You left the passage blank. Which Bible verse or passage should I rewrite as a breaking-news piece in 55 words or less? If you want, I can pick a well-known one (e.g., Psalm 23, John 3:16, Revelation 21:4) — tell me which, or say “surprise.”

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which passage or book you want me to turn into an interview — the quotes in your request are empty. Could you tell me:

1. Which Bible passage, chapter, or book do you mean (e.g., Psalm 23, Romans 8, Genesis 1, the Gospel of John, Revelation)?
2. Which “author” should be interviewed (e.g., David, Moses, Paul, John the Apostle, Isaiah)? If you prefer, I can infer the author from the passage.
3. Do you want a literal paraphrase (keeping key lines/phrases) or a loose, modernized retelling in interview form?
4. Tone/length preference: brief Q&A, in-depth interview, scholarly, conversational, or dramatic?

Give me those details and I’ll write it as an interview with the author. If you’re unsure, I can suggest a few passages and show a short sample.

It looks like you left the book name blank. Which biblical book do you want information about?

If you aren’t sure which one, here’s a short explanation of how evangelicals approach authorship questions and a few examples of “most likely” authors from an evangelical perspective — so you can tell me which one you want a fuller profile of.

How evangelicals generally treat Bible authorship
– High view of Scripture: evangelicals hold that the Bible is God’s inspired and authoritative Word. Whether a book is explicitly named or anonymous, it is treated as authoritative for faith and practice.
– Tradition plus critical tools: evangelicals give weight to the Old Latin/Greek manuscript evidence and early church testimony (patristic evidence), while also using internal clues (style, vocabulary, theology, historical references) and modern scholarship. Many evangelicals accept some critical methods so long as they don’t undermine key doctrines.
– Varied conclusions: on some books there’s broad agreement (e.g., Paul wrote Romans; Luke wrote Luke–Acts; Moses as the general author/leader associated with the Pentateuch), while other books remain debated and evangelical scholars may differ.

Examples of contested or commonly asked-about books (summary of the evangelical position)
– Hebrews — Early church attributed it to Paul, but the letter itself is anonymous. Many evangelicals today accept that the author is unknown while remaining confident in the book’s inspiration; proposed candidates include Paul (still defended by some), Apollos, Luke, Barnabas, or an otherwise unknown second‑generation teacher.
– Isaiah — Traditional evangelical view: Isaiah son of Amoz wrote the whole book (unity). Critical scholarship argues for multiple authors (e.g., Deutero/Third Isaiah), but many evangelicals prefer single authorship and/or see later prophetic extension under God’s providence.
– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy) — Traditional attribution to Moses. Many evangelicals affirm Mosaic authorship while allowing for later editorial additions or compilation (i.e., Moses as primary author/mediator of the tradition, with later redaction).
– Psalms — David is the principal author of many psalms and traditionally associated with the Psalter, but evangelicals recognize the Psalms as an anthology with multiple authors (Asaph, Sons of Korah, Solomon, anonymous).
– Gospels and Acts — Evangelicals typically attribute Matthew to the apostle Matthew, Mark to John Mark (companion of Peter), Luke to Luke the physician (companion of Paul), and John to John the Apostle; Acts is attributed to Luke.
– Revelation — Traditionally attributed to John the Apostle; many evangelicals hold to Johannine authorship, though some evangelical scholars favor a distinct “John the Elder.”
– Pastoral epistles (1–2 Timothy, Titus) — Many evangelicals accept Pauline authorship and pastoral intent; some critical scholars question authenticity, but acceptance remains strong in evangelical circles.

If you tell me the specific book you meant, I’ll give an evangelical Christian–oriented profile of the most likely author (biographical sketch, reasons for attribution, major supporting evidence, and typical evangelical responses to critical objections).

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Breaking News!

I’m missing which Bible verse or passage you want rewritten. Which book/chapter/verse (and any preferred translation)? If you’d like, I can pick a well-known one (e.g., John 3:16) and write it as a 55-word-or-less breaking news story. Which do you prefer?

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse or passage would you like rewritten as a breaking-news story (55 words or fewer)? You can name a verse (e.g., John 3:16), a scene (e.g., Resurrection, Nativity, Exodus), or paste the text. Any preferred tone or translation?

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Breaking News!

Which Bible passage do you mean? Please specify book/chapter/verse (e.g., Matthew 28), or pick from examples: Creation (Genesis 1), Exodus 14, Luke 2 (Nativity), Matthew 5 (Sermon on the Mount), Luke 15 (Prodigal Son), Genesis 6–9 (Noah). Or say “Surprise” and I’ll choose one and write it as breaking news in ≤55 words.

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Breaking News!

It looks like the verse is missing. Which Bible verse or passage would you like reworded as a breaking news story (55 words or fewer)? If you don’t have one in mind, I can pick a famous verse—John 3:16, Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23, or Revelation 21:4. Which do you prefer?

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