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John G. Lake

John Graham Lake (1870–1935). Born on March 18, 1870, in St. Mary’s, Ontario, Canada, to James and Elizabeth Lake, John G. Lake was a Pentecostal evangelist, missionary, and faith healer whose ministry profoundly influenced early 20th-century Pentecostalism. One of 16 children in a Methodist family, he moved to Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, at 16, working as a newspaper publisher and real estate agent. Converted in 1886, he joined Alexander Dowie’s Christian Catholic Church in 1896, experiencing healings that shaped his faith. In 1907, at Dowie’s Zion, Illinois, he received the baptism of the Holy Spirit, speaking in tongues, and began preaching divine healing. From 1908 to 1913, he ministered in South Africa, founding the Apostolic Faith Mission and planting over 600 churches, earning the nickname “Apostle to Africa” despite racial controversies. Returning to the U.S., he established healing rooms in Spokane, Washington (1915–1920), reporting 100,000 healings, and later pastored in Portland, Oregon. Lake authored books like Adventures in God (1910) and Dominion Over Demons, Disease, and Death (1935), emphasizing spiritual authority. Married to Jennie Norton in 1893 until her death in 1908, he had seven children; he wed Florence Switzer in 1913, fathering five more. He died of a stroke on September 16, 1935, in Spokane, saying, “The secret of heaven’s power is a life wholly given to God.”