Your Favorite/Most Useful Logos 4 Purchase

Jerry Bush
Jerry Bush Member Posts: 1,156 ✭✭✭
edited November 2024 in English Forum

Other than your initial package or upgrade to a new one, what are your best purchases?

Mine (I have the regular Scholar's Edition, not Silver/Gold/Platinum:

1) IVP Collection 3.0  - hands down, the best money I've spent beyond my original package.

2) The Expositor's Bible Commentary

3) The Bible Speaks Today

Interested to hear yours...

Jerry

 

 

Macbook Air (2024), Apple M2, 16gb Ram, Mac Sequoia, 1TB storage

Comments

  • Andy
    Andy Member Posts: 2,282 ✭✭✭

    I started off in the middle of 2009 with the Scholars Gold ed. and upgraded to Platinum on release of L4.

    My best purchases,

    1. Theological Journal Library (1-10 and 11)

    2. NICOT/NICNT

    Not sure what the third would be... I have a lot of purchases competing for third-place...

    Andy

  • Michael Sullivan
    Michael Sullivan Member Posts: 142 ✭✭

    My top three (even though I use them in reverse order):

    1) Northwestern Publishing House's People's Bible Series.  By far the most simple, easy to understand, and faithful layman's commentary I have used.  Even though the thoughts are simple, I use this last when studying for a sermon to try to get me thinking simply again before I start writing.  Very faithful to the Biblical text.

    2) Lenski's NT Commentary:  Older but very well done.  He can be too strong on some points that scripture does not give a precise answer to, but he more often then not backs up what he says with Scripture so you can at least understand why he says what he says.  One negative is that he is wordy.

    3) Concordia Commentary Series: Relatively new and only a few volumes are out.  Very scholarly.  Wordy (for example the commentary of Philemon has more pages than the letter has words).  OT volumes are certainly worth having.  Written from a perspective that fully accepts verbal inspiration of Holy Scriptures.  Does well evaluating conflicting views.  Excellent series so far.  This commentary is so deep (at least for me), you need to take a step back and read something simple to collect your thoughts.  This is why I like reading the People's Bible after I read this one - and both only after I have my own exegesis and collected my own thoughts on a text first.

    (I have a combination package of OL and basic Scholars, but I must admit that I use Bibleworks for my exegesis because I am more familiar with the program than I am with Logos.  I use Logos mainly for commentary work - hence my selections of most used, but I also appreciate the Bible dictionaries, maps, histories, etc... that came with L4 too.)

  • Rev. Wayne Paul Barrett
    Rev. Wayne Paul Barrett Member Posts: 62 ✭✭

    I have regular Scholar's edition and these are my top recent purchases:

    1. IVP Collection

    2. Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament

    3. Calvin 500 Collection

    I use these resources all the time, and they are all helpful.

    If you are in a Reformed denomination, the Calvin 500 collection is a resource to seriously consider.

  • Donovan R. Palmer
    Donovan R. Palmer Member, MVP Posts: 2,901

    1. Theological Journal Library (1-10 and 11)

    2. NICOT/NICNT

    Same here and for third place I would put Anchor Bible Dictionary.

  • Mark Barnes
    Mark Barnes Member Posts: 15,432 ✭✭✭

    If you ask me the same question next month, you might get a different answer. But at the moment

    • NICOT/NICNT
    • IVP Essential Reference Collection
    • Tyndale Commentaries

    I'm suggesting those because of their comprehensiveness and their quality. I have other resources like Anchor Bible Dictionary, TDNT and BDAG that I consult almost daily, but there has to be 25,000 pages in NICOT/NICNT. That's tough to beat when they're nearly all top drawer. The TLJ is also a great resource, I use often, but it's not quite in the same quality band as those mentioned (I only use about 1/3 of the journals I suppose).

    This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!

  • Alan Macgregor
    Alan Macgregor Member Posts: 2,438 ✭✭✭

    Those I use most, apart from Bibles (NA27; BHS; LXX; NIV - Anglicised) are:


    • Lexham Discourse Series
    • New International Greek Testament Commentaries
    • Holman New Testament Commentaries
    Those are the ones I use all the time, which is the criterion I am applying to determine my favourites.

    iMac Retina 5K, 27": 3.6GHz 8-Core Intel Core i9; 16GB RAM;MacOS 10.15.5; 1TB SSD; Logos 8

    MacBook Air 13.3": 1.8GHz; 4GB RAM; MacOS 10.13.6; 256GB SSD; Logos 8

    iPad Pro 32GB WiFi iOS 13.5.1

    iPhone 8+ 64GB iOS 13.5.1

  • Alex Scott
    Alex Scott Member Posts: 718 ✭✭

    1.  New Testament Commentary Survey - D.A. Carson

    2. New International Greek Testament Commentaries

    3. Lexham Hebrew-English Interlinear - van der Merwe

    Longtime Logos user (more than $30,000 in purchases) - now a second class user because I won't pay them more every month or year.

  • Daniel Bender
    Daniel Bender Member Posts: 383 ✭✭
    1. NICOT/NICNT
    2. Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament

    Too many vying for third to name just one. I do use BDAG daily and HALOT when in the OT. This past week I've spent a lot of time reading journal articles (I have vols 1-12).

  • Pam Larson
    Pam Larson Member Posts: 683 ✭✭

    1. The Ultimate Archeology Collection.

    2. NICOT/NICNT

    3. A. W. Tozer Collection.

  • Josh
    Josh Member Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭

    1. Lexham Discourse Bundle

    2. Commentary on the New Testament
    Use of the Old Testament

    3. Learn to  Use Biblical Greek and Hebrew with Logos Bible Software

    I'm just predicting the future with my third pick.

  • spitzerpl
    spitzerpl Member Posts: 4,998 ✭✭✭

    1. Theological Journals

    2. SESB (I admit, its overpriced for what I use in it, mainly the Apparatus. But i REALLY like the Apparatus :-))

    3. IVP Reference (Need to learn how to use this one more)

     

    I think that's the order I would put them in.

  • spitzerpl
    spitzerpl Member Posts: 4,998 ✭✭✭

    2. Commentary on the New Testament
    Use of the Old Testament

    I forgot about this one. I LOVE this resource. I would say this is probably my favorite and most profitable commentary. If its not in your library, it should be.

  • Alan Macgregor
    Alan Macgregor Member Posts: 2,438 ✭✭✭

    SESB (I admit, its overpriced for what I use in it, mainly the Apparatus. But i REALLY like the Apparatus :-))

    Yes, I forgot about that. I really use the apparatus a lot.

    iMac Retina 5K, 27": 3.6GHz 8-Core Intel Core i9; 16GB RAM;MacOS 10.15.5; 1TB SSD; Logos 8

    MacBook Air 13.3": 1.8GHz; 4GB RAM; MacOS 10.13.6; 256GB SSD; Logos 8

    iPad Pro 32GB WiFi iOS 13.5.1

    iPhone 8+ 64GB iOS 13.5.1

  • Bill Gordon
    Bill Gordon Member Posts: 169 ✭✭
  • Bohuslav Wojnar
    Bohuslav Wojnar Member Posts: 3,477 ✭✭✭

    Hard to decide, but I will try:

    1. NICOT/NICNT

    2. BDAG/HALOT bundle

    3. Answering Jewish
    Objections to Jesus (4 Vols.) of Michael Brown.

    Many things can be #3. All Bible background resources etc.

    Bohuslav

  • JimTowler
    JimTowler Member Posts: 1,383 ✭✭✭

    what are your best purchases?

    Well, this is not quite what you asked, because this was in one of my package upgrades, but I really use my COED a lot.

    So many big words I don't use myself, and not always sure what they mean. I tend to leave the  Info or COED panel open on the right 1/4 to 1/3 of my screen, and keep looking stuff up.

    Concise Oxford English Dictionary  http://www.logos.com/products/details/2224

    [ HINT: Change Info Panel settings to CLICK rather than HOVER. It stops Info updating on every mouse move, but the update is still only a single click away. Maybe useful for performance reasons too. ]

  • Mike Childs
    Mike Childs Member Posts: 3,135 ✭✭✭

    "Other than your initial package or upgrade to a new one, what are your best purchases?" 

    1. NICOT/NICNT

    2. Wesley's Works

    3.  Spurgeon's Sermons

    4. Word Biblical Commentary

    5. James Montgomery Boice Expositional Commentaries

    6.  New International Greek New Testament Commentaries

    7.  Tyndale Commentaries


    "In all cases, the Church is to be judged by the Scripture, not the Scripture by the Church," John Wesley

  • J. Morris
    J. Morris Member Posts: 569 ✭✭

    1.  Moody Counseling Collection

    2.  R. Larry Moyer Evangelism Collection

    3.  Pure Life Collection

  • Sam Henderson
    Sam Henderson Member Posts: 166 ✭✭

    1. IVP Essential Reference Collection (hands down / without doubt)

    2. BDAG

    3. WBC

  • Jerry Bush
    Jerry Bush Member Posts: 1,156 ✭✭✭

    This has been a really fun read. The one that seems to come up the most that I do not have is the NICOT/NICNT set.

    Can't afford it yet, but maybe someday. Sounds like a good investment. My church only allocates $500/year for me at this point.

    Great to read all of these!

    Jerry

    Macbook Air (2024), Apple M2, 16gb Ram, Mac Sequoia, 1TB storage

  • Al
    Al Member Posts: 105 ✭✭

    1. Interpretation: A Bible  Commentary for Preaching and Teaching

    2. Anchor Bible Dictionary

    3. Hermeneia

    But tomorrow, I might think of something else.

  • William
    William Member Posts: 1,152 ✭✭

    Al Bastin said:

    But tomorrow, I might think of something else.

    Most definitely Al !!  This is the main reason why Im not writing anything down right now.  There are so many!!

     

  • Steve Adams
    Steve Adams Member Posts: 88 ✭✭

    without a doubt:

    1.  IVP Essentials

    2.  Calvin 500

  • Mike Childs
    Mike Childs Member Posts: 3,135 ✭✭✭

    This is a very helpful thread.  It helps one consider which resources to buy.  Some helpful feedback. My thanks to everyone. 


    "In all cases, the Church is to be judged by the Scripture, not the Scripture by the Church," John Wesley