List of resources cited in/linked from the FSB?

Faithlife User
Faithlife User Member Posts: 3
edited November 20 in Resources Forum

I have been trying to find a list of the resources cited in the FSB but cannot find one. Someone mentioned they were posted in this forum at one point, but did not give a link to the post/comment. There was also a comment that said an Excel spreadsheet was posted on the FSB Users group on Fathlife but I could not turn up anything there either.

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Comments

  • Graham Criddle
    Graham Criddle MVP Posts: 32,634

    Hi - and welcome to the forums

    Do you have access to the Concordance Tool? If so, you should be able to see the resources cited there.

    Graham

  • Faithlife User
    Faithlife User Member Posts: 3

    Unfortunately I don't have access to the Concordance Tool since I'm using the free version of Logos. It does look like a nice feature that comes with the paid versions.

    Maybe someone has posted a list somewhere?

  • Don Awalt
    Don Awalt Member Posts: 3,521 ✭✭✭

    Welcome to the forums! Here is a PDF of all the resources cited in the FSB. It's a zip file of a pdf.

    0410.FSB Recources Cited.pdf.zip 

  • Doug Mangum (Lexham)
    Doug Mangum (Lexham) Member, Logos Employee Posts: 221

    I have been trying to find a list of the resources cited in the FSB but cannot find one.

    I see Don has posted a list of works "cited" in FSB just now, but I want to be clear that the links in FSB are not actually citations. These were all links out from FSB to other Logos resources where readers could learn more about the topic discussed in the note. Sometimes they were sort-of citations because they pointed readers to resources we used in our research. Other times, the links might be pointing readers to resources with alternate points of view or resources that had a fuller discussion of the topic. FSB notes reflect a broad synthesis of knowledge found in multiple books, commentaries, and articles combined with the individual expertise of the note writer. Sometimes links were added by others, separate from the work of the primary author. Or a secondary author revised notes and added links to helpful resources. Often, the links were merely meant in the sense of "for more information on this, start here." You could get similar results from running the Passage Guide or Factbook on a particular verse, only those results would be focused on just what you had available in Logos. Often I ran Passage Guide on the verse and linked to a few commentaries that I thought were interesting after I'd already written my notes. So they aren't citations in a technical sense.

  • Faithlife User
    Faithlife User Member Posts: 3

    Don: Thanks for the pdf, that's very helpful. Really appreciate it.

    Doug: Point well taken, thanks for the additional color.