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).

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which passage you mean — the quotes are empty. Which book/verse or passage from the Bible would you like turned into an interview with its author?

If it helps, here are some examples I can do (pick one or give your own):
– Psalm 23 (David)
– Genesis 1 (Moses/traditional author)
– John 1:1–14 (the Gospel writer)
– Romans 8 (Paul)
– Job (Job or the book’s narrator)
– Proverbs 31 (author of Proverbs / persona of the virtuous woman)

Also tell me:
– Do you want a literal Q&A (interviewer asks direct questions and the author answers) or a more conversational, interpretive interview?
– Tone: formal/solemn, modern/casual, scholarly, pastoral, humorous?
– Any length limits?

Give me the passage or choices above and your preferences and I’ll write it.

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

If you weren’t sure which one to pick, here are some common books whose authorship is often asked about and the view an evangelical Christian would most likely hold:

– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): Moses is traditionally seen as the author (or primary author/editor) — evangelicals often affirm Mosaic authorship while allowing that later editing/compilation occurred.
– Psalms: many attributed to David (a large portion), with others by Asaph, the sons of Korah, Solomon, etc.
– Proverbs / Ecclesiastes / Song of Solomon: traditionally ascribed to Solomon (with Proverbs containing sayings from other collections).
– Isaiah: the prophet Isaiah (classic evangelical view holds to single-author Isaiah).
– Daniel: Daniel as author (evangelicals typically affirm a 6th‑century BC setting and prophetic content).
– Matthew: Matthew the tax collector/apostle (traditional evangelical view).
– Mark: John Mark, companion of Peter (evangelicals commonly accept Mark as based on Peter’s eyewitness testimony).
– Luke & Acts: Luke the physician, companion of Paul (evangelicals usually affirm Luke‑Acts as Luke’s work).
– John, 1–3 John: John the Apostle (evangelicals commonly attribute these to the apostle John).
– Revelation: many evangelicals attribute Revelation to John the Apostle, though some prefer “John the elder” or note debates.
– Pauline epistles (Romans–Philemon): traditionally authored by the Apostle Paul — evangelicals generally accept Pauline authorship of most of these; a few letters (Hebrews, and sometimes the Pastoral Epistles or a couple of the shorter letters) are debated but many evangelicals still affirm Pauline authorship for most.
– Hebrews: authorship debated historically; some evangelicals accept Paul, others propose Barnabas, Luke, Apollos, or leave it anonymous but treat it as authoritative.
– 1–2 Peter: 1 Peter is commonly accepted by evangelicals as Peter’s; 2 Peter is more debated, though many evangelicals still accept Petrine authorship.

If you tell me which specific book you meant, I can share an evangelical Christian perspective on the most‑likely author including:
– brief biography of that author,
– reasons evangelicals hold that view (internal claims, early church testimony, linguistic/style and theological coherence),
– major themes of the book and why authorship matters theologically.

Which book would you like me to cover?

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse or passage would you like rewritten as a breaking-news story in 55 words or less? You can paste the verse or name a reference (e.g., Genesis 1:1, John 3:16, Matthew 28:5–7).

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Breaking News!

Which Bible passage would you like rewritten as breaking news? Please give a verse or chapter (e.g., Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23, John 3:16, Exodus 14:21, Matthew 28:1–10). Or say “surprise” and I’ll pick a famous one and produce a ≤55-word breaking-news style piece.

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse or story would you like rewritten as a breaking-news piece? Pick one (or paste the text). Examples: Genesis 1 (Creation), Exodus 14 (Red Sea crossing), Psalm 23, Matthew 5 (Sermon on the Mount), Luke 10:25–37 (Good Samaritan), John 20 (Resurrection).

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Breaking News!

I don’t see a passage specified. Which Bible verse or story would you like rewritten as breaking news (e.g., Genesis 1, Exodus 14, Psalm 23, Matthew 28, John 3:16)? Also tell me tone: serious, dramatic, or witty.

Read News »