Which verse do you mean? You left the quote blank. Type the book/chapter:verse you want, or I can pick one (John 3:16, Psalm 23, Genesis 1:1, Matthew 28:5–6, etc.) and rewrite it as a breaking-news story in 55 words or less. Which do you choose?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing the passage you want transformed — the quotes are empty. Which part of the Bible should I turn into an interview? Please give a book and verse(s) (for example: Psalm 23; Genesis 1:1–5; John 3:16; Matthew 5–7), or paste the exact text.

If helpful, tell me:
– Whether you want the interview with the book’s traditional author (e.g., David, Moses, Paul) or with the text/person described (e.g., Jesus, “the Psalmist”).
– Tone: devotional, historical-critical, conversational, humorous, or dramatic.
– Whether you prefer a close paraphrase of a public-domain translation (KJV) or a freer retelling.

If you’d like, I can pick an example now (short sample below is Psalm 23 as an interview with David). Want me to proceed with your specified passage or use one for you?

Sample (Psalm 23 — brief interview with David):
Interviewer: You begin by saying, “The Lord is my shepherd.” What do you mean by that?
David: It’s simple — I’m not in control. I’ve seen what leadership and failure do; calling God my shepherd says He guides, provides, and protects me when I cannot.
Interviewer: “He maketh me to lie down in green pastures.” Is that literal or metaphor?
David: Both. I remember quiet moments with flocks, but more than that it’s the peace He gives — rest in the midst of trouble.
Interviewer: “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil.” That’s a strong claim. How can you be so sure?
David: Because I’ve faced enemies, betrayals, and my own weakness. Trust isn’t blind; it’s experience of God’s presence. That presence is why I can say fear won’t have the last word.

Tell me the passage you want, and I’ll produce a full interview-style rendition.

I’m missing the book name — the quotes are empty. Which Bible book do you mean?

If you forgot or want suggestions, here are quick evangelical summaries for some commonly‑asked books so you can pick one:

– Genesis — traditionally Moses. Evangelicals typically hold Mosaic authorship (or Mosaic core with later editorial additions), view him as the covenant lawgiver and recorder of early history.
– Psalms — mainly David (with other psalmists like Asaph, Korah, Solomon). Evangelicals affirm Davidic authorship for many psalms and see them as inspired worship and prophecy.
– Isaiah — Isaiah son of Amoz. Evangelicals usually accept single‑author Isaiah (1–66) and view the book as prophetic messianic revelation.
– Proverbs — largely Solomon. Evangelicals see Solomon as primary contributor, with practical wisdom rooted in fearing the Lord.
– Matthew — Matthew the tax collector/apostle. Evangelicals regard him as an eyewitness evangelist emphasizing Jesus as King and Messiah.
– Mark — John Mark, associate of Peter. Evangelicals often view Mark as Peter’s interpreter and the earliest Gospel, focused on Jesus’ actions.
– Luke — Luke the physician, companion of Paul. Evangelicals accept Luke’s careful historical approach and Gentile audience orientation; Luke‑Acts seen as a two‑volume work.
– John — John the apostle. Evangelicals affirm Johannine authorship and the theological, eyewitness testimony about Jesus.
– Romans, Corinthians, Galatians, etc. — Paul the apostle. Evangelicals strongly affirm Pauline authorship of the undisputed letters and their doctrinal authority.
– Hebrews — historically disputed. Some evangelicals accept Paul or Barnabas, others say the author is unknown but the letter is fully canonical and apostolic in teaching.
– Revelation — John the apostle (traditionally). Many evangelicals accept apostolic John as author of Revelation, seeing it as prophetic apocalyptic revelation.

Tell me which specific book you want information about, and I’ll provide: the most likely author from an evangelical perspective, brief biographical background, internal and historical reasons evangelicals give for that attribution, typical dating/context, and key theological emphases.

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse or passage should I rework as breaking news? Please give the book/chapter/verse(s). If you’d like, I can pick a famous one (e.g., Genesis 1, Exodus 14, Matthew 28, John 3:16).

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse or passage should I rewrite as a breaking news story (55 words or less)? Example options: Genesis 1 (Creation), Exodus 14 (Red Sea crossing), John 3:16, Luke 24 (Resurrection). If you don’t pick, I’ll use John 3:16 by default. Any preferred tone or translation?

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Breaking News!

Which verse or passage do you mean? You left it blank. I can rewrite any Bible verse as breaking news in ≤55 words. Want John 3:16, Psalm 23, Luke 2:11, Genesis 1, Revelation 21, or another verse? Pick one (and a translation, if you care), and I’ll do it.

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Breaking News!

I don’t see a passage specified. Which Bible verse or passage should I rewrite as breaking news? Please give book, chapter and verse(s). If you prefer, I can pick a well-known one (e.g., John 3:16 or Psalm 23).

Read News »