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OverviewCourt Case Jesus - A Short Companion Summary A Torah-Jurisdiction Audit of Gospel Authority Claims by Frans Hansen What happens if Christianity is judged by the Torah it claims to fulfill? Christianity repeatedly appeals to the Hebrew Bible, the covenant of Sinai, and the authority of Moses and the prophets. Once those authorities are invoked, one unavoidable question follows: Do the authority claims made about Jesus of Nazareth survive examination under Torah law itself? This book conducts that examination. What This Book Does This short companion volume presents a clear, structured legal audit of Christianity's central authority claims - not emotionally, not devotionally, but procedurally. It applies Torah law as a governing legal system and asks whether the claims attributed to Jesus retain standing under that jurisdiction. The analysis focuses on claims such as: Authority to ""fulfill"" Torah in a way that alters obligation Authority to speak with binding divine force Authority to forgive sins independently of Torah process Authority to mediate access to God Authority as the exclusive path to salvation Authority as a messianic figure whose role changes law or covenant Each of these claims has legal consequences. Each triggers Torah's safeguards. The Method (In Plain Language) This book follows a simple, transparent structure: Jurisdiction - If Sinai is invoked, Sinai's court applies Claims - What authority is actually being asserted? Standards - What does Torah law permit or disqualify? Outcome - Do the claims survive review? No theology is imported. No later doctrine is allowed to override earlier law. No claim is exempt from testing. The Finding Under Torah jurisdiction, disqualification is triggered repeatedly. The failure is not cumulative - it is structural. Under Torah law, one unauthorized breach ends authority. The verdict does not evaluate sincerity, morality, or intention. It evaluates legal standing. What This Book Is - and Is Not This book is: A procedural audit of authority claims A clear explanation of the method and verdict A compact gateway into a much larger case file This book is not: A devotional work A sermon or polemic A judgment of personal faith or character It judges claims, not people. Why This Companion Exists The full documentation - including line-by-line textual analysis, side-by-side comparisons, and detailed evidentiary records - appears in the controlling volume: Court Case Jesus: A Torah-Jurisdiction Audit of Gospel Authority Claims and in the wider Court Case series, which examines Christianity book-by-book under Torah law. This companion gives you: the framework the rules the verdict The full volumes give you the entire record. Who This Book Is For Readers questioning Christian authority claims Jews, Christians, and former Christians seeking clarity Students of Jewish law and covenant theology Anyone who wants analysis instead of argument If Christianity invokes Sinai, Sinai gets the final word. This book explains why - calmly, clearly, and decisively. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Frans HansenPublisher: Frans Hansen Imprint: Frans Hansen Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 0.40cm , Length: 27.90cm Weight: 0.191kg ISBN: 9798233930140Pages: 72 Publication Date: 18 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationFrans Hansen is an independent biblical researcher devoted to disciplined, text-centered reading of Scripture. His work is grounded in a simple conviction: the Hebrew text governs its own meaning, and interpretation must remain accountable to language, structure, and covenant context. Hansen approaches Tehillim and the wider Tanakh with methodological consistency. He reads within mesorah, prioritizes peshat, and resists importing theology, sentiment, or later systems into poetic speech. For him, Scripture is not a collection of inspirational fragments but a coherent covenant document that can be examined carefully, tested rigorously, and taught responsibly. His writing is marked by clarity, restraint, and structural precision. Rather than offering devotional impressions or speculative symbolism, he seeks to identify what the text permits, what it requires, and where interpretation must stop. This approach has drawn readers who value intellectual honesty, reverence for Hebrew, and disciplined engagement with tradition. In this volume on Tehillim, Hansen applies that same method to all 150 psalms, reading them as covenant speech spoken within Israel's history and preserved through Jewish transmission. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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