Am I overlooking something or is it not possible to link created sermons from sermon editor to text or notes? Please advise.
Am I overlooking something or is it not possible to link created sermons from sermon editor to text or notes?
Sorry but I don't fully understand what you are asking.
Please clarify / expand.
document notes can be linked to text. So If i create a note on john 1:1, I can link it to that reference so that anytime I come to john 1:1 I see the note from previous study. However, I cannot do that with sermon editor I don't think...and I cannot see how to link a sermon to notes, which would be very helpful for organization. My question is: "Am I overlooking something" or is the function just not possible?
No sermons don't have attachment points as notes do ... a search or guide is required to find them.
As MJ said, sermons can be found through a search in in a guide. However if you would like to have a sermon document linked in a note file (I not sure what the value of that would be) you could copy the url of the Sermon document and paste it into a note file. Like I said, I'm not sure what the value of doing that would be.
This might not be exactly what you're looking for, but it made me think that it might be beneficial to see in your Bible that you have a sermon on that passage. A sermon icon could show up in the Bible text. Clicking it would open your sermon document. This would be parallel to how notes work.
Are you suggesting that as a possibility, or a current capability?
This might not be exactly what you're looking for, but it made me think that it might be beneficial to see in your Bible that you have a sermon on that passage. A sermon icon could show up in the Bible text. Clicking it would open your sermon document. This would be parallel to how notes work. Are you suggesting that as a possibility, or a current capability?
Future possibility.
I could see that being a very useful function. Especially as we prepare more and more sermons in Logos we can see how we handled particular passages in the past. A long pastorate needs to be sure that we do not keep using the same approaches/illustrations etc.