principalities (Eph. 1:21; 3:10; 6:12; Col. 1:16)” (Referenced in Heavenly Hosts and Bible notes). He elaborates: “Satan’s angels… are organized into principalities and powers (Eph. 1:21; 3:10; 6:10-17; Col. 2:10, 15; Rev. 12:7-12).”8
Dake interprets Daniel 10, which mentions the “prince of Persia” and “prince of Greece,” as proof that specific demons rule over specific nations. He then expands this into a complete system where every nation, city, and region has assigned demons controlling it. According to Dake, these demons have actual thrones, hold court, and command lesser demons in military-style operations.
In his book Revelation Expounded, Dake goes even further, describing how demons will concentrate in rebuilt Babylon:
“She will ‘become the habitation of demons, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird.’ This pictures Babylon as the headquarters of the demon world and the concentration of all wickedness… Babylon will be the habitation of demons who will inspire men to live as stated in Rev. 9:20, 21” (Revelation Expounded, Chapter on Babylon). From his notes: “Kingdoms of this world have always been controlled by godly or satanic angels and wars on earth are lost or won as a result of battles in the heavenlies between the good and bad angels.”9
Where Scripture Stops and Imagination Begins
Yes, the Bible mentions spiritual warfare. Yes, it speaks of principalities and powers. Yes, Daniel 10 mentions spiritual beings associated with nations. But notice how limited and careful the biblical information is. Scripture gives us glimpses of spiritual reality, not detailed organizational charts.
The Bible’s actual teaching about spiritual warfare is both simpler and more practical than Dake’s elaborate system:
- Satan is called “the prince of this world” (John 12:31)
- We wrestle against “principalities and powers” (Ephesians 6:12)
- Our weapons are spiritual, not physical (2 Corinthians 10:4)
- We overcome through faith, truth, and righteousness (Ephesians 6:13-17)
- Greater is He who is in us than he who is in the world (1 John 4:4)
The Bible focuses on what we need to know: spiritual evil is real, but Christ has overcome it. We don’t need detailed maps of demon territories or organizational charts of hell’s hierarchy. We need faith in Christ who has “disarmed principalities and powers” (Colossians 2:15).
The Danger of Demon Obsession
Dake’s detailed demonology creates several spiritual dangers:
1. It Breeds Fear: When believers think specific demons control their city or nation with detailed power structures, they can become fearful and superstitious rather than confident in Christ’s victory.
2. It Encourages Unhealthy Practices: Some followers of such teaching engage in “spiritual mapping” (trying to identify which demons control which areas) and “territorial warfare” (attempting to cast out geographical demons). These practices have no biblical basis.
3. It Shifts Focus from Christ: The more time we spend studying supposed demon hierarchies, the less time we spend focusing on Jesus and His Word. The Bible always points us to Christ, not to detailed knowledge of evil.
4. It Creates Pride: Those who think they have special knowledge about demon organization often become proud of their “deeper understanding,” looking down on other Christians as less informed.
The Dangerous Pattern of Adding to Scripture
Throughout his writings on angels and demons, Dake demonstrates a consistent pattern: he takes a biblical truth and adds layers of speculation until the original truth is buried under human imagination. Let’s look at more examples of this dangerous pattern.
Speculation About Angelic Hierarchies
The Bible mentions different types of angels: cherubim, seraphim, archangels, and angels. It also uses terms like thrones, dominions, principalities, and powers. From these limited references, Dake constructs elaborate hierarchical charts with specific ranks, responsibilities, and chains of command.
He writes as if he has access to heaven’s organizational manual:
“The fact that some angels ‘kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation’ (Jude 6) makes it understandable how a sex sin could be accomplished by them. The Greek word for ‘habitation’ is oiketerion. It is used only twice in Scripture. In 2 Corinthians 5:2 it is translated house and concerns the bodies of men being changed to spiritual bodies. In Jude 6 it refers to angels having a bodily change, or at least a lowering of themselves in some way” (Heavenly Hosts). He adds: “The Gr. for habitation is oiketerion. It is used only twice in Scripture: of the bodies of men being changed to spiritual bodies (2 Cor. 5:2); and the angels having a bodily change, or at least a lowering of themselves in some way (Jude 6-7).”10
Notice how Dake takes the word “habitation” and builds an entire theology of angels changing their bodies for sexual purposes. The text simply says they left their proper dwelling or position—it says nothing about bodily transformation for sex. This is imagination disguised as biblical interpretation.
Claims About Different Classes of Demons
Dake doesn’t just speculate about angels; he creates detailed classifications of demons:
“There are two classes of fallen angels—those loose with Satan who will be cast down to earth during the tribulation (Rev. 12:7-12), and those now bound in hell for committing fornication (2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6-7). Had the ones in hell not committed the additional sin of fornication, they would still be loose to help Satan in the future” (Heavenly Hosts). From his Bible: “There are two classes of fallen angels: those bound (2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6-7; Rev. 9:11, 14; 11:7; 17:8) and those who are still loose with Satan and who will be cast down to the earth in the middle of Daniel’s 70th Week in the future tribulation (Rev. 12:7-12; Eph. 6:10-17).”11
Dake creates categories of demons based on his interpretation of unclear passages. He states as fact that some demons are imprisoned for sexual sin while others roam free. The Bible doesn’t explicitly teach this division—it’s Dake’s speculation presented as biblical truth.
Detailed Descriptions of Spiritual Bodies
Perhaps nowhere is Dake’s speculation more obvious than when he describes the supposed nature of “spirit bodies”:
From God’s Plan for Man: “To be more specific, all angels have like spirit-bodies, souls, and spirits; all men have the same kind of bodies, souls, and spirits; all animals of the same species have the same likeness; and all demons are similar… All persons of like nature, powers, attributes, and works are naturally the same regardless of how many there are in existence” (page 448). He claims God also has physical body parts: “God is a person who is Spirit…He is described as being like any other person as to having a body, soul, and spirit (Job 13:8; Heb. 1:3; Dan. 7:9-14; 10:5-7)…He has a heart (Gen. 6:6; 8:21); hands and fingers (Exodus 31:18; Ps. 8:3-6; Rev. 5:1, 6-7); nostrils (Ps. 18:8, 15); mouth (Num. 12:8); lips and tongue (Isa. 30:27); feet (Ezek. 1:27; Exodus 24:10); eyes, eyelids, sight (Ps. 11:4; 18:24; 33:18)”12
Where does the Bible teach that angels have three parts—body, soul, and spirit? Nowhere. This is pure speculation based on Dake’s assumption that all beings must be structured like humans. He takes the biblical teaching that humans have body, soul, and spirit (1 Thessalonians 5:23) and projects it onto all other beings, including God Himself!
The Genesis 6 Obsession: Building Doctrine on Unclear Texts
Dake’s interpretation of Genesis 6 deserves special attention because it forms the foundation for so many of his other errors. By insisting that “sons of God” must mean angels who had sex with women, he creates a domino effect of false teachings.
Dake’s “Proofs” Examined
Let’s look at each of Dake’s supposed proofs that angels mated with humans:
Dake’s Claim #1: “The expression ‘sons of God’ is found only five times in the Old Testament, twice in Genesis 6 and three times in the book of Job (1:6; 2:1; 38:7). The passages in Job clearly refer to angels.” From his Bible notes: “The expression sons of God is found only 5 times in the O.T. and every time it is used of angels (Gen. 6:1-4; Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7). It is indisputable that the passages in Job refer to angels.”13
The Problem: Just because a phrase means angels in one context doesn’t mean it always means angels. “Sons of God” is used for humans throughout Scripture. In Luke 3:38, Adam is called “son of God.” In Romans 8:14, believers are “sons of God.” Context determines meaning, and Genesis 6’s context is entirely about human wickedness.
Dake’s Claim #2: “Some translations (such as the Septuagint, the Moffatt and others) read ‘angels of God’ in Genesis 6:1-4.” His Bible adds: “Some translations (the Sept., Moffatt, and others) read, angels of God in Gen. 6:1-4, which is the only idea that will harmonize with the passage itself, as well as many other passages.”14
The Problem: Some translations interpret rather than translate. The Hebrew text says “sons of God,” not “angels of God.” We shouldn’t build doctrine on interpretive translations when the original text is clear.
Dake’s Claim #3: From comparing 2 Peter 2:4 and Jude 6-7: “If Sodom and Gomorrah and other cities committed fornication ‘in like manner’ as the angels, then it is clear that the sin of angels was fornication.” He elaborates: “Even as Sodom and Gomorrha, and the cities about them in like manner (as did the angels), giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire.”15
The Problem: Jude says Sodom and Gomorrah went after “strange flesh” or “different flesh.” This refers to homosexuality, not sex with angels. The comparison is that both groups abandoned God’s created order—angels by leaving their proper place, humans by perverting sexuality. Nothing in these texts explicitly says angels had sex with humans.
Why the Human Interpretation Makes More Sense
The traditional interpretation—that “sons of God” refers to the godly line of Seth marrying ungodly women from Cain’s line—fits the context perfectly:
- Genesis 4 describes two lines of humanity: Cain’s ungodly line and Seth’s line that “called on the name of the Lord.”
- Genesis 5 traces the godly line through Seth to Noah.
- Genesis 6 begins with these two lines intermarrying, leading to universal wickedness.
- The punishment fits the crime: Humans sinned, so humans were destroyed in the flood (except Noah’s family).
- The text emphasizes human wickedness: “The Lord saw that the wickedness of MAN was great” (Genesis 6:5).
This interpretation requires no speculation about angel sex, no contradiction of Jesus’ teaching, and no invention of hybrid beings. It simply recognizes that when God’s people compromise with the world, wickedness multiplies.
Satan’s War on Saints: When Truth Becomes Paranoia
Another area where Dake’s speculation runs wild is his teaching about Satan’s supposed detailed strategies against believers. While the Bible does teach that Satan opposes Christians, Dake creates an elaborate system of demonic attack that can lead believers into paranoia and fear.
Dake’s Exhaustive List of Demonic Activities
In his various works, Dake provides incredibly detailed lists of what demons supposedly do. Here’s just a sample from the materials in Heavenly Hosts and his other works:
“Cause delay and compromise (Acts 24:25; 26:28)… Cause divisions and strife (1 Pet. 5:8; 1 Cor. 3:1-3)… Cause sin and rebellion (Gen. 3; 2 Cor. 11:3)… Cause works of darkness, including sexual perversion (Eph. 5:11-12; 6:12; Acts 16:18; Rom. 1)… Kill and destroy (Jn. 10:10)… Cause storms (Job 1:18-19; Eph. 2:2)… Rule nations (Mt. 4:8-9; Dan. 10)… Cause infirmities (Mt. 8:17; Lk. 13:16)… Cause lunacy and mania (Mt. 4:23-24; 17:14-21)… Urge suicides (Mt. 17:15; Jn. 10:10)… Agitate lusts (Jn. 8:44; Eph. 2:1-3)…” His Bible notes add: “They possess people and cause: dumbness and deafness (Mt. 9:32-33; Mk. 9:25); blindness (Mt. 12:22); grievous vexation (Mt. 15:22); lunacy and mania (Mt. 4:23-24; 17:14-21; Mk. 5:1-18); uncleanness (called unclean spirits 20 times; Lk. 4:36); supernatural strength (Mk. 5:1-18); suicide (Mt. 17:16; Jn. 10:10); convulsions (Mk. 9:20); lusts (Jn. 8:44; Eph. 2:1-3; 1 Jn. 2:15-17)”16
The list goes on and on. According to Dake, demons are behind virtually everything negative in life. While the Bible does attribute some things to demonic activity, Dake’s comprehensive lists go far beyond Scripture, creating a worldview where demons lurk behind every problem.
The Problem with Seeing Demons Everywhere
When Christians believe demons cause every problem, several dangerous things happen:
1. Personal Responsibility Disappears: If demons cause all sin and problems, people stop taking responsibility for their choices. “The devil made me do it” becomes an excuse for everything.
2. Medical Issues Get Spiritualized: Dake’s teaching that demons cause various illnesses can lead people to seek exorcism instead of medical help. While the Bible does record some cases of demon-caused illness, it also recognizes natural sickness (1 Timothy 5:23). Dake goes so far as to claim: “There are demon spirits for every sickness, unholy trait, and doctrinal error known among men. They must be cast out or resisted in order to experience relief from them. Disease germs, which are closely allied with unclean spirits, are really living forms of corruption…They are agents of Satan, corrupting the bodies of his victims.”17
3. Fear Replaces Faith: Believers who see demons everywhere often live in constant fear rather than the confidence that comes from trusting Christ’s victory.
4. Weird Practices Develop: People start “binding” demons for everything, “pleading the blood” over their cereal, and engaging in superstitious behaviors that have no biblical basis.
What the Bible Actually Teaches About Spiritual Warfare
The Bible’s teaching on spiritual warfare is both more serious and more simple than Dake’s elaborate system:
We Have Real Enemies: Satan and demons are real and actively oppose God’s people (1 Peter 5:8).
But We Have Victory in Christ: Jesus has already defeated Satan (Colossians 2:15). We fight from victory, not for victory.
Our Weapons Are Spiritual: Truth, righteousness, faith, salvation, the Word of God, and prayer (Ephesians 6:13-18).
Resistance Is Simple: “Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you” (James 4:7). No elaborate rituals needed.
Focus Stays on Christ: The New Testament spends far more time talking about Jesus than about Satan. Our focus should match this proportion.
The Corruption of Biblical Texts
One of Dake’s most serious errors is how he handles biblical texts about the spiritual realm. He doesn’t just misinterpret—he actually changes the meaning of clear passages to fit his system. Let’s look at specific examples.
Twisting Jesus’ Words About Angels
Remember Jesus’ clear statement in Matthew 22:30: “At the resurrection people will neither marry nor be given in marriage; they will be like the angels in heaven.” This seems crystal clear—angels don’t marry. But watch how Dake twists it:
“Christ remained a man after His resurrection and so will all other males… There is nothing in the resurrection to uncreate men and women. Whether male or female, each will be resurrected as such, though their body will be changed from mortality to immortality” (Heavenly Hosts, defending angel sexuality). His Bible expands: “The Bible teaches that every person will continue bodily as he was born, in all eternity. Paul said that everyone will have his own body in the resurrection (1 Cor. 15:35-38). If one is a male he will continue as such with all his bodily parts.”18
Dake completely misses Jesus’ point. Jesus isn’t discussing whether people remain male or female (they do). He’s explaining that marriage—and by extension, sexual relations—won’t exist in the resurrection because we’ll be “like the angels.” If angels were sexual beings, this comparison would teach the opposite of what Jesus intended.
Mishandling the “Spirits in Prison” Passage
First Peter 3:19-20 mentions Christ preaching to “spirits in prison” who disobeyed in Noah’s day. This is admittedly a difficult passage with various interpretations. But watch how Dake uses it:
“Who are these spirits in prison, if not the angels who once lived contrary to their nature—in sin with the daughters of men? We read in Psalm 104:4 that God is the one ‘Who maketh his angels spirits; his ministers a flaming fire'” (Heavenly Hosts). His Bible notes state: “In 1 Pet. 3:19-20 we see that Christ ‘went and preached unto the spirits in prison; which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing.’ Who are these spirits in prison, if not the confined angels who once lived contrary to their nature—in sin with the daughters of men (Gen. 6:1-4)?”19
Dake assumes his conclusion (angels mated with women) and then uses that assumption to interpret this passage. Many scholars believe these “spirits” are human spirits, or that this refers to Christ’s proclamation of victory over evil spirits, not a proof of angel-human sex. But Dake presents his speculation as the only possible interpretation.
Redefining Biblical Terms
Throughout his works, Dake redefines biblical terms to fit his system. For example, when the Bible calls angels “spirits” (Hebrews 1:14), Dake adds the word “bodies” to make it “spirit bodies.” When the Bible says angels are “ministering spirits,” Dake interprets this as “spirits with bodies who minister.”
This might seem like a small thing, but it’s actually huge. By adding to biblical terminology, Dake changes the Bible’s teaching. A “spirit” and a “spirit body” are completely different concepts. One is immaterial; the other is physical (just made of different material, according to Dake). This isn’t interpretation—it’s alteration.
Where Scripture Stops: Learning Biblical Boundaries
One of the most important lessons from examining Dake’s errors is learning to recognize where Scripture stops and speculation begins. God has revealed what we need to know, not everything we might be curious about. Wisdom means accepting these boundaries. Yet Dake pushes beyond these boundaries, claiming about Lucifer: “According to Col. 1:15-18, thrones, dominion, principalities, and powers, visible and invisible, were created in heaven and in earth, which shows the establishment of kingdoms in many places in the heavens, on other planets, besides the earth.”20
What God Has Revealed About Angels
The Bible tells us important truths about angels:
- They are created beings (Colossians 1:16)
- They are spirits (Hebrews 1:14)
- They serve God and help believers (Hebrews 1:14)
- They worship God (Revelation 5:11-12)
- They are powerful (2 Peter 2:11)
- They can appear in human form (Hebrews 13:2)
- They don’t marry (Matthew 22:30)
- Some rebelled and became demons (2 Peter 2:4)
- They are interested in salvation (1 Peter 1:12)
- They will accompany Christ’s return (Matthew 25:31)
This is substantial information! We know angels exist, serve God, help us, and worship with us. We know to test spirits (1 John 4:1) and not worship angels (Colossians 2:18). This is what we need for faith and practice.
What God Has Not Revealed
Notice what the Bible doesn’t tell us:
- Detailed organizational charts of heaven
- Specific numbers of angelic ranks
- How angels communicate with each other
- What angels do when not on assignment
- The exact nature of spiritual substance
- Detailed maps of territorial assignments
- How spiritual beings move through dimensions
- The specific names of demons over regions
God could have revealed these things but chose not to. Why? Because we don’t need this information to love God, live holy lives, and serve His kingdom. Speculation about these unknowns might satisfy curiosity, but it doesn’t build faith or promote godliness.
The Danger of Going Beyond Scripture
When teachers like Dake go beyond Scripture, several dangers emerge:
1. Human Ideas Get Divine Authority: When speculation is presented as biblical truth, human imagination receives the authority that belongs only to God’s Word.
2. Unity Breaks Down: Christians can unite around clear biblical teaching but will divide over speculation. Dake’s teachings have created division between those who accept them and those who recognize them as error.
3. Discernment Weakens: When people accept speculation as truth, they lose the ability to distinguish between God’s Word and human ideas. Everything becomes equally authoritative or equally questionable.
4. Focus Shifts from Christ: Time spent studying supposed angelic hierarchies or demon territories is time not spent knowing Christ and His Word better.
5. New Converts Get Confused: Imagine being a new Christian trying to learn biblical truth while being taught Dake’s elaborate speculations. How can you distinguish between essential doctrine and human imagination?
Healthy Boundaries in Studying the Supernatural
How then should Christians approach the supernatural realm? The Bible gives us clear principles for maintaining healthy boundaries while taking spiritual realities seriously.
Principle 1: Major on What’s Major
The Bible majors on Christ, salvation, holy living, and God’s kingdom. Our teaching should reflect these priorities. Yes, angels and demons are real, but they’re not the focus of Scripture. Count how many verses in the New Testament focus on Jesus versus how many detail demonic activity. The proportion should guide our emphasis.
Paul’s ministry demonstrates this balance. He cast out demons (Acts 16:18) but didn’t write detailed demonology manuals. He warned about spiritual warfare (Ephesians 6) but focused on knowing Christ (Philippians 3). He acknowledged the god of this world (2 Corinthians 4:4) but preached Christ crucified (1 Corinthians 2:2).
Principle 2: Stay Biblical, Not Sensational
It’s tempting to make the supernatural sensational. Stories about angel appearances or demon encounters attract attention. But the Bible’s approach is notably unsensational. Even when recording miraculous events, Scripture maintains a matter-of-fact tone that focuses on God’s purposes, not spectacular details.
Compare biblical accounts of angelic appearances with Dake’s elaborate descriptions. The Bible usually just says “an angel appeared” and focuses on the message. Dake wants to describe the angel’s “spirit body,” rank in heaven’s hierarchy, and territorial assignment. Which approach honors God more?
Principle 3: Test Everything Carefully
First John 4:1 commands: “Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God.” This principle applies not just to spiritual experiences but to teaching about spiritual things. How do we test? By comparing everything to Scripture.
When Dake says angels have bodies with sexual organs, test it: Does Scripture teach this? No.
When Dake says demons control specific territories with elaborate hierarchies, test it: Does Scripture provide these details? No.
When Dake claims angels mated with women producing giants, test it: Does this align with Jesus’ teaching about angels? No.
Principle 4: Maintain Mystery Where God Does
Some things in Scripture remain mysterious, and that’s okay. Paul spoke of “the mystery of godliness” (1 Timothy 3:16). Job learned that some things are too wonderful for human understanding (Job 42:3). The secret things belong to the Lord (Deuteronomy 29:29).
Dake’s error is trying to eliminate all mystery, to answer every question, to explain every detail. But mystery isn’t a weakness in Christianity—it’s a recognition that God is infinite and we are finite. A God we could fully understand wouldn’t be God at all.
Principle 5: Focus on Practical Obedience
The Bible’s teaching about spiritual warfare is remarkably practical. Put on the armor of God (Ephesians 6). Resist the devil (James 4:7). Stay alert (1 Peter 5:8). Overcome evil with good (Romans 12:21). These are things we can do today.
Contrast this with Dake’s approach. Even if we knew the exact organizational chart of demonic hierarchies, how would that help us live for Christ today? Even if angels could reproduce, how would that knowledge make us holier? The Bible focuses on what we need to know for godly living, not what we might be curious about.
Case Studies in Speculation: Specific Examples from Dake
Let’s examine some specific examples of how Dake’s speculation goes beyond Scripture, creating detailed teachings from thin air or misunderstood passages.
Case Study 1: The Two Classes of Fallen Angels
Dake teaches there are two distinct classes of fallen angels with different punishments:
“Two Classes of Fallen Angels: Those bound (Rev. 9:11, 14; 11:7; 17:8; 2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6-7). Those that are still loose with Satan and will be cast down to the earth in the middle of the future tribulation (Rev. 12:7-12)” (Heavenly Hosts). His Bible elaborates: “Their present confinement proves they committed a sin besides that of original rebellion with Satan. That it was sex sin is clear from 2 Pet. 2:4 and Jude 6-7, which fact identifies this class of fallen angels as the sons of God of Gen. 6:1-4.”21
What Scripture Actually Says: Yes, some passages mention bound evil spirits and others mention active demons. But creating rigid categories and explaining why some are bound (Dake says for sexual sin) while others are free goes beyond the text.
The Speculation: Dake states definitively that the bound angels are imprisoned specifically for fornication with humans, while the free ones only rebelled. The Bible never explicitly makes this distinction. This is Dake creating doctrine from inference.
Why It Matters: This speculation supports Dake’s entire Genesis 6 interpretation. If you remove the idea that some angels are bound for sexual sin, his whole angel-human hybrid teaching collapses.
Case Study 2: Demons and Disease
Dake creates elaborate connections between demons and illness:
“There are demonic spirits for every sickness, unholy trait, and doctrinal error found in the world today. Demons must be cast out in order to obtain relief from their influence. Disease germs, which are closely allied with unclean spirits, are really living forms of corruption… Germs are agents of Satan” (Bible Truths referenced in project). Expanding on this, Dake says: “All sicknesses and diseases are but progressive forms of death, and are the wages of sin—the results of the invisible sentence of the righteous judgment of God. They are called evil here because they come from evil, sin, and the fall of man, and are propagated by satanic powers (Lk. 13:16; Jn. 10:10; Acts 10:38).”22
What Scripture Actually Says: The Bible records some instances of demon-caused illness (like the boy with seizures in Matthew 17). But it also recognizes natural illness. Paul had a “thorn in the flesh” that God didn’t remove. Timothy had stomach problems requiring wine as medicine. Not all sickness is demonic.
The Speculation: Claiming “demonic spirits for every sickness” and that germs are “agents of Satan” goes far beyond Scripture. This medicalization of the demonic realm has no biblical basis.
Why It Matters: This teaching can prevent people from seeking medical help, create guilt when healing doesn’t come, and turn Christianity into superstitious folk religion rather than biblical faith.
Case Study 3: Lucifer’s Pre-Adamic Kingdom
Dake teaches extensively about a supposed pre-Adamic world ruled by Lucifer:
“The creation of the pre-Adamite world included the first inhabitants of the Earth, called ‘nations’ over whom Lucifer ruled (Isa. 14:12-14), ‘man’ who built cities (Jer. 4:23-26), and ‘the world (Greek, kosmos, social system) that then was’ (2 Pet. 3:5-8)” (God’s Plan for Man). He adds: “Lucifer was given dominion of the earth and worked deceitfully to get other angelic rulers to follow him in his war against God. Not only did Lucifer’s own earthly, mortal subjects rebel, but over 1/3 of God’s angels, for there are that many still with Satan to be finally cast down to earth in the future tribulation (Rev. 12:1-12).”23
What Scripture Actually Says: Isaiah 14 is about the king of Babylon, using poetic language that may secondarily reference Satan’s fall. Jeremiah 4 is prophecy about coming judgment on Judah. Second Peter 3 refers to Noah’s flood. None of these passages teach about a pre-Adamic civilization.
The Speculation: Dake takes poetic and prophetic passages, interprets them hyperliterally, combines them incorrectly, and creates an entire prehistoric narrative that exists nowhere in Scripture. He even claims: “I will exalt my throne above the stars of God (v 13). This statement not only proves that Lucifer’s plan was to invade heaven, dethrone God, and become the supreme ruler of all creations, but it shows that he already was a ruler. If he had a throne he had a kingdom and he himself was a king.”24
Why It Matters: This speculation undermines the biblical creation account, creates theological problems about sin and death before Adam, and has been used to support racist theories about different human origins.
The Pattern of Deception: How False Teaching Develops
Studying Dake’s errors helps us understand how false teaching develops and spreads. There’s a recognizable pattern that we can learn to identify and resist.
Step 1: Start with a Genuine Biblical Truth
Dake always starts with something true. Angels are real. Demons exist. Spiritual warfare happens. Genesis 6 mentions “sons of God.” These are biblical facts no Christian disputes.
Step 2: Add Speculation to the Truth
Next, Dake adds speculation. Angels are real… and have physical bodies. Demons exist… in elaborate hierarchies controlling nations. Genesis 6 mentions “sons of God”… who must be angels having sex with women.
Step 3: Present Speculation as Fact
Then Dake presents his speculation with the same authority as biblical fact. He doesn’t say “possibly” or “some believe” or “this could mean.” He states his interpretations as absolute truth, often claiming they’re the only possible understanding.
Step 4: Build Further Doctrine on the Speculation
Once the speculation is accepted as fact, Dake builds more teaching on it. If angels mated with women, then angels must have bodies. If angels have bodies, then all spirits have bodies. If all spirits have bodies, then God has a body. Each error supports and requires the others.
Step 5: Attack Those Who Question
Finally, those who question the speculation are portrayed as lacking faith, denying the supernatural, or being influenced by liberal theology. This protects the false teaching from biblical correction.
Recognizing the Pattern
Once you recognize this pattern, you can spot it in many false teachings:
- Prosperity teachers start with “God wants to bless you” (true) and end with “send money for your miracle” (false)
- Cultists start with “Jesus is important” (true) and end with “Jesus is not fully God” (false)
- Legalists start with “God calls us to holiness” (true) and end with detailed rules nowhere in Scripture (false)
The key is catching the speculation at step 2, before it gets embedded in a complex system of teaching.
Pastoral Concerns: How These Teachings Hurt Real People
Dake’s speculation about angels and demons isn’t just theological error—it hurts real people in real churches. Pastors dealing with Dake’s influence see the damage firsthand.
Creating Unnecessary Fear
When believers think demons are behind every problem, constantly attacking with elaborate strategies, fear replaces faith. I’ve counseled Christians who were afraid to sleep because they thought demons would attack them. They spent hours “binding” supposed territorial spirits instead of simply trusting Christ’s protection. This isn’t the abundant life Jesus promised.
One woman influenced by such teaching told me she spent three hours every morning doing “spiritual warfare” before she could face the day. She was exhausted, fearful, and saw demons everywhere. When I showed her the simplicity of biblical spiritual warfare—submit to God, resist the devil, he flees—she wept with relief.
Producing Spiritual Pride
Those who believe they have special knowledge about angel hierarchies and demon territories often become proud. They look down on “simple” Christians who just trust Jesus without knowing all the supposed details of the spirit realm. This creates division in churches and hinders genuine spiritual growth.
I’ve watched Bible study groups split because some members insisted on teaching Dake’s elaborate demonology while others wanted to focus on basic biblical truth. The “enlightened” members couldn’t understand why others weren’t interested in their special knowledge about the spirit world.
Hindering Genuine Deliverance
Ironically, Dake’s elaborate demonology can actually hinder genuine deliverance ministry. When every problem is blamed on specific demons with territorial assignments and reproductive capabilities, the simple biblical approach to spiritual freedom gets lost. Jesus cast out demons with a word. The apostles did the same. They didn’t need organizational charts of hell.
A young man came to me convinced he was oppressed by a specific territorial demon Dake’s followers had identified. He’d been through multiple “deliverance sessions” with increasingly elaborate rituals. When we simply prayed together, confessed sin, and claimed Christ’s victory, he found the freedom that complicated methodology had failed to provide.
Distracting from the Gospel
Perhaps the greatest damage is distraction from the gospel. Churches studying Dake’s angelology and demonology spend precious time on speculation instead of Christ. New believers get confused about what’s essential. Unbelievers hear bizarre teachings about angel sex instead of the simple message of salvation.
One church I know spent an entire year studying angels and demons using Dake’s materials. By the end, they knew supposed details about heavenly hierarchies but had neglected evangelism, discipleship, and basic Christian growth. They could chart demon territories but couldn’t share the gospel clearly.
Correcting the Errors: A Constructive Approach
How do we help those influenced by Dake’s speculation about angels and demons? Harsh condemnation rarely works. Instead, we need patient, biblical correction that replaces error with truth.
Start with Common Ground
Begin where you agree: Angels and demons are real. Spiritual warfare exists. The supernatural realm affects our world. This establishes that you’re not a liberal skeptic denying spiritual realities. You take the Bible seriously, just as they do.
Return to Scripture
Always go back to what the Bible actually says versus what Dake claims it says. Read passages in context. Look at multiple translations. Ask: “Where does the Bible explicitly teach this?” Many times, people have never actually examined whether Dake’s teachings are biblical—they’ve just assumed they must be.
Highlight Jesus’ Teaching
Jesus’ own words carry special authority. When He says angels don’t marry (Matthew 22:30), that should settle the question for any Christian. When He focuses on simple faith rather than elaborate demonology, we should follow His example.
Emphasize the Sufficiency of Scripture
Second Timothy 3:16-17 says Scripture equips us for every good work. If knowing detailed angel hierarchies or demon territories were necessary for Christian living, God would have revealed them. The fact that He didn’t tells us we don’t need this information.
Demonstrate Better Interpretation
Show how proper interpretation—considering context, genre, and the whole counsel of Scripture—leads to different conclusions than Dake’s hyperliteralism. Teach basic hermeneutics so people can evaluate teaching for themselves.
Provide Sound Resources
Recommend solid books on angels and spiritual warfare that maintain biblical balance. Authors like Clinton Arnold on spiritual warfare or Michael Heiser on the divine council provide scholarly, biblical treatment without wild speculation.
Model Healthy Balance
Show what healthy acknowledgment of the supernatural looks like. Take angels and demons seriously without obsessing over them. Practice spiritual warfare without superstition. Recognize mystery without inventing answers.
The Broader Impact: How Speculation Undermines Faith
Dake’s speculation about angels and demons doesn’t exist in isolation. It’s part of a broader pattern that undermines biblical faith in multiple ways.
It Weakens Biblical Authority
When human speculation is presented as biblical truth, and that speculation is later exposed as error, people lose confidence in the Bible itself. They can’t distinguish between what God actually said and what Dake added. This confusion weakens the authority of Scripture in their lives.
Young people especially struggle with this. When they discover that things they were taught as “biblical” are actually speculation, they wonder what else might be false. Some abandon faith entirely, unable to separate Dake’s errors from genuine Christianity.
It Creates Theological Instability
Building theology on speculation is like building on sand. When one error is exposed, the whole system threatens to collapse. People influenced by Dake often experience theological crisis when they realize his teachings are problematic. Everything they believed becomes questionable.
I’ve counseled believers who felt their entire faith collapsing when they learned Dake’s teachings were wrong. They had built so much on his speculation that removing it left them feeling spiritually homeless. Rebuilding on solid biblical foundation takes time and patience.
It Produces Interpretive Chaos
If Dake can make the Bible say angels have sex and demons control territories, what can’t the Bible be made to say? His method of interpretation—taking any passage hyperliterally and adding speculation—can make Scripture support almost anything. This creates interpretive chaos where any meaning becomes possible.
Churches influenced by such teaching often split over increasingly bizarre interpretations. If the pastor can speculate about angel reproduction, why can’t members speculate about other things? The result is theological anarchy.
It Shifts Focus from Christ
Most seriously, elaborate speculation about angels and demons shifts focus from Christ to created beings. The Bible always points us to Jesus. Angels worship Him. Demons flee from Him. He is the center of spiritual reality. But Dake’s system makes angels and demons so fascinating that Christ becomes secondary.
Paul warned the Colossians: “Do not let anyone who delights in false humility and the worship of angels disqualify you. Such a person also goes into great detail about what they have seen; they are puffed up with idle notions” (Colossians 2:18). This perfectly describes the danger of Dake’s speculation.
A Biblical View of Angels
What should Christians actually believe about angels? Let’s establish a biblical, balanced understanding that avoids both skeptical denial and speculative excess.
Angels Are Real Created Beings
The Bible clearly teaches angels exist. They were created by God (Colossians 1:16), probably before the physical universe (Job 38:7). They are numerous (Hebrews 12:22) and powerful (2 Peter 2:11). Denying their existence contradicts Scripture.
Angels Are Spirits, Not Physical Beings
Hebrews 1:14 explicitly calls angels “ministering spirits.” They don’t have permanent physical bodies, though they can appear in physical form when God permits. This spiritual nature is what distinguishes them from humans, who are embodied souls.
Angels Serve God’s Purposes
Angels exist to serve God and His people. They worship God (Isaiah 6:3), deliver messages (Luke 1:26-38), protect believers (Psalm 91:11), and execute judgment (2 Kings 19:35). Their focus is always on God’s will, not their own agenda.
Angels Have Limitations
Despite their power, angels are limited. They don’t know everything (Matthew 24:36). They can’t be everywhere at once. They depend entirely on God for their existence and power. They are fellow servants, not objects of worship (Revelation 22:8-9).
Some Angels Rebelled
Satan led a rebellion of angels against God (Revelation 12:7-9). These fallen angels, or demons, now oppose God and His people. They are already defeated through Christ’s work and await final judgment (Matthew 25:41).
Angels Interest in Salvation
First Peter 1:12 says angels long to look into the gospel. They rejoice when sinners repent (Luke 15:10). They learn about God’s wisdom through the church (Ephesians 3:10). The story of redemption amazes them.
Angels and the Future
Angels will play significant roles in end-time events. They’ll gather the elect (Matthew 24:31), execute judgment (Revelation 16), and accompany Christ’s return (Matthew 25:31). But even then, the focus remains on Christ, not angels.
This biblical view is sufficient for faith and practice. We don’t need Dake’s elaborate speculation to appreciate angels or engage in spiritual warfare. What God has revealed is enough.
A Biblical View of Demons
Similarly, what should Christians actually believe about demons based on Scripture alone?
Demons Are Real but Defeated
Demons are fallen angels who rebelled with Satan. They’re real spiritual beings who oppose God and attack people. But—and this is crucial—they’re already defeated through Christ’s death and resurrection (Colossians 2:15). We fight from Christ’s victory, not for victory. Dake acknowledges: “He spoiled principalities and powers, he made a shew of them openly, triumphing over them in it.”25
Demonic Activity Is Limited
While demons can influence, tempt, and in rare cases possess people, their power is limited. They cannot separate believers from God (Romans 8:38-39). They must flee when resisted in faith (James 4:7). They cannot override human will completely.
Not Everything Bad Is Demonic
The Bible recognizes multiple causes of problems: our fallen nature (James 1:14), the world system (1 John 2:16), natural consequences (Galatians 6:7), and sometimes demonic activity. Wisdom discerns the difference rather than blaming everything on demons.
Simple Resistance Is Effective
The Bible’s prescription for dealing with demons is remarkably simple: Submit to God, resist the devil, and he flees (James 4:7). Put on spiritual armor (Ephesians 6). Stay alert (1 Peter 5:8). No elaborate rituals or special knowledge required.
Christ Is Our Protection
The strongest protection against demonic activity is simply belonging to Christ. “Greater is he who is in you than he who is in the world” (1 John 4:4). We don’t need to fear demons when we’re hidden in Christ.
Focus Remains on Christ
Even when discussing demons, the Bible keeps focus on Christ. He has authority over all evil spirits. He gives believers authority in His name. He will ultimately confine Satan and demons to eternal punishment. The story isn’t about demons—it’s about Christ’s victory over them.
This biblical balance takes demons seriously without becoming obsessed with them. It recognizes spiritual warfare without descending into superstition. It maintains confidence in Christ while staying alert to spiritual danger.
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Chapter 13: Angels, Demons, and Dangerous Speculation
When you open Finis Dake’s Bible or read his book Heavenly Hosts, you enter a world that seems like something from a fantasy novel. Angels have physical bodies and can have babies. Demons control entire nations like puppet masters. Evil spirits reproduce sexually with human women. Satan rules from actual thrones on earth. This isn’t the sober, careful teaching of Scripture—it’s wild speculation dressed up as biblical truth. Dake takes the mysterious spiritual realm that the Bible describes with restraint and transforms it into an elaborate mythology that would make comic book writers jealous.
Dake, Finis Jennings. Heavenly Hosts. Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Publishing, 1995. [All subsequent citations to this work will be abbreviated as HH with page references where available.]
The danger of Dake’s speculation about angels and demons goes beyond just getting facts wrong. When we make up details about the spiritual world that God hasn’t revealed, we open doors to deception, fear, and false teaching. Dake’s elaborate system of demonic hierarchies and angelic reproduction doesn’t just add to Scripture—it contradicts it, creating a different religion altogether. What makes this especially dangerous for younger Christians is that Dake presents his wild ideas with such confidence that readers assume he must have special knowledge or deeper insight than other teachers.
What Dake Really Teaches: “Angels were created male, as their kind is maintained without the reproductive process… That angels have tangible spirit bodies with bodily parts, appear as men, and have performed acts equal to and surpassing those of the human male is clear from many passages” (Heavenly Hosts, Chapter 10). “A spirit being can and does have real, material, and tangible spirit form, shape, and size, with bodily parts, soul passions, and spirit faculties. Their material bodies are of a spiritual substance and are just as real as human bodies.”1 Dake further insists: “If it can be conceived that all these spirit beings are real and have personal bodies, souls, and spirits, then it certainly is conceivable that God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, as three spirit beings also have spirit bodies, souls, and spirits.”26
Let’s be clear from the start: Christians absolutely believe in angels and demons. The Bible teaches they are real spiritual beings created by God. Good angels serve God and help believers. Fallen angels (demons) rebelled with Satan and oppose God’s purposes. This is basic Christian teaching that all orthodox believers accept. But Dake goes far beyond what Scripture actually says, creating detailed teachings about the spirit world based on his imagination rather than God’s Word.
The Fantasy of Angels with Physical Bodies
One of Dake’s most shocking teachings is that all spirit beings, including angels and demons, have actual physical bodies. Not temporary forms they can take when appearing to humans, but permanent physical bodies with all the parts and functions of human bodies. This isn’t a minor detail—it’s the foundation for many of his other errors about the supernatural realm.
What Dake Claims About Angel Bodies
In his book Heavenly Hosts, Dake makes incredibly specific claims about angelic bodies. He doesn’t just say angels can appear in physical form (which the Bible does teach). He insists they have permanent bodies exactly like humans, only made of “spirit” material:
“Angels are real beings with spirit bodies. In fact, the only real difference between angels and the human race is that angels have spiritual bodies and are greater in power and personal attributes… They have wills and spirit bodies with bodily parts like men” (Heavenly Hosts, discussing the reality of fallen angels). In his Bible notes, Dake elaborates: “Angels, cherubim, seraphim, and all other spirit beings have spirit bodies and personal souls and spirits. They have been seen with the natural eyes of men over 100 times in Scripture.”2 He goes so far as to claim that even God has physical body parts: “God is a person who is Spirit…He is described as being like any other person as to having a body, soul, and spirit…He has a heart…hands and fingers…nostrils…mouth…lips and tongue…feet…eyes, eyelids, sight.”27
Think about what Dake is really saying here. He claims angels have bodies with “bodily parts like men”—hands, feet, heads, and everything else. According to him, the only difference between us and angels is the type of material our bodies are made from. This completely misunderstands what the Bible means by “spirit beings.” Dake argues: “God is not a universal nothingness floating around in nowhere. He is not impersonal, immaterial, intangible—an unreal person…He is not omni-body; that is, His body is not everywhere at all places at the same time. It is just as visible, tangible, and material as the bodies of all other spirit beings.”28
Dake goes even further in his Dake Bible notes. Commenting on passages about angels, he lists all the supposed body parts angels possess, treating every biblical metaphor as literal anatomy. When the Bible speaks symbolically of God’s “wings” providing shelter, Dake seems to think this means literal feathered appendages. When Scripture uses human language to describe angelic appearances, Dake assumes this reveals their permanent form.
Why This Contradicts Scripture
The Bible clearly distinguishes between spirits and physical beings. Jesus Himself made this distinction crystal clear after His resurrection. When the disciples thought they were seeing a ghost, Jesus said: “Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have” (Luke 24:39).
Notice what Jesus is teaching: spirits (ghosts) don’t have flesh and bones. That’s what makes them spirits! If angels had permanent physical bodies as Dake claims, they wouldn’t be spirit beings at all—they’d be physical beings like us, just made of different stuff.
The book of Hebrews makes this even clearer: “Are not all angels ministering spirits sent to serve those who will inherit salvation?” (Hebrews 1:14). The Bible explicitly calls angels “spirits,” not “beings with spirit bodies.” There’s a huge difference between these two ideas.
When angels appear in the Bible in physical form—like the three visitors to Abraham in Genesis 18—they are taking temporary physical form for a specific purpose. They can eat and drink and be touched during these appearances, but this doesn’t mean they always have bodies. It means God gives them the ability to manifest in physical form when needed for His purposes.
The Shocking Heresy of Sexual Angels
Building on his false teaching about angel bodies, Dake makes an even more disturbing claim: angels can and do engage in sexual activity. This isn’t just speculation about angelic nature—it’s a complete contradiction of Jesus’ own teaching and leads to horrifying conclusions about the spiritual realm.
Dake’s Teaching on Angel Sexuality
In Heavenly Hosts, Dake explicitly argues that angels are sexual beings capable of reproduction:
“Throughout Scripture angels are spoken of as men. No female angels are on record. It is logical to say then that the female was created specifically to keep the human race in existence. All angels were created male, as their kind is maintained without the reproductive process” (Heavenly Hosts, Chapter on “Angels Aren’t Sexless”). From his Bible notes: “That angels have tangible spirit bodies with bodily parts, appear as men, and have performed acts equal to and surpassing those of the human male is clear from many passages.”3 In God’s Plan for Man, Dake explicitly states: “Angels could not have committed fornication if they were sexless. Angels have bodily parts like man; so why should they not be able to commit fornication like man?”29
Wait, what? Dake says angels are all male and don’t reproduce, but then argues they can have sex with humans? This contradiction runs throughout his teaching. He wants angels to be sexual beings (to support his interpretation of Genesis 6) but also knows the Bible never mentions female angels or angel babies.
Dake directly addresses the main Bible verse that disproves his theory, but watch how he twists it:
“The one scripture used to teach that angels are sexless does not say they are. It simply states, ‘in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven’ (Mt. 22:30). The purpose of this verse is to show that resurrected men and women do not need to marry in order to keep their kind in existence” (Heavenly Hosts). Further elaborating in his Bible notes: “There is nothing in the resurrection to uncreate men and women. Christ remained a man after His resurrection and so will all other males.”4 He claims: “Jesus did not say here that angels were sexless and could not come down on the human plane and marry. He merely taught that resurrected saints and angels in Heaven do not marry to keep their race going, as is necessary down here.”30
This is a perfect example of Dake forcing his ideas onto Scripture. Jesus was answering a question about marriage in the resurrection. He said people won’t marry because they’ll be “like the angels.” If angels were sexual beings who could marry (as Dake claims), Jesus’ comparison makes no sense. The whole point is that angels don’t marry because they’re not sexual beings!
The Dangerous Genesis 6 Interpretation
Why does Dake insist angels are sexual beings? It all comes back to his interpretation of Genesis 6:1-4, where the “sons of God” saw the “daughters of men” and took them as wives. This passage has been debated for centuries, with three main interpretations:
- The Sethite View: The “sons of God” were descendants of Seth (the godly line) who married “daughters of men” from Cain’s line (the ungodly line).
- The Royalty View: The “sons of God” were human rulers or nobles who took multiple wives.
- The Angel View: The “sons of God” were fallen angels who somehow mated with human women.
Dake dogmatically insists on the angel view and builds elaborate theology on it:
“Both testaments of the Bible teach that some angels committed sex sins and lived contrary to nature. Genesis 6:1-4 give the history of such sinning. In 2 Peter 2:4 we have the statement that angels did sin before the flood and for their sin were cast down to hell to be reserved until judgment… If Sodom and Gomorrah and other cities committed fornication ‘in like manner’ as the angels, then it is clear that the sin of angels was fornication” (Heavenly Hosts). From his Bible notes: “Both testaments of the Bible teach that some angels committed sex sins and lived contrary to nature. Gen. 6:1-4 gives the history of such sinning. In 2 Pet. 2:4-5 we have the statement that angels did sin before the flood and for their sin were cast down to hell to be reserved until judgment.”5 He further argues: “Jude plainly says that angels left their own habitation and lived like men. The Greek word for habitation is oiketerion and is used only in Jude 6 and 2 Cor. 5:2, where it is used of the new bodies from Heaven, or the spiritual and glorified bodies of saints in the next life.”31
Notice how Dake takes ambiguous passages and makes them absolute. He claims “both testaments teach” this when actually it’s his interpretation of unclear texts. The passage in Jude he references talks about angels leaving their “proper dwelling” or “first estate”—it doesn’t explicitly say they had sex with humans. Dake further claims: “The fact that some angels ‘kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation’ (Jude 6) to commit sin makes it understandable how a sex sin could be accomplished by them.”6 He insists: “We are obligated to believe plain Scriptures or make Jude, Peter, Moses, and others false teachers…If they were not a part of Adam’s creation, why were they not mentioned at least one time since all other creatures of less importance are mentioned that were a part of the work of the six days?”32
The Biblical Problems with Angel-Human Hybrids
Dake’s interpretation creates massive theological problems:
1. It Contradicts Jesus: As we’ve seen, Jesus clearly taught that angels don’t marry. Dake tries to get around this by saying they don’t marry “in heaven” but could on earth. This is scripture-twisting of the worst kind.
2. It Violates Creation Order: God created everything to reproduce “after its kind” (Genesis 1). Humans produce humans. Dogs produce dogs. Angels are a completely different order of being. The idea that angels and humans could produce offspring violates God’s creation boundaries.
3. It Creates Salvation Problems: If angel-human hybrids (called Nephilim) existed, what would be their spiritual status? Could they be saved? Did Jesus die for half-angel beings? The Bible never addresses these questions because such beings never existed. Yet Dake states: “It was the purpose of Satan and his fallen angels to corrupt the human race and thereby do away with pure Adamite stock through whom the seed of the woman should come.”7
4. It Misunderstands “Sons of God”: While the phrase “sons of God” does refer to angels in Job, it also refers to humans throughout Scripture. Luke 3:38 calls Adam “the son of God.” Believers are called “sons of God” in John 1:12. The context of Genesis 6, which emphasizes human wickedness, strongly suggests human “sons of God.”
The Myth of Territorial Demon Kingdoms
Another area where Dake’s speculation runs wild is his teaching about demonic organization and territorial control. While the Bible does mention evil spiritual forces and their influence, Dake constructs an elaborate system of demon kingdoms with specific rulers, boundaries, and hierarchies that goes far beyond Scripture.
What Dake Teaches About Demon Territories
In his various writings, Dake presents demons as organized into military-style kingdoms with clear command structures. He takes the few biblical references to spiritual warfare and builds them into a complex mythology:
From Dake’s notes: “They rule nations (Mt. 4:8-9; Dan. 10)… They are organized into principalities and powers to war on saints (Rom. 8:38; Eph. 6:10-18; 1 Pet. 3:22)… Organized into principalities (Eph. 1:21; 3:10; 6:12; Col. 1:16)” (Referenced in Heavenly Hosts and Bible notes). He elaborates: “Satan’s angels… are organized into principalities and powers (Eph. 1:21; 3:10; 6:10-17; Col. 2:10, 15; Rev. 12:7-12).”8 In God’s Plan for Man, he states: “Kingdoms of this world have always been controlled by godly or satanic angels and wars on earth are lost or won as a result of battles in the heavenlies between the good and bad angels.”33
Dake interprets Daniel 10, which mentions the “prince of Persia” and “prince of Greece,” as proof that specific demons rule over specific nations. He then expands this into a complete system where every nation, city, and region has assigned demons controlling it. According to Dake, these demons have actual thrones, hold court, and command lesser demons in military-style operations. He claims: “Satan has trusted angels over all the governments of this world. They are responsible to him for carrying out his will in those governments…All wars lost or won on earth are results of wars lost or won by these heavenly armies.”34
In his book Revelation Expounded, Dake goes even further, describing how demons will concentrate in rebuilt Babylon:
“She will ‘become the habitation of demons, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird.’ This pictures Babylon as the headquarters of the demon world and the concentration of all wickedness… Babylon will be the habitation of demons who will inspire men to live as stated in Rev. 9:20, 21” (Revelation Expounded, Chapter on Babylon). From his notes: “Kingdoms of this world have always been controlled by godly or satanic angels and wars on earth are lost or won as a result of battles in the heavenlies between the good and bad angels.”9 He further states: “All nations will be deceived by the sorceries and manifestations of demon powers concentrated in future literal Babylon.”35
Where Scripture Stops and Imagination Begins
Yes, the Bible mentions spiritual warfare. Yes, it speaks of principalities and powers. Yes, Daniel 10 mentions spiritual beings associated with nations. But notice how limited and careful the biblical information is. Scripture gives us glimpses of spiritual reality, not detailed organizational charts.
The Bible’s actual teaching about spiritual warfare is both simpler and more practical than Dake’s elaborate system:
- Satan is called “the prince of this world” (John 12:31)
- We wrestle against “principalities and powers” (Ephesians 6:12)
- Our weapons are spiritual, not physical (2 Corinthians 10:4)
- We overcome through faith, truth, and righteousness (Ephesians 6:13-17)
- Greater is He who is in us than he who is in the world (1 John 4:4)
The Bible focuses on what we need to know: spiritual evil is real, but Christ has overcome it. We don’t need detailed maps of demon territories or organizational charts of hell’s hierarchy. We need faith in Christ who has “disarmed principalities and powers” (Colossians 2:15).
The Danger of Demon Obsession
Dake’s detailed demonology creates several spiritual dangers:
1. It Breeds Fear: When believers think specific demons control their city or nation with detailed power structures, they can become fearful and superstitious rather than confident in Christ’s victory.
2. It Encourages Unhealthy Practices: Some followers of such teaching engage in “spiritual mapping” (trying to identify which demons control which areas) and “territorial warfare” (attempting to cast out geographical demons). These practices have no biblical basis.
3. It Shifts Focus from Christ: The more time we spend studying supposed demon hierarchies, the less time we spend focusing on Jesus and His Word. The Bible always points us to Christ, not to detailed knowledge of evil.
4. It Creates Pride: Those who think they have special knowledge about demon organization often become proud of their “deeper understanding,” looking down on other Christians as less informed.
The Dangerous Pattern of Adding to Scripture
Throughout his writings on angels and demons, Dake demonstrates a consistent pattern: he takes a biblical truth and adds layers of speculation until the original truth is buried under human imagination. Let’s look at more examples of this dangerous pattern.
Speculation About Angelic Hierarchies
The Bible mentions different types of angels: cherubim, seraphim, archangels, and angels. It also uses terms like thrones, dominions, principalities, and powers. From these limited references, Dake constructs elaborate hierarchical charts with specific ranks, responsibilities, and chains of command.
He writes as if he has access to heaven’s organizational manual:
“The fact that some angels ‘kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation’ (Jude 6) makes it understandable how a sex sin could be accomplished by them. The Greek word for ‘habitation’ is oiketerion. It is used only twice in Scripture. In 2 Corinthians 5:2 it is translated house and concerns the bodies of men being changed to spiritual bodies. In Jude 6 it refers to angels having a bodily change, or at least a lowering of themselves in some way” (Heavenly Hosts). He adds: “The Gr. for habitation is oiketerion. It is used only twice in Scripture: of the bodies of men being changed to spiritual bodies (2 Cor. 5:2); and the angels having a bodily change, or at least a lowering of themselves in some way (Jude 6-7).”10
Notice how Dake takes the word “habitation” and builds an entire theology of angels changing their bodies for sexual purposes. The text simply says they left their proper dwelling or position—it says nothing about bodily transformation for sex. This is imagination disguised as biblical interpretation.
Claims About Different Classes of Demons
Dake doesn’t just speculate about angels; he creates detailed classifications of demons:
“There are two classes of fallen angels—those loose with Satan who will be cast down to earth during the tribulation (Rev. 12:7-12), and those now bound in hell for committing fornication (2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6-7). Had the ones in hell not committed the additional sin of fornication, they would still be loose to help Satan in the future” (Heavenly Hosts). From his Bible: “There are two classes of fallen angels: those bound (2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6-7; Rev. 9:11, 14; 11:7; 17:8) and those who are still loose with Satan and who will be cast down to the earth in the middle of Daniel’s 70th Week in the future tribulation (Rev. 12:7-12; Eph. 6:10-17).”11 He claims: “Their present confinement proves they committed a sin besides that of original rebellion with Satan. That it was sex sin is clear from 2 Pet. 2:4 and Jude 6-7, which fact identifies this class of fallen angels as the sons of God of Gen. 6:1-4.”36
Dake creates categories of demons based on his interpretation of unclear passages. He states as fact that some demons are imprisoned for sexual sin while others roam free. The Bible doesn’t explicitly teach this division—it’s Dake’s speculation presented as biblical truth.
Detailed Descriptions of Spiritual Bodies
Perhaps nowhere is Dake’s speculation more obvious than when he describes the supposed nature of “spirit bodies”:
From God’s Plan for Man: “To be more specific, all angels have like spirit-bodies, souls, and spirits; all men have the same kind of bodies, souls, and spirits; all animals of the same species have the same likeness; and all demons are similar… All persons of like nature, powers, attributes, and works are naturally the same regardless of how many there are in existence” (page 448). He claims God also has physical body parts: “God is a person who is Spirit…He is described as being like any other person as to having a body, soul, and spirit (Job 13:8; Heb. 1:3; Dan. 7:9-14; 10:5-7)…He has a heart (Gen. 6:6; 8:21); hands and fingers (Exodus 31:18; Ps. 8:3-6; Rev. 5:1, 6-7); nostrils (Ps. 18:8, 15); mouth (Num. 12:8); lips and tongue (Isa. 30:27); feet (Ezek. 1:27; Exodus 24:10); eyes, eyelids, sight (Ps. 11:4; 18:24; 33:18)”12 He even states: “Spirit beings, including God, Himself, cannot be omnipresent in body, for their bodies are of ordinary size and must be at one place at a time, in the same way that bodies of men are always localized, being in one place at a time.”37
Where does the Bible teach that angels have three parts—body, soul, and spirit? Nowhere. This is pure speculation based on Dake’s assumption that all beings must be structured like humans. He takes the biblical teaching that humans have body, soul, and spirit (1 Thessalonians 5:23) and projects it onto all other beings, including God Himself!
The Genesis 6 Obsession: Building Doctrine on Unclear Texts
Dake’s interpretation of Genesis 6 deserves special attention because it forms the foundation for so many of his other errors. By insisting that “sons of God” must mean angels who had sex with women, he creates a domino effect of false teachings.
Dake’s “Proofs” Examined
Let’s look at each of Dake’s supposed proofs that angels mated with humans:
Dake’s Claim #1: “The expression ‘sons of God’ is found only five times in the Old Testament, twice in Genesis 6 and three times in the book of Job (1:6; 2:1; 38:7). The passages in Job clearly refer to angels.” From his Bible notes: “The expression sons of God is found only 5 times in the O.T. and every time it is used of angels (Gen. 6:1-4; Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7). It is indisputable that the passages in Job refer to angels.”13
The Problem: Just because a phrase means angels in one context doesn’t mean it always means angels. “Sons of God” is used for humans throughout Scripture. In Luke 3:38, Adam is called “son of God.” In Romans 8:14, believers are “sons of God.” Context determines meaning, and Genesis 6’s context is entirely about human wickedness.
Dake’s Claim #2: “Some translations (such as the Septuagint, the Moffatt and others) read ‘angels of God’ in Genesis 6:1-4.” His Bible adds: “Some translations (the Sept., Moffatt, and others) read, angels of God in Gen. 6:1-4, which is the only idea that will harmonize with the passage itself, as well as many other passages.”14
The Problem: Some translations interpret rather than translate. The Hebrew text says “sons of God,” not “angels of God.” We shouldn’t build doctrine on interpretive translations when the original text is clear.
Dake’s Claim #3: From comparing 2 Peter 2:4 and Jude 6-7: “If Sodom and Gomorrah and other cities committed fornication ‘in like manner’ as the angels, then it is clear that the sin of angels was fornication.” He elaborates: “Even as Sodom and Gomorrha, and the cities about them in like manner (as did the angels), giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire.”15
The Problem: Jude says Sodom and Gomorrah went after “strange flesh” or “different flesh.” This refers to homosexuality, not sex with angels. The comparison is that both groups abandoned God’s created order—angels by leaving their proper place, humans by perverting sexuality. Nothing in these texts explicitly says angels had sex with humans.
Why the Human Interpretation Makes More Sense
The traditional interpretation—that “sons of God” refers to the godly line of Seth marrying ungodly women from Cain’s line—fits the context perfectly:
- Genesis 4 describes two lines of humanity: Cain’s ungodly line and Seth’s line that “called on the name of the Lord.”
- Genesis 5 traces the godly line through Seth to Noah.
- Genesis 6 begins with these two lines intermarrying, leading to universal wickedness.
- The punishment fits the crime: Humans sinned, so humans were destroyed in the flood (except Noah’s family).
- The text emphasizes human wickedness: “The Lord saw that the wickedness of MAN was great” (Genesis 6:5).
This interpretation requires no speculation about angel sex, no contradiction of Jesus’ teaching, and no invention of hybrid beings. It simply recognizes that when God’s people compromise with the world, wickedness multiplies.
Satan’s War on Saints: When Truth Becomes Paranoia
Another area where Dake’s speculation runs wild is his teaching about Satan’s supposed detailed strategies against believers. While the Bible does teach that Satan opposes Christians, Dake creates an elaborate system of demonic attack that can lead believers into paranoia and fear.
Dake’s Exhaustive List of Demonic Activities
In his various works, Dake provides incredibly detailed lists of what demons supposedly do. Here’s just a sample from the materials in Heavenly Hosts and his other works:
“Cause delay and compromise (Acts 24:25; 26:28)… Cause divisions and strife (1 Pet. 5:8; 1 Cor. 3:1-3)… Cause sin and rebellion (Gen. 3; 2 Cor. 11:3)… Cause works of darkness, including sexual perversion (Eph. 5:11-12; 6:12; Acts 16:18; Rom. 1)… Kill and destroy (Jn. 10:10)… Cause storms (Job 1:18-19; Eph. 2:2)… Rule nations (Mt. 4:8-9; Dan. 10)… Cause infirmities (Mt. 8:17; Lk. 13:16)… Cause lunacy and mania (Mt. 4:23-24; 17:14-21)… Urge suicides (Mt. 17:15; Jn. 10:10)… Agitate lusts (Jn. 8:44; Eph. 2:1-3)…” His Bible notes add: “They possess people and cause: dumbness and deafness (Mt. 9:32-33; Mk. 9:25); blindness (Mt. 12:22); grievous vexation (Mt. 15:22); lunacy and mania (Mt. 4:23-24; 17:14-21; Mk. 5:1-18); uncleanness (called unclean spirits 20 times; Lk. 4:36); supernatural strength (Mk. 5:1-18); suicide (Mt. 17:16; Jn. 10:10); convulsions (Mk. 9:20); lusts (Jn. 8:44; Eph. 2:1-3; 1 Jn. 2:15-17)”16 He goes even further: “There are demon spirits for every sickness, unholy trait, and doctrinal error known among men. They must be cast out in order to get relief from them.”38
The list goes on and on. According to Dake, demons are behind virtually everything negative in life. While the Bible does attribute some things to demonic activity, Dake’s comprehensive lists go far beyond Scripture, creating a worldview where demons lurk behind every problem.
The Problem with Seeing Demons Everywhere
When Christians believe demons cause every problem, several dangerous things happen:
1. Personal Responsibility Disappears: If demons cause all sin and problems, people stop taking responsibility for their choices. “The devil made me do it” becomes an excuse for everything.
2. Medical Issues Get Spiritualized: Dake’s teaching that demons cause various illnesses can lead people to seek exorcism instead of medical help. While the Bible does record some cases of demon-caused illness, it also recognizes natural sickness (1 Timothy 5:23). Dake goes so far as to claim: “There are demon spirits for every sickness, unholy trait, and doctrinal error known among men. They must be cast out or resisted in order to experience relief from them. Disease germs, which are closely allied with unclean spirits, are really living forms of corruption…They are agents of Satan, corrupting the bodies of his victims.”17 He further states: “Just as refuse breeds maggots, so man in his fallen state of corruption breeds germs through unclean living and through contact with corruptions in the fallen world. They are agents of Satan, corrupting the bodies of his victims.”39
3. Fear Replaces Faith: Believers who see demons everywhere often live in constant fear rather than the confidence that comes from trusting Christ’s victory.
4. Weird Practices Develop: People start “binding” demons for everything, “pleading the blood” over their cereal, and engaging in superstitious behaviors that have no biblical basis.
What the Bible Actually Teaches About Spiritual Warfare
The Bible’s teaching on spiritual warfare is both more serious and more simple than Dake’s elaborate system:
We Have Real Enemies: Satan and demons are real and actively oppose God’s people (1 Peter 5:8).
But We Have Victory in Christ: Jesus has already defeated Satan (Colossians 2:15). We fight from victory, not for victory.
Our Weapons Are Spiritual: Truth, righteousness, faith, salvation, the Word of God, and prayer (Ephesians 6:13-18).
Resistance Is Simple: “Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you” (James 4:7). No elaborate rituals needed.
Focus Stays on Christ: The New Testament spends far more time talking about Jesus than about Satan. Our focus should match this proportion.
The Corruption of Biblical Texts
One of Dake’s most serious errors is how he handles biblical texts about the spiritual realm. He doesn’t just misinterpret—he actually changes the meaning of clear passages to fit his system. Let’s look at specific examples.
Twisting Jesus’ Words About Angels
Remember Jesus’ clear statement in Matthew 22:30: “At the resurrection people will neither marry nor be given in marriage; they will be like the angels in heaven.” This seems crystal clear—angels don’t marry. But watch how Dake twists it:
“Christ remained a man after His resurrection and so will all other males… There is nothing in the resurrection to uncreate men and women. Whether male or female, each will be resurrected as such, though their body will be changed from mortality to immortality” (Heavenly Hosts, defending angel sexuality). His Bible expands: “The Bible teaches that every person will continue bodily as he was born, in all eternity. Paul said that everyone will have his own body in the resurrection (1 Cor. 15:35-38). If one is a male he will continue as such with all his bodily parts.”18 He further argues: “It is a fact that resurrected men and women will still be male and female in the resurrection; so Jesus did not want to leave the impression that men will become sexless in the next life.”40
Dake completely misses Jesus’ point. Jesus isn’t discussing whether people remain male or female (they do). He’s explaining that marriage—and by extension, sexual relations—won’t exist in the resurrection because we’ll be “like the angels.” If angels were sexual beings, this comparison would teach the opposite of what Jesus intended.
Mishandling the “Spirits in Prison” Passage
First Peter 3:19-20 mentions Christ preaching to “spirits in prison” who disobeyed in Noah’s day. This is admittedly a difficult passage with various interpretations. But watch how Dake uses it:
“Who are these spirits in prison, if not the angels who once lived contrary to their nature—in sin with the daughters of men? We read in Psalm 104:4 that God is the one ‘Who maketh his angels spirits; his ministers a flaming fire'” (Heavenly Hosts). His Bible notes state: “In 1 Pet. 3:19-20 we see that Christ ‘went and preached unto the spirits in prison; which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing.’ Who are these spirits in prison, if not the confined angels who once lived contrary to their nature—in sin with the daughters of men (Gen. 6:1-4)?”19 He claims these are: “THE SPIRITS IN PRISON OF 1 PET. 3:19-20 ARE THE ANGELS THAT SINNED IN THE DAYS OF NOAH AND ARE THE SAME AS THE SONS OF GOD OF GEN. 6:1-4.”41
Dake assumes his conclusion (angels mated with women) and then uses that assumption to interpret this passage. Many scholars believe these “spirits” are human spirits, or that this refers to Christ’s proclamation of victory over evil spirits, not a proof of angel-human sex. But Dake presents his speculation as the only possible interpretation.
Redefining Biblical Terms
Throughout his works, Dake redefines biblical terms to fit his system. For example, when the Bible calls angels “spirits” (Hebrews 1:14), Dake adds the word “bodies” to make it “spirit bodies.” When the Bible says angels are “ministering spirits,” Dake interprets this as “spirits with bodies who minister.”
This might seem like a small thing, but it’s actually huge. By adding to biblical terminology, Dake changes the Bible’s teaching. A “spirit” and a “spirit body” are completely different concepts. One is immaterial; the other is physical (just made of different material, according to Dake). This isn’t interpretation—it’s alteration.
Where Scripture Stops: Learning Biblical Boundaries
One of the most important lessons from examining Dake’s errors is learning to recognize where Scripture stops and speculation begins. God has revealed what we need to know, not everything we might be curious about. Wisdom means accepting these boundaries. Yet Dake pushes beyond these boundaries, claiming about Lucifer: “According to Col. 1:15-18, thrones, dominion, principalities, and powers, visible and invisible, were created in heaven and in earth, which shows the establishment of kingdoms in many places in the heavens, on other planets, besides the earth.”20 He even speculates: “When did the demons come from if they are not the spirits of the pre-Adamite races? Did God create them as demons, or were they created holy as were all things that are recorded?”42
What God Has Revealed About Angels
The Bible tells us important truths about angels:
- They are created beings (Colossians 1:16)
- They are spirits (Hebrews 1:14)
- They serve God and help believers (Hebrews 1:14)
- They worship God (Revelation 5:11-12)
- They are powerful (2 Peter 2:11)
- They can appear in human form (Hebrews 13:2)
- They don’t marry (Matthew 22:30)
- Some rebelled and became demons (2 Peter 2:4)
- They are interested in salvation (1 Peter 1:12)
- They will accompany Christ’s return (Matthew 25:31)
This is substantial information! We know angels exist, serve God, help us, and worship with us. We know to test spirits (1 John 4:1) and not worship angels (Colossians 2:18). This is what we need for faith and practice.
What God Has Not Revealed
Notice what the Bible doesn’t tell us:
- Detailed organizational charts of heaven
- Specific numbers of angelic ranks
- How angels communicate with each other
- What angels do when not on assignment
- The exact nature of spiritual substance
- Detailed maps of territorial assignments
- How spiritual beings move through dimensions
- The specific names of demons over regions
God could have revealed these things but chose not to. Why? Because we don’t need this information to love God, live holy lives, and serve His kingdom. Speculation about these unknowns might satisfy curiosity, but it doesn’t build faith or promote godliness.
The Danger of Going Beyond Scripture
When teachers like Dake go beyond Scripture, several dangers emerge:
1. Human Ideas Get Divine Authority: When speculation is presented as biblical truth, human imagination receives the authority that belongs only to God’s Word.
2. Unity Breaks Down: Christians can unite around clear biblical teaching but will divide over speculation. Dake’s teachings have created division between those who accept them and those who recognize them as error.
3. Discernment Weakens: When people accept speculation as truth, they lose the ability to distinguish between God’s Word and human ideas. Everything becomes equally authoritative or equally questionable.
4. Focus Shifts from Christ: Time spent studying supposed angelic hierarchies or demon territories is time not spent knowing Christ and His Word better.
5. New Converts Get Confused: Imagine being a new Christian trying to learn biblical truth while being taught Dake’s elaborate speculations. How can you distinguish between essential doctrine and human imagination?
Healthy Boundaries in Studying the Supernatural
How then should Christians approach the supernatural realm? The Bible gives us clear principles for maintaining healthy boundaries while taking spiritual realities seriously.
Principle 1: Major on What’s Major
The Bible majors on Christ, salvation, holy living, and God’s kingdom. Our teaching should reflect these priorities. Yes, angels and demons are real, but they’re not the focus of Scripture. Count how many verses in the New Testament focus on Jesus versus how many detail demonic activity. The proportion should guide our emphasis.
Paul’s ministry demonstrates this balance. He cast out demons (Acts 16:18) but didn’t write detailed demonology manuals. He warned about spiritual warfare (Ephesians 6) but focused on knowing Christ (Philippians 3). He acknowledged the god of this world (2 Corinthians 4:4) but preached Christ crucified (1 Corinthians 2:2).
Principle 2: Stay Biblical, Not Sensational
It’s tempting to make the supernatural sensational. Stories about angel appearances or demon encounters attract attention. But the Bible’s approach is notably unsensational. Even when recording miraculous events, Scripture maintains a matter-of-fact tone that focuses on God’s purposes, not spectacular details.
Compare biblical accounts of angelic appearances with Dake’s elaborate descriptions. The Bible usually just says “an angel appeared” and focuses on the message. Dake wants to describe the angel’s “spirit body,” rank in heaven’s hierarchy, and territorial assignment. Which approach honors God more?
Principle 3: Test Everything Carefully
First John 4:1 commands: “Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God.” This principle applies not just to spiritual experiences but to teaching about spiritual things. How do we test? By comparing everything to Scripture.
When Dake says angels have bodies with sexual organs, test it: Does Scripture teach this? No.
When Dake says demons control specific territories with elaborate hierarchies, test it: Does Scripture provide these details? No.
When Dake claims angels mated with women producing giants, test it: Does this align with Jesus’ teaching about angels? No.
Principle 4: Maintain Mystery Where God Does
Some things in Scripture remain mysterious, and that’s okay. Paul spoke of “the mystery of godliness” (1 Timothy 3:16). Job learned that some things are too wonderful for human understanding (Job 42:3). The secret things belong to the Lord (Deuteronomy 29:29).
Dake’s error is trying to eliminate all mystery, to answer every question, to explain every detail. But mystery isn’t a weakness in Christianity—it’s a recognition that God is infinite and we are finite. A God we could fully understand wouldn’t be God at all.
Principle 5: Focus on Practical Obedience
The Bible’s teaching about spiritual warfare is remarkably practical. Put on the armor of God (Ephesians 6). Resist the devil (James 4:7). Stay alert (1 Peter 5:8). Overcome evil with good (Romans 12:21). These are things we can do today.
Contrast this with Dake’s approach. Even if we knew the exact organizational chart of demonic hierarchies, how would that help us live for Christ today? Even if angels could reproduce, how would that knowledge make us holier? The Bible focuses on what we need to know for godly living, not what we might be curious about.
Case Studies in Speculation: Specific Examples from Dake
Let’s examine some specific examples of how Dake’s speculation goes beyond Scripture, creating detailed teachings from thin air or misunderstood passages.
Case Study 1: The Two Classes of Fallen Angels
Dake teaches there are two distinct classes of fallen angels with different punishments:
“Two Classes of Fallen Angels: Those bound (Rev. 9:11, 14; 11:7; 17:8; 2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6-7). Those that are still loose with Satan and will be cast down to the earth in the middle of the future tribulation (Rev. 12:7-12)” (Heavenly Hosts). His Bible elaborates: “Their present confinement proves they committed a sin besides that of original rebellion with Satan. That it was sex sin is clear from 2 Pet. 2:4 and Jude 6-7, which fact identifies this class of fallen angels as the sons of God of Gen. 6:1-4.”21 He states: “If the ones now in Hell did not commit a special sin, then they would still be loosed with those who are not bound.”43
What Scripture Actually Says: Yes, some passages mention bound evil spirits and others mention active demons. But creating rigid categories and explaining why some are bound (Dake says for sexual sin) while others are free goes beyond the text.
The Speculation: Dake states definitively that the bound angels are imprisoned specifically for fornication with humans, while the free ones only rebelled. The Bible never explicitly makes this distinction. This is Dake creating doctrine from inference.
Why It Matters: This speculation supports Dake’s entire Genesis 6 interpretation. If you remove the idea that some angels are bound for sexual sin, his whole angel-human hybrid teaching collapses.
Case Study 2: Demons and Disease
Dake creates elaborate connections between demons and illness:
“There are demonic spirits for every sickness, unholy trait, and doctrinal error found in the world today. Demons must be cast out in order to obtain relief from their influence. Disease germs, which are closely allied with unclean spirits, are really living forms of corruption… Germs are agents of Satan” (Bible Truths referenced in project). Expanding on this, Dake says: “All sicknesses and diseases are but progressive forms of death, and are the wages of sin—the results of the invisible sentence of the righteous judgment of God. They are called evil here because they come from evil, sin, and the fall of man, and are propagated by satanic powers (Lk. 13:16; Jn. 10:10; Acts 10:38).”22 He further claims: “Disease germs, which are so closely allied to the work of demons, are living forms of corruption which have come into the bodies of men bringing them to death.”44
What Scripture Actually Says: The Bible records some instances of demon-caused illness (like the boy with seizures in Matthew 17). But it also recognizes natural illness. Paul had a “thorn in the flesh” that God didn’t remove. Timothy had stomach problems requiring wine as medicine. Not all sickness is demonic.
The Speculation: Claiming “demonic spirits for every sickness” and that germs are “agents of Satan” goes far beyond Scripture. This medicalization of the demonic realm has no biblical basis.
Why It Matters: This teaching can prevent people from seeking medical help, create guilt when healing doesn’t come, and turn Christianity into superstitious folk religion rather than biblical faith.
Case Study 3: Lucifer’s Pre-Adamic Kingdom
Dake teaches extensively about a supposed pre-Adamic world ruled by Lucifer:
“The creation of the pre-Adamite world included the first inhabitants of the Earth, called ‘nations’ over whom Lucifer ruled (Isa. 14:12-14), ‘man’ who built cities (Jer. 4:23-26), and ‘the world (Greek, kosmos, social system) that then was’ (2 Pet. 3:5-8)” (God’s Plan for Man). He adds: “Lucifer was given dominion of the earth and worked deceitfully to get other angelic rulers to follow him in his war against God. Not only did Lucifer’s own earthly, mortal subjects rebel, but over 1/3 of God’s angels, for there are that many still with Satan to be finally cast down to earth in the future tribulation (Rev. 12:1-12).”23 He claims: “Before his rebellious invasion of heaven Lucifer had weakened the earthly nations over which he had ruled since the first creation of the earth and its inhabitants. This was before Adam’s time.”45
What Scripture Actually Says: Isaiah 14 is about the king of Babylon, using poetic language that may secondarily reference Satan’s fall. Jeremiah 4 is prophecy about coming judgment on Judah. Second Peter 3 refers to Noah’s flood. None of these passages teach about a pre-Adamic civilization.
The Speculation: Dake takes poetic and prophetic passages, interprets them hyperliterally, combines them incorrectly, and creates an entire prehistoric narrative that exists nowhere in Scripture. He even claims: “I will exalt my throne above the stars of God (v 13). This statement not only proves that Lucifer’s plan was to invade heaven, dethrone God, and become the supreme ruler of all creations, but it shows that he already was a ruler. If he had a throne he had a kingdom and he himself was a king.”24 He states: “They are called nations in the above passage. The demons who are now Satan’s emissaries could be the spirits of the pre-Adamites.”46
Why It Matters: This speculation undermines the biblical creation account, creates theological problems about sin and death before Adam, and has been used to support racist theories about different human origins.
The Pattern of Deception: How False Teaching Develops
Studying Dake’s errors helps us understand how false teaching develops and spreads. There’s a recognizable pattern that we can learn to identify and resist.
Step 1: Start with a Genuine Biblical Truth
Dake always starts with something true. Angels are real. Demons exist. Spiritual warfare happens. Genesis 6 mentions “sons of God.” These are biblical facts no Christian disputes.
Step 2: Add Speculation to the Truth
Next, Dake adds speculation. Angels are real… and have physical bodies. Demons exist… in elaborate hierarchies controlling nations. Genesis 6 mentions “sons of God”… who must be angels having sex with women.
Step 3: Present Speculation as Fact
Then Dake presents his speculation with the same authority as biblical fact. He doesn’t say “possibly” or “some believe” or “this could mean.” He states his interpretations as absolute truth, often claiming they’re the only possible understanding.
Step 4: Build Further Doctrine on the Speculation
Once the speculation is accepted as fact, Dake builds more teaching on it. If angels mated with women, then angels must have bodies. If angels have bodies, then all spirits have bodies. If all spirits have bodies, then God has a body. Each error supports and requires the others.
Step 5: Attack Those Who Question
Finally, those who question the speculation are portrayed as lacking faith, denying the supernatural, or being influenced by liberal theology. This protects the false teaching from biblical correction.
Recognizing the Pattern
Once you recognize this pattern, you can spot it in many false teachings:
- Prosperity teachers start with “God wants to bless you” (true) and end with “send money for your miracle” (false)
- Cultists start with “Jesus is important” (true) and end with “Jesus is not fully God” (false)
- Legalists start with “God calls us to holiness” (true) and end with detailed rules nowhere in Scripture (false)
The key is catching the speculation at step 2, before it gets embedded in a complex system of teaching.
Pastoral Concerns: How These Teachings Hurt Real People
Dake’s speculation about angels and demons isn’t just theological error—it hurts real people in real churches. Pastors dealing with Dake’s influence see the damage firsthand.
Creating Unnecessary Fear
When believers think demons are behind every problem, constantly attacking with elaborate strategies, fear replaces faith. I’ve counseled Christians who were afraid to sleep because they thought demons would attack them. They spent hours “binding” supposed territorial spirits instead of simply trusting Christ’s protection. This isn’t the abundant life Jesus promised.
One woman influenced by such teaching told me she spent three hours every morning doing “spiritual warfare” before she could face the day. She was exhausted, fearful, and saw demons everywhere. When I showed her the simplicity of biblical spiritual warfare—submit to God, resist the devil, he flees—she wept with relief.
Producing Spiritual Pride
Those who believe they have special knowledge about angel hierarchies and demon territories often become proud. They look down on “simple” Christians who just trust Jesus without knowing all the supposed details of the spirit realm. This creates division in churches and hinders genuine spiritual growth.
I’ve watched Bible study groups split because some members insisted on teaching Dake’s elaborate demonology while others wanted to focus on basic biblical truth. The “enlightened” members couldn’t understand why others weren’t interested in their special knowledge about the spirit world.
Hindering Genuine Deliverance
Ironically, Dake’s elaborate demonology can actually hinder genuine deliverance ministry. When every problem is blamed on specific demons with territorial assignments and reproductive capabilities, the simple biblical approach to spiritual freedom gets lost. Jesus cast out demons with a word. The apostles did the same. They didn’t need organizational charts of hell.
A young man came to me convinced he was oppressed by a specific territorial demon Dake’s followers had identified. He’d been through multiple “deliverance sessions” with increasingly elaborate rituals. When we simply prayed together, confessed sin, and claimed Christ’s victory, he found the freedom that complicated methodology had failed to provide.
Distracting from the Gospel
Perhaps the greatest damage is distraction from the gospel. Churches studying Dake’s angelology and demonology spend precious time on speculation instead of Christ. New believers get confused about what’s essential. Unbelievers hear bizarre teachings about angel sex instead of the simple message of salvation.
One church I know spent an entire year studying angels and demons using Dake’s materials. By the end, they knew supposed details about heavenly hierarchies but had neglected evangelism, discipleship, and basic Christian growth. They could chart demon territories but couldn’t share the gospel clearly.
Correcting the Errors: A Constructive Approach
How do we help those influenced by Dake’s speculation about angels and demons? Harsh condemnation rarely works. Instead, we need patient, biblical correction that replaces error with truth.
Start with Common Ground
Begin where you agree: Angels and demons are real. Spiritual warfare exists. The supernatural realm affects our world. This establishes that you’re not a liberal skeptic denying spiritual realities. You take the Bible seriously, just as they do.
Return to Scripture
Always go back to what the Bible actually says versus what Dake claims it says. Read passages in context. Look at multiple translations. Ask: “Where does the Bible explicitly teach this?” Many times, people have never actually examined whether Dake’s teachings are biblical—they’ve just assumed they must be.
Highlight Jesus’ Teaching
Jesus’ own words carry special authority. When He says angels don’t marry (Matthew 22:30), that should settle the question for any Christian. When He focuses on simple faith rather than elaborate demonology, we should follow His example.
Emphasize the Sufficiency of Scripture
Second Timothy 3:16-17 says Scripture equips us for every good work. If knowing detailed angel hierarchies or demon territories were necessary for Christian living, God would have revealed them. The fact that He didn’t tells us we don’t need this information.
Demonstrate Better Interpretation
Show how proper interpretation—considering context, genre, and the whole counsel of Scripture—leads to different conclusions than Dake’s hyperliteralism. Teach basic hermeneutics so people can evaluate teaching for themselves.
Provide Sound Resources
Recommend solid books on angels and spiritual warfare that maintain biblical balance. Authors like Clinton Arnold on spiritual warfare or Michael Heiser on the divine council provide scholarly, biblical treatment without wild speculation.
Model Healthy Balance
Show what healthy acknowledgment of the supernatural looks like. Take angels and demons seriously without obsessing over them. Practice spiritual warfare without superstition. Recognize mystery without inventing answers.
The Broader Impact: How Speculation Undermines Faith
Dake’s speculation about angels and demons doesn’t exist in isolation. It’s part of a broader pattern that undermines biblical faith in multiple ways.
It Weakens Biblical Authority
When human speculation is presented as biblical truth, and that speculation is later exposed as error, people lose confidence in the Bible itself. They can’t distinguish between what God actually said and what Dake added. This confusion weakens the authority of Scripture in their lives.
Young people especially struggle with this. When they discover that things they were taught as “biblical” are actually speculation, they wonder what else might be false. Some abandon faith entirely, unable to separate Dake’s errors from genuine Christianity.
It Creates Theological Instability
Building theology on speculation is like building on sand. When one error is exposed, the whole system threatens to collapse. People influenced by Dake often experience theological crisis when they realize his teachings are problematic. Everything they believed becomes questionable.
I’ve counseled believers who felt their entire faith collapsing when they learned Dake’s teachings were wrong. They had built so much on his speculation that removing it left them feeling spiritually homeless. Rebuilding on solid biblical foundation takes time and patience.
It Produces Interpretive Chaos
If Dake can make the Bible say angels have sex and demons control territories, what can’t the Bible be made to say? His method of interpretation—taking any passage hyperliterally and adding speculation—can make Scripture support almost anything. This creates interpretive chaos where any meaning becomes possible.
Churches influenced by such teaching often split over increasingly bizarre interpretations. If the pastor can speculate about angel reproduction, why can’t members speculate about other things? The result is theological anarchy.
It Shifts Focus from Christ
Most seriously, elaborate speculation about angels and demons shifts focus from Christ to created beings. The Bible always points us to Jesus. Angels worship Him. Demons flee from Him. He is the center of spiritual reality. But Dake’s system makes angels and demons so fascinating that Christ becomes secondary.
Paul warned the Colossians: “Do not let anyone who delights in false humility and the worship of angels disqualify you. Such a person also goes into great detail about what they have seen; they are puffed up with idle notions” (Colossians 2:18). This perfectly describes the danger of Dake’s speculation.
A Biblical View of Angels
What should Christians actually believe about angels? Let’s establish a biblical, balanced understanding that avoids both skeptical denial and speculative excess.
Angels Are Real Created Beings
The Bible clearly teaches angels exist. They were created by God (Colossians 1:16), probably before the physical universe (Job 38:7). They are numerous (Hebrews 12:22) and powerful (2 Peter 2:11). Denying their existence contradicts Scripture.
Angels Are Spirits, Not Physical Beings
Hebrews 1:14 explicitly calls angels “ministering spirits.” They don’t have permanent physical bodies, though they can appear in physical form when God permits. This spiritual nature is what distinguishes them from humans, who are embodied souls.
Angels Serve God’s Purposes
Angels exist to serve God and His people. They worship God (Isaiah 6:3), deliver messages (Luke 1:26-38), protect believers (Psalm 91:11), and execute judgment (2 Kings 19:35). Their focus is always on God’s will, not their own agenda.
Angels Have Limitations
Despite their power, angels are limited. They don’t know everything (Matthew 24:36). They can’t be everywhere at once. They depend entirely on God for their existence and power. They are fellow servants, not objects of worship (Revelation 22:8-9).
Some Angels Rebelled
Satan led a rebellion of angels against God (Revelation 12:7-9). These fallen angels, or demons, now oppose God and His people. They are already defeated through Christ’s work and await final judgment (Matthew 25:41).
Angels Interest in Salvation
First Peter 1:12 says angels long to look into the gospel. They rejoice when sinners repent (Luke 15:10). They learn about God’s wisdom through the church (Ephesians 3:10). The story of redemption amazes them.
Angels and the Future
Angels will play significant roles in end-time events. They’ll gather the elect (Matthew 24:31), execute judgment (Revelation 16), and accompany Christ’s return (Matthew 25:31). But even then, the focus remains on Christ, not angels.
This biblical view is sufficient for faith and practice. We don’t need Dake’s elaborate speculation to appreciate angels or engage in spiritual warfare. What God has revealed is enough.
A Biblical View of Demons
Similarly, what should Christians actually believe about demons based on Scripture alone?
Demons Are Real but Defeated
Demons are fallen angels who rebelled with Satan. They’re real spiritual beings who oppose God and attack people. But—and this is crucial—they’re already defeated through Christ’s death and resurrection (Colossians 2:15). We fight from Christ’s victory, not for victory. Dake acknowledges: “He spoiled principalities and powers, he made a shew of them openly, triumphing over them in it.”25
Demonic Activity Is Limited
While demons can influence, tempt, and in rare cases possess people, their power is limited. They cannot separate believers from God (Romans 8:38-39). They must flee when resisted in faith (James 4:7). They cannot override human will completely.
Not Everything Bad Is Demonic
The Bible recognizes multiple causes of problems: our fallen nature (James 1:14), the world system (1 John 2:16), natural consequences (Galatians 6:7), and sometimes demonic activity. Wisdom discerns the difference rather than blaming everything on demons. Dake himself admits: “We do not mean to say that every person’s sickness is a direct result of some personal sin, for this is not true. This is true of many cases of sickness, but of some it is not (John 9:1-4; 11:4).”47
Simple Resistance Is Effective
The Bible’s prescription for dealing with demons is remarkably simple: Submit to God, resist the devil, and he flees (James 4:7). Put on spiritual armor (Ephesians 6). Stay alert (1 Peter 5:8). No elaborate rituals or special knowledge required.
Christ Is Our Protection
The strongest protection against demonic activity is simply belonging to Christ. “Greater is he who is in you than he who is in the world” (1 John 4:4). We don’t need to fear demons when we’re hidden in Christ.
Focus Remains on Christ
Even when discussing demons, the Bible keeps focus on Christ. He has authority over all evil spirits. He gives believers authority in His name. He will ultimately confine Satan and demons to eternal punishment. The story isn’t about demons—it’s about Christ’s victory over them.
This biblical balance takes demons seriously without becoming obsessed with them. It recognizes spiritual warfare without descending into superstition. It maintains confidence in Christ while staying alert to spiritual danger.
Conclusion: Choosing Biblical Wisdom Over Human Speculation
Finis Dake’s teachings about angels, demons, and the supernatural realm represent human speculation at its most dangerous. By going far beyond what Scripture reveals, he creates an elaborate mythology that distracts from biblical truth, produces fear instead of faith, and shifts focus from Christ to created beings.
The tragedy is that many sincere believers, hungry for understanding of the spiritual realm, have accepted Dake’s speculation as biblical truth. They’ve built their understanding of spiritual warfare on fantasy rather than Scripture. They’ve focused on supposed angelic hierarchies and demonic territories instead of the simple biblical commands to trust Christ and resist evil.
What makes this especially sad is that the biblical truth about angels and demons is actually more wonderful than Dake’s speculation. Real angels worship God perfectly and serve believers faithfully—we don’t need them to have bodies and reproduce. Real demons are defeated foes who flee when we resist them in faith—we don’t need elaborate charts of their supposed kingdoms. The real spiritual battle is won through simple faith and obedience—we don’t need special knowledge or complex rituals.
The Bible’s restraint about the supernatural realm is actually a gift. By not revealing everything we might be curious about, God keeps us focused on what matters: knowing Him, trusting Christ, living holy lives, and serving His kingdom. The mystery isn’t a problem to solve but a reminder that God is infinite and we are finite.
Key Takeaways for Young Believers
1. Test Everything by Scripture: When someone teaches about angels or demons, ask: “Where does the Bible explicitly say this?” Don’t accept speculation as fact.
2. Focus on Christ, Not Angels: Angels point us to Jesus. If teaching about angels doesn’t lead you to worship Christ more, something’s wrong.
3. Keep It Simple: Biblical spiritual warfare is simple: submit to God, resist the devil, put on spiritual armor, stay alert. Complicated rituals aren’t necessary.
4. Don’t Fear Demons: If you belong to Christ, you don’t need to fear demons. Greater is He who is in you than he who is in the world.
5. Accept Mystery: It’s okay not to know everything about the spiritual realm. God has revealed what we need. Trust His wisdom in what He hasn’t revealed.
6. Avoid Sensationalism: Teaching that sensationalizes angels and demons usually contains error. The Bible’s matter-of-fact approach is our model.
7. Stay Balanced: Believe in the supernatural without becoming obsessed with it. Take spiritual warfare seriously without living in fear.
As we close this examination of Dake’s dangerous speculation, remember that the antidote to error is truth, not just denial of error. We don’t just reject Dake’s false teaching about angels and demons—we embrace biblical truth about the spiritual realm. We don’t just avoid speculation—we delight in what God has revealed. We don’t just refuse to go beyond Scripture—we treasure what Scripture actually says.
The God who created angels, who defeated demons, who rules over all spiritual reality, has told us what we need to know. His Word is sufficient. His revelation is enough. In a world full of speculation about the supernatural, let’s be people who stand firmly on the solid ground of biblical truth, neither adding to nor subtracting from what God has said.
This is the path of wisdom: taking seriously what God reveals, accepting humbly what He conceals, and focusing always on Christ who is Lord over all—including every angel and demon in existence. When we maintain this biblical balance, we can navigate the spiritual realm with confidence, serve God with clarity, and resist evil with authority, all while avoiding the dangerous speculation that has led so many astray.
May God give us wisdom to recognize speculation, courage to reject error, and faithfulness to hold fast to biblical truth. And may we always remember that our faith isn’t built on elaborate knowledge of the spirit world but on the simple, powerful truth that Jesus Christ is Lord, and in Him we have everything we need for life and godliness.
Discussion Questions for Chapter 13
- Why is it dangerous to teach that angels have physical bodies when the Bible calls them “spirits”? How does this change our understanding of the spiritual realm?
- Jesus said angels don’t marry. How does Dake’s interpretation of Genesis 6 contradict Christ’s clear teaching? Why should Jesus’ words take priority?
- What’s the difference between acknowledging that demons are real and creating elaborate speculation about demon kingdoms? How can we maintain biblical balance?
- Why do you think some people are attracted to detailed speculation about angels and demons? What need are they trying to meet, and how can that need be better met through biblical truth?
- How can churches protect their members from speculation about the supernatural while still taking spiritual warfare seriously? What practical steps can leaders take?
To God alone be the glory—not to angels, not to human speculation, but to the One who created all, rules all, and has revealed in His Word all we need to know. Amen.
Footnotes
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man (Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Bible Sales, 1949), 56.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible (Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Bible Sales, 1963), notes on 1 Corinthians 15:35-38.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Matthew 22:30.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Matthew 22:30.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on 2 Peter 2:4.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Jude 6.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Genesis 6:4.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Hebrews 1:14.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Revelation 17:8.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Jude 6.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Hebrews 1:14.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 56-57.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Genesis 6:2.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Genesis 6:2.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Jude 6-7.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Matthew 12:22.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Matthew 12:43.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on 1 Corinthians 15:35-38.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on 1 Peter 3:19-20.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Isaiah 14:13.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Genesis 6:4.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Deuteronomy 7:15.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Isaiah 14:12-14.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Isaiah 14:13.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible, notes on Colossians 2:15.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man (Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Bible Sales, 1949), 88.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 57.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 60-61.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 196.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 196.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 196.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 131-132.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 920.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Heavenly Hosts (Lawrenceville, GA: Dake Publishing, 1995), Chapter on Satan and World Governments.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 828.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Heavenly Hosts, Chapter on Two Classes of Fallen Angels.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 61.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Bible Truth Unmasked (Bible Research Foundation, 1950), 14.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 241.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 196.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 197.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 131.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 197.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 241.
- Finis Jennings Dake, Heavenly Hosts, Chapter on Lucifer.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 120.
- Finis Jennings Dake, God’s Plan for Man, 240.
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