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.

Sunday, 24 May 2026

Daily Devotions


The Spirit Gives Life

There is a deep significance in the fact that a ministry which seemed to end in the death of its founder was, from the beginning, about life — life in all its fullness. Jesus did not simply speak about life; he embodied it. And more than that, at the heart of the Christian faith is the audacious claim captured in a line of a well-known song: “Death could not hold him.” What looked like an ending became the doorway to a new beginning.


Paul reflects on this life-giving power in Romans 8:10–11. He speaks of a world that groans — creation itself straining under decay, longing for liberation. Yet this groaning is not despair; it is the labour pains of hope. The same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead now dwells in believers, promising not only personal renewal but the future transformation of all things. Adoption by the Spirit (Romans 8:11–17) and the redemption of creation belong together. God’s purpose is nothing less than new life for the whole cosmos.


It is easy to imagine the disciples in the upper room, waiting. Jesus had risen. He had promised the Spirit. Yet nothing outward seemed to be happening. Perhaps there was excitement mixed with fear, hope mingled with uncertainty — an unarticulated anticipation growing day by day. What they could not yet see was that God was about to breathe resurrection life into them in a way that would change everything.


Illustration

Think of a defibrillator used in a hospital. When a heart has stopped, it looks as though life has gone. Then comes the shock — sudden, powerful, decisive — and the heart begins to beat again. The Spirit’s work is not gentle encouragement to a lifeless body; it is resurrection power. Where there is exhaustion, fear, or stagnation, the Spirit brings life that we cannot generate ourselves.


Challenge

Where are you tempted to believe that something is finished — a calling, a relationship, a season of faith, even hope for the world itself? This week, deliberately invite the Spirit into that place. Pray not for quick fixes, but for resurrection life and patient hope.


Prayer

Living God,

You are the giver of life,

the One who raises the dead

and breathes hope into weary hearts.

Send your Spirit into our waiting,

our groaning, and our uncertainty.

Renew us with resurrection life,

and teach us to live as children of hope

until all creation is made new.

Amen.


Saturday, 23 May 2026

Daily Devotions


As we move on through Pentecost we consider how we are Empowered for Witness

Clothed with Power

Luke 24:49 stands at a turning point in the gospel story. The risen Jesus, having opened the disciples’ minds to understand the Scriptures, now gives them a surprising instruction: wait. Before they go anywhere, before they attempt anything in his name, they are to remain in Jerusalem until they are “clothed with power from on high.” Mission must follow gift; obedience must follow empowerment.


This promise points to the coming of the Holy Spirit, the Father’s gift, who will provide what the disciples lack—courage where there is fear, wisdom where there is confusion, and strength where there is weakness. Jesus’ physical presence among them is giving way to something deeper and more enduring: the indwelling presence of God through the Spirit. The story will unfold in Acts, but the foundation is laid here. The Church is not launched by human enthusiasm, but by divine power.


An illustration may help. 

Imagine being asked to go out into a storm without a coat. You might manage for a few steps, but the cold will soon overwhelm you. A coat does not remove the storm, but it enables you to withstand it. In the same way, the Holy Spirit does not remove the challenges of discipleship, but clothes us with what we need to face them. Power from on high is not about dominance or spectacle; it is about being adequately dressed for the work God calls us to do.


The challenge of this verse is twofold. First, are we willing to wait on God rather than rush ahead in our own strength? And second, do we rely daily on the Spirit’s power, or do we attempt Christian living and witness under our own steam? Waiting is not passivity; it is trustful readiness.


Prayer


Faithful God,

You know our eagerness to act and our reluctance to wait.

Teach us to trust your timing and to depend on your Spirit.

Clothe us with power from on high—

with courage to witness, wisdom to discern,

and love to serve in your name.

May we not go where you have not sent us,

nor speak without your Spirit’s leading,

through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.


Friday, 22 May 2026

Daily Devotions

 
Obedience Before Understanding

In Luke 11:14–28, Jesus reveals that his authority over evil is not borrowed or compromised, but rooted firmly in God. The casting out of a demon is not merely an act of power; it is a sign that the Kingdom of God has broken into the present moment. Jesus exposes the emptiness of divided loyalties and warns that freedom without faithfulness leaves space for chaos to return. Liberation, he teaches, must be filled with obedience.


The passage reaches its theological heart in verse 28. When a woman praises Jesus by blessing his mother, Jesus redirects the moment: “Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it.” This is not a dismissal of Mary—indeed, it quietly honours her, for she heard God’s word and obeyed it at great cost. Rather, Jesus expands the circle of blessedness. True blessing is not found in proximity to holiness, but in participation in it. Obedience, not admiration, is the mark of discipleship.


An illustration may help. 

Imagine being given a map through unfamiliar countryside. You may not understand every symbol or turn, but the map only helps if you follow it. Standing still, debating its logic, or admiring its design will not bring you home. Faith works the same way. God rarely gives full understanding before asking for obedience. The clarity often comes after the step is taken.


Fred Buechner reminds us that obedience to Christ is never for God’s benefit alone. When Jesus calls us to obey the law of love, he does so for our sake. Obedience is not submission to tyranny, but alignment with life as God intends it to be. It is the path toward wholeness.


The challenge of this passage is simple but unsettling: Where are we hearing God’s word but hesitating to act? Is there a step of forgiveness, generosity, justice, or trust that we are waiting to understand fully before obeying?


Prayer


Gracious God,

You speak words of life, yet we so often wait for certainty before we respond.

Give us ears to hear and hearts willing to obey.

Fill the empty places in us with your Spirit,

that freedom may grow into faithfulness.

Teach us that your commands are not burdens,

but invitations into life,

through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.


Thursday, 21 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Expecting God to Move

To expect God to move is to live with active, expectant faith—trusting not only that God can act, but that He will, in His time and according to His purposes. It is more than wishful thinking. Expectancy aligns our prayers, attitudes, and actions with God’s promises, shaping hearts that are ready to recognise His presence whether He moves in dramatic breakthroughs or quiet, faithful provision.


Psalm 27:14 captures this posture perfectly:

Wait for and confidently expect the LORD; be strong and let your heart take courage; yes, wait for and confidently expect the LORD.”

Waiting here is not passive or defeated. It is courageous trust—choosing hope over anxiety, surrender over self-reliance. Strength comes not from rushing ahead but from anchoring ourselves in God’s faithfulness.


This was surely the experience of the disciples in Jerusalem. After Jesus’ ascension, they waited—uncertain, praying, and trusting. They did not know how or when God would act, but they gathered in obedience and expectancy. Pentecost did not come to a distracted or despairing people, but to those who were waiting with open hearts and hopeful faith.


Illustration:

Expectant faith is like standing at a bus stop with the timetable in hand. You may not see the bus yet, but you wait because you trust it is coming. You do not wander off or give up after a few minutes. In the same way, God calls us to wait with confidence—not because we control the outcome, but because we trust the One who does.


Expecting God to move sharpens our spiritual awareness. It trains us to notice God at work in daily blessings, gentle answers to prayer, and moments of unexpected grace. It fuels bold prayer and deepens perseverance in quiet seasons.


Challenge:

Ask yourself this week: Do I pray with expectancy or resignation? Choose one situation where you will intentionally trust God’s timing—praying boldly, remaining faithful, and watching attentively for how God might act, even in small and surprising ways.


Prayer:

Faithful God,

Teach us to wait with courage and confident hope.

When answers seem delayed,

strengthen our hearts to trust Your timing.

Free us from rushing ahead in our own strength,

and help us to expect Your movement

in both the extraordinary and the everyday.

Make us a people who pray boldly,

wait faithfully,

and rejoice in Your faithfulness.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen


Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Open
to the Spirit’s Leading

To be open to the Spirit’s leading is to make a daily, deliberate choice to surrender our will to God’s direction. It means listening beyond our own impulses and preferences, allowing the Holy Spirit to shape our thoughts, words, and actions. The Spirit speaks through Scripture, conscience, prayer, and that deep inner alignment where our hearts are drawn toward what reflects Christ. This openness is not passive; it is a conscious yielding—choosing God’s way over our own.


Paul captures this beautifully in Romans 8:14: “For all who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God.” To be led by the Spirit is to live as part of God’s family—adopted, loved, and assured of an inheritance. This leading stands in contrast to being driven by fear, sin, or self-interest. The Spirit does not merely inform us; He transforms us, guiding us toward spiritual maturity and a life that glorifies God.


Illustration:

Consider a sailing boat. The sails cannot create wind, but when they are raised and positioned correctly, the boat is carried forward by its power. Lower the sails, and the boat drifts or relies on human effort alone. Being open to the Spirit is like raising the sails of our lives—attentive, responsive, and willing to move where God’s wind directs, even when the destination is unfamiliar.


Life in the Spirit draws us away from fear and into freedom. The Spirit confirms our identity as God’s children, replacing anxiety with assurance and self-reliance with trust. This guidance does not remove struggle, but it reshapes it, forming Christlike character in the midst of daily choices.


Challenge:

This week, pause before making decisions—large or small—and ask, “Holy Spirit, what are You leading me to do?” Pay attention to Scripture, prayer, and the gentle promptings that align with Christ’s love and truth. Practise choosing responsiveness over resistance, trusting that God leads His children with wisdom and grace.


Prayer:

Holy Spirit,

We confess how often we follow our own desires

instead of Your gentle leading.

Teach us to listen, to trust, and to obey.

Raise the sails of our hearts,

that we may move with Your wind

and not by our own strength.

Assure us again that we are God’s children,

led away from fear and into freedom,

for the glory of Christ our Lord.

Amen.


Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Daily Devotions


God Dwelling Among Us

The phrase “God dwelling among us” expresses the heart of God’s desire—to be present with humanity. From the very beginning, in the Garden of Eden, God walked with His people. Later, in the wilderness, God’s presence filled the Tabernacle, and in Jerusalem, the Temple stood as a visible sign that God chose to live among His people. Yet these were always signposts, pointing forward to something greater.


That greater fulfilment came in Jesus Christ. John declares, “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14). In Jesus, God did not merely visit humanity—He moved in. God shared our skin, our streets, our suffering. But the story does not end at Bethlehem or even at the empty tomb. At Pentecost, God’s presence takes another astonishing step: through the Holy Spirit, God comes to dwell within His people. The church becomes the living temple, carrying God’s presence into the world.


Bishop Will Willimon reminds us that this indwelling presence is not a poetic metaphor but a radical reality of the new covenant. God is not distant, locked away in heaven or confined to sacred buildings. Through the Spirit, God makes His home in ordinary, imperfect believers—empowering them for witness, service, and mission. Pentecost is not simply about fire and wind; it is about God refusing to remain at a distance.


Illustration:

Imagine a lighthouse. It does not move, shout, or chase ships—it simply shines, offering guidance and hope in darkness. At Pentecost, God did not build a bigger temple; instead, He lit thousands of human lives with His presence. Wherever believers go, God’s light goes with them—into homes, workplaces, schools, and broken places.


Challenge:

If God truly dwells within us, how does that shape the way we live? This week, consider where God might want to make His presence known through you—through a word of kindness, an act of courage, or a moment of compassion. Ask not, “Where is God?” but “How might God be revealed through me?”


Prayer:

Living God,

You are not far away, but nearer than our own breath.

Thank You for dwelling among us in Jesus

and within us through Your Holy Spirit.

Make us aware of Your presence,

bold in Your mission,

and faithful as living temples of Your grace.

Send us into the world to shine Your light,

for Your glory and Your love’s sake.

Amen.


Monday, 18 May 2026

Daily Devotion


Unity in Christ

As the disciples waited for the promised Spirit, something profound was happening among them. Luke tells us in Acts 2:1, “When they were all together in one place”—literally, “of one accord.” Before the fire fell and the wind blew, unity was already taking shape. They prayed together, waited together, depended on one another. Their shared hope in Christ was knitting them into one body.


The writer of Ephesians echoes this same vision. In Ephesians 4:1–3, believers are urged to live lives worthy of their calling by practising humility, gentleness, and patience, bearing with one another in love. Unity is not something we create ourselves; it is a gift of the Spirit. But it is something we must guard, nurture, and protect through Christ-like living.


Illustration:

Think of a choir. Each singer has a different voice—soprano, alto, tenor, bass. If everyone sang louder than the rest, determined to be heard above others, the result would be noise, not music. But when each singer listens, adjusts, and blends, harmony emerges. Unity does not mean sameness; it means choosing to work together under the same direction. In the church, Christ is our conductor, and love is the key we sing in.


Paul’s words give us practical guidance:

  • Humility reminds us that none of us stands above another at the foot of the cross.
  • Gentleness channels strength into service rather than competition.
  • Patience allows space for growth, mistakes, and healing.
  • Love chooses forgiveness and support, even when it is costly.
  • Guarding unity requires effort—it does not happen by accident.

Challenge:

This week, ask yourself: Am I contributing to harmony or tension in Christ’s body? Look for one intentional way to practise humility or patience—perhaps by listening more carefully, offering forgiveness, or encouraging someone you find difficult. Unity grows through small, faithful acts.


Prayer:

Lord Jesus Christ,

You prayed that we might be one, as You and the Father are one.

Soften our hearts with humility,

shape our words with gentleness,

and stretch our patience with Your grace.

Teach us to bear with one another in love

and to guard the unity Your Spirit has given.

Make us one body, living in Your peace,

for the glory of Your 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.