You left the quotation blank — which Bible verse or passage should I rewrite as breaking news?

If you want a suggestion, I can do John 3:16, Psalm 23, Genesis 1:1, Matthew 28:5–6, or another. Tell me which one (or say “surprise”) and I’ll produce a ≤55-word breaking-news version.

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which Bible passage you want turned into an interview — the quotes are empty. Which book/chapter/verse (or author, e.g., Moses, David, Paul, John) do you mean?

A few quick options you can pick from if you’d like:
– Psalm 23
– John 3:16
– Genesis 1 (creation)
– The Lord’s Prayer / Matthew 6:9–13
– The Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5–7)
– Romans 8
– Revelation 21–22

Also tell me:
– Which translation or tone? (e.g., King James, modern paraphrase)
– Do you want a faithful, literal feel or a creative/imaginative interview?

If you prefer, I can choose a well-known passage and proceed.

I’m missing the book name — you wrote two single quotes with nothing between them. Which Bible book (or passage) do you want information about?

To help you choose, here are common evangelical positions on likely authors for some well‑asked books (briefly):

– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): Moses is traditionally regarded as the primary author/editor, with evangelicals appealing to internal claims (Mosaic perspective), early testimony, and God’s revelation through him. Some acknowledge later editorial activity but maintain Mosaic core authorship.
– Psalms: Many Psalms are attributed to David (especially the superscribed ones); evangelicals accept Davidic authorship for those and Solomon or others for particular collections.
– Proverbs / Ecclesiastes / Song of Solomon: Traditionally linked to Solomon; evangelicals commonly accept Solomonic authorship (though Ecclesiastes and Song have some scholarly debate).
– Isaiah: Evangelicals generally affirm single‑author Isaiah (the prophet Isaiah of Jerusalem), pointing to early Jewish and Christian testimony and literary/theological unity.
– Gospels:
– Matthew: Matthew the apostle (tax collector) or his community; early church tradition supports Matthean authorship.
– Mark: John Mark, associated with Peter’s eyewitness testimony (Mark as Peter’s interpreter); evangelical tradition accepts Mark as Peter’s close source.
– Luke: Luke the physician, companion of Paul; evangelicals accept Luke’s authorship of Luke–Acts.
– John: John the Apostle (the “disciple whom Jesus loved”); evangelicals point to internal claims and early church attestation (e.g., Irenaeus).
– Acts: Luke (same author as the Gospel of Luke).
– Epistles:
– Pauline epistles (Romans–Philemon): Evangelicals accept Paul’s authorship of the letters that bear his name; for the Pastoral Epistles (1 & 2 Timothy, Titus) many evangelicals still affirm Pauline authorship though some accept scholarly objections and appeal to amanuensis or differences in genre and pastoral context.
– General epistles (James, 1–2 Peter, 1–3 John, Jude): Most evangelicals accept the traditional attributions (e.g., James the brother of Jesus; Peter the apostle; John the apostle; Jude the brother of Jesus), with some discussion about authorship details.
– Hebrews: More contested. Historically some evangelicals attributed Hebrews to Paul (or suggested Barnabas, Luke, Apollos), but many modern evangelicals accept that the author is anonymous/unknown while affirming the letter’s inspiration and theological integrity.
– Revelation: Traditionally attributed to John the Apostle (or John of Patmos); many evangelicals accept Johannine authorship or at least an early‑Christian John.

If you tell me which book you meant, I’ll share a focused evangelical summary: who’s most likely the author, the main reasons evangelicals give (internal claims, early church testimony, linguistic/style arguments, theological unity), common scholarly objections and evangelical responses, and recommended resources to read next.

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse would you like rewritten as breaking news? Please give the book, chapter, verse (and translation if you have a preference). If you want, I can pick a public-domain verse (e.g., John 3:16, KJV) and rewrite it.

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Breaking News!

Which Bible verse or passage would you like rewritten as breaking news (55 words or less)? Quick options: Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23, John 3:16, Matthew 28 (resurrection). If you don’t pick, I’ll use John 3:16.

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Breaking News!

It looks like the verse passage is blank — which Bible verse would you like rewritten as breaking news (≤55 words)? Options: Psalm 23, John 3:16, Genesis 1:1, The Lord’s Prayer, or pick “Surprise” and I’ll choose one.

Read News »

Breaking News!

I’m missing which Bible verse or passage you mean. Please tell me the book and chapter/verse (e.g., John 3:16) or say “surprise” and I’ll pick a well-known passage and rewrite it as breaking news in 55 words or less.

Read News »