What this book covers
What if the “shadows of Jesus” in the Hebrew Bible are not proof at all?
Christians are often told that Jesus is hidden everywhere in the Hebrew Bible: Genesis, the Passover lamb, the bronze serpent, the Tabernacle, Psalms, Isaiah, sacrifices, feasts, names, numbers, symbols, codes, and patterns.
But does the Hebrew Bible itself authorize those conclusions?
666 Shadows of Jesus? is a courtroom-style Torah investigation. Frans Hansen places 666 Christian hints, types, shadows, parallels, and prooftexts under the Hebrew Bible’s own rules: not church tradition, not later theology, not devotional imagination.
At the center stands The Frans Hansen Seven Gate Torah Verification System: Torah Integrity, Hierarchy of Authority, Public Accessibility, Covenant Subject, Interpretive Consistency, Observable Fulfillment, and Messianic Qualification.
The system cuts through the fog. A resemblance is not automatically prophecy. A symbol is not automatically covenant. A later sermon is not automatically the original meaning of an earlier text. If the Hebrew Bible predicted Christianity, it must be able to say so without being forced, spiritualized, reversed, or decoded centuries later.
Inside you will find claims tested from Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, the Historical Books, Psalms, the Prophets, divine-agency texts, Aleph-Tav arguments, paleo-Hebrew claims, name codes, genealogy claims, replacement-Israel theology, blood-atonement distortions, Torah-override claims, and probability-stacking apologetics.
You also get 21 expanded battlefield trials for major missionary texts including Genesis 3:15, Genesis 22, Genesis 49:10, Numbers 21, Deuteronomy 18, Psalm 22, Isaiah 7:14, Isaiah 53, Jeremiah 31, Zechariah 12:10, and more.
Built for Jews, Noahides, ex-Christians, questioning Christians, Messianics willing to face the Hebrew Bible without church interpretation, teachers, debaters, study groups, and serious Bible readers.
The burden matters. If Christianity claims the Hebrew Bible predicted, authorized, or required its theology, Christianity must survive the Hebrew Bible’s own covenantal standards — not later assumptions, emotional pressure, mystical symbolism, “already-but-not-yet” rescue language, or a thousand weak shadows stacked together and called proof.
Each claim enters the courtroom. Torah cross-examines it. The verdict lands.
Read this before you accept another “Jesus in the Hebrew Bible” claim.
