Which Bible verse or passage would you like rewritten as a breaking-news story (55 words or fewer)? You can name a verse (e.g., John 3:16), a scene (e.g., Resurrection, Nativity, Exodus), or paste the text. Any preferred tone or translation?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which passage you want transformed — the quotes in your request are empty. Which part of the Bible should I turn into an interview with the author?

Please tell me:
– Book/chapter/verse (or the passage name, e.g., Psalm 23, Genesis 1, Sermon on the Mount, Romans 8), or
– The author you want interviewed (e.g., Moses, David, Isaiah, Paul, Luke, John), and
– Any stylistic preferences: modern casual interview, formal press-interview tone, conversational Q&A, length (short ~10 questions, medium, or long), and whether you want direct quotations from the text included or a full paraphrase.

If you don’t care, I can pick a well-known passage (suggestions: Psalm 23, Genesis 1, Matthew 5–7) and produce a sample interview. Which would you like?

I’m missing the name of the book (your quotes are empty). Which Bible book do you want information about?

When you tell me the book, I can give an evangelical Christian perspective on its most‑likely author, including:
– a short biography of the author (if known),
– historical and cultural context,
– internal and early‑church evidence for authorship,
– evangelical reasons for accepting that authorship (and brief responses to common critical objections),
– key theological emphases and pastoral application.

If it helps you choose, here are quick, typical evangelical positions for several books:
– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): traditionally Moses.
– Psalms: many attributed to David (others to Asaph, the Sons of Korah, etc.).
– Proverbs / Song of Songs / Ecclesiastes: traditionally Solomon.
– Isaiah: Isaiah son of Amoz (evangelicals often accept single‑author Isaiah, though some discuss Deutero‑Isaiah).
– Gospels: Matthew (the apostle), Mark (John Mark, companion of Peter), Luke (Luke the physician, companion of Paul), John (the apostle).
– Acts: Luke (same author as the Gospel of Luke).
– Pauline epistles: Paul (with some disputed letters like Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians debated by some scholars).
– Hebrews: traditionally Paul in many older traditions; many evangelicals today accept an anonymous Pauline‑circle authorship (e.g., Barnabas, Apollos, or a Paul associate) but some still hold to Paul.
– Revelation: John the apostle (many evangelicals affirm the apostle John wrote Revelation).

Tell me which book you meant and I’ll prepare the evangelical perspective on its most‑likely author.

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Breaking News!

Which Bible passage do you mean? Please specify book/chapter/verse (e.g., Matthew 28), or pick from examples: Creation (Genesis 1), Exodus 14, Luke 2 (Nativity), Matthew 5 (Sermon on the Mount), Luke 15 (Prodigal Son), Genesis 6–9 (Noah). Or say “Surprise” and I’ll choose one and write it as breaking news in ≤55 words.

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Breaking News!

It looks like the verse is missing. Which Bible verse or passage would you like reworded as a breaking news story (55 words or fewer)? If you don’t have one in mind, I can pick a famous verse—John 3:16, Genesis 1:1, Psalm 23, or Revelation 21:4. Which do you prefer?

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Breaking News!

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.

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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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