I’m missing the verse—could you specify which Bible passage (and preferred translation)? If you don’t care, I can pick a well-known one (e.g., John 3:16, Psalm 23) and rewrite it as breaking news in 55 words or less. Which do you want?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I don’t see a verse or passage in your message — could you tell me which Bible verse or passage you want reimagined as an interview, and which “author” you mean (the traditional human author, the book’s narrator, or God)? Also tell me which translation or whether you want a loose paraphrase, and what tone/length you prefer.

If you like, I can suggest a few well-known options (e.g., Psalm 23 with David, John 3:16 with the Apostle John, or Genesis 1 with Moses) and produce a sample interview. Which would you prefer?

I’m missing the book name in your question — which Bible book do you want information about?

If it helps, here are brief notes about the “most-likely” authors that evangelicals commonly accept for some frequently-asked books (and a couple of special cases):

– Genesis–Deuteronomy: Traditionally Moses (evangelicals usually affirm Mosaic authorship, with attention to later editorial additions).
– Joshua–Kings/Chronicles: Traditional historical books are attributed to Joshua’s generation (Joshua) or later prophetic/historical circles; 1–2 Chronicles traditionally linked to Ezra.
– Psalms: Many attributed to David (but several psalms are credited to other authors like Asaph, the sons of Korah, Solomon, Moses).
– Proverbs: Largely Solomon (plus collections from other wise men).
– Ecclesiastes & Song of Solomon: Traditionally Solomon (ecclesiastes as Qohelet, often Solomon).
– Isaiah: Traditionally the prophet Isaiah (some modern scholars posit multiple authors, but many evangelicals affirm single Isaiah or treat later sections as prophetic).
– Daniel: Traditionally Daniel (evangelicals generally accept Daniel’s authorship and its predictive prophecies).
– Matthew, Mark, Luke, John: The four Gospels are traditionally attributed to those four writers; evangelicals typically accept these attributions and early church testimony.
– Acts: Luke (the physician and companion of Paul).
– Pauline Epistles: Letters like Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon, 1–2 Timothy, Titus — traditionally Paul (some letters debated by scholars; evangelicals vary in which they accept as authentically Pauline).
– Hebrews: Special case — authorship is debated. Early church often attributed it to Paul, but many modern scholars reject Pauline authorship. Many evangelicals remain open to Pauline authorship or attribute it to another early Christian teacher (Barnabas, Luke, Apollos) while emphasizing theological continuity with apostolic teaching.

Tell me which book you meant, and I’ll share a focused evangelical Christian perspective on the most-likely author: short biography, internal and external evidence for authorship, major theological emphases, and how that authorship shapes interpretation.

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Breaking News!

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?

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Breaking News!

I don’t see a verse specified. Which Bible verse or passage would you like rewritten as a breaking-news story (e.g., John 3:16, Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23)?

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Breaking News!

It looks like the verse is missing — which Bible passage would you like rewritten as a breaking-news story (55 words or fewer)?

If you want a suggestion, I can do John 3:16, Psalm 23, Genesis 1:1, or pick one at random. Which do you choose?

Read News »

Breaking News!

I couldn’t see which Bible verse you meant — the quotes are empty. Which verse or passage should I rewrite as a breaking-news story (55 words max)? Or should I pick a well-known one (e.g., Genesis 1:1; John 3:16; Psalm 23)?

Read News »