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Hi Christian, You can find it freely available here: https://bobbysmiley.com/writing/ Shalom, Colin
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I think this is one of the most important steps to making Logos more accessible for users - reducing the number of resources which are type: monograph and classifying them more helpfully. Since so many users are preachers, this is a vital part of that task. I've added a few more to Joseph's list. Joseph mentions the criteria. Actually if it means they
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Hi Kyle, If you're still following this, could the 'Exalting Jesus in ... 'commentaries be counted as commentaries too? Though they have been upgraded into Logos Research Editions they are still monographs. Thanks, Colin
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Hi Edil, I haven't figured out the first word yet (though it starts - so**, possibly soph*) but the last one is ποικίλμα - poikilma in English letters. Shalom, Colin PS I did find it with the first word 'sophou' in The Almost Christian Discovered by Matthew Mead. He uses it as if it is a quotation in which case he may have misremembered the order from
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Thanks very much for this. Shalom, Colin.
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Hi Daniel, Thanks for explaining your work-arounds and for persisting with pleading for this resource to be improved and made more user-friendly. I have just had a look at it and am shocked with how difficult it is to use. I am particularly surprised because this is a Lexham Press resource! Surely if any books in Logos format ought to be easy to navigate
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[quote user="Landon Brake"]That leads into chapters 14–17, where Jesus performs two exoduses—water crossings and wilderness feedings—one for Jewish people, one for Gentile people. [/quote] Hi Landon, This thread has gone off track a little but I think I can shed a little light on your original question. There are 3 stories being referred to here: the
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Hi Michael, It's not a book, it's a journal article. From what I can see in the forums, some back issues used to be available in Logos but they aren't any more. Shalom, Colin
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John, You beat me to it! I had just started typing and looked back to check a detail. Carl, There's nothing to forgive! I have nothing but respect and admiration for someone who keeps on learning as the years pass by. I was using the BHS SESB 2.0 and it gave the option for 'unmarked gender'. As Carl shows above, other Hebrew texts offer the 'common
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Hi Carl, The reason neither you nor Graham can get any results in a search for a 1st person masculine singular verb is because Hebrew verbs have no distinction between masculine and feminine i n the first person . There is only one form, often called a '1st person common singular.' In the Logos morph search it is labelled as 'unmarked gender.' I hope
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Hi Chrisser, Perhaps you're aware of this but it's a chant of the Nicene Creed in Greek. Although the chanting style can make some of the words difficult to hear, it would look like this in our alphabet (according to http://www.prayerfoundation.org/nicene_creed.htm ) These words are found in the full version (9 mins 11 secs) of the chant in the link
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Hi Dale, I see what you mean about the inconsistency. I'm wondering if the difference is in the tense of the verb? For example, I would instinctively say "I learn, I learned, I have learnt." Does that pattern match the usage? Colin
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Hi Dale, NT Wright is British and this is one of those words which varies in usage depending if you are from USA/UK. I'm sure it looks really odd to you - but it's correct on our side of the pond. Just spare a thought for us poor British English speakers since Logos editions are almost always American ones! Colin
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Hi Martin, I have no expertise in this area but I noticed that earlier in the book there is a paragraph about powers which may shed light on your sentence. It seems that lower spiritual powers involve the mind - memory, understanding and imagination, while the higher ones involve the will and perhaps the emotions - love. 'Thus his spiritual combat continued
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Hi Natalie, For me it is 3 of the volumes of John Newton. https://ebooks.faithlife.com/products/10073/the-works-of-john-newton-vol-4 https://ebooks.faithlife.com/products/10071/the-works-of-john-newton-vol-2 https://ebooks.faithlife.com/products/10075/the-works-of-john-newton-vol-6 Thanks for looking into it, Colin.
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Hi Caleb, The book you're asking for has been through pre-pub and is now available on pre-order. See here: https://www.logos.com/product/156276/biblical-hebrew-an-introductory-grammar Shalom, Colin
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Hi Liam, The content is the same as the one you link to. Here are the chapter headings: FIRST LECTURE Calvinism a Life-system SECOND LECTURE Calvinism and Religion THIRD LECTURE Calvinism and Politics FOURTH LECTURE Calvinism and Science FIFTH LECTURE Calvinism and Art SIXTH LECTURE Calvinism and the Future Abraham Kuyper, Calvinism: Six Lectures Delivered
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Thanks very much Glenn for responding so quickly. One of my reasons for asking is to see if it makes sense for me to buy the biggest library I can afford first. I'm holding off until I figure out the new discount structure - I can't find any figures for the levels of discount on the website. Your response clarified that. Can I just check: I got an email
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Hi, Since the discounts don't display separately any more, I don't think I have any way of checking whether or not the 30% discount for connect subscribers stacks on top of the academic discount. It did for Logos 7 and there were multiple threads about it at the time. Could someone tell me if users who receive academic discount also receive a further
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[quote user="EastTN"]Logos has gotten to the point where the core software is powerful enough for most users. I think FaithLife would be well served shifting some development resources from adding new features to rethinking the user interface. Good interface design is a specialty, and can make a real difference in how a program feels. [/quote] I think