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, 17 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Repentance That Prepares the Way

An important part of our preparation for the glory of Pentecost is repentance. This was something Peter knew deeply and personally. In the days between Easter and Pentecost, Peter lived with the memory of denial, failure, and forgiveness. Out of that lived experience, he later urged others, “Repent, then, and turn to God, so that your sins may be wiped out, that times of refreshing may come from the Lord” (Acts 3:19).


Repentance is not simply about feeling guilty or ashamed. At its heart, it is about a change of direction — turning away from what diminishes life and turning towards the God who restores it. Peter describes repentance not as a burden but as a doorway: forgiveness received, and “times of refreshing” poured out by God.


Yet many of us still see repentance as a negative or heavy experience. Fred Buechner offers a much more hopeful picture: “To repent is to come to your senses. It is not so much something you do as something that happens. True repentance spends less time looking at the past and saying, ‘I’m sorry,’ than to the future and saying, ‘Wow!’”


Think of someone who has been walking the wrong way on a long journey. They are tired, frustrated, and wondering why the destination never seems to come closer. Then suddenly they realise the mistake, turn around, and see the path opening ahead of them. The relief, the hope, the renewed energy — that is repentance. It is not about beating ourselves up for the wrong turn, but rejoicing that we are now heading home.


And surely there is no better word to describe the coming of the Holy Spirit than “Wow!” Pentecost is God’s great “times of refreshing” moment — breath for the weary, fire for the fearful, courage for the hesitant.


The Challenge:

As we wait for Pentecost, ask yourself: is there an area of my life where God is gently inviting me to turn around? Not in fear, but in expectation. What might God be longing to refresh and renew?


Prayer:

Loving God,

we bring before you the places where we have lost our way.

Help us to come to our senses, to turn again towards you,

and to trust in your mercy and grace.

As we repent, fill us with hope,

and prepare our hearts for the refreshing power of your Holy Spirit.

May our response be not fear, but wonder — and a joyful “Wow!”

Amen.


Saturday, 16 May 2026

Daily Devotions


We now move on and reflect on Preparing Our Hearts as we wait.

Hearts Made Ready


In many senses, the waiting period between Easter and Pentecost is about preparing our hearts. The disciples were told to wait — not to rush ahead, not to rely on their own strength, but to be made ready for what God was about to do. This theme of heart-preparation runs deep through Scripture and finds a powerful expression in the Old Testament.


Through the prophet Ezekiel, God speaks to a weary and stubborn people with words of extraordinary hope: “I will give you a new heart, and put a new spirit within you… and I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes” (Ezekiel 36:26–27). This is not a call for people to try harder or behave better. It is a promise of God’s own initiative — cleansing, restoring, and transforming from the inside out. God does not simply mend the old heart; He replaces it.


A heart of stone is rigid, resistant, closed off. A heart of flesh is living, responsive, capable of feeling again. God promises to remove stubbornness and replace it with desire — desire for Him, for His ways, and for a life shaped by His Spirit. Obedience, then, becomes not a burden but a response to grace.


Illustration:

Imagine trying to plant seeds in ground that has been baked hard by the sun. No matter how good the seed, nothing will grow unless the soil is softened. Rain must fall; the earth must be broken open. God’s Spirit is like that gentle but persistent rain, softening what has become hard, making space for new life.


As we approach Pentecost, the question is not simply, “What do we want God to do?” but “What is God preparing us to receive?” Are there places where our hearts have grown hard — through disappointment, habit, fear, or familiarity?


Challenge:

This week, take time to pray honestly: “Lord, where is my heart resistant to you?” Ask God not just to inspire you, but to reshape you.


Prayer:

God of renewal,

We bring before you our hearts — weary, distracted, sometimes hardened.

Remove what is rigid and lifeless within us.

Give us hearts of flesh, open and responsive to your Spirit.

Prepare us for your power, your presence, and your purpose,

that we may walk in your ways with joy.

Amen.


Friday, 15 May 2026

Daily Devotions

Many a Christian disciple on their journey has asked, “What’s the point of praying?”

Perhaps James 5:16 has something of the answer: “Make this your common practice: confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you can live together whole and healed. The prayer of a person living right with God is something powerful to be reckoned with.”

This verse reminds us that prayer is not empty words but a channel of healing and transformation. It calls us into honesty, community, and dependence on God. When we pray for one another, something shifts—not only in circumstances, but within us. We become softer, more compassionate, more aligned with God’s heart.

Illustration:
Think of prayer like a tuning fork. When struck, it doesn’t just make a sound—it brings other instruments into harmony. In the same way, when one person prays sincerely, it can begin to “tune” a whole community toward God’s grace and healing.

Challenge:
This week, choose one person. Pray for them daily—and if appropriate, ask them how you can pray. Be brave enough to share one honest struggle with a trusted Christian friend and invite them to pray for you. Notice what changes—not just around you, but within you.

Prayer:
Gracious God,
Teach us to pray with honesty and faith.
Give us courage to confess, humility to receive prayer,
and love to intercede for others.
Shape our hearts so that our prayers align with Your will,
and make us instruments of Your healing and peace.
May our lives reflect the power of prayer at work within us.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Thursday, 14 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Ascension Day Devotional

“While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven.” — Luke 24:51


The Ascension is often misunderstood as Jesus’ departure, as though he were stepping away from the world. But Luke tells us something striking: Jesus ascends while blessing his disciples. His final earthly act is not retreat but generosity, not distance but promise.


The Ascension reminds us that Jesus is not absent; he is enthroned. He reigns not from a place of removal but from a position of authority that fills heaven and earth. From the right hand of God, Christ intercedes, empowers, and sends his people into the world.


The disciples do not respond with grief or fear. Instead, they return to Jerusalem with joy. Why? Because the Ascension means the story is not over. Jesus has entrusted his mission to them—and to us. The work of love, justice, mercy, and hope continues, carried forward by ordinary people filled with extraordinary grace.


The Ascension lifts our eyes upward, but it also sends our feet back to the ground. Christ reigns in heaven, and his kingdom is made visible through his people on earth.


Illustration


Think of a conductor stepping onto the podium. Once raised above the orchestra, they do not stop the music; they make it possible. Their elevated position allows the whole symphony to be held together.


So it is with Christ. Raised into heaven, he holds all things together—our lives, our church, our world—guiding the music of God’s kingdom even when we cannot see him.


Challenge


Today, live as someone who trusts that Christ reigns.

Where might God be inviting you to act with confidence, hope, or courage—knowing that Jesus is already at work beyond what you can see?


Prayer


Risen and reigning Lord,

you bless us and send us.

Lift our eyes to see your glory

and steady our hands for your work.

Help us to live as citizens of your kingdom,

trusting your presence and power

until all creation sings your praise.

Amen.


Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Praying with Expectation

Imagine a child who knows a loved visitor is coming. They don’t just carry on as normal. They keep glancing at the window. They listen for the car. They might even sit by the door with their coat on, bag packed, full of anticipation.


Expectant prayer is a bit like that. It isn’t anxious pacing or demanding certainty. It’s a quiet readiness. A posture that says, “God, I believe you are present. I believe you are at work. I’m watching and listening.


David captures this in Psalm 5:3:

In the morning, Lord, you hear my voice; in the morning I lay my requests before you and wait expectantly.

David doesn’t rush off. He prays—and then he watches.


Jesus takes this further in Mark 11:24, calling his followers to pray boldly and comprehensively, trusting that God’s life is already breaking into the present. As N.T. Wright reminds us, this isn’t a spiritual vending machine. It’s prayer rooted in God’s Kingdom story—trusting that God’s future is already unfolding, and our prayers are part of that new creation work.


Challenge – How Are You Waiting?


This week, I invite you to notice how you pray.


Do you rush through prayer as a duty—or do you pray as someone who expects God to be present?

Do you leave your prayers behind—or do you watch for signs of God’s response, however small?


The challenge is simple:

Pray specifically, then wait attentively.

Watch for changed attitudes, new opportunities, deeper peace, unexpected conversations. God’s answers may be “yes,” “no,” or “wait”—but none of them are silence.


Expectant prayer trains us to see God already at work.


Prayer – A Prayer of Expectation


Faithful God,

We come to you not with empty words,

but with open hearts.


Teach us to pray with confidence,

not because we control outcomes,

but because we trust your goodness.


Help us to lay our requests before you

and wait—not passively,

but with hopeful attention.


When the answer is yes, give us gratitude.

When the answer is no, give us trust.

When the answer is wait, give us patience and faith.


Root our prayers in your Kingdom story,

that we may live as people of the new creation,

watching for your presence,

and rejoicing in your provision.


In Jesus’ name,

Amen.


Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Persistent Prayer

St Thérèse of Lisieux beautifully described prayer as “a surge of the heart… a cry of recognition and of love, embracing both trial and joy.” Prayer, then, is not performance or eloquence, but relationship.


In Luke 18:1, Jesus introduces the Parable of the Persistent Widow with a clear purpose: “that they ought always to pray and not lose heart.” The widow, powerless and unheard, repeatedly comes before an unjust judge, pleading for justice. Eventually, not because of compassion but because of her persistence, the judge relents.


Jesus’ point is not that God is reluctant or unjust. Quite the opposite. If even a corrupt judge can be moved by persistence, how much more will a loving and righteous God respond to the cries of his children? Persistent prayer is not about wearing God down; it is about refusing to let go of hope.


Illustration

Think of a child learning to walk. They fall again and again, but each time they reach out instinctively for a parent’s hand. They don’t analyse whether the parent is listening or willing—they trust. Persistent prayer is that outstretched hand. Even when we fall, even when nothing seems to change, we keep reaching toward God, trusting his presence more than immediate results.


Persistent prayer is not constant talking but constant turning—bringing our fears, frustrations, joys, and longings back to God. It is choosing faith when silence feels loud, and hope when answers seem delayed.


Challenge

Where have you stopped praying because you felt tired, disappointed, or unheard? Jesus invites us not to give up, not because God is slow, but because prayer shapes us—deepening trust, strengthening faith, and anchoring us in God’s promises. This week, choose one situation and commit to bringing it to God daily, not to control the outcome, but to stay connected.


Prayer

Faithful God,

When we grow weary and discouraged, teach us to pray again.

When answers seem delayed, help us to trust your timing.

Give us hearts that keep turning toward you,

Hands that keep reaching out,

And faith that refuses to let go.

Through Jesus Christ,

Amen.


Monday, 11 May 2026

Daily Devotions


Honest Prayer in Times of Need

There is a deep significance in the honesty of the psalmist, particularly in the poetic prayers we find throughout the Psalms. Psalm 62:5–8 is a powerful example:


God alone—my waiting place.

All my hope comes from him.

He is the rock beneath my feet,

space for my soul to breathe,

an unshakeable fortress—

I will not be moved.


The psalm emphasises depending on God for honour and salvation and urges us to trust him at all times. God is portrayed not as distant or fragile, but as a reliable refuge — a safe dwelling place for everyone.


Honesty in prayer means being real and unfiltered with God, sharing our true feelings — even anger, doubt, fear, or grief — rather than only what we think we ought to say. Such honesty fosters a deeper relationship with God. As one writer puts it, it involves bringing our “blood and guts” to God. The Psalms, and even Jesus’ own cries from the cross, show us that God welcomes this kind of prayer. God knows our hearts already and is not threatened by our raw emotions. Instead, God uses honesty to bring restoration, guidance, and transformation — never condemnation.


Illustration:

A child who is hurt does not carefully rehearse polite words before running to a parent. Tears come first, words later — sometimes not at all. The parent does not reject the child for being emotional or messy, but gathers them close, listens, and brings comfort. In the same way, God invites us to run to him as we are, not as we wish we were.


A Collect for Honest Prayer

Gracious God,

you are our rock and refuge,

the place where weary souls find rest.

Teach us to trust you enough

to bring our whole selves before you —

our fears and faith, our pain and hope —

that we may be renewed by your mercy

and strengthened by your love;

through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Prayer

Lord God,

we pour out our hearts before you today.

Meet us in our need, steady us on the rock of your faithfulness,

and make space for our souls to breathe.

For you alone are our salvation and our safe dwelling place.

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.