Would like more information on this offer. Are there costs associated later? How long are the lessons and how many are there?
Hi @Erwin Wuttke, The offer is totally free. You can always upgrade to a paid Logos for Church subscription, but it isn't necessary. You'll get access to three different studies (some are shorter and some are longer). The lessons are designed to be weekly:
Each lesson comes with done-for-you messaging to send out to your members each week to link to that week's lesson. The email cadence also comes with BibleProject overview videos. For the messaging, you can choose to do a 30-day free trial with Text in Church OR you can just take the messaging and build it out in your own messaging platforms. We just want churches to catch a vision for how they can use Logos to study together. I hope you enjoy your study. Let me know if you have any further questions!
I've never cared much for that kind of study…it's too cramped in there and it's often too dark to see well. I'd rather think outside the box where there's some air circulation and a lot more light.
I have a Windows Issue, not a Logos Issue. When I try to install the Windows Desktop Version, I get an error that says:- Another installation is in progress. You must complete that installation before continuing this one. I have uninstalled the original version, then I tried to reinstall. How do I remove this Windows…
Is there a way that I can put my logos in the cloud to free up space on my computer?
Hi all! I've signed up for the 2 Peter study that Logos is running in September, but I work so won't be able to watch the videos at 9 am. Will they be available to click and watch afterwards? Thanks! 😊
I am looking for a recent Logos book on Cultural Anthropology, written from a Christian perspective, to inform cross-cultural missionaries. Suggestions please? For reference, I have these: Anthropology in Theological Perspective. by Pannenberg, Wolfhart. London; New York: T&T Clark, 1985. Social Science: Selections from…
When I create a reading plan for a non‑Bible book in Logos, the daily assignments often turn out quite large. I’m not sure what logic Logos uses for dividing the readings, but if there were a way to break them into smaller portions, I think it would help readers finish each day’s section more easily and stay consistent.…