July 12, 2026: Glory Withheld (Acts 12:20-25)
Dear parents,
This morning, the whole church finished Acts 12, where a proud king dressed in shining silver let a crowd call him a god, and God would not let the lie stand. This week, the home gets to sit on the same Word that the pulpit preached. The devotional below is built so you can lead it cold, with no training and no prep. Do the whole page in one sitting of about ten minutes, or take one short step a night, Monday through Friday. There is no wrong way to use it.
Here is why this matters around your table this week. Your children are learning, one ordinary day at a time, who their applause belongs to, whether the goal of life is to be praised or to praise the One who made them. You do not have to teach them to chase a shout; that comes for free. You get to teach them something better: that the only One who can keep both us and His glory is Jesus, the King who refused every stolen cheer and was struck down in our place so He could lift us up. One faith talk this week is a win.
In Christ,
Pastor Anton
This week's Big Idea: God will not give His glory to anyone else, and that is good news. He shares all kinds of things with us, His bread, His mercy, even His own Son, but the glory of being God belongs to Him alone. A proud king tried to keep some of that glory for himself, and it ended badly. Jesus, the true King, did the opposite: He gave God the glory and gave Himself for us. So we get to give God the glory too, and it is the safest, happiest thing we can ever do.
Memory verse for the week: "An angel of the Lord struck him down, because he did not give God the glory." (Acts 12:23) Say it together at the start of each time you gather. By Friday, see who can say it without looking.
1. READ (start here every time)
This week's passage: Acts 12:20-25 (ESV). Read it out loud together. With young children, read it once slowly. With older children and teens, read it and then ask what stood out. If you are taking one step a night, read a short slice each evening: Monday, Acts 12:20, hungry cities come asking the king for food; Tuesday, Acts 12:21-22, the king shines in his robe and the crowd shouts that he is a god; Wednesday, Acts 12:23, God strikes the king because he kept the glory that was God's; Thursday, Acts 12:24, "but" the word of God keeps growing; Friday, Acts 12:25, God is already getting helpers ready for the next chapter of His work.
2. THINK (a thought a parent can read out loud, cold)
A king named Herod put on a robe that sparkled like silver in the morning sun, sat on his throne, and gave a speech. The crowd shouted, "That is the voice of a god, not a man!" Herod did not say, "Stop, I am only a man." He just sat there and soaked it in, and kept the praise that belonged to God. So God struck him down, and the proud king died. But the very same God who would not share His glory loves to share other things. He gives us bread when we are hungry, mercy when we sin, and best of all He gave us His own Son. Jesus is the true King, and instead of grabbing glory, He let Himself be struck down on the cross so that sinners like us could be forgiven and lifted up. God lifted Jesus higher than every name. So we do not have to fight to be praised. We get to give the glory to God, who is so much bigger and better than we are.
3. TALK (pick the questions that fit your table; you do not need to ask them all)
For young children: The king let people call him a god instead of telling them about the real God. Who should we say is great, the king or God? What is one thing God made that shows He is great?
For school-age children: Herod kept the praise that belonged to God, and it ended badly. What is the difference between Herod, who grabbed the glory, and Jesus, who gave the glory to God?
For teens: We all live in front of some audience whose praise we want, the team, the group chat, the people whose opinion we replay at night. Be honest: whose shout do you chase most? And have you ever stopped chasing it long enough to give your whole life to the King who was struck down in your place?
For the whole table: When something good happens to our family this week, how can we say out loud, on the spot, "Thank You, God, that came from You"?
4. DO (one small thing to carry the truth into the week)
Do this: Start a "Glory to God" habit at dinner this week. Each night, go around the table and have everyone name one good thing from their day, then say together, "Thank You, God, the glory is Yours." Watch for the temptation to grab credit for ourselves, and practice handing it straight back to God out loud.
Another way to do this: Make a "Glory Jar." Keep a jar and some slips of paper on the table. Whenever someone notices a good gift, a sunny day, a kind friend, food to eat, write it on a slip and drop it in the jar. At the end of the week, pour the jar out, read the slips together, and thank God that every one of them came from Him. Add one slip or fill the jar; do what you can this week. The jar is your reminder that the glory goes back to God.
5. PRAY (a parent leads; pray it as written or in your own words)
Father, You are God, and Your glory belongs to You alone. Thank You that You still share so much with us, Your bread, Your mercy, and most of all Your Son. Forgive us for the times we chase praise and try to keep glory that is Yours. Thank You for Jesus, the true King, who refused the crowd's cheer and was struck down on the cross so we could be forgiven. Teach our family to give You the glory in everything. And we ask You to give each of our children a new heart that truly trusts Christ, so that one day they gladly give You the glory forever. In Jesus' name, amen.
6. SING (close by singing one together)
This week's song: "How Great Thou Art" (the whole song hands the glory back to God, singing of His greatness in creation and in the cross, exactly the response Herod refused and Jesus gave). Sing one verse, or the whole thing. If your family does not know it, read the first verse out loud together instead.
One faith talk this week is a win. If your family can do this most nights, even better. Keep it short, keep it warm, keep coming back to it.





