Jeremiah Dyke, among those of the ministers who subscribed the Book of Discipline, was his brother, and edited all Daniel Dyke's works for publication.[2]
Dyke wrote:
‘The Mystery of Self-deceiving,’ 1615.
‘Certaine comfortable Sermons vpon the 124 Psalme,’ 1616.
‘Six Evangelical Histories: of Water turned into Wine, of the Temple's Purgation, of Christ and Nicodemus, of John's last Testimony, of Christ and the Woman of Samaria, of the Ruler's Son's Healing,’ 1617.
‘Exposition upon Philemon and the School of Affliction,’ 1618.
‘Two Treatises: The one, of Repentance; the other, of Christ's Temptations.’
His works were collected and published by his brother in two volumes in 1635.