Calendar starts on Monday, not Sunday

Marek Tomasovic
Marek Tomasovic Member Posts: 18
edited November 21 in English Forum

Hello, 

is there a way to set my calendar to start on Monday, instead of Sunday? It gets be really confused and I already made a few mistakes Big Smile

Thank you! 
Marek 

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Comments

  • Bruce Dunning
    Bruce Dunning MVP Posts: 11,138

    I think this may be a setting in your operating system. If you are on a PC, in windows open setting, then time and language and then date and time and I think it can be set there. If you are using a Mac others will have to chime in.

    Edit: I neglected to welcome you to the forums Marek. I hope you return often.

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  • Marek Tomasovic
    Marek Tomasovic Member Posts: 18

    Hi Bruce, 

    Thanks for the tip, but that doesn't seem to be the case. I have a Mac and all calendars (the calendar app and the date/time panel) start with Monday. So it seems that Logos is overriding this somehow and setting Sunday as first day of the week. 

  • Jack Caviness
    Jack Caviness MVP Posts: 13,489

    I have a Mac and all calendars (the calendar app and the date/time panel) start with Monday.

    That is very strange as every calendar on my Mac starts on Sunday in agreement with every standard calendar in the US.

    Where are you located?

  • Marek Tomasovic
    Marek Tomasovic Member Posts: 18

    Hi Jack, 

    I'm from Slovakia, Europe where calendars start with Mondays. The reason all my Mac's calendars start with Monday is because I set it to. (That's why yours are all set to Sundays, because it matches your regional settings). Coincidentally, that also seems to be Logos' default setting and you don't see any problem. 

    Marek 

  • JT (alabama24)
    JT (alabama24) MVP Posts: 36,489

    I have a Mac and all calendars (the calendar app and the date/time panel) start with Monday.

    That is very strange as every calendar on my Mac starts on Sunday in agreement with every standard calendar in the US.

    Where are you located?

    Side note: when I was in vocational church ministry, I set all of my calendars to start on Monday. It made more sense that way from a ministry perspective. I don’t do so now because it isn‘t an issue currently in my personal or professional life. 

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  • Jack Caviness
    Jack Caviness MVP Posts: 13,489

    Hi Jack, 

    I'm from Slovakia, Europe where calendars start with Mondays. The reason all my Mac's calendars start with Monday is because I set it to. (That's why yours are all set to Sundays, because it matches your regional settings). Coincidentally, that also seems to be Logos' default setting and you don't see any problem. 

    Marek 

    Thanks for the clarification. In my European travels, I never noticed that—but that was almost 50 years ago [:P]

  • Jeffrey S. Robison
    Jeffrey S. Robison Member Posts: 228 ✭✭

    In US. I set the calendar on my Mac to start on Monday. Mac Calendar and other apps start on Mondays. Logos 9 still starts on Sundays. Wish Logos followed system calendar or had the ability to make calendar in the Sermon Editor start on Mondays. I work toward Sundays, not Mondays.

  • David Paul
    David Paul Member Posts: 6,003 ✭✭✭

    In US. I set the calendar on my Mac to start on Monday. Mac Calendar and other apps start on Mondays. Logos 9 still starts on Sundays.

    There is an obvious reason that Bible software starts weeks with Sunday and ends with Saturday/Sabbath--it is the pattern YHWH established at creation. Not only that, but despite the majority of Christianity (never mind secular entities) choosing to worship on the first day of the week, all of Biblical prophecy is irrevocably set to a blueprint which develops Yeishuua`'s return and the millennial period in concord with the 2 Pet. 3:8 prophetic principle; that is, the weekly seventh-day Sabbath rest (i.e the "day") is prophetically intended to correspond to the prophesied rest the world experiences after hassaattaan is cast into the abyss at the beginning of the (seventh) millennium (i.e. the "thousand years").

    Of course, part of the "problem" people have is their "sense" that "weekend" as a concept (that is, Saturday and Sunday) ought to rightfully occur at "the end of the week". This, of course, overlooks the fact that a "M-F work week" didn't exist until after the Civil War (for federal employees) and it wasn't until less than a hundred years ago that Ford initiated the 40 hr. wk. in the private sector. In other words, the Sat./Sun. weekend is practically still wet behind the ears. Put another way, the neologistic concept of "weekend" can hardly dislodge a prophetic Biblical principle, though try many will.

    And then, contributing to the confusion, there's the awkward and literally thorny fact that Christianity resorted to a novel rest & worship day that prophetically aligns with the "first day" of...the Fall and sin. Inconceivable!

    I work toward Sundays, not Mondays.

    A minor point, but I think you likely meant Saturdays, since that is the last day of most calendar weeks.

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  • Jeffrey S. Robison
    Jeffrey S. Robison Member Posts: 228 ✭✭

    Thanks for the history lesson. But I believe you missed my simple request... "Wish Logos followed system calendar or had the ability to make calendar in the Sermon Editor start on Mondays." ... Or whatever day a user wants. My request for the calendar to match the other calendars on my computer has to do with my workflow. Bible software, like all the other apps on my machines are there so I can spend more time with people. Nothing theological, eschatological, prophetic, or historical about my software request. I am most definitely not confused about my workflow. It starts on Monday and ends on Sunday.

  • MJ. Smith
    MJ. Smith MVP Posts: 53,132

    "Wish Logos followed system calendar or had the ability to make calendar in the Sermon Editor start on Mondays." ...

    There was a discussion of this issue some time ago. IIRC FL recognized the need for the European calendar layout.

    Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."

  • Jeffrey S. Robison
    Jeffrey S. Robison Member Posts: 228 ✭✭

    Thanks MJ. I remember that. I was just trying hoping to bump that request again.

  • David Paul
    David Paul Member Posts: 6,003 ✭✭✭

    Thanks for the history lesson. But I believe you missed my simple request... "Wish Logos followed system calendar or had the ability to make calendar in the Sermon Editor start on Mondays." ... Or whatever day a user wants. My request for the calendar to match the other calendars on my computer has to do with my workflow.

    That's fine...you do you.

    Nothing theological, eschatological, prophetic, or historical about my software request.

    You might be surprised.

    I am most definitely not confused about my workflow. It starts on Monday and ends on Sunday.

    As you say...but prophecy has a far more expansive purpose than pretty much anyone realizes. Among other things, it functions as gridlines and way points for how Scripture (and everything else) should be perceived. If your workflow is out of sync with a prophetic concept or principle, that's something you should probably have a very deep think about. At the very least--Lk. 2:19. Or not...being your own ruler is an option.

    I don't suppose you could just play a mind trick on yourself and say, "My job is to start the week off right!"? That way it makes sense that everything you are doing leads up to "the beginning" of the week.

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    "The Unbelievable Work...believe it or not."  Little children...Biblical prophecy is not Christianity's friend.

  • Jeffrey S. Robison
    Jeffrey S. Robison Member Posts: 228 ✭✭

    David Paul,

    I would direct you to the Forum Guidelines that are found here https://community.logos.com/forums/t/10072.aspx. You agreed to abide by these. You do not.