Months ago I saw yet another volume of the Library of Christian Classics up on CCEL, namely Augustine's Confessions at http://www.ccel.org/ccel/augustine/confessions. IMHO, this rich work is a classic that deserves multiple translations, and so in spite of two versions (ECF and the earlier Pussey) available for Logos, I created a PB of it.
For some reason the CCEL edition was separated from the Enchiridion which is there at http://www.ccel.org/ccel/augustine/enchiridion. I have joined them together, like they were published. I have also added page numbers and tagged the documents so they should work better with Logos.
In every link I had to the Enchiridion in my Logos Library, it was to the "paragraph" number, ignoring the chapter number, so I have tagged it this way.
In one footnote, the book had Hebrew text. CCEL did not. I have not re-inserted the Hebrew. In addition, the Bibliography and Index were not at CCEL, and I did not feel inspired to key them in myself.
Anyway, both texts of St. Augustine are worth reading. The Enchiridion is a brief summary of the views of Late Augustine, written for a friend, and the Confessions are a devotional classic.
SDG
Ken McGuire
"You don't fix faith, River. It fixes you." - Shephard Book in "Jaynestown"
Ken McGuire:in spite of two versions (ECF and the earlier Pussey) available for Logos
More like four, I believe: Pusey, ECF, Harvard Classics, and now Loeb.
But thanks anyway.
Mac Mini late 2010 8GB RAM 10.6.8
Ken McGuire: Months ago I saw yet another volume of the Library of Christian Classics up on CCEL, namely Augustine's Confessions at http://www.ccel.org/ccel/augustine/confessions. IMHO, this rich work is a classic that deserves multiple translations, and so in spite of two versions (ECF and the earlier Pussey) available for Logos, I created a PB of it. For some reason the CCEL edition was separated from the Enchiridion which is there at http://www.ccel.org/ccel/augustine/enchiridion. I have joined them together, like they were published. I have also added page numbers and tagged the documents so they should work better with Logos. In every link I had to the Enchiridion in my Logos Library, it was to the "paragraph" number, ignoring the chapter number, so I have tagged it this way. In one footnote, the book had Hebrew text. CCEL did not. I have not re-inserted the Hebrew. In addition, the Bibliography and Index were not at CCEL, and I did not feel inspired to key them in myself. Anyway, both texts of St. Augustine are worth reading. The Enchiridion is a brief summary of the views of Late Augustine, written for a friend, and the Confessions are a devotional classic. SDG Ken McGuire
Thank you also for: "sanus perfecte est in spe, in re ... peccator - M. Luther, 1515"
Philippians 4: 4 Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. 5 Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand..........