I’m missing which passage—what verse or Bible story would you like rewritten as breaking news in 55 words or less? Give a book and verse (e.g., John 3:16, Genesis 1:1) or a story name (Exodus, Resurrection). Also tell me a preferred translation, if any.

Robot Created – Ask Your Pastor First!

I’m missing which passage you want transformed — the quotes are empty. Which part of the Bible should I write as an interview with the author?

A few suggestions you can pick from (or give a specific book/chapter/verse):
– Genesis 1 (creation narrative)
– Psalm 23
– Isaiah 53
– Matthew 5–7 (Sermon on the Mount)
– John 1 or John 3:16
– Romans 8
– Revelation 21–22

Also tell me:
– Which translation or tone do you prefer (formal/KJV style, modern/NRSV, paraphrase, conversational)?
– How long should the interview be (short Q&A, full-length feature)?
– Do you want it to sound like the historical human author (e.g., David, Moses, Paul) or like a narrator/prophet?

Give me those details and I’ll write it.

I’m missing the book name you meant — the quotes are blank. Which Bible book are you asking about?

If you weren’t sure which to pick, here’s a quick, evangelical-friendly summary of the “most likely” authors for many frequently asked books (brief notes on the typical evangelical position):

– Pentateuch (Genesis–Deuteronomy): Moses — evangelicals typically affirm Mosaic authorship or Mosaic leadership of a core tradition later edited.
– Psalms: Traditionally David for many psalms (also Asaph, Sons of Korah, Solomon, etc.). Evangelicals usually accept Davidic authorship for many key psalms.
– Proverbs / Ecclesiastes / Song of Solomon: Solomon traditionally; evangelicals often accept Solomonic attribution for Proverbs and Song, and commonly accept Solomon as Qoheleth though some allow later editing.
– Isaiah: Isaiah son of Amoz — most evangelicals hold to single-author Isaiah (rather than multiple authors).
– Jeremiah / Ezekiel / Daniel: Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel respectively — traditional prophetic authorship is typically affirmed.
– Job: Anonymous; evangelicals generally treat it as an ancient inspired wisdom book without firm attribution.
– Matthew (Gospel): Matthew the tax collector/apostle — evangelicals commonly accept Matthean authorship.
– Mark (Gospel): John Mark, companion of Peter — evangelicals often see Mark as recording Peter’s testimony.
– Luke (Gospel) & Acts: Luke the physician, companion of Paul — widely accepted among evangelicals.
– John (Gospel), 1 John, 2 John, 3 John, Revelation: John the Apostle commonly identified by evangelicals for Gospel and epistles; Revelation also traditionally ascribed to John (some specify John the Apostle or John of Patmos).
– Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon: Paul — widely accepted.
– Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians: Many evangelicals affirm Pauline authorship, though some recognize scholarly debate (some conservative scholars still defend Pauline authorship).
– 1–2 Timothy, Titus (Pastorals): Many evangelicals accept Paul as author, though there is scholarly debate; conservative commentators often defend Pauline authorship.
– Hebrews: Historically debated — some evangelicals accept Paul, others favor Barnabas, Luke, Apollos, or an anonymous gifted teacher; evangelical views vary but the book is accepted as canonical and inspired.
– James: James the brother of Jesus (leader in Jerusalem) — commonly affirmed.
– 1 Peter: Peter the Apostle — generally accepted. 2 Peter: More debated; some evangelicals accept Petrine authorship, others note late style and possible pseudonymous composition.
– Jude: Jude (Judas), brother of Jesus — typically accepted by evangelicals.

If you tell me the specific book you intended, I can give a fuller evangelical-perspective profile: historical background, internal and external evidence for authorship, theological emphases tied to the author, and typical evangelical scholarship or devotional uses.

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Breaking News!

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?

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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.

Read News »