Logos Bible Software - Logos Today

Logos Today

Logos Bible Software provides multilingual tools and resources for Bible study on Macs, PCs and mobile devices, partnering with 150 publishers to offer more than 27,000 Christian ebooks to users in 210 countries. Languages include English, Greek, Hebrew, German, Spanish, Swedish, Norwegian, Afrikaans, and more.

Logos Bible Software also publishes resources from around the world, such as a syntactically tagged Hebrew Bible produced from Francis I. Andersen and Dean Forbes's lifetime project; a syntactically tagged Greek New Testament by Dr. Albert L. Lukaszewski; and a second syntactically tagged Greek New Testament from the OpenText project. Also included in Logos Bible Software are "reverse interlinear" Bibles, an unusual format retaining the English translation on the top line and tying in each word or phrase of the underlying original language texts below. This enables readers to view corresponding words between translations and the original languages.

Logos publishes the Bible Study Magazine, which is ranked No. 4 on About.com's Top 10 Christian Magazines list; it was also named one of the Best Magazines of 2008 by Library Journal, and in 2010–11, published the Lexham English Bible, or "LEB", a new, literal translation of the Bible into English with a Creative Commons license. The LEB is part of Logos' July 2012 release of a Faithlife Study Bible.

Headquartered in Bellingham, Washington, Logos currently has a staff of more than 300, with some employees located at a South African subsidiary. Logos occupies three buildings downtown including the Flatiron Building. The company was named a Best Christian Place to Work in 2006–08 and 2010–12 as reported in Christianity Today magazine. as reported by Best Christian Workplaces Institute. In 2005, CEO Bob Pritchett was named a winner of the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award in the Pacific Northwest for the category Realizing Business Potential.

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