Note that there are Bibles that do navigate by pericope e.g. NRSV
I was going ask why then can the NRSV-CE Bible navigate by pericope but I think I see why:
I can't recreate the problem you are reporting. For all of the books you listed I was able to start typing a pericope into the navigation box (like "creation"). A list of matching pericopes was suggested, and I was able to pick one and the book was navigated to the appropriate location.
Could you perhaps attach a screenshot to show exactly what you are attempting to do?
If you step to the next article, you'll get to chapter 21, instead of the pericope at verse 7 (Eutychus Raised from the Dead).
Article boundaries are not necessarily aligned with pericopes. They are often (but not always) aligned with chapters.
There is currently no navigation option (I now understand what kind of navigation you are referring to) for pericopes. Sounds like a good feature request.
something changed so that I am unable to hear text to speech on the program that has on one side and ESV Bible on the other. I use the ctrl r to hear it. It works on the Truth for Today but not on the Bible side. I am not sure what changed, to cause that. Please help if possible. God Bless You.
I can change the versions that appear in the text comparison tool with no trouble. However, when I press F7 from my Bible, I do not get the versions I want to compare. How do I change the Bibles that appear when I press F7?
I have noticed that I can right click in the media tool and send that image to a sermon, word document or Power Point but cannot send it to the Bible Study Builder. Also it would be nice if the little icon in my Bible that indicates there is available media for that passage would also show up in the Mobile app
Why are all my cross reference footnotes suddenly only in NASB, no matter what version of the Bible I’m in? I mainly use ESV, but when I click a cross reference footnote, it is in NASB. This happens when I am using KJV and AMP…all cross references are in NASB. If I click on the cross reference, it will open up a new NASB…
Both Robert Solomon and Irving Singer attribute the quote "love is lust plus the ordeal of civility" to Freud, but neither of them provides an actual source. I have looked and looked and strongly suspect this is a sentence/claim attributed to Freud that he never actually said/wrote. This happens a lot with famous thinkers.…