L/V 10 Tip of the Day #32 What passages are read in RCL Year C that deal with the topic "repentance"
Another tip of the day (TOTD) series for Logos/Verbum 10. They will be short and often drawn from forum posts. Feel free to ask questions and/or suggest forum posts you'd like to see included. Adding comments about the behavior on mobile and web apps would be appreciated by your fellow forumites. A search for "L/V 10 Tip of the Day site:community.logos.com" on Google should bring the tips up as should this Reading List within the application.
This tip is inspired by the forum post: BUG: New Passage List capabilities in 10.1 - Logos Forums
How does one search only texts in a particular lectionary or subset of the lectionary? First one creates a Passage list. By force of habit, I used The Text This Week rather than the Logos lectionary.
- Open browser to The Text This Week - Textweek - Sermon, Sermons, Revised Common Lectionary, Scripture Study and Worship Links
- Navigate to Year C Year C (textweek.com)
- Select the entire table of readings
- Copy to clip board
- Open Document Menu
- Create a new passage list
- Provide a name for the passage list
- Click on Add and select Clipboard
- For purposes of illustration, I then chose to sort the list
Now build your search
- Open a search panel
- Select Bible search
- Set the Bible translation(s) as you find fit; I set to my default Bible, the NRSV
- Set the passages to the Passage list you made above
- In the Search argument, build the argument for the Preaching Theme repentance.
- Run the search
- While there are other routes you might take, I'll assume manually relating these back to liturgical dates is satisfactory.
- Note that in the screen shot, I ran the same search against all passages so that you can verify that the Passage List in fact constrained the results.
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."