- Thu Aug 07, 2014 3:25 pm
#15744
I am having difficulty understanding the following example on page 381:
R > S---L
or
S---L > R
I thought the correct diagram would be:
S > R > L
or
L > R > S
My problem here is I am understanding the phrase "but not both" to mean that S and L cannot both, simultaneously, be before or after R, which means R would have to be in the middle. If anyone can help clarify and wrap my head around why the proper diagrams correctly reflect the rule, that will be appreciated. Thanks!
R sings at some time before S or at some time after L, but not both.The LG Bible provides the following diagrams (with S and L on top of each other over the dotted line - I'm not sure how to type that out and have it display properly):
R > S---L
or
S---L > R
I thought the correct diagram would be:
S > R > L
or
L > R > S
My problem here is I am understanding the phrase "but not both" to mean that S and L cannot both, simultaneously, be before or after R, which means R would have to be in the middle. If anyone can help clarify and wrap my head around why the proper diagrams correctly reflect the rule, that will be appreciated. Thanks!