Frans Hansen
Torah-first forensic research

Stop debating shadows. Test the claim under Torah.

Frans Hansen’s books examine Christian claims by the Hebrew Bible’s own covenantal controls: public revelation, textual context, Torah continuity, named covenant subjects, and observable fulfillment.

666 Shadows of Jesus book cover
New reader

Start with the shortest route.

Use the companion summary if you need the method before the full case files.

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Missionary prooftexts

Go after the flagship claims.

Use Isaiah 53 and 666 Shadows for the claims most often used in debate.

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Noahide clarity

Stay under Torah jurisdiction.

Use the Seven Gates to avoid inherited church assumptions.

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Teacher / debater

Use the books as field manuals.

Choose by claim-type: prophecy, typology, divine agency, atonement, or covenant replacement.

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Featured books

Not every book has the same job. These are the conversion drivers: the shortest entry, the biggest prooftext, the broad typology audit, and the divine-agency case.

Why the site exists

The question is not whether Christians can preach symbolic connections. They can. The harder question is whether the Hebrew Bible itself authorizes those conclusions before later theology supplies the decoder key.

A resemblance is not a prophecy. A sermon is not a covenant. A later interpretation is not automatically the original meaning of an earlier text.

Core controls

  • Torah must remain Torah.
  • Sinai outranks later private claims.
  • Public covenant requires public meaning.
  • Israel, Judah, and Zion cannot be quietly reassigned.
  • Prophetic fulfillment must be observable, not rescued by fog.