WHAT IF THE NEW TESTAMENT DOESN’T PASS ITS OWN TEST?
This book does not ask you to believe anything. It asks you to judge.
Court Case Jesus subjects the New Testament to the only authority it repeatedly claims to fulfill: Torah law. Not later theology. Not church tradition. Not personal faith. Statute.
This is not a devotional. It is not a sermon. It is not an opinion piece. It is a legal audit.
Using a courtroom framework, the book examines New Testament claims exactly the way Torah itself demands claims be tested-by authorization, jurisdiction, fidelity, and outcome. Each chapter functions as a formal case file, presenting:
- the Torah statute
- the New Testament claim
- the legal effect of that claim
- and a binding verdict
No emotional appeals. No "but the Spirit led us." No immunity for miracles, charisma, or sincerity.
The core question is simple-and explosive:
Can a system that alters law, redirects worship, reassigns authority, or reroutes covenant access still claim Torah continuity?
The findings are not selective. They are cumulative.
The book examines claims about:
- authority over the Sabbath
- forgiveness of sins
- food laws and purity
- marriage and divorce
- worship and divine honor
- mediation and salvation access
- prophetic legitimacy
- apostolic authority
- Paul’s revelation claims
- systemic outcomes across the New Testament
The method never changes.
Statute rules. Claims answer. Outcomes decide.
And the conclusion is unavoidable: If even one confirmed Torah breach stands, the New Testament’s own definition of sin as lawlessness collapses the entire structure that depends on a sinless redeemer, authorized sacrifice, and lawful covenant continuity.
This book does not argue that Jesus was immoral. It does not speculate about motives. It does not psychoanalyze belief.
It asks one question only: Does the system comply with the law it claims to fulfill?
That question has consequences. Whether you are a believer seeking certainty, a skeptic seeking rigor, a scholar tired of circular arguments, or a serious reader who refuses to outsource judgment-this book will force you to confront the claims at their strongest point.
You may disagree with the verdict. But you will not be able to dismiss the method. This is not an attack. It is a trial.
And once the evidence is on the record, there is no appeal to tradition.