All Are Welcome

At St Nicholas Methodist you will find a friendly welcome where we help each other to worship God, and strive to live more like Christ in service beyond the walls of our church building. We are part of the Exeter Coast and Country Circuit.

Friday, 2 January 2026

New Year Devotions


Pay Attention

Exodus 3:1–5 — Moses turns aside to look.

In today’s passage, we find Moses catching sight of the burning bush. But unlike Dr. Watson in the famous words of Sherlock Holmes—“You see, but you do not observe”—Moses does more than simply notice. He truly observes. The Hebrew phrasing suggests both “to turn aside from” and “to turn aside to,” indicating not just a change of direction, but a deliberate shift of attention.

In other words, Moses chooses to focus on what matters. He steps away from the ordinary and stands on holy ground.

Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:17 that “if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” Turning to Jesus also requires a holy reorientation—leaving behind the former way of life and receiving a new identity and purpose through union with Christ.

Imagine walking through a crowded marketplace, noise and movement all around you. Suddenly, you hear your name spoken softly—so softly that you could ignore it if you wished. But something in that voice makes you turn aside. When you look, you realise the one calling you is someone who loves you deeply. In the swirl of distractions, that single moment of turning becomes the beginning of a new direction.

This is what Moses experienced at the bush—and what we experience whenever Christ calls us to turn toward Him.

Lord, help us to turn aside from the noise and distractions of life and to turn toward You with attentive hearts. Give us eyes that observe, not just see, and lead us onto the holy ground of Your presence. Make us new creations in Christ, shaped by Your purpose and guided by Your love. Amen.

Practice: Notice one thing you usually miss.


Thursday, 1 January 2026

New Year Devotions


January can feel like a long exhale. Our devotional theme for the month  gently invites us to notice God’s presence in the “ordinary things” of daily life — the kettle boiling, the commute, the quiet moments, the messy ones. No heroic resolutions. No spiritual guilt trips. Just small, doable steps that slowly turn our attention back to God.

WEEK 1 — Slowing Down Enough to Notice


1/1 Take a Breath
Psalm 46:10 — Be still and know…


What was it the great Welsh poet, William Henry Davies,  said, “What is this life if, full of care, We have no time to stand and stare. No time to stand beneath the boughs. And stare as long as sheep or cows.”


In our  world of urgency, rush and haste, we often miss so much and in fact put our selves in danger. Our bodies and brains absolutely hate it, even if we pretend we’re coping like champs.  When you’re constantly rushing, your system basically thinks you’re being chased by a bear 24/7. Too much rushing results in cortisol spikes, tense shoulders, foggy thinking, and that weird feeling that you’re forgetting something… because you probably are. Did you know that stress hits your heart harder than caffeine ever could. With all that rushing about even when you try to go to bed, your brain is still sprinting. Yes, that’s chronic rushing messing with your rest.


A  wildlife photographer spent a week trying to capture a rare bird. He had all the gear, all the patience, and all the knowledge — but for days the bird refused to appear. One afternoon he just sat down on a fallen log, exhausted. He wasn’t pretending to be still; he genuinely had nothing left in the tank.


And then something strange happened. As he stopped moving… the forest started. After a while, the soundscape changed. The forest “trusted” him again. And then, as if it had been waiting for him to stop striving, the rare bird landed on a branch just a few feet away. Long enough for the perfect photo.


Later he said, “I spent five days trying to find the bird… and it took five minutes of stillness for the bird to find me.”


Stillness doesn’t mean doing nothing — it means becoming the kind of person who can finally receive what God has been trying to give us all along. When we stop rushing, stop forcing, stop striving, the “voice” of God — the guidance, the peace, the reassurance, the next step — often finds us.

 “Be still, and know that I am God.”


Prayers 

God of quiet and calm,

slow our hearts and steady our minds.

In the silence, draw us close.

Let your peace settle over our worries

and your presence rest within us.

Make us still,

that we may know you are God.

Amen.


Stillness isn’t a luxury for holy people. It’s the quiet space where ordinary people finally hear the holy.


Practice: One minute of stillness today.


Wednesday, 31 December 2025

Christmas Devotions


Isaiah 43:18–19 (NIV)

“Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past.

See, I am doing a new thing!

Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?

I am making a way in the wilderness

and streams in the wasteland.”


On the final day of the year, many of us feel the weight of memory. We recall what has gone well and what has gone wrong. We remember moments that lifted us up and moments that left us bruised. Some memories we gladly keep; others we wish we could release.


God speaks into that place with a gentle but powerful invitation:

“Do not dwell on the past… I am doing a new thing.”


He is not asking us to erase our memories but to release their power to define us. Where we see dry land, He sees streams forming. Where we see a wilderness, He sees a way being carved out ahead of us.


As you stand at the threshold of a new year, consider this: God is already at work in places you have not yet stepped into. He is preparing grace for challenges you have not yet faced. He is shaping opportunities you have not yet seen.


Today is a day to give thanks for God’s sustaining presence over the past year — and to open your hands to receive the “new thing” He longs to grow in the year to come. You don’t have to force it; you simply have to notice it and walk with Him into it.


Picture a gardener at the end of winter. The ground looks lifeless, the branches bare, and there is little sign of growth. Yet the gardener knows that beneath the soil seeds are stirring. Hidden roots are preparing to send up shoots. The gardener waters the ground not because he sees life but because he trusts the life he knows is coming.


We often end a year looking at the “bare ground” of things that didn’t flourish the way we hoped. But God is the Gardener who sees what lies beneath the surface of our lives. He tends to us patiently, preparing new growth that may not yet be visible. The “new thing” He promises is already stirring in the soil of tomorrow.


Prayer


Lord of all our days,

On this final day of the year, I thank You for Your presence, Your guidance, and Your unending grace.

Where the past holds joy, I thank You.

Where it holds pain, I place those memories in Your healing hands.

Where it holds failure, I receive Your forgiveness and mercy.

Teach me not to dwell on what lies behind but to look with hope toward what You are doing next.

Open my eyes to the new paths You are making, the quiet miracles You are forming, and the life You are growing even now.

Lead me into the coming year with faith, courage, and trust in Your unfailing love.

Amen.


Tuesday, 30 December 2025

Christmas Devotions


“Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. 
They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.” Lamentations 3:22–23 (NIV)


The days between Christmas and New Year often feel like a quiet in-between — a pause between what has been and what is coming. The world slows down, decorations linger, and we find ourselves reflecting on the year that is almost over.


Lamentations is an unexpected place to find a year-end encouragement. Jeremiah writes these words while standing in ruins — yet he speaks of God’s steadfast love and fresh mercies. He reminds us that God’s goodness is not tied to our circumstances, our successes, or our failures. It is tied to God Himself, and therefore it does not run dry.


As we approach the last day of the year, we may look back and see moments of joy and sorrow, victories and regrets. But God invites us not to measure ourselves by our record, but to rest in His compassion. Every dawn — including the dawn of a new year — arrives with an unspent supply of mercy.


Today, pause and breathe in the truth that God has carried you this far. And breathe out the trust that He will carry you into tomorrow. His mercies are new—not recycled, not diminished—new. And they are for you.


Imagine walking into a bakery early in the morning. The air is warm, and the smell of freshly baked bread surrounds you. No one is offering you yesterday’s leftovers; what you receive is fresh, warm, and made for this new day.


God’s mercy is like that. He doesn’t hand us stale grace from the past, nor does He ration His compassion based on how well we performed yesterday. Each morning, like the warm light spilling from a bakery oven, God offers mercy that is fresh, sufficient, and ready for whatever the day holds.


Prayer


Gracious God,

As this year draws to a close, I thank You for Your unfailing love and the countless ways You have sustained me. Thank You that Your mercies are new every morning, and that Your faithfulness does not depend on my strength but on Your steadfast heart.


Help me release the burdens, regrets, and worries of this past year into Your care. Prepare my spirit to step into a new season with hope and trust.


Teach me to live each day aware of Your compassion, ready to receive Your fresh mercies, and eager to walk in Your ways.


Great is Your faithfulness, Lord. Amen.


Monday, 29 December 2025

Christmas Devotions


Christmas, The Gift of Emmanuel

📖 Isaiah 9:6

“For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.”


Reflection:

Christmas is the joyful celebration that God’s love has come to us in the form of a child. Emmanuel—God with us—is the greatest gift we could ever receive. This tiny baby embodies hope, peace, and a new beginning for the world.

So we rejoice that God did not stay distant but chose to enter our story, to share our joys and pains, and to offer us grace beyond measure. This child invites us into a lifelong journey of love and transformation.


Illustration:

Imagine receiving a gift you never expected but which changes everything—something that brings light to your darkest days and warmth to your coldest nights. That is what Jesus is for the world: the greatest gift, wrapped not in shiny paper but in swaddling clothes, given with infinite love.


Prayer:

Thank you, God, for the gift of Jesus—Emmanuel, God with us. May this day fill my heart with joy and gratitude. Help me to carry the light of your love into the world every day. Amen.


Sunday, 28 December 2025

Christmas Devotions


Christmas the Waiting with Hope

📖 Romans 8:24–25

“For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have? But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently.”


Reflection:

The crux of the Christmas season, is that we see humanity standing on the edge of anticipation. We recall how through the incarnation the waiting is almost over, but not quite. It’s a moment filled with quiet hope—the hope of a promise about to be fulfilled. The waiting itself is holy, teaching us patience, trust, and the deep longing for God’s presence to break fully into our lives.


Even in the darkness, hope keeps burning. It reminds us that God’s arrival is not just a past event but an ongoing gift—a light that continues to shine in the shadows. As we wait, we join the faithful of every generation who longed for the coming of the Messiah.


Illustration:

Think of a child waiting for Christmas morning, eyes wide with excitement but still patient in the night. That childlike hope is a gift we can reclaim: trusting that the promise of God’s love will be fulfilled—even when we don’t see it fully yet.


Prayer:

God of promise and hope, in this quiet waiting, teach me patience and trust. Keep my heart awake and expectant for your coming. Help me live today with the joy of one who knows the dawn is near. Amen.


Saturday, 27 December 2025

Christmas Devotions


Day 28 – The Word Became Flesh

📖 John 1:14

“The Word became flesh and lived among us. We have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.” (John 1:14, NRSV)


Reflection:

At the heart of Christmas is this astonishing truth: God came to dwell with us. Not in splendour or distance, but in the everyday reality of human life. The eternal Word took on skin—fragile, vulnerable, mortal—and entered our world in the form of a newborn child.

Jesus, God’s Son, didn’t just visit; he moved in. He walked our streets, touched the sick, wept with the grieving, and loved the broken. He knows what it’s like to be us. The incarnation is not just a miracle of birth; it’s the miracle of divine love choosing intimacy over distance.


Illustration:

Imagine someone building a home for people in need—not just designing it from afar, but choosing to live among them, to share the conditions and the struggles of their daily life. That’s what God did at Christmas. He didn’t send a message—he came in person. That’s what makes it love.


Prayer:

Emmanuel—God with us—thank you for drawing near, for choosing to live among us with grace and truth. Help me to see your presence in the ordinary, to welcome you into my daily moments, and to carry your love to others. Dwell with me now and always. Amen.


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We are a community of faith seeking to discover the face of Jesus Christ in our Church, in our Community and in our Commitment.