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.

Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Joy – More Than Circumstances

The next Fruit of the Spirit we encounter in Galatians 5:22–25 is joy. Listed second, it points us to something deep-seated, spiritual, and enduring. Biblical joy is not the same as happiness. Happiness rises and falls with events and emotions; joy remains rooted in God’s presence. It is an “inner, calm delight” that flows not from what is happening around us, but from who is at work within us.

This joy is linked to the Greek word chara, closely related to charis—grace. In other words, joy is a gift before it is a feeling. It can coexist with sorrow, uncertainty, and even pain. That is why Scripture can say, “The joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10). Joy does not deny reality; it gives us resilience to face it.


Illustration:

Think of a lighthouse during a storm. The waves crash, the wind howls, and the sky grows dark—but the light remains steady. The lighthouse does not stop the storm, but it offers guidance, hope, and direction in the midst of it. Christian joy is like that light. It doesn’t mean life is calm, but it assures us that God is present, faithful, and guiding us through.


Fred Buechner captures this beautifully when he reminds us that Christianity is not meant to be “stiff and antiseptic,” but full of laughter, freedom, and open-armed wonder. At its heart, faith is joy—a joy that embraces the world even when it breaks our hearts.


Challenge:

This week, pay attention to where you are seeking joy. Are you looking for it mainly in circumstances, achievements, or other people? Each day, deliberately place your joy back in God—through prayer, gratitude, or noticing small signs of grace. Ask the Spirit to shape in you a joy that endures, not just reacts.


Prayer:

Gracious God,

Thank you for the gift of joy that comes from your Spirit, not from our situations. Root our joy in your grace, steady us in times of trial, and remind us that you are always near. Teach us to live with open hearts, trusting that your joy is our strength.

Amen.


Monday, 8 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Love – The Root of All the Fruit

As we begin to explore the fruit of the Spirit, it is important to notice that the New Testament speaks of fruit, not fruits. This is not a pick-and-mix list from which we choose our favourites, but a single, unified image. Together, these qualities describe the full breadth and depth of the Spirit’s work in our lives.


At the heart of this image stands love. “Love – the root of all the fruit” is a helpful way of understanding Galatians 5:22–23. Paul begins with love not by accident. Love—agapÄ“, God’s self-giving love—is not merely one virtue among many, but the deep root from which all the others grow. Joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control all draw their life from this root. Without love, they become hollow imitations—politeness without compassion, patience without grace, self-control without mercy.


Illumination:

This helps us see that the fruit of the Spirit is not about behaviour modification or moral achievement. We do not manufacture fruit; we bear it. Fruit grows when roots are well nourished. When our lives are rooted in God’s love—received, trusted, and lived out—the Spirit shapes us from the inside out. Love transforms our actions from duty into delight, from obligation into grace.


Challenge:

The question, then, is not simply “Am I patient enough?” or “Am I kind enough?” but “Am I rooted in love?” Where we struggle to show the fruit of the Spirit, it may be less about effort and more about connection. Are there places in our lives where fear, resentment, or self-protection have begun to choke the roots of love? Who might God be calling us to love more deeply—not in words alone, but in costly, Christ-shaped action?


Prayer:

Loving God,

you are the source of all true love.

Root our lives more deeply in your grace,

that your Spirit may bear fruit in us.

Where our love is thin, renew us;

where it is blocked, heal us;

where it is costly, strengthen us.

May our lives reflect not our own goodness,

but the transforming love of Christ,

to the glory of your name.

Amen.


Sunday, 7 June 2026

Daily Devotions


A Life that Overflows – Why Fruit and Gifts Matter

Picture an apple tree in full leaf. From a distance it looks healthy, impressive, even productive. But as you draw closer, you realise there is no fruit on its branches. It offers shade, but nothing to share. Now imagine another tree, heavy with apples, but with weak branches that snap under the weight. The fruit falls to the ground before it can be gathered.


In the Christian life, fruit and gifts belong together. The Fruit of the Spirit shapes the kind of people we are becoming—rooted in love, joy, peace, patience, kindness. The Gifts of the Spirit shape what we do—serving, teaching, encouraging, healing, leading. Fruit without gifts can leave us well-meaning but ineffective. Gifts without fruit can make us active but unloving, impressive but unsafe.


Paul reminds us that love is not an optional extra; it is the framework that holds everything together. Without love, gifts become noise. With love, even the smallest act becomes eternal fruit. As Paul says in Philippians, this fruit “increases to your credit”—not as a reward to boast about, but as evidence of lives being shaped into the likeness of Christ.


Challenge


This week, take time to reflect honestly:

Where is God growing fruit in your character right now?

Where might God be inviting you to use your gifts more courageously in love?


Pray not just for more activity, but for a life that overflows—where who you are in Christ and what you do for Christ are held together by love.


Prayer


Loving God,

Thank you that you are at work in us, shaping us into the likeness of Christ.

Grow in us the fruit of your Spirit, especially love, so that our words and actions reflect your grace.

Awaken and strengthen the gifts you have placed within us, not for our own glory, but for the building up of your people and the blessing of the world.

Keep us rooted in love, faithful in service, and open to your transforming work,

that our lives may bear fruit that lasts,

to the glory of Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.


Saturday, 6 June 2026

Daily Devotions


The Spirit and Community – Growing Together, Not Alone

Community, at its best, is more than people sharing space or interests; it is belonging, mutual care, and shared responsibility. In the Christian vision, community is shaped by koinonia—a Spirit-created fellowship that binds believers to Christ and to one another. The Church is not a loose network of individuals but the Body of Christ, where life is shared, burdens are carried, and no one is meant to grow alone.


Paul’s words in Galatians 6:2, “Bear one another’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfil the law of Christ,” remind us that Christian community is active, not passive. This way of living is only possible through the Holy Spirit. Walking in the Spirit (Galatians 5:16, 25) forms in us the fruit of love, gentleness, and humility—qualities essential for true community. What feels costly or inconvenient in our own strength becomes natural when the Spirit shapes our hearts.


Illustration

Think of a bundle of sticks. Individually, each stick can be snapped easily. Bound together, they become remarkably strong. The Church is like that bundle—not held together by rope, rules, or personalities, but by the Spirit of God. When one stick weakens, the others support it. Alone, we are vulnerable; together in the Spirit, we become resilient.


Challenge

Ask yourself: am I trying to carry my burdens alone, or am I willing to share them? And whose burdens am I being invited to help carry? This week, take one intentional step into Spirit-shaped community. It may mean asking for prayer, offering practical help, listening without judgment, or restoring someone gently rather than criticising. Let the Spirit move you from polite fellowship into Christlike participation.


Prayer

Holy Spirit,

draw us out of isolation and into true fellowship.

Teach us to carry one another’s burdens

with love, patience, and humility.

Where we are weak, bind us together;

where we are weary, help us to lean on one another.

Form us into the Body of Christ,

that together we may grow in faith, hope, and love,

for the glory of God and the healing of the world.

Amen.


Friday, 5 June 2026

Daily Devotions


From Effort to Surrender – Letting the Spirit Lead

Christian growth often begins with effort: trying harder, doing more, proving faithfulness. Yet maturity leads us beyond striving into surrender. Zechariah 4:6 reminds us that God’s purposes are fulfilled “Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit.” Zerubbabel faced a task far beyond his capacity, yet God assured him that what human strength could not achieve, the Spirit would complete. The same is true for us.


Bernard of Clairvaux’s image of the canal and the reservoir is deeply instructive. A canal is always giving out, but never stopping to be filled. A reservoir waits, receives, and only then overflows. Many Christians live as canals—busy, active, exhausted—while God invites us to become reservoirs, grounded in prayer, attentive to the Spirit, and able to serve from abundance rather than depletion.


Illustration

Imagine trying to push a sailing boat across a lake by paddling with your hands. You may make some progress, but it is slow and exhausting. Then someone raises the sail. Suddenly the wind takes hold, and the boat moves with ease and purpose. The effort shifts from straining muscles to attentive guidance—adjusting the sail, reading the wind. The Christian life is not about paddling harder, but about raising the sail of surrender so the Spirit can carry us where God intends.


Challenge

Where are you still paddling when God is asking you to raise the sail? This week, notice the areas of your life or ministry driven by anxiety, overwork, or self-reliance. Choose one deliberate act of surrender: begin the day with silence rather than rushing, pray “Holy Spirit, lead me” before making decisions, or release a burden you were never meant to carry alone. Trust that God’s work done God’s way will never lack God’s power.


Prayer

Gracious God,

we confess how often we rely on our own strength

and measure faithfulness by effort alone.

Teach us to wait, to receive, and to trust your Spirit.

Fill us until we overflow,

that our lives may serve not from exhaustion

but from grace.

Raise the sails of our hearts,

and lead us where your love desires to go.

Amen.


Thursday, 4 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Grace Before Growth – The Spirit at Work in Weakness

Throughout the history of the Church, some of the most fruitful servants of Christ have been those who felt least equipped. Hudson Taylor, the great missionary to China, once observed, “All God’s giants have been weak ones who did great things for God because they reckoned on His power and presence to be with them.” His words remind us that Christian growth does not begin with confidence or competence, but with grace.

The apostle Paul captures this truth in Romans 8:26–27. He acknowledges our weakness, not as a failure but as a reality of discipleship. There are moments when life overwhelms us—when pain, confusion, or exhaustion leave us unable to find the right words for prayer. In those moments, Paul tells us, the Holy Spirit comes alongside us, interceding with “groans too deep for words.” God, who searches the heart, understands these unspoken prayers because the Spirit prays in perfect harmony with God’s will.

Illustration:
Imagine a small child trying to explain a deep hurt to a loving parent. The words come out muddled, mixed with tears. Yet the parent understands—not because the child speaks clearly, but because the parent listens with love. In the same way, when our prayers falter, the Spirit translates our sighs, tears, and silences into prayers that reach the heart of God.

This is grace before growth. We do not grow strong by pretending we are not weak; we grow as we allow the Spirit to work within our weakness. Spiritual maturity is not marked by self-sufficiency, but by deeper dependence on God.

Challenge:
Where are you trying to be strong in your own strength? This week, resist the urge to “tidy up” your prayers. Bring God your confusion, your weariness, and even your silence. Trust that the Spirit is already at work, praying for you and shaping your life according to God’s purpose.

Prayer:
Gracious God,
We confess our weakness and our inability to pray as we ought.
Thank you for the gift of your Holy Spirit,
who intercedes for us when words fail.
Teach us to rely not on our own strength,
but on your grace at work within us.
May we rest in the assurance that even our deepest sighs
are heard and held by you.
Through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Abiding in Christ – Where Fruitfulness Begins

We often use the word spirit to describe the deeper meaning of something: the spirit of adventure, the spirit of the law, the spirit of Christmas. We mean not just the outward form, but the heart, intention, and life behind it.


Isn’t that close to what Jesus means when he says, “Abide in me” (John 15:4)? To abide is not simply to believe certain things about Jesus, or to check in with him occasionally. It is to remain, to stay rooted, to dwell deeply in him—like a branch connected to the vine, drawing its life from the source.


Illustration:

Imagine a mobile phone left unplugged. It may look fine, still shiny and useful, but slowly the battery drains. Eventually, no matter how sophisticated it is, it becomes powerless. The phone was designed to work only when regularly connected to its power source. In the same way, we were never meant to live the Christian life on stored-up faith alone. Without abiding—daily prayer, Scripture, worship, attentiveness to God—we slowly run dry. Fruitfulness doesn’t come from trying harder; it comes from staying connected.


Jesus promises that when we abide in him, his life flows through us. Love, joy, patience, courage, and faithfulness grow naturally—not because we manufacture them, but because Christ’s Spirit is at work within us.


A favourite lyric from Spirit captures this beautifully:


“Who is it tells me what to do?

Who makes me want to do what’s right?

Who puts the courage in my soul?

Who makes me strong to reach my goal?

That’s the Spirit of the Lord in me.”


Challenge:

This week, ask yourself: Where am I truly abiding? Not just believing, but remaining. Set aside intentional time—however small—to reconnect with Christ each day. Let your actions, choices, and words flow from that relationship rather than from habit or pressure.


Prayer:

Lord Jesus, help us to abide in you. When we rush ahead or grow weary, draw us back to yourself. Fill us with your Spirit, that our lives may bear fruit—fruit that lasts. Keep us rooted in your love, shaped by your truth, and strengthened for your service. Amen.  


About Us

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