Bibleworks Alternatives 【NEWEST · Manual】
You can strip Logos down. Go to Layouts > Minimal . Turn off the Home Page and the Factbook. You can configure the search panel to act like BibleWorks, but it takes 30 minutes of setup.
This is a budget/workflow hack. If you cannot afford Accordance or the full Logos, you can rebuild BibleWorks using two free/low-cost tools.
For decades, BibleWorks was the undisputed heavyweight champion of original language Bible study. Pastors, seminarians, and scholars relied on its lightning-fast search engine, comprehensive original language databases, and no-nonsense interface to dig deep into the Hebrew and Greek texts. However, with the announcement that BibleWorks had ceased operations and would no longer be updated, many users were left in a difficult position. While the software still works for now, the inevitable march of operating system updates and hardware changes means that the search for a replacement is not a matter of "if," but "when."
Your exegesis is too important to be held hostage by obsolete software.
You can strip Logos down. Go to Layouts > Minimal . Turn off the Home Page and the Factbook. You can configure the search panel to act like BibleWorks, but it takes 30 minutes of setup.
This is a budget/workflow hack. If you cannot afford Accordance or the full Logos, you can rebuild BibleWorks using two free/low-cost tools.
For decades, BibleWorks was the undisputed heavyweight champion of original language Bible study. Pastors, seminarians, and scholars relied on its lightning-fast search engine, comprehensive original language databases, and no-nonsense interface to dig deep into the Hebrew and Greek texts. However, with the announcement that BibleWorks had ceased operations and would no longer be updated, many users were left in a difficult position. While the software still works for now, the inevitable march of operating system updates and hardware changes means that the search for a replacement is not a matter of "if," but "when."
Your exegesis is too important to be held hostage by obsolete software.