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Those pages contain the endnotes, which are incorporated into the text as popups in the Logos edition.
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This might actually be an error in the official text. According to the numbering of the NAB, the response actually comes from Ps 66:2a. The text, however, numbers it as Ps 66:1. I've assumed that the lectionary consistently uses the NAB numbering (even though the responses are ICEL translations that don't come from the NAB). To complicate matters, we
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The volumes include everything the Vatican website had available in English. It's a lot of content, so we posted the pre-pub as eight volumes (though there's no print equivalent that I know of, so this is, admittedly, somewhat arbitrary). When it came to producing it though, we determined that it was actually simpler (for us and for the user) to have
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Sorry. I still don't have any news on this. I'm sorry to have to walk back what you heard from Preston last year, but as I said, acquiring rights can be a complicated process with sudden dead ends and reversals, so we usually avoid making any public comment until we have a deal in hand. In addition, our strategy for pre-pubs has shifted in the last
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[quote user="Steve"]Are you saying that as a Verbum Capstone owner I may already have it?[/quote] You have the homilies, but not the Angelus/Regina Coeli addresses.
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[quote user="Steve"]I know this is an old post, but does the pending release of The Homilies and Angeli of Pope John Paul II (8 vols.) fill the gaps?[/quote] Unfortunately, no. The homilies resource is the same as what shipped in the Verbum 6 packages. (I don't think we have the dynamic pricing set up correctly yet, but I'm working on it.)
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Our resource matches the readings given at commontexts.org . I don't know why Vanderbilt's listing differs. Edit: We're using the correct readings for the days following Trinity Sunday. It's Vanderbilt that has skipped those and is using the Ordinary Time readings for May 24-28.
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[quote user="Steve"] The Priest Is Not His Own Fulton Sheen - another must read.[/quote] This is included in the Ignatius Press Theology and Discipleship Collection .
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Seems to be a bug of some sort. I'll file a case. Thanks.
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[quote user="Steve"] 1. Ralph P. Martin is not the Catholic author Ralph Martin, they are two different people and the former is not Catholic. His resource on the Worship of God is not "Catholic Thought". 2. Mark E. Powells book on Papal Infallibility is not "Catholic Thought". According to the description, it is a protestant evaluation. [/quote] I
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See this thread for a comparison between the CUA Fathers of the Church and Ancient Christian Writers. The CUA set is obviously the most comprehensive, but each set has a fair amount of unique content. Maybe at some point we could put together a comprehensive comparison, but the comparison isn't quite as straightforward as comparing base packages, since
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[quote user="Brian Losabia"]I think you need a big enough library to have all the RI-powered functions and you need to be a subscriber to Logos Now/Verbum Now.[/quote] To clarify how things work: The reverse interlinears are a set of four resources we produced that align the English text of the NABRE to the Greek and Hebrew text of the original languages
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The NABRE reverse interlinears are part of Verbum Now and Logos Now.
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By default the comparison chart is set to just show titles that you don't already own. That may be why you aren't seeing it. If you change "New to You" to "All" at the top, you'll see the full list.
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The Sources of Catholic Dogma is included in Verbum Basic and all the Verbum base packages .
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These commentaries are included in this collection on Community Pricing .
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Technical explanation (if you're interested): The logosres protocol specifies both a resource with the first part of the url ( logosres:catcathchrch ), and a data type reference with the second part of the url (ref=CCC.CCC_128). In this case, it is specifying the English text of the Catechism of the Catholic Church and a Catechism of the Catholic Church
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[quote user="MJ. Smith"] [quote user="Louis St. Hilaire"]They go to the end of the liturgical year in November[/quote] I can't resist since the two post together led to the conclusion that November is half-way through the year - I have to point out that the end of the liturgical year is in November except for the churches that begin their liturgical
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Yes. All the lectionaries will be updated before they run out. (They go to the end of the liturgical year in November, so we've got some time, but I'll get it done by this fall.)
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I'm pretty sure the way the NABRE works is by design and the behavior in the NRSVCE is actually incorrect at this location, by our standards. If you look at the way the NRSVCE works at Jn 1:19, you'll see that it is more like what you see in the NABRE. (I'll notify our Content Production department about this.) I understand that this seems odd, but