Which Bible verse or passage do you want rewritten as a breaking-news story? Also prefer a specific translation (KJV, NIV, ESV, etc.) or should I pick one (KJV by default)?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which verse or passage you want rewritten — the quotes in your prompt are empty. Could you tell me:

– The book/chapter/verse (or paste the passage), and
– Which translation you want (e.g., King James Version [public domain], NIV/ESV [modern, copyrighted], or a neutral paraphrase)?

Notes:
– If you want an exact modern translation (NIV, ESV, etc.) turned into an interview, I can’t reproduce long verbatim copyrighted text unless you paste it here; I can, however, paraphrase it in an interview style.
– I can freely use public-domain translations (KJV) or create an original paraphrase based on any passage.

If you don’t have a passage in mind, I can pick a well-known one (Psalm 23, John 3:16, Genesis 1, the Beatitudes) and write it as an interview. Which would you prefer?

It looks like the book title didn’t come through (your message shows two single quotes with nothing between). Which Bible book do you want information about?

If you’re not sure, here are quick, evangelical-oriented summaries of the traditionally/most-likely authors for many well-known books — any one of these I can expand on (biography, historical context, internal/external evidence for authorship, theological emphases, and why evangelicals accept the attribution).

Old Testament (typical evangelical attributions)
– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): Moses — evangelicals usually affirm Mosaic authorship while recognizing later editorial activity.
– Joshua: Joshua (clerk/leader who succeeded Moses) or a Deuteronomistic historian; many evangelicals accept traditional Joshua association.
– Judges/Ruth: Often associated with the period’s prophetic historians (Samuel/prophets); Ruth sometimes linked to Samuel tradition.
– 1–2 Samuel, 1–2 Kings: Samuel, Nathan, Gad and later prophetic historians; evangelical views often accept prophetic/historical authorship within Israel’s prophetic tradition.
– 1–2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah: Ezra (and/or chronicler tradition) — evangelicals commonly accept Ezra’s role in the post-exilic compilation.
– Psalms: Primarily David (plus Asaph, Korahites, Solomon, and anonymous psalmists); David is the key traditional figure.
– Proverbs, Song of Songs, Ecclesiastes: Largely Solomon (with Proverbs including sayings from others).
– Isaiah: Isaiah son of Amoz — many evangelicals hold to single authorship (though some accept later contributions).
– Jeremiah: Jeremiah (with Baruch as scribe).
– Ezekiel: Ezekiel.
– Daniel: Daniel (evangelicals commonly affirm Daniel’s authorship and prophetic dating).

New Testament (typical evangelical attributions)
– Matthew: Matthew the tax collector/apostle.
– Mark: John Mark (companion of Peter); Gospel reflecting Peter’s testimony.
– Luke: Luke the physician (companion of Paul); Luke–Acts as a two-volume work by Luke.
– John (Gospel) / 1–3 John / Revelation: John the Apostle (Revelation attributed to John of Patmos; evangelicals generally identify him with the apostle, though some separate the figures).
– Acts: Luke.
– Pauline epistles: Paul (authentic letters include Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon, etc.; some letters like Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians, the Pastorals are debated).
– Hebrews: Historically debated; some evangelicals hold to Pauline or Pauline-circles authorship, others accept anonymous/unknown.
– James: James the brother of Jesus (leader of the Jerusalem church).
– 1–2 Peter: Peter (with recognition that 2 Peter’s authorship is debated).
– Jude: Jude (another brother of Jesus).

Tell me which specific book you meant and I’ll give a focused evangelical perspective on its most-likely author — including biographical sketch, internal and external evidence, dating, and why evangelicals affirm that attribution.

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