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, 7 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Sharing Summer’s Beauty

Reflecting on how divine love calls us to share with others


Summer often arrives with a gentler rhythm. Days stretch longer, evenings linger, and the natural world seems to sing more loudly of God’s generosity. In this season, creation itself becomes an invitation to rest—to treat summer as a kind of “Sabbath season,” a gift from God for restoration of body, mind, and spirit. Fields glow, gardens flourish, and skies blaze with colour at dawn and dusk, quietly reminding us that God delights in beauty and abundance.


When life slows, we notice more. The sweetness of a sun-ripened strawberry, the warmth of sunlight on our skin, or the familiar call of birdsong can become holy moments. These “small wonders” draw our attention back to the Creator, helping us recognise God’s loving presence woven into everyday life. Summer teaches us gratitude—not just for what we have, but for what we are given freely.


There is also something deeply childlike about summer. Holidays, play, and unhurried time invite us to rediscover wonder and curiosity. Jesus spoke often of receiving the kingdom like a child, with open hands and trusting hearts. In these relaxed days, Paul’s prayer feels especially close to fulfilment: “I pray that God, the source of hope, will fill you completely with joy and peace because you trust in him. Then you will overflow with confident hope through the power of the Holy Spirit” (Romans 15:13). Summer joy is never meant to stop with us; it overflows.


Illustration:

Imagine a jug of cold water on a hot day. It refreshes when poured out, not when hoarded. Left untouched, it grows warm and stale. God’s love is like that jug—meant to be shared. The beauty we receive from God refreshes others when we let it flow beyond ourselves.


Challenge:

This week, intentionally share summer’s beauty. Invite someone for a walk, share fruit from your garden, offer time to listen, or simply point out something beautiful you’ve noticed. Let gratitude turn into generosity.


Prayer:

Loving God, thank you for the gift of summer and for the beauty that surrounds us. Slow our hearts so we may notice your goodness in small and simple things. Fill us with joy and peace through your Spirit, and help that joy overflow in kindness, generosity, and love toward others. May we share freely what you have so graciously given. Amen.


Monday, 6 July 2026

Daily Devotions


 
“The Hum of Life Around Us” – Listening for God’s Voice in Nature’s Busy, Vibrant Energy

I recall during the pandemic how conscious I became of the sound of nature around me, free from the constant hum and distraction of everyday life. With traffic stilled and routines disrupted, birdsong seemed louder, the wind more noticeable, and even silence itself felt alive. Creation hadn’t changed — but my listening had.


Listening for God’s voice within the busy, vibrant energy of nature involves cultivating an inner silence and a posture of awe, even amidst the clamour of creation. Nature can be loud — crashing waves, wind-swept trees, chattering birds — yet these sounds can be heard as God’s voice, expressing power, majesty, and constant, living energy. God is not only found in stillness, but also in movement, rhythm, and life unfolding all around us.


There is also an almost imperceptible groan of nature around us. Psalm 19:1–4 reminds us that “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.” Creation speaks continuously, without words, yet its message reaches to the ends of the earth. God’s presence is broadcast constantly — not shouted, but faithfully revealed.


Illustration

Think of standing near a beehive. At first, the sound feels overwhelming — a loud, restless buzzing. But as you stay, you begin to hear something else: order within the noise, purpose in the movement, life working together. What once felt chaotic becomes a sign of health and fruitfulness. So it is with creation. When we linger long enough, the noise becomes a song, and the song becomes a witness to God.


This leads us to an honest question: How tuned are we to the voice of God around us? Have we trained our ears only for silence, while God is speaking through the hum of life itself?


Challenge

This week, spend ten uninterrupted minutes outdoors. Don’t analyse. Don’t pray with words. Simply listen. Notice what stirs your awe, what calms you, what draws your attention. Ask yourself: What might God be saying through this moment?


Prayer

Creator God,

Open our ears to hear You in the song of birds, the rush of wind, and the quiet groan of creation.

Still our inner noise so we may recognise Your voice in the life around us.

Teach us to listen with wonder, to live with attentiveness,

and to respond with gratitude and praise.

Amen.


Sunday, 5 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Morning Prayer Like Dew

How consistent prayer nourishes our spirit as dew feeds summer grass


The image of dew as spiritual nourishment is beautifully drawn from Hosea 14:5, where God promises, “I will be like the dew to Israel; he will blossom like a lily.” Dew is a sign of divine favour—quiet, undeserved grace that arrives not through effort, but through God’s faithfulness.


Morning prayer, practiced consistently, works in the same way. It is not dramatic or noisy, but it is deeply necessary. Just as dew settles on summer grass before the heat of the day, early communion with God refreshes the soul before the demands of life take hold. Without dew, grass dries and withers; without prayer, our spirits can become parched, brittle, and weary.


Dew does not come with thunder or force. It falls silently, softening the soil and preparing it for growth. In the same way, God’s grace often works quietly within us—reshaping attitudes, renewing hope, restoring strength—long before we notice outward change. If life feels dry or unfruitful, God promises not condemnation, but renewal. He brings life where there has been barrenness, beauty where there has been fatigue.


Illustration:

A gardener once noted that during a long dry spell, his lawn stayed green—not because of heavy watering, but because of consistent early-morning dew. Neighbours wondered why their grass browned while his endured. The difference was not intensity, but consistency. So it is with prayer: small, faithful moments with God sustain us far more than occasional spiritual downpours.


Challenge:

This week, set aside ten quiet minutes each morning. No agenda, no rushing—simply sit with God’s Word and invite His presence. Trust that even if you feel nothing immediately, His grace is falling like dew.


Prayer:

Lord God, be like dew to my soul today. Refresh what is weary, soften what is hardened, and restore what has grown dry. Teach me to begin each day resting in Your presence, trusting Your quiet work within me. May my life blossom by Your grace. Amen.


Saturday, 4 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Summer Heat

“For the Lord God is a sun and shield; the Lord bestows favour and honour; no good thing does he withhold from those whose walk is blameless.”
Psalm 84:11

A hot summer’s day can be a real delight. The sunshine helps flowers bloom, fruit ripen, and draws us outdoors to enjoy God’s creation. Yet prolonged heat can also leave us tired, thirsty, and searching for shade.

The Bible often uses summer heat as a picture of life’s difficult seasons. We all experience times when pressure, worry, disappointment, or grief feel as relentless as the midday sun, draining our strength and leaving us weary.

Psalm 84 offers a beautiful reminder that “the Lord God is a sun and shield.” God is like the sun, bringing light, life, warmth, and hope into our lives. But He is also our shield, protecting and sustaining us when life’s heat becomes overwhelming.

God doesn’t always remove our struggles, but He promises to be with us through them. He refreshes the weary, strengthens the weak, and offers shelter to all who trust in Him. Whatever season you are facing today, His presence is enough.

Illustration

On a scorching summer’s day, it’s common to see people gathering beneath the shade of a large tree in a park. Children play nearby, walkers pause on a bench, and families enjoy a picnic, all grateful for the cool refuge the tree provides. The sun is still shining, but the shade makes all the difference.

God’s care is much like that tree. He doesn’t always take us out of life’s heat, but He invites us to rest in His presence. There we find peace, renewed strength, and the assurance that we are not facing life’s challenges alone.

Challenge

The next time you seek out a shady spot on a warm day, let it remind you to pause and rest in God’s presence.

Ask yourself:

Where do I need God’s protection and strength today?

Take a few quiet moments to place that concern into His hands.

Prayer

Loving God, thank You for being my sun and my shield. Thank You for the light that guides me and the protection that surrounds me. When life feels overwhelming, help me to trust in Your presence and Your care. Refresh my spirit, strengthen my faith, and help me to walk each day in the warmth of Your love and the safety of Your grace. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.



Friday, 3 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Rest Under a Shady Tree

On a blazing summer’s day, few things are more welcome than the cool shade of a tree. The air feels lighter, your shoulders drop, and your breathing slows. Shade doesn’t remove the heat of the sun, but it gives relief, space, and the chance to recover.


Scripture often uses this image to describe the peace and security God longs to give his people. In Micah 4:4, we are given a beautiful picture of God’s future: “Everyone will sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree, and no one will make them afraid.” It is an image of safety, sufficiency, and rest — life lived without fear. The Message paraphrases it vividly: “Each man will sit under his own shade tree… God-of-the-Angel-Armies says so, and he means what he says.”


Yet it’s one thing to step into the shade and another to truly rest beneath the branches. Many of us live shaded lives without rested souls. We pause, but we keep worrying. We stop, but our minds keep racing.


Billy Graham once said, “The rest that Christ gives is not a piece of negation… It is founded upon something positive – Christ himself.” Jesus doesn’t just offer shade from life’s heat; he offers himself. True rest is not found by escaping responsibility, but by trusting the One who carries us.


Illustration:

Imagine a child walking on a long, hot journey. When the child becomes tired, the parent doesn’t just point out a shady spot — they lift the child into their arms. The rest comes not only from stopping, but from being held. That is the rest Christ offers.


Challenge:

This week, deliberately “sit under the tree.” Set aside a few quiet minutes each day to stop striving, hand over your worries to God, and remind yourself that you are held, not hurried. Ask yourself: Am I just standing in the shade — or am I allowing God to give me rest?


Prayer:

Gracious God,

When life feels relentless and the sun beats down on our souls, lead us to your shade. Teach us not only to pause, but to trust. Help us to rest in Christ, the true source of peace, joy, and renewal. May we sit unafraid beneath your care, restored and strengthened for the journey ahead.

Amen.


Daily Devotions


The Warmth of Sunshine on Skin

There are few sensations more quietly reassuring than the warmth of sunshine on our skin. On a cool morning, when the sun finally breaks through the clouds, we instinctively turn our faces toward it. We don’t question whether it will reach us; we simply receive it. Its warmth feels personal, even though we know it is shared by the whole world.


Psalm 19:6 captures something of that wonder. The sun, the psalmist says, makes its complete and tireless journey across the sky, “like a strong runner,” and nothing is hidden from its heat. Its light and warmth are universal, unavoidable, and life-giving—a visible testimony to the glory of God woven into creation itself.


Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase sharpens the point beautifully:

“That’s how God’s Word vaults across the skies from sunrise to sunset, melting ice, scorching deserts, warming hearts to faith.”

Just as the sun reaches every corner of the earth, so God’s presence and Word reach into every corner of our lives—melting what is frozen, softening what is hard, and warming what has grown cold.


Scripture often speaks of hearts being “warmed” by God. Think of the disciples on the road to Emmaus, whose hearts burned within them as Jesus spoke. John Wesley famously described his heart as “strangely warmed.” This warming is not emotional hype; it is the quiet, deep work of grace. God replaces hearts of stone with hearts of flesh—hearts able to feel again, to trust again, to love again.


Illustration:

Imagine standing in sunlight after being in the cold for too long. At first, the warmth almost stings, then slowly soaks in, bringing life back to numb fingers. God’s presence can feel like that—gentle, persistent, and healing, even when we didn’t realise how cold we had become.


Challenge:

Today, where do you need to turn your face toward God’s warmth? What might it look like to stop rushing, step into the light of prayer and Scripture, and simply receive God’s presence rather than striving to earn it?


Prayer:

Gracious God,

as the sun warms the earth, warm our hearts with your presence.

Melt what is frozen within us, soften what has grown hard,

and rekindle our love for you.

Help us to turn toward your light and live in its warmth today.

Amen.


Thursday, 2 July 2026

Daily Devotions


The Warmth of Sunshine on Skin

There are few sensations more quietly reassuring than the warmth of sunshine on our skin. On a cool morning, when the sun finally breaks through the clouds, we instinctively turn our faces toward it. We don’t question whether it will reach us; we simply receive it. Its warmth feels personal, even though we know it is shared by the whole world.


Psalm 19:6 captures something of that wonder. The sun, the psalmist says, makes its complete and tireless journey across the sky, “like a strong runner,” and nothing is hidden from its heat. Its light and warmth are universal, unavoidable, and life-giving—a visible testimony to the glory of God woven into creation itself.


Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase sharpens the point beautifully:

“That’s how God’s Word vaults across the skies from sunrise to sunset, melting ice, scorching deserts, warming hearts to faith.”

Just as the sun reaches every corner of the earth, so God’s presence and Word reach into every corner of our lives—melting what is frozen, softening what is hard, and warming what has grown cold.


Scripture often speaks of hearts being “warmed” by God. Think of the disciples on the road to Emmaus, whose hearts burned within them as Jesus spoke. John Wesley famously described his heart as “strangely warmed.” This warming is not emotional hype; it is the quiet, deep work of grace. God replaces hearts of stone with hearts of flesh—hearts able to feel again, to trust again, to love again.


Illustration:

Imagine standing in sunlight after being in the cold for too long. At first, the warmth almost stings, then slowly soaks in, bringing life back to numb fingers. God’s presence can feel like that—gentle, persistent, and healing, even when we didn’t realise how cold we had become.


Challenge:

Today, where do you need to turn your face toward God’s warmth? What might it look like to stop rushing, step into the light of prayer and Scripture, and simply receive God’s presence rather than striving to earn it?


Prayer:

Gracious God,

as the sun warms the earth, warm our hearts with your presence.

Melt what is frozen within us, soften what has grown hard,

and rekindle our love for you.

Help us to turn toward your light and live in its warmth today.

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.