Had Caiaphas and Pontius Pilate not been biased, Jesus would have never been found guilty of blaspheming by Caiaphas nor sedition by Pontius Pilate. The author has compiled twenty-seven prophecies from the Jewish Holy Scriptures about the First coming of Messiah and juxtaposed them against the biography of Jesus and two other messianic claimants. He derived twenty-seven questions from the twenty-seven prophecies. He created a scenario in which, utilizing these questions Sanhedrin council would pose their questions to Jesus and the other two claimants. The answers they gave are based on the biographies the author collected and chronologically assembled from the King James Bible and other reputable sources for the other two claimants. After two-thousand years of a guilty verdict, through the process of elimination, their biography-based answers absolved Jesus of all charges against Him. What should have been concluded by the Sanhedrin in the first place is now objectively, and without any hesitation, concluded that Jesus was the long-awaited King, the Messiah. Initially, this book was written as a thesis by the author to obtain his MTS master's in theological studies. However, his one-on-one advisor at Louisianan Baptist University emailed him, "you are blessed for writing this paper, and whoever who reads it is also blessed...." This paper was not written to change the course of Scriptural events chronicled in the King James Bible. But, an attempt to implement 1 John 4:1, "Beloveds, believe not every spirit, but [try] the spirits whether they are [of God: ] because many false prophets are gone out into the world." With editorial formatting, and grammatical changes, the authenticity of the conclusion arrived at in his thesis is preserved in the "Messianic Prophecies, Cross-Examined."