Library: 170+ digital books including Christ Centered Exposition Commentary | CCE, Smyth & Helwys Preaching the Word | SHPtW (5 vols.), Christianity: The Biography; 2000 Years of Global History, Classical Pastoral Care (4 vols.), and more.
Designed for: Pastors and Lay Ministers
No Subscription Needed (but Better Together): We recommend pairing this library with Logos Pro for the best experience.
Logos is recommended by John Piper, Christine Cane, R. Albert Mohler Jr., and other trusted Christian leaders. See all endorsements.
Elevate your preaching with the Preacher Silver Library. This package builds on the Preacher Bronze Library, providing more key resources to draw from. Key texts include insights on refining your communication style, incorporating stories and examples effectively, ensuring your messages resonate, and focusing on the spiritual preparation necessary for effective preaching.
Resource Highlights
Library Resources
Digital books, media, courses, and other resources included in 2026 Preacher Silver Library.
Protestant and Reformed resources dominate my library. While many resources, such as ancient texts and lexicons, remain neutral, individual titles vary by author. The Logos AI system heavily leans towards a Protestant and Reformed academic bias, which I am addressing by adding orthodox, Lutheran, and other relevant legacy packages.
This academic bias, as evident in my study of “God’s Armor,” tends to resist “ontological change” (theosis) and favors “legal status” (justification). To counteract this, I have added an “Ontological Hook” to press it. I want the AI to incorporate data without an agenda and let me decide how to use it. Therefore, I am feeding it with various theological perspectives/packages.
It is unclear how a workbook can be meaningfully used without the accompanying original book: Worship Quest Workbook: A Study Guide for the Book by Steven D. Brooks.
The lack of features in the mobile app is disconcerting. If I had realized that the ESV Commentary doesnt work there I would've switched to the ESV app.
I always find the libraries helpful. The main problem I have seen is that the libraries always seen heavily skewed toward a Reformed/Calvinist theology foundation. Being more Arminian minded, I find myself having to follow the advice of my bride more often than I'd like to "chew up the meat, spit out the bones."