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Electronic Edition of Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions

September 11th, 2007
Marketing Advertising Blog — VuManhThang.Com

Concordia_second_edition
I have good news. By early next year we will have an electronic edition of Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions. It will be in the LOGOS format, as areLibronix_2
CPH’s other electronic book editions. My request to yo is this. As soon as possible, send me any typos and mistakes you have noticed in the second edition. We only want to hear about the second edition, which is copyrighted 2006 and as a dark blue cover with burgundy.

So, any typos, mistakes, little things wrong that you have noticed in Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions, the second edition, please send them to me ASAP.

Send them to: paul.mccain@cph.org

Many thanks!

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Categories: Lutheran Confessions
  1. September 11th, 2007 at 07:40 | #1

    Sweet!

  2. September 11th, 2007 at 07:55 | #2

    Thanks for the info. I have all of the CPH stuff in Libronix. I look forward to adding this as well.

  3. PHW
    September 11th, 2007 at 12:34 | #3

    Yea! I wish CPH would put most of their stuff on CD…I have quite a bit on Libronix as well…although I do like books more.

  4. Craig
    September 18th, 2007 at 02:03 | #4

    I am new to Lutheranism (recovering Calvinist) and have loved this new edition. Why do you not have a great ESV Lutheran Study Bible or a new Systematic Theology Book with the nice charts, pictures graphs, timelines and beauty of this book? The Concordia NIV Study Bible is not very impressive compared to the Reformed Study Bible. And a Systematic Theology that is updated (the Peiper is good but over my head) would be a useful tool for many of us new converts.
    McCain: Craig, glad to hear you enjoy the Concordia edition of the Book of Concord. I’ve got good news. We are working on a new study bible based on the ESV text. It is titled, “The Lutheran Study Bible” and, God-willing, it will be available Reformation 2009. There is a new Lutheran dogmatics that will be coming out in a few years too. Blessings!

  5. September 23rd, 2007 at 12:02 | #5

    That’s great — now all I need is a version of Logos that (1) works on a Macintosh, and (2) doesn’t cost over $200. They’ve been working on (1) now for over a year and it’s not even out of alpha yet, and (2) just sounds like it’ll never happen.
    It would be really cool if this version of the Book of Concord could be released for open-source Bible software or jsut made into a web site. (Or, I guess I could just buy the book.)
    McCain:
    1) Yes, you should buy the book.
    2) LOGOS works fine on Macs, you just have to have the ones with the dual-core Intel processors so you can run it native in PC mode.
    3) It would be great if some outside entity funded CPH so we could give away for free everything we publish.

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