• I love Logos been a user since 1997 while at Dallas Theological Seminary, but spent a few thousand dollars to upgrade then the next year another upgrade was on sale. I'm still making payments on the first purchase. Logos has become too profit-driven. It used to be about getting into God's word; now it seems to be about sales. This pastor can't keep up financially. Sorry Logos crew, love you but feeling left behind and viewed as a potential sale instead of viewed as a minister of the Most High with a daunting assignment. Please reconsider how you offer upgrades and your business model. (Logos, please share this with Logos decision-makers.) Thanks!
    1. Thank you for using Logos; I'm sorry you're finding it expensive. We try hard to keep the price as low as we can while providing excellent value and ensuring we make enough to continue to be here, serving you in the future. It takes a lot to keep updating all the platforms (Windows, Mac, web, iOS, Android, etc.) and staying up with technology, not to mention adding features, doing support, etc. The latest Logos 7 engine is available free as part of Logos.com/Basic; you might also consider one of the cross-grade options that updates data sets but doesn't deliver a larger library. You don't have to go 'Gold to Gold'. -- Bob Pritchett, President/CEO Faithlife
    2. Thanks Bob. Please check your link. It's dead.
  • I have only read the first chapter so far, but in narrative form the author(s) lay out a church culture problem, then toward the end of the chapter details church health principles every pastor should know and accept. (www.KevinThomasMinistries.org)