Excellent interview! Mike is always a wealth of knowledge and a joy to listen to. I really appreciated the technicality of this interview and how Mike was able to go a bit more in depth and demonstrate his use of the original language features.
@@MorganDyb I've don't know if you'd be up for it, but I'd be curious about sitting down and talking through Logos as a new user, why you went with Max, and I'd be happy to get you set up and off the ground running with some on-the-spot training. Let me know if you are up for it!
I’m not an avid CLIPPINGS user myself. This was an eye-opening use case because I haven’t heard too many folks make such great use of the Clippings feature. It honestly seems like they both have their pros. Are you someone who makes great use of Notes already?
@@logosbibletraining I agree. I have tried both but have gravitated to notes for no particular reason. I Would like to hear others' thoughts on how and when to use either tool.
@@dgross07 Notes is good if you plan on writing extensive self-comments about a word study, passage, commentary note. However, I found clippings more helpful because what I need often are hyperlinks back to the particular quote, sentence, of paragraph that got my attention. Right-click or holding on an iPad, clippings is one of the default shortcuts, and so over time it was easier to employ clippings quickly instead of having to open my notes and manually type the information in. The "Add a note" option is there, but that creates a new note, EVERY TIME, which is laborious if you are like me and want to compile them into a single document quickly. If I am focused on creating a new sermon, I want all the 'notes' I take to be found under one document, and not need to sift through dozens of other note documents to find what I need.
The comment with Jonah is just mind blowing and how important and significant it is to do word study. Only the LSV says And Nineveh has been a great city "before God", a journey of three days.
Interesting, never heard of that translation before. It seems to be a heavily revised version of the Robert Young Literal Translation, so my guess leans heavily on the MT and TR, similar to the KJV/NKJV translations. Funny thing I did not get to mention during the interview with Jason, both the Aramaic and LXX translations of that verse in Jonah recognize the lelohim word and correspondingly emphasis that Nineveh was a great city BEFORE the Lord, which is an understandable rendering of the 'l' preposition from the MT.
Excellent interview! Mike is always a wealth of knowledge and a joy to listen to. I really appreciated the technicality of this interview and how Mike was able to go a bit more in depth and demonstrate his use of the original language features.
I very much enjoyed this chat as well! I'm encouraged you found much fruit in what we covered. Are you a Logos user yourself?
@ 10+ year Bible nerd, brand new logos user! About 2 months in to Logos Max
@@MorganDyb I've don't know if you'd be up for it, but I'd be curious about sitting down and talking through Logos as a new user, why you went with Max, and I'd be happy to get you set up and off the ground running with some on-the-spot training. Let me know if you are up for it!
@@logosbibletraining I’d be open to that after the new year!
@@MorganDyb We can put it on the calendar whenever you'd like and reschedule if need be. :)
Thanks again for another great video.
Glad you enjoyed it! More to come. Blessings!
@@logosbibletraining Keep them coming.
@@Reedsumc Will certainly try to do just that!
I'm over here shouting HALLELUJAH!! Thanks Jason
Did you enjoy the interview? So many good insights were uncovered by my special guest!
@@logosbibletraining ABSOLUTELY! I'd like a list of his resources in each quadrant.
Always appreciate these interviews!
There’s always something new to learn and these chats have been incredibly insightful.
Good one
Thank you so much, ant man. Where’s your hat? :)
That’s just for the forums
@@antonybrennan Okay, fine! I'll let it slide this time ... LOL.
Thanks Jason. Great info. Quick question, when is better to use "Clippings" vs. "Notes"?
I’m not an avid CLIPPINGS user myself. This was an eye-opening use case because I haven’t heard too many folks make such great use of the Clippings feature. It honestly seems like they both have their pros.
Are you someone who makes great use of Notes already?
@@logosbibletraining I agree. I have tried both but have gravitated to notes for no particular reason. I Would like to hear others' thoughts on how and when to use either tool.
@@dgross07 Notes is good if you plan on writing extensive self-comments about a word study, passage, commentary note. However, I found clippings more helpful because what I need often are hyperlinks back to the particular quote, sentence, of paragraph that got my attention. Right-click or holding on an iPad, clippings is one of the default shortcuts, and so over time it was easier to employ clippings quickly instead of having to open my notes and manually type the information in. The "Add a note" option is there, but that creates a new note, EVERY TIME, which is laborious if you are like me and want to compile them into a single document quickly. If I am focused on creating a new sermon, I want all the 'notes' I take to be found under one document, and not need to sift through dozens of other note documents to find what I need.
@@Chu_on_This Excellent point!
The comment with Jonah is just mind blowing and how important and significant it is to do word study. Only the LSV says And Nineveh has been a great city "before God", a journey of three days.
Oh man! I was looking through translations and didn’t get to that one. Thank you for pointing that out! 🤯
Interesting, never heard of that translation before. It seems to be a heavily revised version of the Robert Young Literal Translation, so my guess leans heavily on the MT and TR, similar to the KJV/NKJV translations. Funny thing I did not get to mention during the interview with Jason, both the Aramaic and LXX translations of that verse in Jonah recognize the lelohim word and correspondingly emphasis that Nineveh was a great city BEFORE the Lord, which is an understandable rendering of the 'l' preposition from the MT.
@@Chu_on_This Interesting, indeed!