I would love to see the ESV Prayer Bible notes available in Logos.
https://www.crossway.org/bibles/esv-prayer-bible-case-2/
400+ prayers seem like too few for the entire Bible.
I would like to see a list of prayers for Psalms, John + Romans, say, to get a deeper idea of usefulness.
Yes, I agree, it is quite meager.. but it would still be nice to see in the offerings. Maybe just at a cheaper price.
but it would still be nice to see in the offerings. Maybe just at a cheaper price
I agree, Liam.
Meh 😑 Not worth it! I have books with 300 prayers for free 😂 Maybe as a FBOTM or for 0.99 cents 😂
A bit similar to this one, which has only 400 doctrinal entries. However I am actually curious if anyone finds this one a good tool or not.
ESV Systematic Theology Study Bible Notes
I am actually curious if anyone finds this one a good tool or not. ESV Systematic Theology Study Bible Notes
I am actually curious if anyone finds this one a good tool or not.
I have not used it. But I am not aware of Crossway printing anything that is not good.
I did look at it in a bookstore once. As a printed Bible it was typical Crossway. Very nicely done. But as most Crossway Bibles, printed in China using less than the best materials.
I have the ESV Study Bible, in print and in Logos. It is very good. It is about as much material as you can put into a single volume book along with the Bible text. It is really too big to carry to church with you [:)]
But once you move to the computer (or portable device), physical size is no longer a big factor.
The theology study Bible looked fine to me. But I already have tons of study Bibles. And Theology books.
What this particular item brings to the table is a nice sized printed Bible with a very small and concise amount of theological commentary. It is convenient if you just want to carry one book, and are happy with very limited and concise theological commentary.
But if you are going to be using it on Logos ... I'm wondering why you would, when there are so many other choices. With Logos you can put any Bible text alongside any commentary or theology. You can view scripture references in the theology instantly.
The only reason I can think of is if you are already using the print edition and also want it on Logos. That is a good enough reason to spend the $20.
But for me a much better choice would be J.I. Packers Concise Theology which costs about half as much as the study Bible. (most people already know, but Packer was the general editor of the ESV translation)
Or you could get it by adding a package. Logos 9 Anglican Starter Legacy Library includes Packer and a bunch of other resources, including two other larger theologies and several N.T. Wright titles ... for $35 or less depending on what you already own.
I personally like to have print books for some things, so that I am not distracted by the technology. Or to just have them on my Kindle, which functions quite a bit like a print book.
Amazon has a Kindle version of the Prayer Bible, but with the price I would personally probably get the print copy. Kindle does not work well for study Bibles in my experience. I have the ESV Study Bible on the Kindle (a Paperwhite). Navigation is a big weakness of the e-ink Kindle devices. With no physical keys it just does not work well.
Agreed. I'd love to own the ESV Prayer Bible notes in Logos format.