So how do we read the Hebrew Bible keeping its genre in mind? Well, the good news is that you already know how to do this. You do it every day when you read, listen, or watch something. However, a couple practical things are to invest in a good study bible. This would help because in the notes the translators will usually mention what the genre or form is. As you read, you can also try to identify the attributes, characteristics, and possible aim of a passage. This will at least get you thinking about what the possible genre is and onto a more active way of reading the Hebrew Bible.

The setting in settings for "display 1 verse per line" has a check box. If you click it or unclick it, the display of your bible text changes accordingly. Not so in Hebrew. It's always 1 verse per line irregardless of the choice in settings.


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If I am wrong please provide an example, but I don't recall ever seeing a paragraph formatted Hebrew Bible in Logos. So I do not believe it's a case of the software not working. I would expect checking or unchecking this box to have little effect for a Hebrew bible given the bible is not in paragraph format. This check box is meant to change the display of resources that are in paragraph format. One could argue this particular check box should not be displayed in bibles that are not in paragraph format.

What you are asking for is something new. There are two ways this could be done: either a visual filter that converts a verse per line bible into a paragraph format or a new resource that is in paragraph format by default. I would have no issue with either of these as I believe it is important for the needs of all users to be met in terms of their preferred reading format.

Dr. Saul Pressman, You are correct in saying that the Septuagint is older than the oldest Hebrew bible we have. I am curious if you have some documentation on your implication on the influence Bar Kochbah and Rabbi Akiva had on Masoretic vsersion of Torah?

I've got at least 6 Hebrew, apparently MT, bibles in my library (not counting BHQ). For the life of me, I cannot discern what text these bibles are. One is BHS untagged. Fine. The others seem identical [Hebrew Bible (Biblia Hebraica Tagged), Biblia Hebraica Stutgartensia Tagged, Hebrew Bible (BHS) Tagged, BHS (ETCBC) *AND* BHS (ETCBC Apparatus). This last one actually isn't an apparatus, despite the name. There is a separate apparatus. To make matters even more confusing, the name of the module in the library and the little abbreviation that shows in the text window don't always correspond so I can't even tell which text I've got open sometimes. There is no readme I can find and the website is no help. What is the difference in these texts????? Why is there so little information about them available from accordance????

(1a) Biblia Hebraica with Westminster Hebrew Morph 4 (HMT-W4 )

The complete text of the Hebrew Bible, following the Biblia Hebraica Leningradensis, with the Groves-Wheeler Westminster Hebrew Morphology 4.20. This module includes vowel pointing, cantillation marks, and lemma and grammatical tagging information for each word in the text. The text is almost identical to the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia.

 -hebraica-with-westminster-hebrew-morph-4/

TBH, I do think this issue is nowhere near as clear as it could be in the store. I don't see why someone should have to complete a chart to make clear what's actually being purchased. I recognize that the state of the OT text is entirely different than that of the NT, but the descriptions of these texts could mention the text base and clear things up and/ or some of the distinctive (such as including both Q and K readings in the text, which no other hebrew E text I'm aware of does). 17dc91bb1f

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