I’m missing the verse — the quotes are empty. Which Bible verse or passage should I turn into a 55-word-or-less breaking-news piece?

If you don’t care, I can pick a famous one (e.g., Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23, John 3:16, or Matthew 28:5–6). Which do you want?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which part of the Bible you want transformed. Which book, chapter or verse should I write as an interview with its author?

Also tell me:
– Which author you mean (e.g., Moses, David, Paul, Luke, John) if you want a particular attribution.
– Preferred translation or tone (literal/KJV-style, modern/NIV-style, poetic, humorous, conversational).
– Length (short Q&A, a few questions, or longer feature-style interview).

If you’re not sure, here are quick options you can pick from:
– Psalm 23 (David) — comforting, poetic.
– Genesis 1 (Moses/traditional authorship) — grand, majestic.
– John 1 or the Gospel of John (John) — theological, reflective.
– Romans 8 (Paul) — doctrinal, pastoral.
– A single verse (e.g., John 3:16) — short, focused.

Pick a passage and style and I’ll write it as an interview.

It looks like the book name after the quotes didn’t come through. Which Bible book do you mean?

If you’re unsure, here are some commonly asked-about books and the typical evangelical view of their most-likely author — pick one and I’ll give fuller detail from an evangelical perspective (biographical background, internal/external evidence, theological significance, and why evangelicals accept or reject the attribution):

– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): traditionally Moses; many evangelicals still affirm Mosaic authorship (with allowance for later editorial additions).
– Psalms: many attributed to David (but Psalms is a collection with multiple authors); evangelicals usually accept Davidic authorship for those marked David.
– Isaiah: many evangelicals hold to single authorship by Isaiah of Jerusalem (contrasting some critical views that posit multiple Isaiahs).
– Jeremiah/Ezekiel/other prophets: generally accepted as written by the named prophet.
– Matthew: traditionally Matthew (the tax collector/apostle); widely accepted in evangelical circles.
– Mark: traditionally John Mark (companion of Peter); accepted by most evangelicals.
– Luke–Acts: traditionally Luke (physician, companion of Paul); strongly accepted by evangelicals.
– John, 1–3 John, Revelation: evangelicals often attribute these to John the Apostle (though Revelation’s authorship is debated in some circles).
– Hebrews: historically attributed to Paul in many evangelical traditions, but modern evangelical scholarship is divided — some still accept Pauline authorship, others propose Apollos, Barnabas, or an unknown near-Pauline figure.
– James, 1–2 Peter: James often attributed to James the brother of Jesus; 2 Peter’s authorship is debated among evangelicals (1 Peter often ascribed to the Apostle Peter).
– Jude: typically attributed to Jude (brother of Jesus) by evangelicals.

Tell me which book you want, and I’ll share a focused evangelical-Christian perspective on its most-likely author.

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Breaking News!

You didn’t specify a passage. Which Bible verse or chapter should I rewrite as a breaking-news report (55 words max)? Or should I pick one (e.g., John 3:16)? Also, prefer a classic (KJV) or modern wording?

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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).

Read News »

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.

Read News »