Which Bible software program should I buy? Comparison of BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos

 

Which Bible software program should I buy? It’s an important question for the student of the Bible, especially if she or he is on a limited budget. Having now reviewed BibleWorks 9 (here), Accordance 10 (here) and Logos 4 (here) and now 5 (here), I want to compare the three programs and offer some suggestions for moving forward with Bible software.

There are some free programs available for download (E-Sword, for example), but my sense has been that if you want to have something in-depth, you’ll probably want to consider BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos.

If you’re in the market to buy Bible software, then, here’s how I recommend proceeding.

 

1. Think through why you want the Bible software.

 

I don’t mean in an existential sense; I mean: for what do you want to use Bible software? Personal Bible study? As a means to access electronic commentaries for sermon preparation? To do in-depth word studies in the original languages? To compare the Greek and the Hebrew texts of the Old Testament? For complex syntactical searches? To help generate graphics and handouts for a Sunday School class you teach? Some or all of the above?

Similarly, are there things you know you don’t need? Are you interested only in studying the Bible in English (or Spanish, or French…) but not necessarily in Greek and Hebrew? Are maps and graphics something you can easily access elsewhere? Is having a large library of electronic commentaries not a value?

I highlight these considerations because the answer to the question, “Which Bible software program should I buy?” is: It depends. It depends on why and for what you want Bible software. More on that below.

 

2. Explore BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos on their own merits.

 

Get a sense of what each can do by visiting their respective Websites (BibleWorks here, Accordance here, and Logos here). Look through those sites for videos which will let you see the programs in action. You can also look through the full reviews I’ve done of BibleWorks here, Accordance here, and Logos here (v.4) and here (just-released v. 5). In these reviews I look at multiple features and resources in each program.

BibleWorks is a PC program. You can run it on a Mac, though. This either requires a separate Windows license (= more $$), where it runs nicely in Parallels, etc., or you can use a “native” Mac version of it. The former option is costly and requires a lot of your Mac machine (though you get a fully-functinoing BibleWorks on a Mac that way). I can’t yet recommend the latter option, where it is in “Public Preview,” since the “native” Mac version looks only native to about two Mac operating systems ago… I expect BibleWorks will make improvements here, but I haven’t found BibleWorks on my Mac to be as functional as I’d like. It’s excellent on a PC, though.

Accordance is a Mac program. They have announced that they’ll introduce Accordance for Windows in 2013, and they have said that they are previewing that at SBL/AAR this week. (I understand that you can run Accordance on Windows now via an emulator, per the above link, but that it’s not 100% functional in the same way Accordance on Mac is.) Accordance is silky smooth–if I may call a Bible software program that. It is very Mac-like, which is a goal and priority of Accordance. Using it is truly enjoyable. Accordance also has an iOS app, which I haven’t used, as I do not own an iPhone, iPad, iOverbrain, etc. It looks like a stripped-down version of Accordance, but it’s free. If I had an iPhone, that would definitely be on there.

Logos works on PC and Macs. It’s also cloud-based, so that you can sync your work in Logos across computers, platforms, mobile devices, on the Internet using Biblia, and so on. Logos for the Mac feels fairly Mac-like, but not to the extent that Accordance does. However, being able to switch between a PC and a Mac in Logos and have everything sync via the cloud is a great feature. I noted in a Logos review recently how I was working in Logos 5 on a PC, then the next day opened Logos on my Mac to the exact same window I had just closed on a PC the day before.

 

3. Think about what your budget is.

 

You should actually probably do this before you check out the individual programs a whole lot–just to make sure you don’t end up spending money you don’t really have! Sometimes you’ll see a price tag associated with how much a base package would cost you if you bought all the resources in print. But this really doesn’t matter if you wouldn’t buy many of those resources in the first place (per point #1 above).

BibleWorks does not have packages, per se–it’s just the program and all its contents for $359. You can also purchase add-on modules in BibleWorks. Accordance has various collections (beginning with the basic Starter Collection at $49.99), which you can compare here. They sell various other products, as well. These base packages had been a little difficult to wade through and make sense of in Accordance 9, but the August release of Accordance 10 greatly simplified things. Logos also sells various base packages, starting at $294.95 retail price for their Starter package, and many other products. Note also that Accordance and Logos both offer discounts to academicians, ministers, etc.

 

4. Compare.

 

Keep firmly in mind the purposes for which you want Bible software as you read the below. But I will offer some general insights.

 
Speed

BibleWorks (PC) and Accordance (Mac) take the cake here. I wrote here about the sluggishness of Logos 4 for searching. That’s improved somewhat in Logos 5. Where BibleWorks stands out is in its Use tab, new in BibleWorks 9. Via the Use tab, you can instantaneously see all the uses of a given word in an open version just by hovering over that word. I’m not aware of anything comparable in Accordance or Logos, and it’s a mind-blowing feature. Accordance, however, returns search results as quickly as BibleWorks, and starts up faster. I continue to be impressed with the speed of both BibleWorks and Accordance. I’m glad for the improvements in Logos, but hope they’ll continue to improve search speed.

 
Package for the Price

Had I written this post six months ago, the no-brainer answer would be that BibleWorks is best. For $359 you get everything listed here.

Comparable in Accordance is the Original Languages Collection for $299 (full contents compared here). This collection six months ago was not really comparable to BibleWorks, but with the release of Accordance 10, Accordance significantly improved on and expanded what’s available in its Original Languages Collection. Someone wanting Bible software for detailed original languages work could get a lot of what they need in Accordance for under $300. However, it remains true that you get more in BibleWorks that you have to pay extra for in Accordance (like the Center for NT Textual Studies apparatus and images, Philo, Josephus, Church Fathers, the Tov-Polak MT-LXX Parallel, etc.). That’s true compared with Logos, too.

Logos 5 is a little more difficult for me to size up here. In Logos 4 there was an Original Languages Library for $400 or so that was at least comparable to BibleWorks and Accordance (and included the 10-volume Theological Dictionary of the New Testament). Based just on package for the price, I still would have picked BibleWorks over Logos, but the release of Logos 5 has seen a restructuring of base packages that seems less than ideal for something like original language study. They do now have the Theological Lexicon of the OT and of the NT in the “Bronze” package, but the nearly $300 Logos Starter package doesn’t include the necessary and basic lexica for studying the Hebrew Bible, the Septuagint, and the Greek New Testament.

This is where what you want out of a Bible software program should dictate which way you go. Are you a seminarian with a primary interest in original language exegesis, with a preference for commentaries in print? If so, I recommend Accordance on Mac or BibleWorks on PC. Accordance also has good commentaries as add-ons (not much here for BibleWorks), but Logos has a large amount of digitized books, and tends on the balance (though not always) to run cheaper than Accordance for the same modules. (The cheapest BDAG/HALOT lexicon bundle is in BibleWorks.) But the larger library in Logos is perhaps at the expense of program speed, so you’ll want to weigh options here. If you preach weekly and don’t make much reference to Greek and Hebrew, wanting extensive commentaries instead, Logos could be the way to go for you.

 
Customizability and Usability

Here I favor Accordance of the three. BibleWorks is probably the least configurable. There are four columns in BibleWorks 9, but you can’t move things around much, whereas in Accordance and Logos you can put tabs/zones/resources more or less where you want them. Logos is plenty customizable, but the Workspaces feature in Accordance sets it apart from Logos. In Accordance you can save distinct Workspaces and have multiple ones open at a time. You can save “Layouts” in Logos, but from all I can see, you can only have one layout open at once. This has often slowed my study. You can detach tabs into separate windows with Logos, but for working on multiple projects at once (e.g., an NT use of the OT Workspace, an LXX Workspace, a Hebrew OT Workspace, an English Bible Study workspace, etc.), Accordance is tops.

For the record, both for my graduate studies and message preparation, Accordance is the first program I have open. Part of this is due to the fact that I prefer to use a Mac. (Within the last year I bought a cheap PC laptop just so I could keep using BibleWorks, which is still excellent.) But the multiple Workspaces option makes Accordance great for easy day-to-day use across multiple kinds of tasks. It’s been interesting to watch myself mouse over to the Accordance icon in my dock on my Mac before either Logos or BibleWorks.

 
Support

This is probably a toss-up. I’ve had positive interactions with everyone I’ve contacted in BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos. All have active and helpful user forums. All offer help files and how-to videos. (BibleWorks has the most extensive set of videos.) I was surprised to see how many how-to videos and manuals you could buy from Logos, but many of these have been produced by approved third-parties. I don’t think you should have to pay more money to learn how to use a program you already paid for.

 
Note-taking

One thing I haven’t extensively reviewed is the note-taking features, which are available in BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos. I particularly appreciate being able to highlight passages (which then stay highlighted every time I open that resource) in resources in both Accordance and Logos. Logos has an easier one-keystroke shortcut to highlight selected text, but there’s a delay in doing so; Accordance is faster here. But back when I was using only BibleWorks, I was concerned about saving notes in a file format that wouldn’t be accessible across computers and platforms, so all my notes were always just in Word or TextEdit (.rtf). I’ve continued this practice as I’ve begun using Accordance and Logos, so that any writing I generate is not confined within a given program.

 

In sum…

 

So, which Bible software program should you buy? It depends on why you want Bible software and the uses you’ll have for it. If you’re looking to build and access a large digital library, no one denies that Logos is the leader in that regard. It is also only Logos that connects to the cloud to sync across multiple devices. If you’re looking to really delve into the original languages, though, and do complex and fast searches, Accordance for Mac and BibleWorks for PC are preferable. (Logos 5 has offered significant improvement from Logos 4 in working closely with original language texts, but the search speed still needs to be improved.) BibleWorks gets you the most bang for your buck by including as many resources, versions, lexica, grammars, etc. as it does, but the interface and customizability of Accordance makes the latter more enjoyable and a little easier to use.

When it comes to the BibleWorks vs. Accordance vs. Logos question, I think at bottom each is a solid software program and good decision. You can’t go badly wrong with any of them. In fact, I now use all three on an almost daily basis. (Thanks again to each software company for the review copies.) But insofar as potential users may not want to have to purchase or learn how to use all three programs, I hope the above reflections are of use.

 

Next time…

 

I will post one more time in the near future along these same lines. In particular I plan to compare Septuagint study across BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos. I’ve covered this in each of my individual reviews already, but I’ll look at the Tov-Polak MT-LXX Parallel database in particular in each of the three, so you can see in more detail how each software program handles the same basic resource. In that post I will also write about more complex search features in BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos, assessing how they compare.

(2015 UPDATE: That would-be blog post ended up as a published article in a journal of Septuagint studies. See more here.)

If you’ve made it this far (more than 2,000 words later), congratulations! Please feel free to leave me a comment or contact me if you are seriously considering Bible software and want to ask any questions about anything I’ve reviewed… or haven’t covered in my reviews.

January 2014 UPDATE: I have begun reviewing the Bible Study app from Olive Tree. You can see those reviews gathered here.

41 thoughts on “Which Bible software program should I buy? Comparison of BibleWorks, Accordance, and Logos

  1. Thanks, Abram. Lots of good points… A few things I would add:
    – The students at my institution get BibleWorks using a group license. You need at least 10 people, but the cost for the program then is only $259. (http://www.bibleworks.com/IPP/) That really makes it a good value.
    – You make note of it, but I would highlight even more that if you want mobile access to your biblical resources (and I’m thinking smartphones, iPhones, iPad, Android tablets), then Accordance and especially Logos should be more strongly considered. The Logos app still needs some work, but you can get to almost all your resources via the Biblia.com page.
    – I’m not sure how Accordance handles notes, but I have ended up doing all my note-taking in BibleWorks. The files it creates are actually all RTF files (they just have a bww extension) and are easily backed up/synced.
    – As you note, BibleWorks is the least customizable in terms of the interface, but it has by far the most extensive collection of free user-created texts and other modules: http://bibleworks.oldinthenew.org/

    1. Mark–very helpful additions and clarifications. Thank you! Looks like any notes in BibleWorks would be easily transferred into new folders, onto different computers, etc.

      Agreed about the mobile app–if this were a concern for me, from what I’ve seen, Logos would be my go-to, I think–if for no other reason than that you can sync your work between mobile and other machines very easily. Though I’d still definitely want the Accordance app, too.

      To your last point–Accordance has something similar at http://www.accordancefiles1.com/exchange/index.htm, though I believe that of BibleWorks is more extensive. (And I’ve gotten some great stuff from the Old in the New blog.) I’m not sure what Logos has in this regard.

  2. I used BW and Quick Verse (base packages) several years ago and moved to Logos for depth of available resources. Speed has always been an issue in Logos and I recently stepped up to an i5 processor to take full advantage of Logos. Logos is a great program, but still far to anchored in public domain and evangelical resources.

    1. Thanks, Mark! I do plan to address that as part of the post… aided, no doubt, by your excellent videos, which I’ve begun to enjoy! Thanks for pointing that out.

  3. I second Mark Barnes’ comments about LXX resources in Logos (and not just because of my work on the Lexham English Septuagint!). The feature I find most useful is displaying the results of a search like (to use Mark’s example) “all places where this Greek word translates this Hebrew word – e.g. ANDEQUALS ” in a customizeable “Analysis” report. Or to find the exceptions, use NOTEQUALS instead.

  4. Thanks, Ken. I’ve already enjoyed having access to the Lexham English Septuagint, by the way. Nice work!

    Thanks also for the command line examples–I’ll check them out in depth before posting again.

  5. BW9 is quite amazing. I use the note taking feature extensively. The BWW files are essentially RTF files so they can be opened with Word. I only wish that BW would use the RTF extension. Verses can be tagged using the verse note feature. And I just used the “Build User Version” module to incorporate the Bislama New Testament from text files that I had formatted. It worked flawlessly. I use BW everyday and continue to be impressed with its features.

    1. The .rtf extension is a good idea for BibleWorks files. Glad to know it’s a fairly universal format, though.

      Awesome about the build user version module. I haven’t translated tons of Scripture, but have translated enough that I’d love to compile it all and put it in one place…BW seems to support that fairly easily.

      Thanks for your comment!

  6. I haven’t used any Bible software on a desktop/laptop since Accordance 6 (when in seminary), so I’m commenting as a “casual” user that has appreciated tools of more depth and study. I pretty much only use an iPhone 5 and iPad 2. Because I had already purchased a number of modules back with Accordance 6, I have mostly used the latest iPad and iPhone versions. Logos is useful, but slow on iOS devices too. As a correction, the latest versions of the iOS Accordance apps DO cloud sync using any Dropbox account (free). It works well. Now whenever I switch devices, it zips straight to the same page/location, has the same highlights, notes, etc.

  7. Hi, Ben, and thanks for your comment. I’ve had fits and starts with getting Dropbox to work with Accordance (across two laptop computers), but I understand they’re actively developing that feature, for which I’m glad. Sounds like it works really well on various iOS devices. I think that’s probably key for the future for them.

    1. I’m unsure where they’ll go in the future, but for now the Dropbox sync feature in the iOS apps suggest only using it if you’re NOT syncing with desktop Accordance directly over wifi. Also, it’s not automatic and you have to hit a sync button in the settings to manually sync your notes, highlights, and user tools with Dropbox. But for some reason they sync your place in the last text viewed and your bookmarks separately through your free (from Apple to all iOS users) iCloud account if logged in, regardless of whether you have Dropbox sync turned on. I’m unsure why the 2 separate syncing channels for different features (iCloud for last position viewed and bookmarks; Dropbox for notes, highlights, and user tools), but perhaps this will be improved in the future.

      1. That’s helpful to know–yeah, I agree.. two ways of syncing could be cumbersome. For all of Logos’s spottiness on a Mac, they do have syncing pretty well figured out, at least across computers. I hope Accordance gets there, too.

  8. Thank you so much. I was already using Bibleworks on my PC, but have acquired a Macbook this week, and was wondering about Accordance. Your review has helped me decide that I shall at least get the starter package, and then I can splash out and get the Hebrew and Greek languages collection later.

    1. You’re welcome, Jane! So glad to hear it.

      I’m leading an Accordance webinar (live online… and free) Wednesday at Noon EST about what other resources are available. You can find out more here if you’re interested.

      1. Hai i am relatively new… is there a way we can buy Logos 6 as multi user.. It is so costly for individual student like me.. And I would appreciate very much if you can review the latest versions now.

        As for now, i am most tempted with Bibile works. I had used libronics 3.0 (my professor has it) looks so wonderful, but are so prohibitively costly. I was planning to buy starter pack version of Logos 6. thanks for the review.

  9. I need Hebrews documents but I can find the especially vocabulary and how can I know spoken hebrew

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