I’m missing which Bible verse or passage you want rewritten. Please tell me the book/chapter/verse and the translation (e.g., NIV, KJV). Note: I can’t provide long, verbatim text from modern copyrighted translations you don’t supply, but I can paraphrase or summarize any passage in breaking-news style (55 words or less). Want me to pick a well-known verse if you don’t specify?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which passage or book you want turned into an interview—your request shows an empty quote. Which part of the Bible should I use?

You can tell me:
– Book and chapter (e.g., “Psalms 23”), or
– A verse (e.g., “John 3:16”), or
– An author (e.g., “Paul” or “Moses”) or book (e.g., “Genesis,” “Revelation”) if you want a broader piece.

Also tell me:
– Preferred tone (straightforward/journalistic, humorous, reflective, modern language, archaic),
– Length (short Q&A, full-length interview), and
– Which translation to base it on, if any (e.g., KJV, NIV, NRSV) or just a paraphrase.

If you don’t care, I can pick a well-known passage (suggestions: Genesis 1, Psalm 23, John 3:16, Isaiah 53, Romans 8) and produce a sample interview. Which would you like?

I’m missing the book name — could you say which book of the Bible you mean? Once you tell me, I can summarize who evangelicals most commonly consider the author to be, why they hold that view, key evidence (biblical, early-church, and historical), and common objections.

If it helps, here are a few frequently-asked examples and the typical evangelical positions I could expand on:

– Hebrews — many traditional evangelicals have attributed it to Paul (or to someone in Paul’s circle); others accept anonymous authorship but still favor an early, apostolic writer. I can list the evidences and counterarguments.
– The Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy) — most evangelicals affirm substantial Mosaic authorship (with later editorial activity), arguing from internal claims and early tradition; I can explain responses to the Documentary Hypothesis.
– Isaiah — some evangelicals defend single-author Isaiah; others accept multiple authors but still view the book as prophetically unified. I can summarize the reasons.
– The Gospels — evangelicals generally accept the traditional attributions: Matthew, Mark (John Mark), Luke, and John (the apostle). I can outline the supporting evidence.
– Pauline epistles — evangelicals accept Pauline authorship for the undisputed letters (e.g., Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon) and often treat the Pastoral Epistles (1–2 Timothy, Titus) as more debated; I can describe why.

Which book would you like me to cover?

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Breaking News!

Which specific Bible verse or passage would you like rewritten as breaking news? If you prefer, I can choose a well-known one (Genesis 1:1; Psalm 23; John 3:16; Matthew 28:5–6).

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Breaking News!

I’m missing which verse or passage you mean — the quotes are empty. Which Bible verse would you like rewritten as breaking news, and do you prefer a specific translation (KJV, NIV, ESV, etc.)? If you don’t care, I can pick a well-known one (e.g., John 3:16 or Psalm 23).

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Breaking News!

I’m missing the passage — which Bible verse or chapter should I rewrite as breaking news (≤55 words)?
Choices: John 3:16; Genesis 1:1–5; Psalm 23; Luke 2:1–20 — or name any other verse. Reply with the passage and I’ll write it.

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Breaking News!

You left the verse blank. Which Bible verse or passage should I rewrite as a breaking-news story? Pick one (examples: John 3:16; Genesis 1:1; Psalm 23; Luke 2:10–11; Matthew 28:5–6) or paste the exact text and preferred translation. I’ll return a ≤55-word breaking-news version.

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