The Frans Hansen Seven Gate Torah Verification System cover

Frans Hansen book

The Frans Hansen Seven Gate Torah Verification System

One claim. Seven gates. No shortcut around Torah.

A compact companion methodology volume teaching the Seven Gate Torah Verification System: how to test religious claims by text, context, covenant, prophetic outcome, and burden of proof.

What this book does

Religious claims are often sold with confidence before they are tested with Scripture. A preacher says a verse points to Jesus. A missionary says the Hebrew Bible secretly proves later theology. A mystical teacher says a hidden pattern reveals the truth. Even a Jewish-sounding teacher can use Hebrew while quietly breaking Torah.

The question is not whether a claim sounds spiritual. The question is whether it survives the Bible’s own method of verification.

Bring the claim. Bring the text. Walk it through the gates.

The operating system behind the larger case archive

This book is the companion methodology volume to 666 Shadows of Jesus?. Where that larger work functions as the full case archive, this volume teaches the operating system itself. It shows readers how to test claims without being trapped by emotional pressure, isolated prooftexts, church tradition, later theology, mystical creativity, or poetic resemblance.

The Seven Gates ask

  • 1Does the Hebrew wording actually say it?
  • 2Does the immediate context support it?
  • 3Would the original audience have heard this meaning?
  • 4Does the claim preserve Torah?
  • 5Does the whole Tanakh agree?
  • 6Did the public prophetic outcome happen?
  • 7Is the conclusion proven from the text, or read backward into it?

Claims tested inside the book

The method is applied to ten major missionary claims: Genesis 3:15, the Binding of Isaac, Shiloh, the Passover lamb, blood atonement, the bronze serpent, the prophet like Moses, Psalm 2, Psalm 22, and Psalm 110.

Contact is not proof

The system does not pretend every Christian argument is stupid. Some arguments have real surface contact with the Hebrew Bible. A serious method must admit that. But contact is not proof. Resemblance is not covenantal verification. A shadow may decorate a sermon; it cannot rewrite Sinai.

Who should read this

For Jews, Noahides, counter-missionary readers, former Christians, serious Bible students, and anyone who wants a disciplined way to test religious claims by the governing rules of the Hebrew Bible.

New methodology volume

Use the Seven Gate volume as the compact operating manual for testing claims before moving into the larger case archives.

Stress-tested beyond the book

Across the claims tested in this site’s running Seven Gate archive, none survived as covenantal proof. The result does not mean every Christian sermon is impossible. It means the tested claims failed as proof that the Hebrew Bible predicts, authorizes, or requires Christianity.