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Logos sells Derek Cooper’s Basics of Latin: A Grammar from the Christian Tradition, published by Zondervan. However, Zondervan also sells video lectures by Dr. Cooper teaching his grammar. I would like to commend these lectures to Logos as a product they should make available to customers.
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Dear Mr. Ball, Thanks for the move. By the way, Accordance Bible software includes the critical edition of the Vulgate, along with the traditional Clementine Vulgate, in its Latin package. (It does not have a package designed for Greek orthodox people, but its Greek and Hebrew master packages include the Gottingen LXX at a reasonable price). Also, I
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So "well-published, professional theologians in the Catholic Church have no need whatsoever," and and can not "ever," use the standard critical edition of the Latin Vulgate, despite the Catholic Church's teaching about the place of the Latin Vulgate, and, at least if they are engaged in any kind of Biblical research, can totally ignore the standard
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It may very well be that some users will not use the standard critical editions of the Vulgate and LXX, but by not including them at any level Logos is saying that their Orthodox and Verbum packages are not at all geared towards scholars. These are texts that these traditions think are inspired or at least authoritative, yet they are absent from even
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Logos has left out two essential resources from its Orthodox and Catholic base packages. The Gottingen Septuagint: https://www.logos.com/product/4951/gottingen-septuagint is not present in any Orthodox base package. This is the standard edition of the LXX. It does not make sense at all when the Orthodox view the LXX as inspired to not have the standard
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One more work Logos should have: Those So Called Errors, Chet Kulus
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Dear Mr. Martini, Thanks for the info. I still wish it was in a base package, though! Dear M. J. Smith, Just for your information, I'm not a Protestant, but a Baptist,concerning whom, in the words of a non-Baptist historian: "The Baptists may be considered as the only Christian community that has stood since the days of the apostles, and as a Christian
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Since the Gottingen Septuagint is the standard critical edition of the LXX, leaving it out in a religious tradition that treats the LXX as inspired would be like having a Roman Catholic base package (Verbum) that leaves out, even at its very highest level, the standard critical edition of the Vulgate. I suspect, though, that my interest in the package
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Shouldn't at least the Orthodox Platinum have the Gottingen Septuagint? https://www.logos.com/product/4951/gottingen-septuagint This is a major omission. If it were included, with upcoming volumes automatically added in as they were processed, I would buy the Platinum set immediately, in all likelihood.
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I have both Accordance and Logos, and believe Accordance is far superior for careful study of the original languages, while Logos is superior in the number of books it offers. If I could only use one or the other, I would definitely go with Accordance, but I don't need to, so I use both of them for their respective strengths. Logos does a better job
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Dear Logos, Good day! I have taught first year college/seminary Hebrew a number of times (I even have it online here for anyone to take at any time , and I agree with a variety of my Hebrew teaching brethren that Lambdin's Introduction to Biblical Hebrew is the best first year grammar. I believe that, in conjunction with Williamson's Annotated Key
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I would like thi book also.
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I would buy the OED if it is reasonably priced and there is not an annual fee to use it. My 2 volume reduced size physical copy is much harder to use, as I have to use a magnifying glass for it, as nine pages are compressed on one page.
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David Otis Fuller's works defending the KJV are held by the Institute for Biblical Textual Studies, and Logos can contact them to get permission to use them: http://kjv-ibts.org/ David Cloud's works defending the KJV are at: http://wayoflife.org so Logos can contact him there for permission. The Biblical theology of the Perfect Preservation of Scripture
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The Gomez revision of the Reina-Valera would also be a great feature for Logos, e. g.: http://www.4thesaviour.com/8.html
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Also: Introduction to the Rabbinic Bible, Jacob ben Chayyim Introduction to the Massoretico-critical edition of the Hebrew Bible, C. D. Ginsburg which are in the public domain and linked to here ( http://faithsaves.net/hebrew-courses/ these Hebrew text resources would also be valuable in a general textual criticism package, and I could see both TR/KJV
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Dear Matthew, Very good idea. Publishing a complete Ben Chayyim 1524-1525 Rabbinic Bible (online in the public domain here: http://faithsaves.net/bibliology/) would be a good one to include also, as would the Ginsburg ed. of the Hebrew Textus Receptus as published by the Trinitarian Bible society
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Yes, thanks all. One more book worth adding to a KJV-only collection: The Translators Revived: a Biographical Memoir of the Authors of the English Version of the Holy Bible [KJV], Alexander W. McClure
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Dear M. J. Smith, Thank you so much for your helpful comments in this thread. Dear all, Here is part 2 of a response to James White's video discussed earlier: http://kentbrandenburg.blogspot.com/2015/08/more-james-white-on-version-issue_4.html
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Dear M. J. Smith, Thanks again for the comment. I agree that the resources you listed would be great for a KJVO collection. Far be it from me to keep anyone from being comfortable coming on these forums asking questions and receiving answers. I would suggest that the historical resources I referenced on the page termed "anti-Catholic polemic" are indeed