Acts 12 Sermon: power vs. Power
In Acts 12, Herod has the crown, the chains, and the crowd—but God has the last word. A study of human power versus the sovereign Power of God. What Is Reverential Capitalization? Before we open Acts 12, look again at the title of this post: power vs. Power . The difference is one capital letter, and it is doing all the work. That little device has a name. It is called reverential capitalization — the practice of capitalizing words that refer to God as a kind of typographic bow. You have seen it your whole life: He , Him , His , the Almighty , the Lord — the capital letter signaling that the One being spoken of is in a category by Himself. It is worth being honest about what this convention is and is not. Reverential capitalization is a devotional tradition, not a feature of the original text. Hebrew has no uppercase and lowercase letters; the earliest Greek manuscripts were written entirely in capitals, with no spaces, so they drew no such distinction either. The ESV — the translati...