Adrian Rogers Sermons
Comments
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Jesse Blevins said:
Does anyone know if these are the updated sermons with full outlines? I was reading the product pages but didn't see where it mentioned it.
They will include the full outlines. We will also be adding new "Sermon Outline" label mark-up that will make the outlines searchable using label syntax.
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I think that this is a great deal which could only be made better if it was part of a base package. If you do the math on recent prepubs of sermons, this is almost the cheapest per sermon with the exception of Don Fortner.
Don Fortner $.07 per sermon
John Piper $.08 per sermon
Macarthur $.13 per sermon (In Baptist Platinum so you can get it much cheaper.)
Adrian Rogers $.13 per sermon
D. A. Carson $.16 per sermon
Tony Evans $.19 per sermon
Matt Chandler $.22 per sermon
Tim Keller $.25 per sermon
J. D. Greear $.29 per sermon
David Platt $.41 per sermon (Available in Baptist Gold)
Not all the sermon collections, but a least the big, modern ones. Makes me really think about picking up that Piper Sermon set.
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Hi all,
I've added sample pages to the product page to give you an idea of what will be included in the sermon archive.
Let me know if you have any more questions!
Product Manager, Faithlife
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Daniel Motley said:
Let me know if you have any more questions!
I hope this will also include a Sermon by reference index? I ask this because David Platt sermons did not come with one.
Dell, studio XPS 7100, Ram 8GB, 64 - bit Operating System, AMD Phenom(mt) IIX6 1055T Processor 2.80 GHZ
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Daniel Motley said:
Hi all,
I've added sample pages to the product page to give you an idea of what will be included in the sermon archive.
Let me know if you have any more questions!
Are all 1925 sermons full manuscripts? In my copy in Wordsearch, some are just outlines. My pre-order is in anyway. Having his illustrations alone searchable is worth the cost.
Using Logos as a pastor, seminary professor, and Tyndale author
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Yes it looks like they are full manuscripts with their respective searchable outlines.
I'm so glad I returned the copy that I got from wordsearch. It's so sloppy I can't believe they're selling it for $350. Yeah you get 30% off but still at 245 I'd rather have the updated way better Logos version of it.
DAL
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In 2003, I had the privilege of being part of the first Adrian Rogers Pastor Training Institute. He invited 50 young pastors to spend three days with him. He cleared his calendar and invested in us. He did not talk with us at all about "church growth" or "how we do it at Bellevue," He talked with us about being a man of God, integrity, marriage, family, and expository preaching. It was to this day three of the best days of my life. I have these sessions on my iphone and frequently still listen to them when I travel. See below a tribute that I wrote to him when he passed away....
A Tribute to Dr. Adrian Rogers
By Gregory L. Corbin
November 15, 2005
Dr. Adrian Rogers, a well-known pastor and leader in the Southern Baptist Convention, went home to be with the Lord on November 15, 2005. While I will not be among the thousands who will be present at his funeral service, I decided to honor Dr. Rogers among my church family and others that I have contact with by sharing my thoughts about a man that I had the opportunity to meet up close and personal.
“I want to be like Adrian Rogers.” Those have been the words of thousands of young Baptist preachers over the years. They have been my words in my younger days as well. I still remember the first time that I saw Adrian Rogers preaching on television. I had just begun my own journey of preaching the Word of God when I saw my first Love Worth Finding broadcast. “What a voice,” I remember thinking. Like many, I was struck by his booming voice and the passion that he preached with. In 1996, I saw him in person for the first time as he preached at the Southern Baptist Pastor’s Conference in New Orleans. He was no less impressive in person than on television. Great preacher. Huge church. Baptizing hundreds. Commanding leader. Like many young preachers there, I remember thinking, “I want to be like Adrian Rogers.”
Fast forward to the Fall of 2003. I was privileged to be one of 50 pastors that Dr. Rogers invited to spend three days with him in Memphis. I preached that Sunday morning at the church I was serving as pastor, hopped into my car, and took off to Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis for the evening worship service. It was an incredible service and Dr. Rogers preached a tremendous message. There were three or four other pastors who arrived early for the conference to attend the evening service. To our surprise, an announcement was made at the end of the service that Dr. Rogers would like to meet in his office with any pastors who were present. We were escorted into his office. Of course, it was very large and tastefully decorated. Behind his desk were portraits of Dr. Rogers with three different United States Presidents. However, the thing that I remember most about his office was the visitor who was there when we entered – a truck driver. As a child, this man had been saved and baptized at Bellevue early on in Dr. Rogers’ ministry there. He had not been to Bellevue or seen Dr. Rogers since he was a child. In fact, he was not even planning on being at Bellevue that night. His rig had broken down in Memphis, and it was going to be the next morning before he was going to be able to resume his trip. So, in his work clothes, he took a taxi to Bellevue for the Sunday night service and wound up getting invited to visit with Dr. Rogers in his office. It impressed me that Dr. Rogers would do that. He only spent about ten minutes with that man, but it was ten minutes that man will never forget. Even though thousands were present that night at church, Adrian Rogers took a few minutes to talk to a truck driver he had not seen in years.
When the pastor’s conference started the next morning, I was again pleasantly surprised. Dr. Rogers had cleared his calendar for three days for us. Yes, he taught us during the sessions, but he also stood out in the hallway with us during the breaks. He ate meals with us. He arrived early to talk with people and he left late after talking with people. He had a way of making each person that he talked with feel like the most important person in the building.
Speaking of the sessions, they turned out to be the opposite of what I expected. For three days, Dr. Rogers never talked to us about “how to grow a big church.” Instead, he talked with us about the pastor’s prayer life and personal integrity. He talked about the pastor’s family life – “the ministry that doesn’t begin at home doesn’t begin.” He taught us about expository preaching and how important it was to invest our lives in preaching the Word – “the Bible will get the job done.” He opened up and shared with us deeply personal stories of the tragedies and triumphs of his fifty years in ministry. He shared with us about times when he failed as a husband and struggled as a father. He shared with us about the times when he was not happy at the church he was serving. He told us about times when he had been hurt. There was not a dry eye in the house when he and his wife Joyce talked about the heart break of burying their infant son.
Another attribute that impressed me was the fact that Adrian Rogers was comfortable in his own skin. He did not try to act as if he was not a well-known pastor who led one of the largest ministries in the world. Yet, his genuine humility shined through at every turn. There was absolutely no hint of taking credit or putting on airs. He was humble, real, and personable. On the closing night of conference, we had a formal banquet. A friend and I sat down at a table and begin talking when I felt a hand on my shoulder. “May we join you?” Dr. Rogers asked as he sat down with his wife. So, I literally ate a meal elbow to elbow with Adrian Rogers. We did not talk about Bellevue or his ministry. He asked about my wife and children. He wanted to know all about them. He asked about my church and how things were going. I had dinner with Adrian Rogers and he wanted to talk about me.
When I arrived home the next day, I wrote Dr. Rogers and thanked him for three of the best days of my life. On a recent trip, I listened to most of the tapes of those sessions again. Once again, I laughed and cried and prayed as I listened to Adrian Rogers remind me that the most important things about a pastor are not the size of his church and the number of baptisms. Now that he has gone on to be with the Lord, I will probably listen to them again very soon. They are priceless.
I am so thankful that I had the opportunity to get to know Adrian Rogers the man. He was so much more than a powerful preacher and a strong leader. He was a husband who stayed faithful to his wife and loved her more the longer he was married to her. He was a father who would quickly let you know how proud he was of his children, and, when it was time to have dinner with them, he showed you to the door! They were important. He preached with great boldness but on a personal level he was humble, loving, and sincere. He loved Christ with all of his heart. He served the church with all of his might. He preached to thousands from one of the most prestigious pulpits in the world, and yet he took time to talk to truck drivers and young preachers from Alabama. There was never a hint of scandal or immorality in all of his years as a pastor. He was faithful to his Lord, his family, and his church. In a day when so many fell, he stood. In a day when so many quit, he finished. It was never about Adrian, but it was always about Jesus. Whenever he stepped into the pulpit, he did not have a sermon – he brought a message. He preached from the heart – with all of his heart. He lived what he preached. And then he died.
I want to be like Adrian Rogers.
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The WS sale price was a bit cheaper, but Logos' price is well worth the value, in my opinion. I bought the WS, and would not have done so if I had thought Logos would produce this so fast. A $200 mistake on my part, as one day I will purchase it again in Logos. For now I am stuck with an extra program on my computer just for this one resource. Clumsy, but usable.DAL said:Kenute P. Curry said:Adrian Rogers is one of the best, but I am shocked at the price!
I will not be buying this. Price is far too exorbitant.
But I am happy to see that it is finally in prepub.
WS's price is higher than Logos Prepub. I'm sure Logos will have the updated manuscripts with full outlines since this seems to be a recent contract/deal. WS is sloppy for their high price on these sermons; and I mean sloppy, but it's probably due to them not having the updated manuscripts. Even then, the price seems to be a publisher's thing on this one, since they'll even sell the disk with PDF's for over $300.
DAL
"In all cases, the Church is to be judged by the Scripture, not the Scripture by the Church," John Wesley0 -
Yeah clumsy to say the least. WS is like sabotaged software, it suffers terribly. I have had it for a long time and do not use it very often. Sad thing is I have a lot of resources in it - and many times they offer content @ very discounted prices and unavailable elsewhere. Their customer service is atrocious! I was actually insulted by a "tech support rep" once when I called for help. For me, it really functions more like a search-able book shelf than true bible software. However, they do have free online training, maybe I should look into checking it out just make sure I'm getting the benefits of the program. I just can bear to put any more resources into WS.
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Ted Hans said:Daniel Motley said:
Let me know if you have any more questions!
I hope this will also include a Sermon by reference index? I ask this because David Platt sermons did not come with one.
Yes. It will have a reference index.
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Greg Corbin said:
A Tribute to Dr. Adrian Rogers
By Gregory L. Corbin
November 15, 2005
Thanks for posting the tribute. Well written about a rare individual.
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Dell, studio XPS 7100, Ram 8GB, 64 - bit Operating System, AMD Phenom(mt) IIX6 1055T Processor 2.80 GHZ
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I agree with you that it is greatly inferior to Logos Bible software. All I ever use it for is this one resource, and I only use it like a searchable bookshelf for one book - the Adrian Rogers Sermon Archive. It is clumsy but adequate for that. Everything else I do in Logos. I find I will often search for how Dr. Rogers handled a passage or a subject.William Palmer said:Yeah clumsy to say the least. WS is like sabotaged software, it suffers terribly. I have had it for a long time and do not use it very often. Sad thing is I have a lot of resources in it - and many times they offer content @ very discounted prices and unavailable elsewhere. Their customer service is atrocious! I was actually insulted by a "tech support rep" once when I called for help. For me, it really functions more like a search-able book shelf than true bible software. However, they do have free online training, maybe I should look into checking it out just make sure I'm getting the benefits of the program. I just can bear to put any more resources into WS.
Much prefer it in Logos, and will buy it again in Logos at some point.
"In all cases, the Church is to be judged by the Scripture, not the Scripture by the Church," John Wesley0 -
Hi all,
Just wanted to let you all know that the Adrian Rogers Sermon Archive only needs a few more orders to go into production: https://www.logos.com/product/129284/adrian-rogers-sermon-archive.
If you were thinking about getting on board but for whatever reason didn't, I suggest you place your order today!
Product Manager, Faithlife
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Hi all,
Just wanted to let you all know that the Adrian Rogers Sermon Archive only needs a few more orders to go into production: https://www.logos.com/product/129284/adrian-rogers-sermon-archive.
If you were thinking about getting on board but for whatever reason didn't, I suggest you place your order today!
Wow ALMOST there! Just a tiny space before it goes into production! I hope it gets there and out of prepub soon 👍
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I had been considering this, so I went ahead and pre-ordered it. When I refreshed it it showed as in production. There you have it.
Disclaimer: I hate using messaging, texting, and email for real communication. If anything that I type to you seems like anything other than humble and respectful, then I have not done a good job typing my thoughts.
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Joseph Turner said:
I had been considering this, so I went ahead and pre-ordered it. When I refreshed it it showed as in production. There you have it.
Thanks Joseph! I've had the same experience happen to me a couple of times in the past, so you may have been the one to push it over into production 👍
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Is this worth getting if I already have sermon sets from Keller, Carson, and Greear? I need a selling point to justify to my wife...$250
Keith Pang, PhD Check out my blog @ https://keithkpang.wixsite.com/magnifyingjesus
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Keith Pang said:
Is this worth getting if I already have sermon sets from Keller, Carson, and Greear? I need a selling point to justify to my wife...$250
Better than Greer and Keller in my opinion.👍
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DAL said:
Better than Greer and Keller in my opinion.👍
Wow, thanks for your opinion DAL. I have not heard of Adrian Rogers until today when I saw this post, thanks for the feedback.
Keith Pang, PhD Check out my blog @ https://keithkpang.wixsite.com/magnifyingjesus
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Keith Pang said:DAL said:
Better than Greer and Keller in my opinion.👍
Wow, thanks for your opinion DAL. I have not heard of Adrian Rogers until today when I saw this post, thanks for the feedback.
You can listen to him here: http://www.lwf.org/broadcasts
DAL
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Keith Pang said:DAL said:
Better than Greer and Keller in my opinion.👍
Wow, thanks for your opinion DAL. I have not heard of Adrian Rogers until today when I saw this post, thanks for the feedback.
Probably because he died in 2005. I have this in WS and bought it again to have it in Logos. Here is a classic: https://youtu.be/6_StcFocip8
Using Logos as a pastor, seminary professor, and Tyndale author
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Thank you DAL and Justin, that probably explains a lot since I am younger. I will check out those videos you both posted.
Keith Pang, PhD Check out my blog @ https://keithkpang.wixsite.com/magnifyingjesus
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Love to see this one released
https://www.logos.com/product/149904/adrian-rogers-supplemental-sermon-archive
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