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Marshall's commentary on Luke in the NIGTC is almost unreadable due to its lack of footnotes or endnotes. A Greek professor of mine said he admired Marshall's insights - when he could find them.
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I'm running an i7-720QM, 4 GB ram, 500 GB 7200 HD, NVidia GT 230M 1 MB. I noticed the last update caused a few seconds slowdown in assembling the commentaries within the Passage Guide; it was almost instantaneous before the update. The main difference I noticed in moving from my Dual-Core Pentium, 2 GB ram, 120GB 5400 HD was the time for indexing. I
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I have the same problem, but with Word 2003. It is something that has arisen in the last couple of weeks or so. I suspect it has to do with the last update to Logos 4 since I have made no change in Word and the last update from Microsoft was 6/11/2010.
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After updating with the latest release (4.2a SR3) I cannot regain the Taskbar without having to hit the Windows key. Not a major problem but it is a nuisance.
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Perhaps you are looking for something like Zerwick & Grosvener's A Grammatical Analysis of the New Testament ? Check it out at http://www.logos.com/product/4229/a-grammatical-analysis-of-the-greek-new-testament I have used this since my second year Greek class and now have it in hard copy and L4 format. I find it extremely helpful, especially since
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I would recommend Robert Jewett, Jesus Against the Rapture as a prerequisite for any study of the subject.
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Check out the following link: http://www.logos.com/L4/Support/Warning1946 It appears to have no lasting effect according to the link.
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I agree whole heartedly with William Lane's volume, even though it is getting a bit dated now. In addition, Morna Hooker's commentary in Black's series has some very helpful insights due to her extensive knowledge of NT Greek. I also like English's commentary in The Bible Speaks Today series. Not to be overlooked is Robert Guelich in Word Biblical Commentary
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A Grammatical Analysis of the Greek New Testament by Zerwick & Grosvenor is a great tool. I've used it in hard back and in Logos for many years.
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The word liberal is such a loaded term that I'm not sure what you are needing. However, those definitely not like MacArthur would include the commentaries of Barth, Brunner, Cranfield, Fitzmyer, Kaseman, and Nygren (just off the top of my head, though these vary in degrees of liberalism ). The commentary by Wright in The New Interpreters' Commentary
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I've used Zerwick and Grosvener for a number years now. As soon as I found it available in Logos I bought it and have been pleased. A knowledge of Greek grammar is helpful. I find this work especially helpful in identifying idiomatic sayings, which can be tricky simply following a word for word translation.
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I had the same problem a while back. Logos 4 had resized itself to some strange parameters on the screen which prevented Auto-hide to work properly. I hit the "Restore Down" button (next to the "Close" button at upper right hand of the window) and then "Maximize" (same button in the reduced window). It seemingly solved my problem permanently.
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I have the taskbar hidden and when I move the mouse to hover at the bottom of the screen the taskbar normally reappears - it does so with every other program, but not with the newest update of Logos 4. The taskbar will reappear when I hit the Windows key, but that is a bit of a nuisance going from Logos to Word, Excel, etc. I think this may be an issue
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Problem solved. Sorry about the previous alerts. I resized the Logos 4 windows and the taskbar now reappears when I hover at the bottom of the screen. Evidently the update had a glitch that made the Logos window a bit oversized for my display. This caused the taskbar to be below screen. Thanks for your help. Your lack of problems with this inspired
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You might try adjusting the ClearType settings. Go to Control Panel/Appearance and Personalization/Fonts/Adjust ClearType text and follow the instructions. It makes a great deal of difference in (nearly) all programs. Hope this helps.
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I was unaware that this was available in Logos format. This was a work I read for a reading course in early Christianity during my seminary days. It came highly recommended by my professor (in other words, it was required reading) and I found it to be very readable.
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Tested on HP dv6t-2000 CTO Logos 4 runs fine, little or no lag during searches, passage guides, etc. Verified NovaBench Score: 749 Test run on October 15, 2010 Microsoft Windows 7 Professional Intel Core i7 Q 720 1.60GHz running at 1600 MHz NVIDIA GeForce GT 230M GPU 4087 MB System RAM (Score: 134) - RAM Speed: 7926 MB/s CPU Tests (Score: 480) - Floating
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Brevard Childs in the Old Testament Library has excellent philological and background information as well as comments on how the book of Exodus influences NT studies and issues.
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I wish Schnackenburg and Barrett were available in Logos.