The Upper Room Fellowship

The Upper Room Fellowship

The Upper Room Fellowship of Columbiana Ohio's sermon audio // www.urfellowship.com

  1. 5 APR

    Easter 2026 :: He Was the Message // Chris Holm

    Easter raises a question most people never think to ask: why does Christianity still exist?Every major movement in history follows a predictable pattern. Unrest, a charismatic leader, a compelling message, a growing following. The leader dies, and the followers carry the ideas forward. Islam, the civil rights movement, countless others. The pattern makes sense.Christianity doesn't fit.Jesus never talked about overthrowing anything. He told people to pay their taxes and said his kingdom wasn't even of this world. The crowd that cheered him on Palm Sunday turned on him by Friday because he refused to be the liberator they wanted. And the core problem with his message was that Jesus placed himself at the center of it. He didn't ask people to trust his ideas or his principles. He asked them to trust him.So when Jesus died, everything died with him. His closest followers scattered. Peter denied him to a middle school girl. There was nothing to pass on because the message was a person, and the person was gone.Then Sunday happened.Mary shows up at the tomb expecting a body. The stone is moved. She assumes theft, not resurrection. The men think she's out of her mind. Peter runs in. John outruns Peter (and makes sure we know that). They find burial linens, folded and empty.And everything changes.Those same scattered cowards walk into the streets of Jerusalem with one message: you killed him, God raised him, we saw him, repent.The resurrection is the only explanation for the church. And for followers of Jesus, it's something more personal. It's a receipt. Proof that the debt has been paid in full.If you've been on the fence, this is the weekend to step off it.URF WEBSITE: ➤ http://www.urfellowship.comSOCIALS: ➤ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urfellowship/➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urfellowship

    26 min
  2. 29 MAR

    Here For Good :: No Enemy List // Chris Holm

    Sermon Summary:Palm Sunday is more than a parade. It is a case study in what happens when people see what they want to see instead of who is actually there.The crowd that welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem was desperate. Rome was occupying their land, and Passover week was saturating the air with stories of the God who had defeated Pharaoh. When word spread that the Messiah was coming down the Mount of Olives, the crowd responded with everything they had. Palm branches. Cloaks. Shouts of Hosanna. They were ready for liberation.One week later, much of that same crowd was calling for his execution.The difference was not what Jesus did wrong. The difference was what he failed to deliver. He did not fight Rome. He did not rally an army. He got arrested. And once he stopped performing according to their category, they stopped seeing a person. They saw a failed label. And failed labels are easy to discard.This sermon traces that dynamic into our own lives. The human brain categorizes constantly, and that capacity becomes dangerous when the category replaces the person. Paul's phrase in 2 Corinthians 5 is kata sarka, seeing according to the flesh, sorting people by surface and deciding they are the sum of one characteristic.Jesus refused that. He sat down with tax collectors. He looked at Matthew in his booth and saw someone worth calling. He kept finding the actual person underneath what everyone had already decided.And at the cross, the most powerful labeling device the empire had, he prayed continuously for the people killing him. No enemy list.The invitation is to let what God has already said about us free us from needing to label others. The love of Christ compels us. The Spirit changes what we see first.URF WEBSITE: ➤ http://www.urfellowship.comSOCIALS: ➤ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urfellowship/➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urfellowship

    27 min
  3. 22 MAR

    Here For Good :: What Moves God // Chris Holm

    The Christian life is fundamentally a story about trust. From the fracture in the Garden of Eden, where the real break was not disobedience but distrust, to the ministry of Jesus, the whole arc of Scripture is God working to restore a trust relationship with people. The Ten Commandments came after the Exodus because relationship always precedes the rules. God's goal has never been compliance. It has always been trust.This week's sermon centers on Matthew 8 and one of the most surprising moments in all four gospels: the only time Jesus is described as amazed. A Roman centurion, a pagan military officer with no religious credentials, approaches Jesus on behalf of his paralyzed servant and says something remarkable. He tells Jesus he does not need to come to the house. Just say the word, and it will be done. The centurion understood authority. He knew that Jesus was operating under a power greater than himself, and he bet on it without needing to see it happen first.Jesus turns to the crowd and says he has not found faith like this anywhere in Israel. People who knew Scripture, kept the laws, and attended the temple were outranked in faith by a Roman who had never been inside one. Knowledge about God had become a system. The centurion had trust.We are in a moment that calls for that same kind of faith. Our church is building for people whose names we do not know yet, people God is already drawing toward this place. The goal cards we are praying over this week are not just financial commitments. They are acts of trust, a way of saying to God: we believe you. We cannot see what is coming, but we trust the one who can.URF WEBSITE: ➤ http://www.urfellowship.comSOCIALS: ➤ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urfellowship/➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urfellowship

    26 min
  4. 12 MAR

    Transforming Together Growth Campaign Informational Meeting

    If you were able to join us for our Transforming Together Growth Campaign meeting this past weekend, you know the room was filled with faith, generosity, and a real sense of God moving among us. If you weren't able to make it, we want to make sure you're caught up on everything that was shared, because this involves all of us. We spent time looking back at our history, and it was a good reminder of how God has led us every step of the way. From a handful of teenagers meeting above a veterinarian clinic in 1971, to renting space at what's now Generation Dance Studio, to setting up and tearing down every Sunday at Dixon School, to finally landing at our current location and eventually adding the sanctuary we worship in today. Every single chapter began with people saying yes to God, trusting Him with what they had, and watching Him do more than anyone expected. And now we find ourselves in another one of those chapters. As many of you have experienced firsthand, our building is full. Dozens of visitors are walking through our doors every week, and they keep telling us the same thing: they feel loved, they feel welcomed, they feel like they've found a home. That's because of you. The way you greet people, introduce yourselves, and make room in your lives for others is a direct reflection of the heart of Jesus, and it's beautiful. So where are we headed? We have a vision to build a new 650-seat sanctuary that will extend from our existing space through the Destiny Room. Once funds are available, the current sanctuary will be repurposed for classrooms and a flexible gym/multipurpose space. The estimated cost for the new sanctuary is $2.5 million, furnished, including things like seating and a sound system. We also got to hear from Brad and Kaylin, who shared honestly about what it looked like for them to pray through their commitment as a couple. They talked about their different personalities, their different numbers, and the way God ultimately challenged them to commit to something bigger than either of them had initially considered. Their story was a real encouragement, and it reminded us that this process is Christ-forming work in itself. Tom Melazoni, who has spent 30 years helping churches walk through seasons like this, also shared some wisdom and challenged us with three simple ideas as we consider our giving: Do away with something for a season. Delay a purchase or a plan. Or do more, whether that's extra hours or a creative way to contribute. The point is that God works differently in every household, and the gift that counts is the one that comes from a cheerful heart. So where do things stand right now? We currently have $150,000 in cash on hand toward our first milestone of $400,000, which is what we need to pursue permits. And the Growth Campaign executive team, representing five households, has already committed $151,200 toward our second milestone of $1,000,000 in three-year commitments before we break ground. We're on our way. And every commitment, every gift, every prayer moves us forward together. On Palm Sunday, March 29, we'll be collecting commitment cards. So between now and then, we're asking every person and every household in our Upper Room family to take time to pray and ask God a simple question: "Lord, what do you want to do through me?" The amount you land on is between you and God. What we care about is the heart behind it. And if God leads you to give cheerfully, then give. That's all we're asking. You can give to the Growth Campaign here:https://onrealm.org/urfellowship/give/growthcampaign You can submit your commitment card here:https://onrealm.org/urfellowship/AddPledge/goalcard We love you, Upper Room. God has been faithful through every season of this church's life, and He's not stopping now. We get to be part of what He's doing, and we get to do it together. Transforming Together,Chris and the URF Leadership Team

    52 min
  5. 8 MAR

    Here For Good :: Sun Stand Still // Chris Holm

    SERMON SUMMARYWe kicked off this week by going deeper into the foundation underneath our Here for Good series and our Transforming Together growth campaign. Before we talk about buildings, timelines, or giving, we need to talk about the thing that holds all of it up: prayer.We started in Joshua 10, where Joshua finds himself in a battle that God has already promised to deliver into his hands, but the sun is going down and time is running out. So Joshua prays one of the most audacious prayers in all of Scripture: God, make the sun stand still. And God does it. What makes this even more compelling is that Joshua was in that situation partly because of his own mistakes. He made a treaty he never should have made. And yet when he cried out, God answered anyway. That should give all of us freedom to bring our messes to God and still ask boldly.From there we moved into Acts 4, where Peter and John have just been released from jail for preaching about Jesus. Instead of pulling back, their community gathers and prays for even greater boldness. They don't pray for safety or an easier assignment. They pray, "Stretch out your hand to heal and perform signs and wonders through the name of your holy servant Jesus." And when they finish praying, the place shakes.We closed with Revelation 8, where heaven itself goes silent to receive the prayers of the saints, and those prayers are mixed with fire and hurled back toward the earth. Walter Wink wrote that history belongs to the intercessors who believe the future into being. That is our call in this season. We are praying for people whose names God already knows, for seats that don't exist yet but will. The foundation of everything we are building together is a people who pray, specifically, persistently, and boldly.URF WEBSITE: ➤ http://www.urfellowship.comSOCIALS: ➤ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urfellowship/➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urfellowship

    28 min
  6. 1 MAR

    Here For Good :: Synoikodomeisthe // Chris Holm

    We opened this series with a building campaign and a question worth sitting with: why are we really doing this?The answer starts in Isaiah 54, where God tells a barren woman with no household and no future to enlarge her tent. Not someday. Now. Before a single person has arrived. God sees who is coming before she does, and he invites her to act on that word before the evidence shows up. That pattern runs all the way through Scripture. Abraham, Gideon, Noah, Mary. People acting on a word about a future they cannot see but God already has.Vision, in this series, means a specific person. Not a floor plan. Every decision we make over the coming months gets made with a face in mind.In Luke 14, the host of a great banquet refuses to scale back when the invited guests make absurd excuses. He sends his servant into the streets, the alleys, the roads, the country lanes. Bring in everyone. The reason is simple: the host wants a full table. The Spirit goes ahead of us into those spaces. We are not manufacturing spiritual hunger. We are pointing to a seat and saying, the host wants you here.We are not just solving a square footage problem. We are cutting stone, knowing what the stone is for. Fifty-four years of God doing exactly what he said he would do is what we are building on. People are coming whose names we do not know yet. God already knows them. We are building the thing they are going to walk into and setting the seat they are going to sit in.Scripture references: Isaiah 54:1-2, Luke 14:15-23, Ephesians 2:20-22, Acts 2:42-47URF WEBSITE: ➤ http://www.urfellowship.comSOCIALS: ➤ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urfellowship/➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urfellowship

    28 min
  7. 22 FEB

    Emotionally Healthy Spirituality #7 :: Before the Lions Showed Up // Chris Holm

    Sermon Summary:We wrapped up our journey through Pete Scazzero's Emotionally Healthy Spirituality with a question that matters more than any sermon series: what does a sustainable spiritual life look like on a random Tuesday when no one is asking you to think about it?A study of Israeli parole judges showed that the time of day mattered more to their decisions than the facts of a case. Decision fatigue is real. We are not brains driving bodies around. We are whole people who get depleted, and depleted people default to whatever is easiest and most immediate. Good intentions, without structure, are not a plan.That structure has a name. Fifteen hundred years of Christian tradition calls it a Rule of Life, drawn from the Greek word for trellis, a framework that helps something grow where you actually want it to grow. Daniel had one. Praying three times a day toward Jerusalem, keeping convictions about food and allegiance, he maintained his identity through sixty-plus years of living inside the most sophisticated empire on earth. The lions and the furnace made him famous. The prayer at the window made him who he was.The Desert Fathers and Mothers, St. Benedict, William Wilberforce and his Clapham Circle all understood the same thing: formation requires intention. Scazzero organizes a Rule of Life around four areas: Prayer, Rest, Work, and Relationships. Sabbath is not just recovery. It is a declaration that God holds things together. Caring for the body is a spiritual act. Community is not optional support for the real work. Community is the work.The goal of all of it is joy. Jesus said his joy would be in us and our joy would be complete. The most formed disciples should be the most alive people in the room.URF WEBSITE: ➤ http://www.urfellowship.comSOCIALS: ➤ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urfellowship/➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urfellowship

    31 min

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The Upper Room Fellowship of Columbiana Ohio's sermon audio // www.urfellowship.com

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