This source cluster combines current official self-description for Steve Holt and The Road Church with older repo captures on the 2017 chapel merger, Church Voter Guides, and later reporting on Hold the Line, school-board mobilization, and Seven Mountains-adjacent rhetoric. Taken together, the current repo supports a durable Steve Holt / The Road slice that is strong for named leadership, ministry branding, public-policy framing, and repeated political adjacency, but still incomplete on direct District 49 meeting evidence and the church's most defensible current legal-entity structure.
The strongest current-source layer is official and self-descriptive: The Road's homepage, about page, leadership page, and public-policy page; Steve Holt Online's about, books, and wholeHARD45 pages; and a ProPublica nonprofit record for Worshiper And Warrior. Those sources are best for current role, roster, and ministry claims. The stronger controversy and movement-network layer comes from outside reporting or retained secondary material: Colorado Politics on a 2020 mask-optional prayer rally, earlier Church Voter Guides captures, Colorado Times Recorder reporting on Hold the Line, and an existing repo video transcript that presents a quoted Steve Holt / Chaim Goldman election-mobilization clip inside a critical presentation.
EmpowerU.live and Worshipper Warrior Men's Ministry, which makes the church, the men's ministry, and Holt's personal brand inseparable in the current public-facing source layer.Leadership page with a named Public Policy Director, Amy Stephens, and a dedicated Public Policy page framed around Faith, Family & Freedom.Letter to the American Church and Fault Lines.2017 article says The Road merged with Chapel Hills Church and adopted the name The Road @ Chapel Hills.Worshipper Warrior, wholeHARD45, and three books, while ProPublica resolves Worshiper And Warrior as a Colorado 501(c)(3) with the same PO box already associated with The Road in older captures.2020 COVID-era mask-optional prayer-rally controversy preserved by Colorado Politics. The other is the later Hold the Line and school-politics layer preserved in existing reporting and transcripts.2025 Podbean result confirms a continuing public media role for Goldman through The Peak News, and the retained 2025-03-21 presentation transcript ties Holt, Goldman, and local school-board election strategy together. What remains weaker is a direct, first-party church-public-policy podcast or a direct District 49 meeting transcript for Holt himself.2014: older repo business-index material preserves a Colorado entity lead for The Road, but that remains a non-official legal-status clue rather than a definitive filing record.2015: ProPublica records Worshiper And Warrior with ruling date 2015-09-01.2017-04: Holt's merger article says The Road and Chapel Hills Church merged and began operating as The Road @ Chapel Hills.2020-09: Colorado Politics reports Holt helped organize a Sean Feucht-linked Colorado Springs prayer rally where masks were optional despite the pandemic-era controversy.2021-2023: Church Voter Guides material in the repo places Chaim Goldman and school-board voter-guide activity inside the same Colorado Springs religious-political environment.2022-05: existing reporting says The Road hosted Hold the Line, linking the church to a larger Christian-right event network and to public praise from Doug Lamborn around Seven Mountains language.2025-01: Steve Holt Online's current books and wholeHARD45 pages indicate an active ministry-product push in the present-tense source layer.2025-01: Podbean preserves Chaim Goldman as host and executive producer on a The Peak News episode.2026-03: The Road's current leadership page still lists Amy Stephens as public-policy director and preserves a fuller current leadership roster.Worshiper And Warrior, but not The Road itself. The church may be operating under a structure that is normal for churches but still poorly surfaced in the current repo.