Which Bible passage do you mean? Please name the verse/chapter (e.g., John 3:16). If you don’t specify, I’ll rewrite John 3:16 as a breaking-news item in 55 words or less—ok?

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which part of the Bible you want rewritten. Which book, chapter, or verse (or which author) should I turn into an interview?

A few options if you want suggestions:
– Psalm 23 (David)
– Genesis 1 (Moses, creation)
– John 3:16 or a passage from the Gospel of John (John)
– The Sermon on the Mount / Matthew 5–7 (Matthew)
– Romans or Corinthians (Paul)
– Isaiah 6 (Isaiah)

Also tell me:
– Do you want a faithful paraphrase or a more creative reimagining?
– Tone: serious, conversational, poetic, humorous, scholarly?
– Any length preference?

If you prefer, I can pick a well-known passage and proceed — tell me which option you prefer.

I’m missing the name of the book you want information about — your message shows an empty title (” ). Which book of the Bible do you mean?

If you’re not sure, here are a few common possibilities and the “most-likely” authors from a typical evangelical Christian perspective (briefly):

– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): Moses is traditionally regarded as the author (evangelicals normally affirm Mosaic authorship while recognizing later editorial work).
– Psalms: Many psalms are attributed to David (but other authors—Asaph, the sons of Korah, Solomon, Moses—are also recognized).
– Isaiah: Evangelicals often affirm single authorship by Isaiah of Jerusalem (some conservative evangelicals accept the unity of Isaiah while others accept multiple authorship on critical grounds).
– Gospels: Matthew — Matthew the tax collector/apostle; Mark — John Mark (linked with Peter’s testimony); Luke — Luke the physician (companion of Paul); John — John the apostle (the “Beloved Disciple”). Evangelicals generally accept these traditional attributions.
– Acts: Luke (same author as the Gospel of Luke).
– Pauline Epistles (Romans–Philemon): Paul the apostle is accepted as author of the letters traditionally attributed to him; a few letters (Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians) have been disputed by some scholars but are still often treated as Pauline in many evangelical circles.
– Hebrews: Historically contested. Many evangelicals have accepted Pauline authorship, but a significant number of modern evangelical scholars also allow other candidates (Luke, Barnabas, Apollos) or simply acknowledge the author is anonymous while affirming the book’s authority.
– General epistles: James — James, brother of Jesus; 1–3 John — John the apostle; Jude — Jude (brother of Jesus). Evangelicals typically accept these traditional attributions.
– Revelation: John the apostle is the traditional evangelical author (some debate between John the apostle vs. another John, but many evangelicals affirm apostolic authorship).

If you tell me which specific book you had in mind, I can provide an evangelical-leaning profile of the most-likely author that includes:
– short biography/background,
– internal and early-church evidence for authorship,
– major theological emphases and how they fit evangelical doctrine, and
– recommended resources for further reading.

Which book would you like me to cover?

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Breaking News!

I’m missing which Bible verse or passage you want rewritten. Which book/chapter/verse (and any preferred translation)? If you’d like, I can pick a well-known one (e.g., John 3:16) and write it as a 55-word-or-less breaking news story. Which do you prefer?

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Breaking News!

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?

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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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