
Okhlah we-Okhlah: What It Is, Why It’s Important, and How to Get It
Okhlah we-Okhlah is a medieval compilation of information about the Hebrew Bible. Here are the basics about why it’s important and how to access it.

Okhlah we-Okhlah is a medieval compilation of information about the Hebrew Bible. Here are the basics about why it’s important and how to access it.
Under the heading of “keeping
your Greek and Hebrew skills sharp,” Mark Ward has some helpful
advice about creating a serial biblical text in Logos
Bible Software. For instance, if you create a series between BHS
and NA28
and you have BHS open, you can type a New Testament passage in the go
box and run straight there. Logos will treat the two resources as
combined.
I’d had this done at one point, but then a subsequent software update disrupted that connection, and I’d been looking for a good way to reestablish the connection. Using Mark’s principles, I’ve now got serial relationships established among BHS, LXX (based on the current German Bible Society version of Rahlfs), and NA28 texts. The combination allows movement from any one of the texts to any other. For texts occurring in more than one of the resources (BHS, LXX), it looks like Logos may follow the priority system established via the library.
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