Free Book from Logos: From Bondage to Liberty

[UPDATE] Of course with a new month, comes a new book. Keep checking http://logos.com/free-book-of-the-month to stay up-to-date.

Logos Bible Software is one of the mainstay tools in the seminarian’s toolbox. In the last few years, their Free Book of the Month program has continued to offer one digital book for free each month, with no catch.

With Logos (made by Faithlife), the software platform itself is free, while you pay for books and datasets/resources which power its various features. So the opportunity to get 12 free books per year is pretty valuable. Plus, Logos offers an additional (and usually related) book to the freebie for only $1.99, so… win-win!

Here’s a pro-tip: if you are new to Logos, check out their Products section and sort by price (lowest-highest), and browse their dozens of books which are normally free. This is a great way to populate the platform with some resources, and start making some use of it.

April’s Free Book of the Month

Anthony T. Selvaggio’s From Bondage to Liberty: the Gospel According to Moses is April’s freebie, and it looks well worth the read. Normally $12.99, all you have to do to pay $0.00 is have a (free) Logos.com account, and you’re off to the races.

The $1.99 offering this month is Chris Morgan’s A Theology of James: Wisdom for God’s People. So for $2, you can get two solid biblical theology monographs in your digital library.

(Make sure you don’t miss out on each month’s books — bookmark https://logos.com/free-book-of-the-month and check it monthly!)

“Nowhere does the theme of redemption shine more brightly in the Old Testament than in Exodus. Anthony Selvaggio draws us into the story of Moses in a most personal way. In concise and stirring chapters, he shows us the beauties of the Lord Jesus and teaches us practical lessons about godliness.”

—Joel R. Beeke, president, Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids

“If you have wondered what Scriptures Jesus might have cited when he showed his disciples the things concerning himself ‘beginning with Moses’ (Luke 24:27), Anthony Selvaggio provides a significant part of the answer.”

—Dennis E. Johnson, professor of practical theology, Westminster Seminary California