HEROD’S FATE

HEROD’S FATE

Acts 12:20-24 NET.

20 Now Herod was having an angry quarrel with the people of Tyre and Sidon. So, they joined together and presented themselves before him. And after convincing Blastus, the king’s personal assistant, to help them, they asked for peace, because their country’s food supply was provided by the king’s country. 21 On a day determined in advance, Herod put on his royal robes, sat down on the judgment seat, and made a speech to them. 22 But the crowd began to shout, “The voice of a god, and not of a man!” 23 Immediately, an angel of the Lord struck Herod down because he did not give the glory to God, and he was eaten by worms and died. 24 But the word of God kept on increasing and multiplying.


There is an old story about a vain emperor who hires tailors who promise him magical clothes visible only to the wise. Not wanting to seem foolish, everyone pretends to see them. He parades through the city in nothing at all until a child blurts out the truth, exposing the deception for all to see.

There are also moments in Scripture when God pulls back the curtain and lets us see the true danger of living for human approval. One of the clearest examples is found in this story about Herod Agrippa in Acts 12. It is a story about power, pride, and the seductive pull of flattery. But more than that, it is a story about the God who refuses to share His glory with anyone, and who calls His people to anchor their identity in His truth rather than in the applause of others.


I. Herod Embraces Flattery Instead of Truth

The people of Tyre and Sidon understood the political landscape of their day. Their cities depended on Judea for food, and Herod controlled the supply lines. They had offended him somehow—Scripture doesn’t tell us how—but they knew their survival depended on regaining his favor. So when Herod scheduled a public address, they came prepared. They came rehearsed. They came determined to flatter him into good graces. Their goal was not the truth. Their goal was survival. And in their minds, survival required praise.

Herod entered the amphitheater wearing a robe woven with silver threads that caught the morning sun. Josephus tells us the garment shimmered so brightly that the crowd gasped. And as Herod began to speak, the people erupted with carefully crafted adoration. They shouted that his voice was not the voice of a man but of a god. They lifted him to a place no human being should ever occupy. And Herod, instead of recoiling in horror, instead of tearing his garments as any faithful Jew would have done, instead of redirecting the glory to the One who alone deserves it, soaked in the applause. He drank it like a man dying of thirst. He let their flattery settle into his bones. He let their praise become his identity.

This moment was not an isolated event. It was the culmination of a long pattern in Herod’s life. He had already executed James, one of the apostles, simply because it pleased the crowds. He had arrested Peter for the same reason. He governed by popularity. He made decisions based on applause. He shaped his morality around the expectations of others. He lived for approval, and he was willing to silence the gospel to get it. Herod’s entire political strategy was built on the fragile foundation of human praise.

But God’s patience with Herod’s self‑exaltation had reached its limit. Scripture describes it with striking simplicity: “Immediately an angel of the Lord struck him down, because he did not give God the glory.” The man who lived for applause died under judgment. The man who craved approval received a verdict instead. The man who silenced the gospel was silenced by God.

Herod could have saved his own life that day. All he had to do was deflect the praise. All he had to do was say, “I am only a man.” All he had to do was acknowledge the truth. But truth was the one thing he refused to embrace. He preferred the illusion of greatness over the reality of humility. He preferred the admiration of people over the approval of God. And in the end, the flattery he loved became the instrument of his downfall.


II. Flattery Is a Universal Temptation That Distorts Faithfulness.

The tragedy of Herod is not merely that he died. The tragedy is that he wasted his life chasing the wrong voice. He listened to the crowd instead of the Lord. He shaped his identity around the praise of people instead of the truth of God. He allowed the applause of others to drown out the call to repentance. He let flattery become fatal.

And if we are honest, Herod’s temptation is not as distant from us as we might like to think. Most of us will never sit on a throne or wear a silver robe or hear a crowd shout our name. But we all know what it feels like to crave approval. We all know the subtle pull of wanting to be admired, respected, affirmed, or celebrated. We all know the temptation to shape our words, our decisions, and even our convictions around what will make people like us. We all know the quiet fear of losing status, influence, or acceptance.

Flattery is not always loud. Sometimes it is gentle praise that makes us feel indispensable. Sometimes it is the admiration that feeds our ego. Sometimes it is the subtle affirmation that tempts us to believe we are more important than we really are. Sometimes it is the approval that makes us compromise truth, so we can keep the applause coming. Flattery is dangerous not because it feels bad, but because it feels so good.

The inhabitants of Tyre and Sidon used flattery as a tool for survival. Herod used it as a drug for his ego. But God calls His people to something far better. He calls us to live by His truth, not by the praise of others. He calls us to anchor our identity in His voice, not in the shifting opinions of the crowd. He calls us to humility, not self‑exaltation. He calls us to obedience, not popularity.


III. God Calls Us to Anchor Our Identity in His Voice Alone.

The gospel frees us from the tyranny of human approval. When we know that God has already accepted us in Christ, we no longer need to chase acceptance from others. When we know that God delights in us as His children, we no longer need to earn delight from the world. When we know that God’s verdict over our lives is “beloved,” we no longer need to manipulate people into giving us a verdict of “important.” The gospel gives us a new identity that cannot be inflated by praise or deflated by criticism.

But this freedom requires vigilance. It requires the courage to resist the subtle pull of flattery. It requires discipline to examine our motives. It requires the humility to acknowledge when we are being shaped by the opinions of others more than by the truth of God. It requires the willingness to disappoint people when obedience demands it. It requires the strength to say, “I am not here to be admired; I am here to be faithful.”

Herod’s story stands as a warning to all who are tempted to build their lives on the unstable foundation of human praise. The applause of the crowd is fickle. The admiration of others is temporary. The approval of people is fragile. But the truth of God endures. His word stands firm. His verdict is eternal. His glory is unmatched. And His call to us is clear: follow Me, not the crowd.

When we choose truth over flattery, we choose life. When we choose obedience over applause, we choose freedom. When we choose humility over self‑exaltation, we choose the path that leads to joy. When we choose God’s voice over the voices around us, we choose the only voice that can anchor our souls.

Herod’s last speech was his most important, not because of what he said, but because of what he failed to say. He failed to give God the glory. He failed to acknowledge the truth. He failed to humble himself. And in that failure, he lost everything.

May we learn from his story. May we refuse to let the praise of others shape our identity. May we resist the temptation to build our lives around the approval of people. May we anchor ourselves in the truth of God’s word. May we cultivate the humility that deflects praise and gives glory to God. May we be more interested in following God’s voice than in hearing the applause of the crowd.

Lord, deliver us from the seduction of flattery. Guard our hearts from the desire to be admired. Teach us to love Your truth more than we love the approval of others. Make us faithful, humble, and steady. And when the voices around us grow loud, help us to listen for Yours alone.

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Author: Jefferson Vann

Jefferson Vann is pastor of Piney Grove Advent Christian Church in Delco, North Carolina.

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