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.

Thursday, 18 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Pruning and Growth – When God Refines Us

You may have heard the saying “knock the rough edges off.” It means refining something that is almost right but needs shaping—softening sharp corners, correcting habits, improving what is already good. Life does that to us through experience, learning, and sometimes gentle correction. In the gospel, Jesus gives this idea a deeper, more purposeful meaning: pruning.


In John 15:1–2 Jesus says, “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser… every branch that bears fruit he prunes so that it may bear more fruit.” Notice something important: pruning is not punishment for failure. It is what happens to branches that are already fruitful. God refines us not because we are useless, but because He sees our potential for more.


Illustration:

A skilled gardener does not hack at a plant randomly. Each cut is deliberate. Dead wood is removed. Crowded growth is thinned. Healthy branches are shortened so that energy goes into fruit rather than excess leaves. To the plant, the cutting feels severe. To the gardener, it is an act of care. Left unpruned, the plant may look full, but it will never produce its best fruit.


So it is with us. God, the loving Gardener, sometimes cuts away habits, attitudes, or even comfortable routines that hinder our growth. His Word acts like a sharp knife—precise, discerning, sometimes uncomfortable—yet always guided by love. Pride may be trimmed into humility. Self-reliance into trust. Harshness into gentleness. These are the “rough edges” God smooths away.


Pruning can be painful because it often involves loss or change. But Jesus reminds us that fruitfulness depends on staying connected to Him. Apart from the vine, branches wither. Abiding in Christ allows even painful pruning to lead to deeper joy and lasting growth.


Challenge:

Ask honestly: What might God be pruning in my life right now? Instead of resisting, can I trust His hand and remain close to Christ through prayer and Scripture this week?


Prayer:

Loving God, you know us better than we know ourselves. When your refining work feels painful or confusing, help us to trust your wisdom. Keep us rooted in Christ, open to your Word, and willing to be shaped for greater fruitfulness. May our lives bring glory to you. Amen.


Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Growing Fruit Takes Time – Trusting the Process

Today, on my 77th birthday, John Newton’s honest words resonate deeply: “I am not what I ought to be… but still I am not what I once used to be, and by the grace of God I am what I am.” With the passing years comes a clearer awareness of this truth: growing spiritual fruit takes time.


We live in a culture that values speed and instant results. Yet the wisdom of life—and of faith—tells a different story. There is a phrase that has stayed with me: “The day you plant the seed is not the day you eat the fruit.” It reminds us that anything worthwhile—character, faith, wisdom, love—cannot be rushed. Growth happens slowly, often invisibly, beneath the surface.


James uses a beautiful illustration to make this point:

“Be patient, then, brothers and sisters, until the Lord’s coming. See how the farmer waits for the land to yield its valuable crop, patiently waiting for the autumn and spring rains” (James 5:7).

The farmer cannot force the seed to grow. He prepares the soil, plants faithfully, and waits—trusting the seasons and the rain to do their work.


Illustration:

An apple tree does not produce fruit the year it is planted. For years it looks unremarkable—just branches and leaves. But underground, roots are deepening, strengthening, preparing to support future fruit. In the same way, God often works in us quietly and slowly, shaping our hearts long before others see the results.


This can be frustrating. We want instant maturity, instant answers, instant holiness. But the fruit of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience—ripens over a lifetime, not overnight. Looking back, I can see how God has been faithful, even when progress felt painfully slow.


Challenge:

Ask yourself: Where might God be inviting me to be patient—with myself, with others, or with a situation I cannot control? This week, commit to one small, faithful act—prayer, kindness, perseverance—and trust God with the outcome.


Prayer:

Gracious God, thank you that you are patient with us. When growth feels slow and progress hard to see, help us to trust your timing. Deepen our roots, strengthen our faith, and teach us to wait with hope. May our lives, in time, bear fruit that brings you glory. Amen.


Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Daily Devotions

 

Self-Control – Freedom, Not Restriction

This almost sounds counter intuitive when talking of the fruit of the spirit, for doesn’t the gospel speak of self denial. The problem with self-control is that our natures can quickly veer towards selfishness.


Imagine a river flowing through open countryside. Left entirely unchecked, it may flood its banks, eroding soil, destroying crops, and leaving chaos behind. But when the river is guided by well-placed banks, it does not lose its freedom; it gains purpose. The water flows deeper, stronger, and further, bringing life wherever it goes.


Self-control in the Spirit is like those riverbanks. It is not a dam that stops life, nor a cage that restricts joy. It is the loving guidance of God that allows our lives to flow as they were meant to—towards love, peace, and fruitfulness. Without it, our desires easily spill into selfishness or excess. With it, those same desires are shaped into generosity, patience, and faithful living.


Challenge


Galatians reminds us that self-control is not about gritting our teeth or relying on sheer willpower. It is the Spirit’s work within us, enabling us to pause, pray, and respond rather than simply react.


This week, notice the moments when you feel rushed, irritated, tempted, or defensive. Instead of asking, “What do I want right now?” try asking, “Who is God shaping me to be in this moment?”


Practise one small, intentional act of Spirit-led restraint: listening instead of interrupting, choosing kindness over sarcasm, rest over relentless activity, or generosity over self-protection. In doing so, you may discover that self-control does not diminish you, but frees you to become more fully yourself—your best self, shaped by grace.


Prayer


Loving God,

we thank you for the gift of your Holy Spirit,

who works within us to grow fruit we could never cultivate alone.

Forgive us for the times we confuse freedom with indulgence

and strength with self-assertion.


Teach us the freedom of self-control—

the freedom to love well,

to respond with grace,

to say “no” to what harms

so we can say a deeper “yes” to life in you.


Shape our desires, steady our reactions,

and form in us the beauty of holiness

found in gentleness, patience, and quiet faithfulness.

May our lives reflect your presence

in the ordinary moments of each day,

through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.


Monday, 15 June 2026

Daily Devotion


Gentleness – Strength Shaped by God’s Humble Heart

Gentleness is our current stop on the voyage through the fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22–23), and perhaps one of the most misunderstood virtues in the Christian life. In a world that celebrates dominance, loud voices, and self-promotion, gentleness can seem irrelevant or even dangerous. It is often confused with passivity or weakness, as though gentle people have simply opted out of the struggle.


Yet the Kingdom of God works by a very different logic. Jesus stands on the hillside and blesses the meek, the merciful, and the peacemakers (Matthew 5:3–9). Gentleness is not the absence of strength; it is strength willingly placed under God’s control. It reflects the humble heart of God Himself, revealed most clearly in Christ, who had all power yet chose compassion, patience, and sacrificial love.


Illustration

Think of a skilled horse trainer breaking in a powerful horse. The animal’s strength is immense, capable of destruction if uncontrolled. But through patience, trust, and careful guidance, that strength becomes purposeful and beautiful. Gentleness does not remove the horse’s power; it channels it. In the same way, spiritual gentleness is power disciplined by love. It is choosing restraint over retaliation, kindness over cruelty, humility over pride — not because we are weak, but because God’s Spirit is at work within us.


Reflection

Jesus describes Himself as “gentle and humble in heart” (Matthew 11:29). This is the heart of God’s Kingdom. Gentleness shows itself in how we speak, how we respond to provocation, how we treat those who disagree with us, and how we handle those who are vulnerable or wounded. It is the Spirit shaping our instincts so that grace, not ego, has the final word.


Challenge

This week, pay attention to your reactions. Where might God be calling you to respond with gentleness rather than defensiveness or force? Choose one situation — at home, church, or work — where you will deliberately listen more, speak more kindly, or show patience when it would be easier to push back.


Prayer

Gentle and gracious God,

You come to us not with crushing force, but with mercy and love. Shape our hearts to reflect the gentleness of Christ. Where we are harsh, soften us; where we are proud, humble us; where we are weary, give us grace. By Your Spirit, help us to live with strength guided by love, that we may be true children of Your Kingdom.

Amen.

Sunday, 14 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Faithfulness – Steady Trust in a Faithful God

Faithfulness is not blind optimism; it is steady trust in a God whose character does not change. When life feels uncertain or overwhelming, faithfulness rests not in what we can see, but in who God has proven Himself to be. The writer of Lamentations, standing amid loss and heartbreak, dares to proclaim hope: “Great is your faithfulness.” This is faith born out of experience, not ease.


Illustration

Consider a well that has served a village for generations. In times of rain, people barely notice it. But during drought, when streams dry up and fields crack, the well becomes essential. Day after day, people draw water and find it still there—deep, reliable, unchanged by the surface conditions. God’s faithfulness is like that well. When circumstances are good, we may take it for granted. When life is hard, we discover just how deep and dependable His mercy truly is. As Lamentations reminds us, God’s compassion is never exhausted; it meets us fresh every morning, even when the world around us feels dry and barren.


Reflection

Faithfulness as a fruit of the Spirit reflects God’s own nature. It is not about heroic endurance but about daily reliance on the One who keeps His promises. We learn faithfulness by remembering—remembering how God has carried us before, how His goodness has sustained us in the past. From that memory grows trust, and from trust comes perseverance. Through the Spirit’s work, faithfulness shapes us into people who are steady, trustworthy, and committed to God and one another.


Challenge

Where are you tempted to give up because answers feel slow or outcomes uncertain? This week, choose to “draw again from the well.” Begin each day by acknowledging God’s faithfulness aloud. Commit to one act of obedience or kindness, not because it is easy, but because God is faithful.


Prayer

Faithful and gracious God,

Thank You that Your mercy never runs dry and Your love never fails. When we feel weary or uncertain, help us to trust in Your unchanging nature. By Your Spirit, grow in us the fruit of faithfulness, that our lives may reflect Your steadfast love.

Great is Your faithfulness, Lord.

Amen.


Saturday, 13 June 2026

Daily Devotions


Goodness – Integrity Shaped by Grace

What exactly is goodness? The word good is used so often in everyday speech that it can lose its depth. We say “good morning,” “good luck,” or “good job” almost without thinking. Yet in Scripture, goodness is far richer. Biblically, good is closely linked with holiness, purity, and righteousness. In that sense, goodness is not simply niceness—it is godliness.


Goodness is something that shows itself in our actions, but it begins much deeper, in the heart. Psalm 23:6 reminds us, “Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.” God’s goodness is not occasional or accidental; it is constant, faithful, and purposeful. When Christ lives within us, that same goodness is meant to flow through our lives each day.


Here is an illustration. Imagine a clear glass of water. From a distance it looks clean and refreshing. But if there is dirt settled at the bottom, no matter how carefully you pour, the water will eventually become cloudy. In the same way, good deeds poured from a heart that is not being shaped by grace will never remain clear for long. True goodness flows from a heart that is being daily cleansed and renewed by God.


The goodness described as a fruit of the Spirit is not simply moral behaviour or rule-keeping. It is an excellence of character—integrity shaped by grace. It is choosing what is right even when it is costly. It is acting with compassion, honesty, and courage because Christ is forming his character within us. This kind of goodness cannot be manufactured by effort alone; it grows as we remain close to God and rely on his mercy.


Challenge:

This week, ask yourself not only what you are doing, but why. Where is God inviting you to let his grace reshape your heart so that goodness flows naturally into your words, decisions, and relationships?


Prayer:

Gracious God,

Thank you that your goodness never fails. Shape our hearts by your grace, cleanse us from within, and help us to reflect the goodness of Christ in all we say and do. May our lives bear fruit that brings glory to you.

Amen.


Friday, 12 June 2026

Daily DevotIons


Kindness: Love in Action

Kindness of the Spirit is far more than good manners or being pleasant. It is love that moves its feet and opens its hands. Rooted in God’s own character, kindness flows from a heart transformed by the Holy Spirit. As Paul reminds us in Galatians 5:22–23, kindness is fruit grown in us, not manufactured by us. It shows itself in generous, compassionate actions—often costly, often unnoticed, and sometimes offered to those who least deserve it.


Spirit-shaped kindness is deliberate and counter-cultural. It chooses patience over irritation, mercy over judgement, generosity over self-protection. It treats others as we would wish to be treated, even when doing so stretches us. This kind of kindness cannot be sustained by sheer willpower; it depends on the Holy Spirit enabling us to love beyond our natural limits. As Mother Teresa beautifully expressed, “Let no one ever come to you without leaving better and happier.” Kindness becomes visible—in our words, our expressions, our attentiveness, and our actions.


Illustration

A church member noticed the same elderly man sitting alone on a park bench each morning. After weeks of polite nods, she finally stopped to talk. She learned he had recently lost his wife and came to the bench because it was the last place they had sat together. She began sitting with him once a week. Nothing dramatic—just listening. Months later he said, “You reminded me that I still matter.” No sermon was preached, yet love was made visible.


Challenge

Today, ask the Holy Spirit to show you one specific act of kindness you can offer—especially to someone you might normally overlook or avoid. It could be a listening ear, a generous gesture, or a word of encouragement. Do it quietly, without seeking recognition, trusting that God is at work through small acts of love.


Prayer

Loving God,

Thank you for your undeserved kindness to us.

Shape our hearts by your Holy Spirit,

that our lives may reflect your compassion and grace.

Give us eyes to notice need,

courage to act,

and love that goes beyond convenience.

May others encounter your kindness through us today.

In Jesus’ name, 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.