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, 10 March 2026

Daily Devotion


Turning Again

Building on yesterday’s reflection on the patience of God, we turn today to Joel 2:12–13:

“But there’s also this, it’s not too late — God’s personal Message! — ‘Come back to me and really mean it! Come fasting and weeping, sorry for your sins!’ Change your life, not just your clothes. Come back to God, your God. And here’s why: God is kind and merciful.” (The Message)

In Old Testament times, repentance was often visible. People tore their clothes, dressed in sackcloth, and sat in ashes. These outward actions expressed grief, humility, and sorrow for wrongdoing. They were powerful symbols, but symbols nonetheless.

Through the prophet Joel, God presses deeper. What the Lord desires is not simply a performance of repentance, but transformation at the centre of our being. “Rend your hearts,” God says, not your garments. True turning always begins on the inside.

N. T. Wright describes repentance as a serious turning away from life-patterns that distort our humanity. It is not merely feeling sorry, but recognising how far we have fallen short of reflecting God’s image — missing the mark of true humanness. Repentance is a fundamental reorientation of life: a turning towards the kingdom of God, a response to God’s gracious summons to love and obedience, rather than simply regret over rule-breaking.

Repentance, then, is never shallow. It involves the whole person:

  • the mind, awakened to truth and conviction;
  • the heart, softened by godly sorrow;
  • the will, choosing to turn away from sin and towards life-giving obedience.

Imagine a house with a cracked window. 

You might draw the curtains to hide the damage, rearrange the furniture so it’s less noticeable, or keep guests away from that room. But the cold still seeps in. The crack still widens.

God does not ask us to rearrange our lives to disguise the broken places. He invites us to open the window fully, to let the light in, and to allow repair to begin. Tearing garments hides nothing; rending hearts allows healing.

Challenge

Choose one small, concrete step that reflects a heart truly turning back to God.

Prayer

Gracious and merciful God,
You call us back, not with anger, but with kindness.
We confess that too often we change appearances rather than hearts.
Search us, O God, and show us where we have settled for shallow sorrow
instead of true turning.

Create in us hearts that are open, honest, and ready to change.
Give us courage to turn away from all that distorts your image in us,
and grace to walk again in the way of your kingdom.

We return to you, trusting in your mercy,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.


Monday, 9 March 2026

Daily Devotions


The Unfolding of God's Patience

Scripture: 2 Peter 3:9 “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.”

It's compelling to consider whether Peter, in writing these words, reflects on his own experiences with Christ's patience. This verse offers a glimpse into God's timing. Elisabeth Elliot wisely stated, “To love God is to love His will...content with His timing and His wise appointment.” Peter highlights that God's timing provides the space and opportunity for transformation.

Illustration: The Potter's Wheel

Picture a potter working with clay. The clay might resist, feeling dry and inflexible. A hurried potter might force the clay, resulting in cracks and imperfections. But a skilled potter knows that patience is key. They gently moisten the clay, kneading it with care, allowing it to become pliable and responsive. Only then can the clay be shaped into something beautiful and useful.

God is like that patient potter. We are the clay, sometimes resistant and unwilling to yield. He doesn't force us into a mold, but gently works with us, offering grace and understanding, allowing us to become the vessels He intends us to be.

Challenge: Cultivating Patience in Your Life

Identify a situation in your life where you're struggling with impatience. It could be a relationship, a personal goal, or a difficult circumstance. This week, consciously choose to respond with patience and trust in God's timing. Ask yourself: How can I offer grace and understanding in this situation? How can I surrender my need for control and trust in God's plan?

Prayer: A Heart Open to God's Timing

Gracious God,

Thank you for the boundless patience you extend to me. I confess that I often struggle with impatience, wanting things to happen on my own timeline. Help me to surrender my need for control and trust in your perfect timing. Grant me the wisdom to see others through your eyes, with compassion and understanding. Teach me to be more like the patient potter, allowing you to shape me into the person you desire me to be.

In Jesus' name, Amen.


Sunday, 8 March 2026

Daily Devotions


Bearing Fruit

Scripture: Luke 13:6–9

Jesus told this parable: A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, but for three years it bore no fruit. He told the gardener to cut it down, saying it was wasting the soil. The gardener replied, “Give it one more year. I will tend it and fertilise it. If it bears fruit, well and good; if not, then cut it down.”

This parable draws our attention to the patient grace of God. It reveals Christ as the one who intercedes on our behalf and reminds us that while God is patient, the call to repentance and spiritual fruitfulness is urgent. Time is given not so that nothing changes, but so that transformation can take place.

The fig tree is not abandoned, nor is it ignored. Instead, it is given careful, intentional attention. The gardener promises to dig around it and nourish it — a vivid image of the way Christ works in our lives, loosening hardened soil, adding what is lacking, and creating the conditions in which growth can happen. God’s grace is never passive; it is active, hopeful, and purposeful.

Frederick Buechner reminds us that bearing fruit is not about outward performance or rule-keeping. It is about a life reshaped by repentance and love. Fruit shows itself in the quiet qualities of the Spirit — love, joy, peace, patience — and in practical acts of goodness: forgiving others, serving faithfully, and discovering where our deepest joy meets the world’s deepest need. True fruit grows from a forgiven and transformed heart, not from obligation, but from mercy received and shared.


Illustration: The Patient Gardener

A gardener knows that some plants do not respond immediately. Soil may be compacted, roots weak, nutrients depleted. The easy option is to give up. The wiser choice is to dig deeper, enrich the soil, and wait with expectation. Growth cannot be forced, but it can be nurtured.

In the same way, God does not discard us when fruit is slow to appear. Instead, Christ tends us with patience, trusting that grace, given time and care, will bear fruit.


Prayer

Patient and gracious God,
thank you for not giving up on us
when our lives feel unproductive or barren.

Dig deep into our hearts,
remove what hinders growth,
and nourish us with your grace.
Help us to repent where change is needed
and to respond faithfully to your care.

May our lives bear fruit
that reflects your love
and blesses the world around us;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.


Saturday, 7 March 2026

Daily Devotions


Loving When It Gets Tough

We have perhaps all heard the phrase tough love—loving not because it is easy, but because it is right. Jesus takes this even further with one of his most demanding commands: “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” Loving in the face of opposition is not weakness; it is faith refined under pressure. It is choosing obedience and joy when circumstances would justify bitterness.

Illustration

Think of gold being refined in a furnace. The fire is not there to destroy the gold, but to remove what does not belong, so its true value can shine. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were thrown into the blazing furnace not because they were faithless, but because they were faithful. In the fire, they discovered not God’s absence, but God’s nearness—“one like a son of the gods” walking with them. The fire revealed God’s power and brought glory to His name.

In our lives, opposition can feel like that furnace—criticism, rejection, hostility, or unfair treatment. Yet Scripture reminds us, “No weapon forged against you will prevail” (Isaiah 54:17), and Paul boldly asks, “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31). The answer is clear: nothing and no one can ultimately defeat those held in Christ’s love.

Challenge

In the coming weeks of Lent, identify one difficult relationship or situation where love feels costly.

  • Pray intentionally for the person who opposes or hurts you.
  • Choose one practical act of kindness, even if it is unseen or unreturned.
  • When tempted to retaliate, pause and trust God’s greater purpose.

Ask yourself: How might God be using this challenge to refine my faith and reveal His glory?

Prayer

Lord God, You know how hard it is for us to love when we are wounded or opposed. Fill us with the strength of Your Spirit, that we may respond with grace instead of anger, kindness instead of resentment, and trust instead of fear. Help us to believe that You are for us, walking with us in every fire we face. May our lives reflect the love of Christ, so that even through hardship, Your name is glorified. Amen.


Friday, 6 March 2026

Daily Devotion


The Cost of Love

“This is my command: Love one another the way I loved you. This is the very best way to love. Put your life on the line for your friends.”
— John 15:12–13 (The Message)

When we are suffering from a health condition, a doctor will often prescribe a course of medication. We then take that prescription to the pharmacy, trusting that what is given — taken faithfully — will lead us toward healing. The word command used by Jesus in today’s verses carries something of that same meaning: it is not simply an order, but a prescription for life.

Here Jesus is not listing love among many ethical requirements. He is prescribing love as the essential practice of those who abide in him. In John’s Gospel, obedience is not about rule-keeping but about living in relationship. To follow Jesus is to practise his way of love — a love that costs something.

Jesus deepens that cost when he says, “No one has greater love than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” While this ultimately points to the cross, it is not limited to dramatic, one-time sacrifice. For most of us, laying down our lives happens in quieter, daily ways: choosing patience over irritation, forgiveness over resentment, generosity over self-protection, presence over convenience.

Illustration: Small Coins, Real Cost

Imagine paying for something valuable not with one large banknote, but with many small coins. Each coin seems insignificant on its own, yet together they represent real cost and real value. Laying down one’s life often looks like that — not a single heroic act, but a steady offering of time, energy, attention, and love.

Jesus calls his disciples to spend their lives this way — coin by coin — for the sake of others.

To love as Jesus loves is to accept that discipleship will sometimes inconvenience us, stretch us, and even cost us. Yet paradoxically, it is in this giving away of life that we discover its deepest meaning.

Prayer

Lord Jesus Christ,
you loved us not in words alone
but by laying down your life.

Teach us to love as you love —
not only in great gestures,
but in daily choices that place others before ourselves.
Give us courage when love feels costly,
and grace when sacrifice feels unseen.

Help us to trust that as we give our lives in love,
we remain rooted in you,
and find life in its fullness.
Amen.

Daily Challenge

Today, intentionally “lay down your life” in one small, practical way — giving time, patience, or kindness where it would be easier to hold back.


Thursday, 5 March 2026

Daily Devotion


Trusting God with What We Cannot Control

I once knew a College Principal whose favourite catchphrase was, “I’m sure of that… I think?” It was said with humour, but it revealed a quiet truth: certainty is often more fragile than we admit.


Another saying puts it plainly: “You can’t control everything that happens to you, but you can control the way you respond. And in your response is your greatest power.” That wisdom echoes Proverbs:


“Trust in the Lord with all your heart.

Never rely on what you think you know.

Remember the Lord in everything you do,

and he will show you the right way.”

(Proverbs 3:5–6, Good News Bible)


These verses acknowledge a deeply human reality: our understanding is limited. Life does not always bend to careful planning or good intentions. Yet Scripture offers a way of living wisely when control slips from our grasp.


Three simple steps emerge: Trust. Check. Remember.


First, Trust — not cautiously, but with all your heart. Trusting God means placing confidence not in our ability to manage outcomes, but in God’s faithfulness to walk with us through them.


Second, Check — “never rely on what you think you know.” This is a call to humility, inviting us to question assumptions and allow God’s wisdom to challenge our instincts.


Third, Remember — acknowledge the Lord in everything you do. Faith is lived out in everyday decisions and responses. As we remember God, direction emerges — not always a full map, but enough light for the next step.


Imagine driving on an icy road. Pressing harder on the accelerator or gripping the wheel in panic only makes things worse. The safer response is counterintuitive: ease off, steer gently, and keep moving forward.


Life is often like that. When we try to force control, we skid. When we trust God, check our reactions, and remember whose hands hold the journey, we find a steadier way forward.


Prayer


Faithful God,

when life feels uncertain

and outcomes are beyond our control,

teach us to trust you with all our hearts.

Help us to check our assumptions,

to release our need to be in charge,

and to remember you in every step we take.

Guide our responses,

steady our hearts,

and show us the way that leads to life;

through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.


Challenge for Today


Identify one situation you cannot control and practise the three steps today: trust God, check your response, and remember God’s presence.


Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Daily Devotion


In a world where so much is false — curated, filtered, and carefully presented — we are called back to the practice of honest prayer.

Psalm 51 gives us language that is raw and courageous:

“I’ve been out of step with you for a long time,7
in the wrong since before I was born.
What you’re after is truth from the inside out.
Enter me, then; conceive a new, true life.”
(Psalm 51:6, The Message)

Honest prayer does not pretend. It does not hide behind religious language or polished words. It dares to tell the truth — not only about God, but about ourselves.

I recently read the words: “When you have a mask on, God cannot get to you. It is only when you are open and honest with what God is revealing to you that he can bring about change. God wants your heart.”
That insight cuts to the heart of the psalm.

The psalmist seems to have been struggling for years — aware of being out of step with God, yet unable to fix things alone. There is no self-justification here, no attempt to tidy things up before approaching God. Instead, there is a frank confession of helplessness. And it is precisely that honesty which becomes the doorway to renewal. From truthful confession comes a newly conceived life shaped by grace.

That is honest prayer.

Illustration: Removing the Mask

Imagine going to the doctor while wearing a mask that hides your symptoms. You might look fine, even sound convincing, but no real healing can take place if the truth is concealed. The doctor cannot treat what is hidden.

Prayer works the same way. God does not require us to arrive healed, composed, or spiritually impressive. God invites us to remove the mask — to tell the truth — so that real transformation can begin.

Prayer

God of truth,
you see us as we are,
yet you love us more than we can imagine.

Give us courage to remove the masks we wear,
to name what is broken,
and to trust you with what feels unfinished or ashamed.

Create in us truth from the inside out,
conceive in us a new and faithful life,
and lead us back into step with you;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.

Challenge for Today

Pray without pretence — tell God one honest truth you have been avoiding, and trust God with the change that follows.


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.