Great Day Ministry

Note: It may be necessary to click on Great Day or The Aboite Independent (above) to update the page of your choosing to the current date!

“Great Day” Sunday 02/15/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-15-26 Sunday 2.50 and select ‘Save Link’.

“Great Day” Saturday 02/14/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-14-26 Saturday 2.50 and select ‘Save Link’.

Great Day” Friday 02/13/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-13-26 Friday 2.50 and select ‘Save Link’.

“Great Day” Thursday 02/12/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-12-26 Thursday 3.14 and select ‘Save Link’.

“Great Day” Wednesday 02/11/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-11-26 Wednesday 2.50 and select ‘Save Link’.

“Great Day” Tuesday 02/10/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-10-26 Tuesday 2.50 and select ‘Save Link’.

“Great Day” Monday 02/09/2026*

To open or download this program click Great Day 02-09-26 Monday 2.53 and select ‘Save Link’.

“Great Day Presents” Week of 02/15/2026

To open or download this program click Great Day Presents i02-15-26D 57.24M and select ‘Save Link’.

The Chapel Quotes

Spiritual disciplines are self-imposed acts that a person willingly enters into in order to get spiritual benefits. We live in a culture with a popular belief that a positive virtue is to satisfy every human appetite, and we live in a time and culture where we are able to do that. We need to develop a greater hunger for God. One of the best ways to satisfy our spiritual appetite is to occasionally say no to our physical one.”

“Fasting is the abstaining from food for spiritual purposes. In our moments of temptation Satan invites us to meet a legitimate need in an illegitimate way, renouncing the natural in order to invoke the super-natural. Saying ‘no’ to self in order to hear ‘yes’ from God. Fasting deepens and displays our hunger for God. The primary purpose of fasting is developing a hunger for God. The point of fasting is to take our attention off ourselves and to put it toward God. If the spiritual purpose of fasting is not God then we have failed. How much do you want more of God? How much is your soul famished for a real close intimacy that is fully satisfying solely to Him?

To access complete messages from The Chapel click http://www.thechapel.net to go to The Chapel website.

“Christian Stylings In Ivory” by composer-musician Don Krueger

To hear the complete 15-minute program click > on the sound bar above.
To open or download this program click on Stylings 021526 and select ‘Save Link’.

Devotion 02/15/2026

Our Devotion, “Perfect Father” is by Jessica G. Smith of Beavercreek, Ohio, who studied professional writing at Taylor University.

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”  Matthew 5:48

Sometimes my dad and I do not get along well. We frequently bicker over very minor differences of opinion. He considers me to be a rebellious teenager, and I accuse him of being overly domineering.  Maybe it is because I am so independently minded that he and I are too much alike and, like a magnet, we repel similar forces.  

Whatever the reason, being at odds with my dad can be tiresome and annoying. Perhaps it is just a phase we are both going through. Even though my father on this earth is not flawless, I can rely on the fact that I have the perfect dad in heaven. God is my eternal father. He looks out for me. He plans the best for my life. I can depend on God to be there for me in times of struggle and need. He is perfect and He thinks that I am worth something. To Him, I was worth dying on the cross.

 Anyone accepting God as a personal Savior gains the perfect father. God does not replace an earthly dad, but He is an Eternal Father who cares and loves forever.

PRAYER: Dear God, let me feel Your presence in my life. Allow me fully to understand that You are the perfect Father and You love me perfectly. Let me know that I can come to You for anything I need. In Your name, I pray. Amen.

 Book Review 02/11/2026

This Book Review is by Anna Oelerich, Professional Writing Student, Taylor University, Upland, Indiana

Present Over Perfect: Leaving Behind Frantic for a Simpler, More Soulful Way of Living
by Shauna Niequist
Zondervan, PB, 234 pages

 “What kills a soul? Exhaustion, secret keeping, image management. And what brings a soul back from the dead? Honesty, connection, grace.”

So claims Shauna Niequist, writer, wife, mother of two—and, up until recently, someone utterly exhausted. A lover of simple family meals and days at the lake, she found herself tugged away from the things she most enjoyed by speaking schedules, demands from society, and her own inability to say “no.” In short, her soul felt compromised, and she knew she needed a change.

 Present Over Perfect takes the reader through Shauna’s journey to live more simply and more soulfully, without a formula or road map. Guided by her love of liturgical teaching and desire to enjoy her family more deeply, Shauna chronicles the beauty she’s found in stripping away all the “extra” until only what is most essential is left. This includes turning down speaking opportunities, playing more pick-up basketball with her boys, and getting rid of household items that only take up space. It also includes gaining a better sense of her God-given passions, what makes her thrive. The result is a refreshing book that reminds the modern believer that less is often more—especially for the soul.

I’m not usually one for superlatives, so when I say this is the best book I’ve read in a long time, I mean it. Shauna’s words, passions, and writing style resonate with me so deeply that I feel I’m reviewing the work of a dear friend. Shauna doesn’t write as a Christian self-help guru who has discovered the secret to happiness, nor does she present a cookie-cutter thesis for the believing woman-on-the-go. Rather, Present Over Perfect is written as a personal quest for deep, Christ-centered satisfaction, raw and honest in a time when “raw and honest” is often anything but. Shauna’s prose—slow, rhythmic, uncluttered—reflects the life she has chosen for herself, and it is a joy to read.

Personally, I found this book strengthened my faith in an unexpected way. It’s easy to forget that the Lord loves us even when our schedules aren’t full; isn’t constant activity the mark of a good Christian, a good woman? Shauna Niequist reminds readers of the deep contentment our souls can find when we choose our “yeses” wisely and put away frantic for good. 

 Review used by permission of Evangelical Church Library Association (ECLA)

To open or download this program click Poulenc-Melancholie Roge and select ‘Save Link’.

Comments?
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