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Midtown Fellowship: Downtown

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Teaching and sermons from Midtown Fellowship: Downtown in Columbia, SC. Our church exist to be a Jesus-centered family on mission.

449 Episodes
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Sermon by Jake Blair on October 26, 2025.Key scripture: John 8:12-38What do you do when life feels like a dark room—uncertain, confusing, even terrifying? Jesus doesn’t just offer comfort in the dark—He declares, “I am the light of the world,” and invites us to follow Him out of the shadows and into the truth.
Sermon by Jake Blair on October 19, 2025.Key scripture: John 7:1–52Jesus never leaves us neutral. In John 7, as crowds argue and brothers doubt, Jesus steps into the tension with truth that demands a response. He’s either crazy, deceptive—or the Christ. What are we going to do with him?
Sermon by Jon Ludovina on October 12, 2025.Key scripture: John 6:1-6, 6:25-27, 6:30-35, 6:41, 6:48-51, 6:66-69What do you do when your life with Jesus doesn’t look like you imagined? This week, we explore John 6 and the quiet ways our expectations of Jesus collide with His deeper invitation to know Him.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on October 5, 2025.Key scripture: John 5:1-18In a story where healing leads to conflict, Jesus offers a question that’s not as simple as it sounds: Do you want to be healed?
Sermon by Jake Blair on September 28, 2025.Key scripture: John 4:1-30, 4:39Jesus doesn’t avoid broken people—He seeks them. In John 4, the Messiah reveals Himself to an outsider, offering her living water and a restored identity.
Sermon by Jon Ludovina on September 21, 2025.Key scripture: John 3:1-21What if your biggest problem isn’t what’s happening to you—but what’s happening inside you? Jesus tells Nicodemus that the solution isn’t more self-effort or more rules. It’s being born again.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on September 14, 2025.Key scripture: John 2:13-22Jesus’ love shows up not just in gentleness, but in righteous passion. His zeal for God’s house drives him to act boldly, calling us to let Him cleanse what’s keeping us from worship.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on September 7, 2025.Key scripture: John 2:1-12What do you do when the wine runs out? At a wedding on the verge of social disaster, Jesus quietly turns shame into honor and scarcity into abundance—hinting at the deeper rescue He offers to all who trust Him.
Sermon by Jake Blair on August 31, 2025.Key scripture: John 1:35–51Jesus’ first disciples didn’t just believe in Him—they followed Him. This message invites us to consider how our own lives are always being discipled by something, and what it would mean to follow Jesus as our true Rabbi.
Sermon by Jon Ludovina on August 24, 2025.Key scripture: John 1:6–8, 19–34 & 3:22–30We are often tempted to find our identity, purpose and meaning either in others or in our selves. But John the Baptist’s message echoes: Jesus must increase, and I must decrease. This sermon invites us into a radically freeing humility that finds identity and purpose by centering our lives, not on others or our selves but on Christ.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on August 17, 2025.Key scripture: John 1:1-5, 14 & 20:30-31The book of John is a firsthand account from one of Jesus’ closest friends—someone who walked with Him, heard His voice, saw His miracles, stood at the cross, and ran to the empty tomb — so that “you may believe Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God” (John 20:30).At its heart, the Gospel of John invites us not only to know the facts about Jesus but to encounter His love in a way that changes how we see ourselves, our purpose, and the world around us.
Sermon by Jon Ludovina on August 10, 2025.Key scripture: Jonah 4:1-11Do you really believe every good thing in your life is a gift of God’s grace? Or do you think at some level, something about you makes you somehow deserving of God’s grace?
Sermon by Ryan Shults on August 3, 2025.Key scripture: Jonah 3In a chapter filled with a short sermon and shocking repentance, Jonah 3 shows us that God's grace is never small, never withheld, and never done working—on others or on us.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on July 27, 2025.Key scripture: Jonah 1:17-2:10In Jonah 2, we find a prophet at rock bottom and a God who hears from the deep. Even in judgment, grace is breaking through.
Sermon by Jon Ludovina on July 20, 2025.Key scripture: Jonah 1:1–17The book of Jonah has captivated and perplexed audiences for generations. It’s often understood as “that story about a guy who got swallowed by a whale.” But truth be told, there’s so much more going on than that. At its core, Jonah is a story about a prophet who calls others to repent but refuses to repent himself. And ultimately, about a God who will go to extreme measures to try and change that about him.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on July 13, 2025.Key scripture: Genesis 1:27–28, 31, Psalm 139:13–16, Proverbs 17:17, Proverbs 22:6, Ephesians 6:4, and Hebrews 12:6–11God didn't just make you wonderfully—He made them wonderfully too. As we kick off our summer Family Gatherings, we’ll see how God invites us to rediscover our families as places of grace, growth, and His ongoing story.
Sermon by Jake Blair on July 6, 2025.Key scripture: Ecclesiastes 7:2, Ecclesiastes 9:2-3, 1 Corinthians 15:55-57, and Psalm 90:12In a world that avoids death at all costs, Ecclesiastes invites us to face it head-on—and in doing so, find the freedom to enjoy the life God has given us.
Sermon by Jon Ludovina on June 29, 2025.Key scripture: Ecclesiastes 5:10-20What if the reason money never feels like enough is because it was never meant to be? Solomon doesn’t just critique materialism—he unveils a deeper invitation to contentment in God’s provision and presence.
Sermon by Adam Gibson on June 22, 2025.Key scripture: Ecclesiastes 4:1-16In a culture chasing status and striving to measure up, Solomon’s words in Ecclesiastes 4 point us to a richer life—one found in relational depth, not personal gain.
Sermon by Jake Blair on June 15, 2025.Key scripture: Ecclesiastes 3:1-13Life brings seasons we can’t predict or control. But in Ecclesiastes 3, we’re invited to be spiritually prepared—not by mastering outcomes, but by entrusting ourselves to a God who sees the whole story.
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