• Every symmetry of physics laws leads to a conservation law, and every conservation law arises from a symmetry in the laws of physics. 
  • Symmetry is the casual structure built into the creation module.  The creation module has a two-way arrow of time that is built into it.  All current information is always passed back into the versatile storage unit.  These informational totals can’t be changed or deleted.
  • The closed sub-atomic quantum system is a duplicate of the macro quantum system.  The two systems interact on a binary basis.
 
  • A SITUATIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE JEWS WHEN JESUS SHOWED UP:
  • THE TIMELINE, AND SOME COMPONENTS:
  • Judea:  
  • Twelve Tribes of Israel
  • Ancient history
  • Kingdom of Judah
  • Babylonian captivity
  • Assyrian captivity:
  • In 722 BCE, ten to twenty years after the initial deportations, the ruling city of the Northern Kingdom of Israel, Samaria, was finally taken by Sargon II after a three-year siege started by Shalmaneser V.
  • Second Temple
  • The Second Temple period in Jewish history lasted between 516 BCE and 70 CE when the Second Temple of Jerusalem existed. The sects of Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, Zealots, and early Christianity were formed during this period.
  • In the writings of Josephus and the Gospels, for example, the Sanhedrin is presented as a political and judicial council headed by the high priest (in his role as a civil ruler); in the Talmud, it is described as primarily a religious legislative body headed by sages, though with certain political and judicial functions.
  • Jerusalem
  • The Siege of Jerusalem was a military campaign carried out by Nebuchadnezzar II, king of Babylon, in 597 BC.
  • 2ND:  SOME COMPONENTS:
  • The Rise of the Maccabees, Lions of Judea : Book 1 by Amit Arad | 9781541417717 | Booktopia
  • The Maccabean Revolt  was a Jewish rebellion, lasting from 167 to 160 BCE, led by the Maccabees against the Seleucid Empire and the Hellenistic influence on Jewish life.  where a group of Jewish rebel warriors who took control of Judea, which at the time was part of the Seleucid Empire.[1][2] They founded the Hasmonean dynasty, which ruled from 167 BCE to 37 BCE.
  • The Talmud is the comprehensive written version of the Jewish oral law and the subsequent commentaries on it. It originates from the 2nd century CE. The word Talmud is derived from the Hebrew verb ‘to teach’, which can also be expressed as the verb ‘to learn’.
  • Pharisees claimed Mosaic authority for their interpretation of Jewish Laws, while Sadducees represented the authority of the priestly privileges and prerogatives established since the days of Solomon, when Zadok, their ancestor, officiated as High Priest.
  • The Pharisees saw themselves as a separate group of people. They were above the common people and saw that they kept to the religious laws. Scribes could interpret and regulate Jewish laws, but they did not interfere with or assume any role in the guidance of the people.
  • 332 BCE
    Alexander the Great conquers Phoenicia and Gaza, probably passing by Judea without entering the Jewish dominated hill country on his way into Egypt.
    200 BCE–100 CE
    At some point during this era the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) is canonized. Jewish religious works that were explicitly written after the time of Ezra were not canonized, although many became popular among many groups of Jews. Those works that made it into the Greek translation of the Bible (the Septuagint) became known as the deuterocanonical books.
  • 157–129 BCE
    Hasmonean dynasty establishes its royal dominance in Judea during renewed war with the Seleucid Empire.
    63 BCE
    Pompey lay siege to and entered the Temple, Judea became a client kingdom of Rome.
    40 BCE–4 BCE
    Herod the Great, appointed King of the Jews by the Roman Senate.
    6 province of Roman Judea created by merging Judea proper, Samaria, and Idumea.
    10 Hillel the Elder, considered the greatest Torah sage, dies, leading to the dominance of Shammai till 30 CE, see also Hillel and Shammai.
    26–36 CE
    Trial and crucifixion of Jesus by the Romans.
    30–70 CE
    Schism within Judaism during the Second Temple era. A sect within Hellenised Jewish society starts Jewish Christianity, see also Rejection of Jesus.
    66–70
    The First Jewish–Roman War ended with destruction of the Second Temple and the fall of Jerusalem. 1,100,000 people are killed by the Romans during the siege, and 97,000 captured and enslaved.[citation needed] [3] The Sanhedrin was relocated to Yavne by Yochanan ben Zakai, see also Council of JamniaFiscus Judaicus levied on all Jews of the Roman Empire whether they aided the revolt or not.
    70–200
    Period of the Tannaim, rabbis who organized and elucidated the Oral Torah. The decisions of the Tannaim are contained in the MishnahBeraitaTosefta, and various Midrash compilations.[4]
    73
    Final events of the First Jewish–Roman War – the fall of MasadaChristianity starts off as a Jewish sect and then develops its own texts and ideology and branches off from Judaism to become a distinct religion.
    115–117
    Kitos War (Revolt against Trajan) – a second Jewish-Roman War initiated in large Jewish communities of Cyprus, Cyrene (modern Libya), Aegipta (modern Egypt), and Mesopotamia (modern Syria and Iraq). It led to the mutual killing of hundreds of thousands of Jews, Greeks, and Roman.
     The Talmud, or oral law, includes the Mishnah, a six-part Hebrew compilation finished around A.D. 200, but in popular parlance Talmud usually refers to the 38 volumes of the Gemara, in which later rabbinic generations used the Mishnah’s bare-bones argumentation as a springboard for more razor-sharp parsing of logic.  The Babylonian Talmud (Bava Batra 14b — 15a) gives their order as Ruth, Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon, Lamentations of Jeremiah, Daniel, Scroll of Esther, Ezra, Chronicles.
     SOME KEY CHRISTIANITY DATES:
    Shortly after the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ (Nisan 14 or 15), the Jerusalem church is founded as the first Christian church with about 120 Jews and Jewish Proselytes (Acts 1:15), followed by Pentecost (Sivan 6), the Ananias and Sapphira incident, Pharisee Gamaliel‘s defense of the Apostles (5:34–39), the stoning of Saint Stephen (see also Persecution of Christians) and the subsequent dispersion of the Apostles (7:54–8:8, also Mark 16:20) which leads to the baptism of Simon Magus in Samaria (8:9–24), and also an Ethiopian eunuch (8:26–40). Paul’s “Road to Damascus” conversion to “Apostle to the Gentiles” is first recorded in 9:13–16, cf. Gal 1:11–24. Peter baptizes the Roman Centurion Cornelius, who is traditionally considered the first Gentile convert to Christianity (10). The Antioch church is founded, where the term Christian was first used.
    • 37-41 Crisis under Caligula, proposed as the first open break between Rome and the Jews[5]
    • Before 44 Epistle of James if written by James the Great
    • 44? Saint James the Great: According to a medieval tradition, on 2 January of the year AD 40, the Virgin Mary appeared to James on a pillar on the bank of the Ebro River at Caesaraugusta, while he was preaching the Gospel in Spain. There is no factual evidence of this. Following that vision, St James returned to Judea, where he was beheaded by King Herod Agrippa I in the year 44 during a Passover (Nisan 15) (Acts 12:1–3).
    • 44 Death of Herod Agrippa I (JA19.8.2, Acts 12:20–23)
    • 44-46? Theudas beheaded by Procurator Cuspius Fadus for saying he would part the Jordan river (like Moses and the Red Sea or Joshua and the Jordan) (JA20.5.1, Acts 5:36–37 places it before the Census of Quirinius)
    • 45-49? Mission of Barnabas and Paul, (Acts 13:1–14:28) to Cyprus, Pisidian AntiochIconiumLystra and Derbe (there they were called “gods … in human form”), then return to Syrian AntiochMap1
    • 47 The Church of the East is created by Saint Thomas
    • 48-100 Herod Agrippa II appointed King of the Jews by Claudius, seventh and last of the Herodians
    • 49 “Since the Jews constantly made disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus,[6] he [Claudius] expelled them from Rome.” (referenced in Acts 18:2)[7]
    • 50 Passover riot in Jerusalem, 20,000–30,000 killed
    • 50? Council of Jerusalem and the “Apostolic Decree” of Acts 15:1–35, same as Galatians 2:1–10?, which is followed by the Incident at Antioch[8] at which Paul publicly accuses Peter of “Judaizing” (2:11–21); see also Circumcision controversy in early Christianity
    • 50-53? Paul’s 2nd mission (Acts 15:36–18:22), split with Barnabas, to Phrygia, Galatia, Macedonia, Philippi, Thessalonica, Berea, Athens, Corinth, “he had his hair cut off at Cenchrea because of a vow he had taken”, then return to Antioch; 1 ThessaloniansGalatians wrote? Map2Lydia of Thyatira, a seller of purple, becomes the first European Christian convert[9] (Acts 16:11-15)
    • 51-52 or 52-53 Proconsulship of Gallio according to an inscription, only fixed date in the chronology of Paul[10]
    • 52, November 21 St. Thomas the Apostle lands in India.[11][12][13] Establishes churches at KodungalloorPalayoorParaurKottakkavKokkamangalamNilakkalNiranam, and Kollam
    • 53-57? Paul’s 3rd mission, (Acts 18:23–22:30), to Galatia, Phrygia, Corinth, Ephesus, Macedonia, Greece, and Jerusalem where James the Just challenges him about the rumor of teaching antinomianism (21:21); he addresses a crowd in their language (most likely Aramaic); Romans1 Corinthians2 CorinthiansPhilippians wrote
    • 55? “Egyptian prophet” (an allusion to Moses) and 30,000 unarmed Jews doing The Exodus reenactment massacred by Procurator Antonius Felix (JW2.13.5, JA20.8.6, Acts 21:38)
    • 58? Paul arrested, accused of being a revolutionary, “ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes“, teaching resurrection of the dead, imprisoned in Caesarea (Acts 23–26)
    • 59? Paul shipwrecked on Malta, called a god (Acts 28:6)
    • 60? Paul in Rome: greeted by many “brothers”, three days later calls together the Jewish leaders, who hadn’t received any word from Judea about him but were curious about “this sect” which everywhere is spoken against; he tries to convince them from the “law and prophets“, with partial success – said the Gentiles would listen and spends two years proclaiming the Kingdom of God and teaching “the Lord Jesus Christ” (Acts 28:15–31); Epistle to Philemon written?
    • 60-64? an early date for the writing of 1 Peter (written by Peter)
    • before 62 Epistle of James.
    • 62 James the Just stoned to death for law transgression by High Priest Ananus ben Artanus; popular opinion against act results in Ananus being deposed by new procurator Lucceius Albinus (JA20.9.1)
    • 63-107? Simeon, 2nd Bishop of Jerusalem, crucified under Trajan
    • 64-68 after July 18 Great Fire of RomeNero blames and persecutes the Christians (or Chrestians[14]), possibly the earliest mention of Christians by that name, in Rome; see also Tacitus on Jesus; Paul beheaded? (Col 1:24,Eph 3:13,2 Tim 4:6–8,1Clem 5:5-7), Did Peter crucify upside-down? (Jn 21:18,1 Pet 5:13, Tertullian’s Prescription Against Heretics Chapter XXXVI, Eusebius’ Church History Book III chapter I), “…a vast multitude, were convicted, not so much of the crime of incendiarism as of hatred of the human race. And in their deaths they were made the subjects of sport; for they were wrapped in the hides of wild beasts and torn to pieces by dogs, or nailed to crosses, or set on fire, and when day declined, were burned to serve for nocturnal lights.” (Annals (Tacitus) XV.44)
    • 64/67(?)-76/79(?) Pope Linus succeeds Peter as Episcopus Romanus (Bishop of Rome).
    • 64 Epistle to the Hebrews written
    • 65? Q document, a hypothetical Greek text thought by many critical scholars to have been used in the writing of Matthew and Luke
    • 66-73 First Jewish–Roman War: the destruction of Herod’s Temple and end of Judaism according to SupersessionismQumran community (site of Dead Sea Scrolls found in 1947)destroyed
    • 70(+/-10)? Gospel of Mark, written in Rome, by Peter’s interpreter (1 Peter 5:13), original ending apparently lost, endings added c. 400, see Mark 16
    • 70? Signs Gospel written, hypothetical Greek text used in the Gospel of John to prove Jesus is the Messiah
    • 70-100? Additional Pauline Epistles
    • 70-200? Gospel of ThomasJewish Christian Gospels: Gospel of the EbionitesGospel of the HebrewsGospel of the Nazarenes
    • 72, July 3 Martyrdom of St. Thomas the Apostle at Chinnamala, Mylapore, Chennai (Tamil Nadu)
    • 76/79(?)-88 Pope Anacletus: first Greek Pope, who succeeds Linus as Episcopus Romanus (Bishop of Rome)
    • 80(+/-20) Didache written
    • 80(+/-20)? Gospel of Matthew, based on Mark and Q, most popular in Early Christianity
    • 80(+/-20)? Gospel of Luke, based on Mark and Q, also Acts of the Apostles by the same author
    • 80(+/-20)? Pastoral Epistles were written (possible post-Pauline authorship)
    • 88-101? Clement, fourth Bishop of Rome: wrote Letter of the Romans to the Corinthians (Apostolic Fathers)
    • 90? Council of Jamnia of Judaism (disputed); Domitian applies the Fiscus Judaicus tax even to those who merely “lived like Jews”[15]
    • 90(+/-10)? late date for the writing of 1 Peter (an associate of Peter as author)
    • 94 Testimonium Flavianum, a disputed section of Jewish Antiquities by Josephus in Aramaic, translated to Koine Greek
    • 95(+/-30)? Gospel of John and Epistles of John
    • 95(+/-10)? Book of Revelation written, by John (son of Zebedee) and/or a disciple of his
    • 96 Nerva modifies the Fiscus Judaicus, from then on, practicing Jews pay the tax, Christians do not[16]
    • 98-117? Ignatius, third Bishop of Antioch, fed to the lions in the Roman Colosseum, advocated the Bishop on Saturday in favor of “The Lord’s Day” (Sunday). (Mag 9.1), rejected Judaizing (Mag 10.3), first recorded use of the term catholic.
    • 100(+/-30)? Epistle of Barnabas (Apostolic Fathers)
    • 100(+/-25)? Epistle of James is written by an author other than James the Just or James the Great.
    •                                                                (Click on Timeline to Enlarge)
    • Church History – Rightly Dividing Matters!timeline of christian church history - Google Search | Orthodoxy, Eastern orthodox church, Christianity
    • VERN BENDER  VERN BENDER
    • VERN BENDER  VERN BENDER
    • Every symmetry physics law leads to a conservation law, and every conservation law arises from a symmetry in the laws of physics.  
    • THE LAW THAT CONTROLS ALL PARTICLE INTERACTIONS IS THIS:
    • ALL THINGS ARE TRIUNE, WITH BINARY INTERACTIVES.  THIS IS THE LINKAGE BETWEEN MATTER AND FORCE CARRYING PARTICLES. FERMIONS AND BOSONS CONTROL THE LINKAGE BETWEEN THE PARTICLE ZOO. 
    • THE REALITY OF HOW LIFE FORMS CAME ABOUT ON THIS REMOTE BLUE MARBLE IS THIS:  THE EVENT ORIGINATOR WROTE THE CODE, PRODUCED THE BLUEPRINT, AND USED AN EVOLVEMENT PROCESS TO OBTAIN THE REQUISITE RESULT.  IT’S ALL JUST A BINARY SOFTWARE PROGRAM.  
    • IT’S ALL ABOUT THE CODE THAT YOU START WITH.
    • THE DESIGNER/CREATOR’S PROCESS : (recap).
    • 1ST: Write the code for the upcoming big bang that will create another universe.
    • (One universe does not an infinity make.)
    • 2nd:  Write the code for the design and evolvement for all intended results as the event unfolds.
    • ( One event does not an eternity make).
    • 3rd:  Set the event in motion.
    • (All things are triune, with binary interactives).
    • 4th:  Monitor, fine-tune, adjust, and select out on-going.
    • 5th: Use DESIGN AND EVOLVE  as the process.  Write a separately coded blueprint for the consciousness of the known thought reposers.
      • 6th: It’s not the people, it’s the event.
      • 7th:  Harvesting new crops of known thought reposers is the intended result.
        • ONE EVENT DOES NOT AN ETERNITY MAKE.
        • ONE UNIVERSE DOES NOT AN INFINITY MAKE.
        • EVOLUTION IS ONLY PART OF THE PROCESS USED.
        • ALL THINGS ARE TRIUNE, WITH BINARY INTERACTIVES.
        • BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL IS ONLY GOOD.
        • ITS NOT THE PEOPLE, ITS THE EVENT.
        • GET BACK TO WHERE YOU ONCE BELONGED.
        • IN THE END, CHOICES ARE NEVER FREE.
        • WHAT TO DO, IS UP TO YOU. 
        •   GETTING BEYOND EVIL IS A START.
        • www.vernbender.com
      • The reality of the unseen is beyond your ken. 
      • It resides on the backside of the space-time continuum.
    • www.vernbender.com
      • Symmetry is the casual structure built into the creation module.  The creation module has a two-way arrow of time that is built into it.  All current information is always passed back into the versatile storage unit.  These informational totals can’t be changed or deleted.
      • The closed subatomic quantum system is a duplicate of the macro quantum system.  The two systems interact on a binary basis.
        • DNA is a codebook that issues instructions.  DNA is the governing force that issues instructions to specific proteins at specific times, in specific amounts.
        • The gene blueprint regulates gene activity.  DNA issues instruction three at a time. DNA is an information structure.    It maintains gene production and regulation to deliver the correct gene functions.  Genes are networked in a complex, sequenced network.  The gene network self schedules and delivers the required results.
        • Information is physical and it represents the ultimate nature of reality. These surprisingly simple assertions have many deep consequences. Information theory is the wellspring of our contemporary digital world.  The universe is an information network. Life is an informational structure.  Quantum gravity interacts with the universe’s knowledge base.  This knowledge base stores the human consciousness bits.  Growing and storing the knowledge bytes from the known thought reposer’s production is the reason that this current universe exists.  The universe’s information structure built the universe.  This information structure operates this universe.  When the universe matures, the consciousness bytes that had been generated by the known thought reposers are saved.  They will be used again, in the next universe.
      • The triune combined functions of consciousness, quantum gravity, and quantum entanglement act as one from the underside of the fabric of space-time.  
    • THE UNIVERSE GENERATES AND STORES  ALL OF THE BITS OF CONSCIOUSNESS.  IT’S ALL ABOUT THE BYTES.
    • www.vernbender,com