Author Archives: Chris Hendrix

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About Chris Hendrix

My name is Chris Hendrix and I live in Houston. I've had some spectacular failures in my life. I've been divorced, bankrupt, lost a business and just about everything I once held dear. I've lived through them and learned from them. God has somehow found me worthy enough to use me to share my testimony, give hope, teach lessons I've learned and to bring encouragement from His Word to others. My hope is that in reading these devotionals that I post Monday through Friday, you will start your day off thinking about God and His promises to you instead of all the worries that life brings. If we learn to focus on Him first instead of our problems, we will see that He is greater than anything we'll face today. You haven't gone further than His love can reach or failed so badly that He can't use you. You can follow me on twitter at @devotionsbyme or to set up a speaking engagement, you can send an email to chris@devotionsbychris.com

God is a Necessity not a Convenience

This past Sunday, the preacher asked a question that rocked me. He asked, “Is God a convenience for you or a necessity?” When God becomes a necessity to us, then we will see His hand become more prominent in our lives. Sadly, for most of us, God is a convenience that we use when we need Him. I wonder what would happen if we allowed ourselves to be used by Him when He needed us?

How do we know if he is a convenience to us? These things will tell you.

1. We want intimacy without relationship

The world has made it the norm to have intimacy with others without having to have a relationship with them. Somehow we think that we can take that same philosophy into our relationship with God. Yes, He wants to use you, but He also wants to spend time with you.

Anyone who is continuously used by God, continuously spends time with Him. He is not looking for us to just have that daily time where we throw all our prayers up to heaven and hope some make it past the ceiling. He wants us to sit down at His feet like Mary and to listen to Him.

2. We don’t step out in faith

We expect others to step out in faith to help us, but we don’t allow ourselves to step out in faith to help others. When you step out in faith, it is raw dependence on Him. There is no shelter for you. You become completely vulnerable and unprotected. God wants you in that place with Him where you will hear His voice, step out of a boat in the middle of a storm and walk on water.

Any one of the twelve men in that boat could have climbed out and walked with Jesus. Only one was willing to take that step of faith. Later Jesus told him (Peter) that he would build His church on him. It wasn’t because he had it all together. None of us do. It was because he knew Peter was willing to trust Him and step out when He said to step out. Faith is stepping out not knowing the end result or how you’ll accomplish it. It’s knowing you can’t accomplish it on your own.

3. We need Him less than our next breath

When you need God more than your next breath, things will start to happen. Paul understood this concept. He said that to live was Christ and to die was gain. He knew that his next breath didn’t matter as much as his relationship with God. It’s that raw dependence on God that He wants from us.

That kind of dependence will get you to step out of that boat in the middle of a storm and trust Him with your life. We often say that we trust Him with our life, but we live like our trust is in the things we posses. They make us feel secure, but that security is a lie.

When we learn to make God a necessity in our life, we will change the world. We will do greater things than Jesus did. We will live an overcoming life and others will be able to notice.

What steps can you take today to make that change in your life where God becomes less of a convenience to you and more of a necessity? It won’t happen over night, but taking that first step in faith to make it happen will get you on your way to the life He wants you to live.

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Waiting on God to Fulfill His Promise

Waiting on God to fulfill His promise can be like waiting to open a present at Christmas. We see it there with our name on it. It is ours, but we have to wait. Every day you see it there. You’re ready to open it and use it, but the time has not come. There is always a waiting period from the time you are promised something and the time that you get it. How you spend that time matters.

There are 3 lessons we can learn from Abraham and Joseph while waiting on God to fulfill His promise to you.

1. Don’t preempt God

When God spoke to Abraham and promised him a son, he was about 85 years old. He could not see how God would do what he said he would do. He decided to intervene on God’s behalf and make the promise come true. He ruined a relationship and started a feud that goes on to this day.

When God makes a promise, our desire is to see it come to pass immediately. Often we are the ones who are unprepared or ready at the time a promise is given. We think we are, so when it delays, we try to step in. God does not need your help to bring about what He has promised. He needs you to prepare to receive it.

2. Bad things may still happen to you

Joseph received a dream that everyone, including his brothers and parents, would bow down to him. Being young and foolish, he had no problem telling others what God had intended for him at the time. While he waited on God’s promise he was beaten by his brothers, sold as a slave, taken to a foreign land against his will, worked as a slave, was wrongly accused, thrown in jail and forgotten about.

I’m sure it was difficult to trust God to fulfill His promise in any of those situations. You never read of Joseph complaining or crying out “why me, God”. The bible simply says that in each instance, he worked. In working, he found favor with those around him. God used those situations to prepare him and to get him in place for the promise. You may not like or understand what is happening to you in the waiting, but if you trust God and work for Him, he will fulfill it in His time.

3. Have patience

This is easier said than done. Abraham waited 15 years before God fulfilled his promise of having a son. He just thought he was too old at 85! For Joseph, it was 13 years before he interpreted pharaoh’s dream. It was at least more than 7 years after that before his brothers came and bowed down before him. I’m not saying you will have to wait 15 or 20 years for God to fulfill his promise to you, but it could.

We want God to act in our time. We want Him to fulfill His promise when we think we are ready, not when He thinks we’re ready. Patience is tough. Waiting is hard. God may show you then end result now, but wants you to take one step at a time. He may not show you the step after that until you take this one.

What step has God called you to take right now to move towards the fulfillment of His promise? Are you willing to trust Him and His timing? Take each step one at a time. Don’t preempt God. Understand that things may happen between now and the time of fulfillment. They are there to prepare you and to place you. Above all, have patience as He works to bring it about. He keeps His promises.

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Don’t make excuses. Obey God.

Many of us have been asked by God to do something for someone else. Some of us have been called to go into ministry whether it is full time or just volunteering in some capacity. It is common and easy to reject the idea that God can and will use you. It can be scary to accept that responsibility no matter how small or large it might seem.

God has simply asked for obedience from us. When we choose not to obey, we rob ourselves and others of the blessings that come with obedience. You may not see the value in doing something simple that God has asked you to do, but He sees the ripple effect of it. You may feel foolish doing it, but stepping out in faith is not a foolish matter. God uses the foolish things of this world to confound the wise.

I’ve found 3 excuses that people use when God calls them to do something.

1. There are others who are more qualified

When God was looking for the next king of Israel, he sent the prophet to Jesse’s house. Jesse called all of his sons, except one. After the prophet looked at all of the sons, he asked Jesse if he had any other kids. He said he had another one, but he was just a shepherd. David’s own father didn’t see his potential to be king.

Others may not be able too see what God sees in you. You may not even be able to see what God sees. We compare ourselves to others and their gifts and talents. God doesn’t do that. He looks to your heart and sees if He can accomplish His will through you. If He sees that in you, you should too. Don’t see yourself through the eyes of others. See yourself through the eyes of God.

2. There are others who are in line ahead of you

When it was time for Ruth to be redeemed by her kinsman, he said there were others who were in line first to redeem her. He went to the family member who was more closely related and offered her to him. He gave an excuse that marrying her would endanger what he already had. He gave up the right of Ruth to Boaz.

There may be other people who have been in ministry longer or have been waiting to be used by God longer than you. When it comes down to it, God knows if they’re ready to be used or not. It’s not about the time you have been waiting, but what you have done while waiting to be used. Boaz was prepared to redeem Ruth and didn’t make an excuse. He immediately married her and had a child. That child was David’s grandfather. Immediate obedience yields future results.

3. You are not ready to be used

When God called Moses to lead Israel out of Egypt, he made several excuses why he couldn’t do it. He asked, “who am I”, “what if no one listens to me” and then said “I’m not very good at speaking.” He was full of excuses why he couldn’t do what God asked him to do. He didn’t feel he was ready to follow his calling.
God did not call Moses nor you to do His will with your own ability. If He has called you, He will equip you with His ability to do His will. If you could do it on your own, you wouldn’t have to act in faith. When we step out in faith, God can accomplish more through us than we imagined. Take it one step at a time and God will accomplish the vision He has for you.

What is the next step God has asked you to take? What is keeping you from taking it? Don’t make an excuse that keeps you from doing what He asks. Step out in faith and trust Him to do what He said He will do. He won’t fail you or leave you alone.

If you would like to receive an email when new posts are made, please send an email to harvestprepblog@gmail.com

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Defeating Your Giants

Each of us face giants in our life that stand in the way of what we are supposed to do. They call out to us and taunt us. They intimidate us and bring fear. They make us feel inferior and weak. We stress about them and worry that we can never face them or defeat them. We often lose sleep because of them.

In reading the story of David and Goliath, I found some helpful things that you can do to slay the giants in your life.

1. Don’t listen to negativity or bad advice

When David arrived at the battlefield, his own brothers ridiculed him. They told him to go home and to tend to his little flock. The king told him that he was too young and inexperienced. Saul then tried to give him his armor to fight, but it didn’t fit. David knew that it was bad advice and took off that armor.

David didn’t accept the negativity of others or their bad advice and neither should you. Life is full of people who try to bring you down, tell you that you can’t do it or even try to equip you with things that don’t work for you. You need wisdom to know what is good advice and to follow it instead. God said if you lack wisdom, ask him and he will give it to you.

2. Know your strengths and prepare

David knew what he was good at. He knew what weapons he possessed and he prepared ahead of time. He stopped by a brook and picked out 5 smooth stones. He armed himself before facing his giant.

God has given you unique gifts and talents. Don’t believe the lie that you don’t have any. If you know what they are, stir them up and begin to use them. Prepare to use them to face your giant. Don’t wait until the problem is staring you in the face to prepare for it. You know it’s coming ahead of time. Don’t procrastinate or ignore the giant. Your destiny is to defeat it. You can do all things through Christ who strengthens you!

3. Know who you are and face it head on

David wasn’t intimidated by the giant or his words. David even yelled back at the giant that he was coming in the name of the Lord and that God would give him victory. He then ran toward the giant armed with his sling and defeated him.

Don’t be afraid to speak to your giant. Know who you are in Christ. Speak out loud who you are: I am a child of God. I am a royal priesthood, a holy nation. I have been called out of darkness. I am who God says I am and greater is he that is in me than he that is in the world. When you know who you are and who you belong to, there is nothing that can stand in your way or defeat you.

What giants are you facing today? Have you let them intimidate you? Stand up, block the negativity, prepare to face it head on, proclaim who you are, go out and win the victory over it today.

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Drawing closer to God

You can have a closer relationship with God. Most people want to, but don’t know how to. On any given Sunday, if a preacher asks for those who want to be closer to God to come to the front, the altars would be filled. They flock at the opportunity on a Sunday, but don’t execute it on Monday.

James 4:8 says if you draw near to God, He will draw near to you. The problem is that we don’t draw near to Him, but we expect Him to draw near to us first. That’s not what the scripture says. It is our responsibility to make the first move. It requires more than you responding to that call on Sunday. It requires action on Monday.

Here are some ways I have found to help me draw near to God and in return, I have found that He has drawn close to me.

1. Set aside time for Him

In Psalm 5:3, David tells God that in the morning he prepares a prayer for him. David picked out a time for his meeting with God and he prepared for it. If you want to get close to God, make time for him. If you wait for an opportunity to meet with Him, it will never happen. Tell your schedule what to do or your schedule will tell you what to do. I have found that keeping a consistent time for meeting with God has helped me to draw closer. Before I would do it when I had time. I wasn’t consistent and I wasn’t hearing from Him as often either.

2. Separate yourself from distractions

Jesus said in Matthew 6:6 to go into your most private room, close the door and pray to your God. While there is a place for public prayer, intimacy comes from getting alone with Him and closing the door to other distractions. If you can’t find that place in your home without distractions, look for it elsewhere. Some people find it in a field, a golf course before it opens or in their car. Turn off your phone, the radio and tune out your thoughts so that you can be available to Him.

3. Give God time to talk

Back in Psalm 5:3, David says, “I watch and wait for you to speak to my heart.” Prayer is a dialog. Yes, David prepared a prayer for God in the morning, but he also waited on God to speak to Him. Drowning out thoughts and distractions while you wait is tough. You have to bring every thought captive and simply wait for God to draw near to you.

By doing these 3 things, I have found that I have become closer to God. In return, He has come closer to me. It takes consistency and execution each day. It isn’t easy to do, but if you want to truly be closer to him, you need to take the first step. What step(s) can you take today to start that journey?

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Escape the gravity of dangers

As my son is becoming more independent, I’ve noticed that dangerous things seem to have a gravitational pull on him. He can be in an open area and immediately he will head for something dangerous. I constantly have to walk in his path to steer him from things that will do him harm. He usually fights me and tries to walk around me to get to it. I keep blocking him until he gives up, but then he usually sees something else that has the potential to be dangerous and heads for it.

I’ve found that we are no different spiritually. Our inner man gravitates to things that are not of God. It tries to get us to go places and do things that are dangerous for our souls. God sends the Holy Spirit to warn us and to block our path, but we try to elude him and his warnings. We then see something else that grabs our attention and head straight for it. He constantly tries to guide us to what is right, but we fight him each step of the way.

In Romans 7 & 8, Paul describes this battle perfectly. In 7:15 he says that he wants to do what is right, but doesn’t do it. I find myself in this predicament often. I know what I’m supposed to do and still the battle rages to get me to do something else. My mind comes into play and wants me to do what is wrong. I, like Paul, don’t want to do what is wrong, but I find myself doing it anyway. In verse 21, Paul said it was a principle of life that we do that.

So how do we overcome that? What did Paul do? Romans 8 seems to have the answer.

1. Do not accept condemnation

Condemnation is different than conviction. Condemnation brings shame and guilt. That is usually put on us by others or ourselves. It brings us down and makes us feel like failures. Conviction brings life and change. It is the job of the Holy Spirit to bring conviction and to steer us from spiritual dangers. When we still do what is wrong, he is there to remind us and to guide us to repentance and forgiveness.

2. Understand you have received freedom

After the Civil War, a lot of slaves stayed with their masters even though they were free. They didn’t know where to go or what to do with the freedom they had been given. We are not much different. We were born into the slavery of sin and once we were forgiven, we didn’t know how to act. We still revert back to that nature that we grew up in. Shake off those chains and walk in the freedom that you have been given. Verse 2 of chapter 8 says the power of the life-giving Spirit has freed you from the power of sin. Walk, think and act like someone who is no longer bound by the old chains of your life.

3. Be controlled by the Spirit

Verse 5 of Romans 8 says that we are dominated by the sinful nature when we think about sinful things, but when we are controlled by the spirit we think about things that please Him. When we think on the things of God, we act on those things and they lead to life and peace.

Controlling what you think is a difficult task, but can be accomplished through the help of the Holy Spirit. Understand that you are no longer bound by the things that had you before so you can now live and act in a way that you know is right. Don’t fall for condemnation, but accept conviction and make the changes. What things are you allowing your mind to think that are keeping you from doing what you should do?

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Winning God’s Approval

In Luke 18, Jesus tells the story of two men praying in the temple. One man, known to be very religious, prayed near the door where everyone could see and hear him. He thanked God that he wasn’t like other people who were sinners. He also listed off all he did for God in this prayer. There was another man, not known to be religious. He was away from others and wouldn’t even lift his head toward heaven as he prayed. He begged God for mercy and forgiveness. Jesus said of these two, that the man who was praying for mercy was the one who was justified, not the religious man.

Jesus didn’t call us to be religious. He called us to be humble and to walk in his ways. It’s easy to get caught up in doing things for God so that others will notice, but that is not what he is looking for. Each time that happened in scripture, Jesus said that they had their reward. We win God’s approval and the lost by being humble and doing what he asks.

Here’s a few ways you can do that.

1. Be humble

Constantly God reminds us that he rejects the proud and exalts the humble. It’s one thing to let others know what you are doing for God so that they can assist and another to let others know so you can feel superior. God looks past the outside and into our heart. He knows our motives… and so do others.

When we do things for God, we don’t have to broadcast it. People, especially non believers, are paying attention. They may never say anything to you, but they are watching all the same.

2. Practice more than you preach

There are enough people out there preaching more than they practice. I Timothy 4:12 tells us to be an example in what you say, how you live and in your love, faith and purity. Actions speak louder than words. Sometimes people can’t hear our message over the actions of how we live.

What would the world look like if we practiced more than we preached? St. Francis of Asisi said that we should preach at all times and use words when necessary. Simply said, live like you should and you won’t have to preach them a sermon to reach them.

3. Don’t get diverted

Everything in this world wants to pull you away from what you are supposed to do. It all competes for your time and energy. I Timothy 4:16 says to keep a firm grip on both your character and your teaching. If you do, both you and those who hear (see) you will experience salvation.

Set up an accountability partner to help you stay the course. If you know there are areas where you easily get off track, be open and honest with someone to help hold you accountable to keep a firm grip in that area. You will both profit from it.

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Renewing your thoughts and attitudes

I wonder if a butterfly ever goes back to thinking like a caterpillar once he has undergone chrysalis. Does he ever think, “Man, I had it good when I had to crawl everywhere and ate leaves”? Or does he look to his new life where he can fly, go places faster and eat the sweet pollen from flowers and think he’ll never go back to crawling? I’m guessing the latter because I’ve never seen a butterfly eat leaves or crawl around.

I wonder then why we often go back to our old way of thinking and doing things once we receive Christ. We were set free from a life shackled and earth bound to a life of a high calling in Christ Jesus. Scripture says that all things have become new and we are new creatures. We have to put away our old way of thinking.

Ephesians 4:23 says that we should let the spirit renew our thoughts and attitudes and to put on our new nature. That’s easier said than done since our sin nature still lies within us. It wants to come back out and do things that it used to do before we accepted new life in Christ.

1. A few ways to help do that are:

Change your environment

You can’t change your thinking and your life until you change your environment. The butterfly has to flap his wings and leave the leaf so he can find his new life. You are called to come out from among them and to be separate. If you never leave your old life, you will never be what God intended you to be.

You have to find new friends, new places to hang out and feed yourself good things. It’s hard to leave things behind, but if they are holding you down, you have no choice. You were meant to fly. Spread your wings and trust God to help you find friendships with Godly people.

2. Change what you put in your mind

The butterfly no longer eats what he used to. His appetite changed and so did his tastes. As a Christian, your spiritual appetite and tastes must change. You can’t watch the same things, listen to the same things and feed your mind the same things that you used to. It is unhealthy now for your spirit.

I’ve learned that when you change your eating habits, eventually you will no longer crave the foods you used to. The same thing happens spiritually. When you change what you take in to your mind and spirit, eventually it will no longer want the things it used to.

3. Embrace your new life

Your life should not only bring glory to God, but also light to others. When you see a caterpillar and a butterfly, you think two different things. One is destructive to plants and is ugly. The other brings life to other plants and is beautiful. Your life should have that kind of change.

You are called to live and walk in the light. You are to bring life to those around you and not destruction. People should be able to see a difference in you once you have accepted Christ and notice the change. Embrace who God has called you to be and strive to live the life you were meant to live. If you do that, you can’t help but to fly!

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Showing Love

Love is a crazy thing. It makes us do things we would not normally do. It doesn’t let us sit back and hold things in. It makes us do something. It wants to let everyone know how you feel. It can’t be contained or bottled up. It oozes out of you to the point that everyone can see it.

God has called us to love others that way. When Jesus was asked what the greatest commandment was, he had two things for them: love God and love your neighbor. We find it easy to follow the first part of that, but difficult to love our neighbors. When you truly love God, you end up loving people.

The world is looking for the church to show them love. For years Christians have spread a message of condemnation and not love. We have failed to show them the love of Christ. Only by loving them can we reach them. Jesus said he did not come to the world to condemn it, but that through him the world might be saved.

Everything he did was showing love to others. He went to the houses of people that made the religious leaders of the day attack him. He hung out with people and loved people that didn’t deserve it according to the rules. His ministry was not about going around judging and condemning. It was about loving others. We say that God loves the sinner, but hates the sin. Can we look past the sin to love the sinner?

The message of the Pharisees was all about legalism and trying to show God you loved him by following an impossible group of laws. Jesus message was that when you show love to others, you fulfill the law. When you try to follow all the laws, you end up not doing for others because you are focused on yourself.

Scripture says that true religion is caring for orphans and widows. It is doing for others, not for yourself. Jesus said that when you did things for the least among you, you have done it unto him. It is having a servants heart and doing for others. Doing for others is not an option when you love God. Faith without works is dead and loving without action is dead.

God loved us so much that he did the craziest thing of all: He sent his only son to the world to show us how much he loved us. He allowed him to be sacrificed so that we could be with him. What can you do today to show that kind of love to others? Showing that kind of love opens doors for you to share the message of Christ with others. When you can love others in spite of their sin or what others may say, you will see a harvest.

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Extend grace not judgement

I love to watch the show “Holmes on Homes”. In this show, Mike Holmes goes to houses that people bought, finds problems with the house and then repairs it free of charge. It often costs him money personally that show doesn’t pay for. He finds people who didn’t do their homework when hiring a contractor or when buying a home and later find that nothing was done right. He comes in, does a thorough inspection to find everything that is wrong and makes all the necessary changes.

It costs him time and money to make it right for these strangers. I watch the show in amazement not only because he does a great job, but because of the grace he extends to these people. He doesn’t walk through and tell the homeowners what they should have done. He simply points out the problems and then finds the solution. He lets the audience know what should have happened so we don’t make the same mistakes.

My nature is to quickly point out someone’s mistakes and to tell them how they should have done it. That’s not how Jesus operated though. He extended grace to people who didn’t deserve it. People who were outcasts and out right sinners were brought to him for judgement and every time, he responded with grace.

I noticed 3 things he did each time that we can do for others.

1. He conversed with them

At the well with the Samaritan woman, Jesus started the conversation with her. He didn’t wait for her to talk to him. It was against the culture for him to speak with her because she was a woman and because she was considered a unclean. When the disciples came back, they were shocked that he was talking to her.

Who has God placed in your life to talk to? Have you kept your distance because of what others might say? There are plenty of people who are hurting because everyone has kept their distance from them. They need a friend. They need someone to talk to. They need someone to offer living water.

2. He didn’t judge

When the Pharisees brought the woman caught in adultery and wanted to stone her, he simply said, “Let whoever is without sin cast the first stone.” I love that it says starting with the oldest, one by one they laid down their stones. There is not one of us without fault or sin somewhere in our life. I think we like to find fault in others because it makes us feel better about our own faults.

Jesus said clearly in this story, “I did not set myself up to judge or condemn.” If he didn’t, then why do we? Condemnation brings death. Love brings life. Jesus said, “I am the bread of life. I will give you living water. I have come to bring life and that more abundantly.” How can you bring life to someone who needs it today instead of condemnation?

3. He extended grace

Grace is something we all want, but rarely give. He knew the woman had been caught in adultery, but said, “Neither do I condemn you.” He knew the woman at the well had been married five times and was now living with a man out of wedlock. He still told her, “Ask of me and I will give you living water.”

Jesus looked past the externals and circumstances of people to see who they really were. He didn’t judge them for that. He extended grace because he knew they needed it. When we receive it, it makes a difference in our day and in our life. You may have been wronged by someone, but Jesus calls you to extend grace to them anyway. Don’t be quick to receive grace from others and slow to give it. We all need grace.

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