Which verse would you like rewritten?

Example (John 3:16 as breaking news, 38 words):
Breaking: Divine Rescue Declared — In an unprecedented announcement, God has sent His Son to offer eternal life to anyone who believes. Sources say belief yields everlasting salvation; critics unknown. Church bell footage rolling. More updates at the cross.

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which passage you want turned into an interview. Which book/chapter/verse (or the name of the passage) would you like? Also tell me:

– Which Bible translation do you want used (KJV is public domain; modern translations like NIV/ESV are copyrighted — I can paraphrase those).
– Do you want the author portrayed historically (e.g., “Moses,” “David,” “Paul”) or as a modern interviewee?
– Tone: serious, conversational, poetic, or humorous?

If you’d like, I can show a quick example first. Here’s a very short sample (Psalm 23, KJV, public domain) shown as an interview with the author “David” to illustrate the style — tell me if you want the full passage or a different one:

Interviewer: “When you say ‘The Lord is my shepherd,’ what image are you trying to give people?”
David: “A shepherd guides, protects, provides. I wanted to say God watches over me personally — close enough to lead me to green pastures and quiet waters.”

Interviewer: “You mention walking through the valley of the shadow of death. Are you speaking of literal danger or something deeper?”
David: “Both. I recall real threats, but I mean all dark times — loss, fear, loneliness — and the certainty that God’s presence removes my terror.”

If that looks good, tell me the passage and choices above and I’ll write the full interview.

It looks like the book name is missing from your request (you wrote two quotes with nothing between them). Which Bible book do you want information about?

If you’re not sure which one you meant, here are a few commonly asked-about books and the typical evangelical position on their most likely author — pick one and I’ll give a fuller, evangelical-Christian perspective (biographical details, internal/external evidence, dating, theological emphases, and significance).

– Hebrews — Traditional early-church attribution to Paul; many modern scholars reject Pauline authorship. Many evangelicals either defend Pauline authorship or at least hold to an early, apostolic-era author and affirm the letter’s authority and high Christology.

– Isaiah — Evangelicals typically affirm single authorship by Isaiah of Jerusalem (8th century BC) and see the “second” and “third” Isaiah sections as prophetic unity rather than later redaction. This supports predictive prophecy (e.g., Cyrus) in evangelical readings.

– Luke (Gospel and Acts) — Strong evangelical consensus that Luke, the “physician” and companion of Paul, wrote both volumes. Seen as careful historian and theologian with Gentile audience in view.

– John (Gospel, 1–3 John) — Evangelicals generally identify the author as John the Apostle (the “disciple whom Jesus loved”), emphasizing eyewitness testimony, high Christology, and pastoral concern.

– Revelation — Attributed to “John” of Patmos. Many evangelicals regard him as the Apostle John; some distinguish “John of Patmos” from the apostle but still treat the book as authoritative prophetic revelation.

– 2 Peter — Authorship debated (some see pseudepigraphy). Many conservative evangelicals defend Petrine authorship or provide arguments for early composition consistent with apostolic origin.

– James and Jude — Traditionally ascribed to Jesus’ brothers (James the leader of the Jerusalem church; Jude the brother of James). Evangelicals commonly accept those attributions and highlight practical holiness and warnings against false teaching.

– Ecclesiastes / Song of Solomon — Traditionally attributed to Solomon. Evangelicals often accept Solomonic authorship, while critical scholars sometimes date them later or see wisdom school composition.

Tell me which book you meant (or pick one from the list), and I’ll share the most-likely author and an evangelical perspective in more detail.

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Breaking News!

You didn’t specify a passage. Which Bible verse or chapter should I rewrite as a breaking-news story (55 words or less)? If you want, I can pick a well-known one—John 3:16, Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23, Luke 2:11, etc.—and I can make it serious or playful. Which do you prefer?

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Breaking News!

I think the verse/passage is missing. Which Bible verse would you like rewritten as a breaking-news story (55 words or less)? Examples: Genesis 1:1; Exodus 14 (Red Sea); Psalm 23; Matthew 28 (Resurrection); John 3:16. Or paste the exact verse/passage.

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Breaking News!

I think you left the passage blank. Which Bible verse or story do you want rewritten as a breaking-news item (e.g., John 3:16; Psalm 23; Exodus 14, parting of the Red Sea; Matthew 28, resurrection)? Or I can pick a popular one — which do you prefer?

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Breaking News!

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.”

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