Logos web app bible
This is helpful for studying things like the ceremonial laws in the Torah or similar types of searches. You can also track a specific type of law. This is a tool that lets you group the 613 mitzvoth commandments into categories such as state and people. It has a Propositional Flow tool that labels and reformats the text into an outline so you can see how ideas fit together, how the text flows, and how each line relates to the next one. It shows technical tools such as Granville Sharp’s first rule, Colwell’s Rule, conditional clauses, clause-level asyndeton, historical presents, and articular infinitives. This is a dataset that identifies NT Greek grammatical constructions and shows the various occurrences of it throughout the New Testament. It will also search for a specific lemma, root, or sense of a word within the Biblical texts. You can mouse-over any word and it will show you where it’s found in your commentaries or Bibles. This tool makes that study method easier. This is actually a Bible study method that helps you draw out ideas and see key themes within passages. This is a search tool that shows everywhere repetition occurs within any of your resources. It will also play an audio clip of how the name is pronounced in the original language. It will show the number of occurrences, the variations on the name, and let you see it in the original context. You can narrow your search by the type of literature, the Biblical language, who’s speaking, specific books, and more. This tool lets you find every name of God and see where each one occurs in Scripture. This is helpful for finding specific text-types or texts that contain specific portions of Scripture. You can navigate, filter, and sort the results to highlight specific details about the manuscripts. This is an interactive tool that lets you search through NT manuscripts. It will transform the Hebrew or English into points with sub-points with labels. These let you trace the thoughts of the Biblical writers and see how each line relates to the next one. You can browse by topic, word, lemma, or root word, and you can search for keywords, transliterated Greek and Hebrew words, authors, and more. You can create your very own custom concordance for any of the resources in your library. You can search for words and get results in both texts. They can share the search results and visual filters. This lets you view two resources at once such as multiple translations and commentaries in the same panel. You can expand the section you want and you’ll see the results broken into the denominational groups of their authors. You can right click on a passage, run the passage guide, scroll to the systematic theologies section and you’ll find the results already categorized based on the theological topic (Soteriology, Bibliology, Christology, etc.). This is a great way to quickly search your resources for information about passages based on topic and denomination. You can sort them by author or denomination. References are organized according to categories. There’s a systematic theologies section that gives more information about a Biblical text within the Passage Guide. Here’s a look at some of the new features that are included: Systematic Theologies Section
For new and improved features, datasets, and media, you don’t have to wait until the next major release of the Logos software. Not only do you get new features, you get the latest updates first.
#LOGOS WEB APP BIBLE SOFTWARE#
The point of any new software is to get new features. I’ve been using it for a few weeks and here are my thoughts about the features and what it has to offer. It adds features, tools, media, datasets, etc. Logos Now is a subscription-based extension to Logos 6.