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.

Saturday, 18 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Praying the Stars

“When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place, what is mankind that you are mindful of them, human beings that you care for them?” — Psalm 8:3–4


As dusk deepens into night, something extraordinary happens. The sky opens up. One by one, stars appear, and the vastness of the universe slowly reveals itself. In those moments, we are invited to look up, to wonder, and to pray with the stars.


The psalmist does exactly that—pausing to “consider” the heavens. This is not a rushed glance, but a lingering gaze. The stars are described not as accidents of nature, but as the careful work of God’s own fingers. Delicate. Intentional. Beautiful. Creation itself becomes a prayer, pointing beyond itself to the Creator.


Standing beneath a starlit sky can make us feel small. Our worries, achievements, and struggles shrink against such immensity. Yet Psalm 8 holds a stunning tension: the God who set galaxies in motion is mindful of us. The One who flung stars into space also bends close to human lives. Our value does not come from our size, strength, or success, but from being known and cared for by God.


Praying with the stars helps realign our perspective. It lifts our eyes from the immediate and the overwhelming, reminding us that we belong to something far greater—and far kinder—than ourselves. The night sky whispers reassurance: you are seen, you are held, and you matter.


This kind of prayer does not need many words. Awe becomes intercession. Wonder becomes trust. Silence itself becomes worship as we rest in the truth that the Creator of all things holds our lives with equal care.


Illustration Challenge

On a clear night this week, step outside or look through a window and find one star. Spend a few moments simply gazing at it. As you do, name one concern you are carrying and one truth about God’s greatness. Let the star remind you that the God who made it also knows your name.


Prayer

Creator God,

When we look at the heavens, we are filled with wonder.

You formed the stars with care

and yet You are mindful of us.

Thank You that we are never forgotten or insignificant to You.

Lift our eyes beyond our worries

and anchor our hearts in Your vast and faithful love.

As we pray beneath the stars,

help us trust You more deeply

and rest in the truth that we belong to You.

Amen.


Friday, 17 July 2026

Daily Devotions


The Comfort of Evening Coolness

“Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the LORD God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day…” — Genesis 3:8


One of the quiet gifts of summer is the gentle coolness that arrives as evening unfolds. The heat of the day softens, shadows lengthen, and the world seems to breathe more slowly. For many of us, this is the most comforting part of the day—a natural invitation to pause, reflect, and rest.


In Genesis we are told that God walked in the garden “in the cool of the day.” Often understood as evening, this moment hints at fellowship: God drawing near in gentleness, not in noise or demand. The day’s labour is done; striving gives way to presence. Evening becomes a sacred meeting place where God comes close, not to hurry us, but to be with us.


As the day cools to night, we are invited into the same rhythm. Evening prayer is less about asking and more about releasing. Gratitude rises as we look back and notice God’s quiet faithfulness—mercies given, strength sustained, grace sufficient. Even the difficult moments can be placed into God’s hands with thanksgiving, trusting that nothing has been wasted.


Evening is also a time of surrender. Some tasks remain unfinished; some worries unresolved. Yet God is already present in tomorrow. We do not need to carry the weight of what cannot be completed today. In the cooling air, we learn again that we are held, protected, and watched over through the night.


Finally, the stillness of evening creates space to listen. As the world grows quieter, the “still, small voice” of God becomes easier to hear—not shouting instructions, but offering peace. In that calm, anxious thoughts loosen their grip, and our spirits settle.


Illustration Challenge

Tonight, step outside or sit by a window as evening arrives. Notice the change in temperature, light, and sound. As the day cools, name three things you are grateful for. Then consciously hand over one worry to God, imagining it fading with the setting sun.


Prayer

God of the evening,

Thank You for the gentle gift of rest as day turns to night.

We praise You for Your faithfulness today

and for mercies that meet us again tomorrow.

Help us to release our worries,

to surrender what is unfinished,

and to rest in Your protecting love.

Still our hearts, quiet our minds,

and speak Your peace into our souls.

As we lie down, keep us in Your care.

Amen.


Thursday, 16 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Gardening as Prayer

“Like valleys they spread out, like gardens beside a river, like aloes planted by the LORD, like cedars beside the waters.” — Numbers 24:6 (NIV)


Gardening is slow, earthy, and wonderfully ordinary—and that is precisely why it makes such a powerful picture of the spiritual life. A garden does not burst into life by accident. It needs time, attention, patience, and care. In the same way, faith is not something we “switch on”; it grows as we tend it day by day.


In Numbers 24, God’s people are described as gardens beside a river—well-watered, abundant, deliberately planted by the Lord. This image speaks of God’s generosity and purpose. He is not a careless scatterer of seeds but a wise gardener, placing His people where they can flourish. Yet even the best planting requires stewardship. The gardener must weed, water, prune, and wait.


Gardening can itself become a form of prayer. The quiet rhythm of turning soil, planting seeds, or pulling weeds creates space to listen. Many people find that God feels especially near when their hands are busy and their hearts are still. The garden becomes a sacred space—not because it is perfect, but because it is honest. There is dirt under the fingernails, plants that fail, and growth that comes only in God’s time.


The promise of being “gardens beside a river” reminds us that flourishing comes from proximity. When our lives are planted near the living water of God’s Word and Spirit, nourishment is constant, even in dry seasons. Roots grow deep where water is close. Faith becomes resilient not because life is easy, but because God is faithful.


Illustration Challenge

This week, notice a growing thing—a plant, tree, weed, or even grass pushing through concrete. Ask yourself: What does this tell me about God? As you water a plant or observe one growing, pray for one area of your faith that needs attention. What needs weeding? What needs patience? What needs trust?


Prayer

Gardening God,

You are the giver of life and the patient nurturer of our souls.

Plant us where we can flourish, close to the river of Your Spirit.

Teach us to tend our faith with care—

to pull out what hinders growth,

to wait when progress is slow,

and to trust You with the harvest.

May our lives become living gardens,

bearing witness to Your grace in every season.

Amen.


Wednesday, 15 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Long Days, Long Conversations with God

Letting Summer’s Rhythm Shape Our Prayer


Summer stretches time. The long evenings linger, the daylight seems unhurried, and the pace of life softens just enough to notice the sky changing colour. These extended days offer more than beauty—they offer space. Space for deeper prayer. Space for longer conversations with God.


Jesus reminds us that prayer does not need performance or an audience. “Go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen” (Matthew 6:6). Prayer begins in quietness, but it grows in honesty. As we bring Scripture into our praying, we learn to align our hearts with God’s will, not simply our wishes. As we practice confession, we remove the barriers that dull our spiritual hearing and restore intimacy with God.


The Bible invites us not to hesitate but to come boldly. “Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need” (Hebrews 4:16). And Psalm 145:18 assures us: “The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth.” Long prayers are not about impressive words—they are about honest presence.


Illustration:

Imagine sitting outside at sunset on a warm summer evening. At first, you notice the colours in the sky. Then the birds. Then the breeze. Slowly, the world quietens. You’re not rushing anywhere. Conversation deepens because there’s no pressure to finish quickly. Prayer can be like that—less like a rushed message and more like sitting with someone who loves you, letting silence and words mix naturally.


A hymn line captures it beautifully:

“Prayer gently lifts me to highest Heaven,

From earth’s confusion to Jesus’ breast;

My sin and weakness, my doubt and sorrow,

Are lost forever in sweetest rest.”


Challenge:

This week, choose one long summer evening (or early morning) to spend unhurried time with God. No agenda. No clock-watching. Bring Scripture, honesty, and silence into the space. Let prayer become a conversation, not a task.


Prayer:

Lord God, thank You for the gift of time, light, and stillness. Teach me to pray without rushing, to listen as well as speak, and to draw near with confidence. Lift me from life’s confusion into Your peace. Let my long days become long conversations with You.

Amen.


Tuesday, 14 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Communal Meals Under the Sky

Connecting with God and others through shared fellowship


Well over thirty years ago, while writing a youth choir musical called Bread, I tried to imagine what it must have been like to sit on that hillside when Jesus fed the five thousand. One song captured the wonder:


He gave us bread to eat and fish so neat,

a picnic upon the hillside, a treat…

I listened to his word, the greatest heard,

that he is the life-giving bread.


There is something holy about eating together. A shared meal slows us down. It places us side by side rather than face to face in competition. It opens space for conversation, laughter, listening—and grace.


Jesus understood this deeply. He taught crowds, healed the broken, and then said, in effect, “Let’s eat.” The miracle of the loaves and fishes was not only about abundance, but about people sitting together on the grass, receiving from Jesus and from one another.


The early church carried this instinct forward. Acts 2:42–47 describes believers devoted to teaching, fellowship, breaking bread, and prayer. Their meals—often simple, daily, and informal—were acts of worship. The agape feast was not about fine food but about shared life: rich and poor, young and old, all welcomed at the same table. In those homes, bread was broken, prayers were offered, resources were shared, and no one was left out.


In a fragmented world, this kind of fellowship is quietly revolutionary. Sharing food becomes sharing life. Hospitality becomes testimony. Community becomes mission.


Perhaps the question for us today is not only what we believe, but with whom we eat.


Illustration Challenge


This week, intentionally share a meal outdoors or in a relaxed setting—a picnic, coffee on a bench, lunch in the garden. Invite someone you wouldn’t normally eat with. As you eat, notice how conversation flows, how barriers soften, and how God feels nearer at the table.


Prayer


Bread of Life,

thank you for meeting us not only in sanctuaries,

but on hillsides, at tables, and in ordinary meals.

Teach us to break bread with generosity and joy.

Open our homes, our tables, and our hearts,

that through shared fellowship

your love may be tasted and seen.

Amen.


Monday, 13 July 2026

Daily Devotions


Walking in Green Fields

“He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.” — Psalm 23:2 (KJV)


The image of walking in green fields is one of deep peace and gentle guidance. Psalm 23 reminds us that God is not a distant overseer but a loving Shepherd, attentive to our needs, aware of our limits, and committed to our flourishing. In a dry and demanding world, He leads us to places where our souls can breathe again.


Green pastures are more than pleasant scenery. In the harsh, arid landscape of ancient Israel, green grass did not appear by accident. It was the result of a skilled shepherd who knew where to lead the flock. In the same way, God provides spiritual nourishment exactly where and when we need it. Even in seasons that feel barren—times of uncertainty, loss, or exhaustion—God is already preparing places of sustenance and growth for us.


The psalmist also says, “He makes me lie down.” Rest does not always come naturally to us. We often keep pushing, striving, and worrying. Yet God, who knows us better than we know ourselves, sometimes lovingly insists that we stop. Rest in God’s green pastures is not laziness; it is trust. It is choosing to believe that our worth is not measured by productivity but by being held in God’s care.


Illustration:

Imagine a smartphone that is never switched off or recharged. Over time, the battery drains, performance slows, and eventually it shuts down. The manufacturer designed it to be recharged regularly. In the same way, God has designed us to need rest. Green pastures are God’s charging points—places where prayer, Scripture, silence, and trust restore what life has depleted.


Challenge:

Today, notice where God might be inviting you to rest. Is there something you need to pause, release, or hand back to Him? Make space—even briefly—for stillness, and trust that God’s provision is enough.


Prayer:

Shepherd God, thank You for leading me to green pastures and still waters. Help me to trust Your guidance, especially when life feels dry or overwhelming. Teach me to rest in You, to receive Your provision, and to walk in Your peace today. Amen.

  • Walking in Green Fields


“He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.” — Psalm 23:2 (KJV)


The image of walking in green fields is one of deep peace and gentle guidance. Psalm 23 reminds us that God is not a distant overseer but a loving Shepherd, attentive to our needs, aware of our limits, and committed to our flourishing. In a dry and demanding world, He leads us to places where our souls can breathe again.


Green pastures are more than pleasant scenery. In the harsh, arid landscape of ancient Israel, green grass did not appear by accident. It was the result of a skilled shepherd who knew where to lead the flock. In the same way, God provides spiritual nourishment exactly where and when we need it. Even in seasons that feel barren—times of uncertainty, loss, or exhaustion—God is already preparing places of sustenance and growth for us.


The psalmist also says, “He makes me lie down.” Rest does not always come naturally to us. We often keep pushing, striving, and worrying. Yet God, who knows us better than we know ourselves, sometimes lovingly insists that we stop. Rest in God’s green pastures is not laziness; it is trust. It is choosing to believe that our worth is not measured by productivity but by being held in God’s care.


Illustration:

Imagine a smartphone that is never switched off or recharged. Over time, the battery drains, performance slows, and eventually it shuts down. The manufacturer designed it to be recharged regularly. In the same way, God has designed us to need rest. Green pastures are God’s charging points—places where prayer, Scripture, silence, and trust restore what life has depleted.


Challenge:

Today, notice where God might be inviting you to rest. Is there something you need to pause, release, or hand back to Him? Make space—even briefly—for stillness, and trust that God’s provision is enough.


Prayer:

Shepherd God, thank You for leading me to green pastures and still waters. Help me to trust Your guidance, especially when life feels dry or overwhelming. Teach me to rest in You, to receive Your provision, and to walk in Your peace today. 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.