Words don’t come easy for me to express my gratitude to our excellent system of government.
My leader had a special affinity to rainbows and I thought it would be most appropriate to add a playlist of soothing a cappella music that starts off with a rainbow.
Life is a pareto optimal curve between being right and being friendly.
Always do the right thing, your good sister in Christ tells you. But the problem of insisting on doing the right thing is that you could actually be wrong. For example, the Pharisees thought they were right when they nailed Jesus to the cross.
Next, be friendly. Maintain friendship. It is easy to see when this could go wrong if you imagine you are friends with Doctor Octopus.
So it is important to choose good friends, kind and courageous allies.
This way, you can do the right thing and maintain friendship at the same time.
First trial, before Annas [nightime hours]; Annas is looking for an accusation, biding time till Sanhedrin is gathered at High Priestly villa
Second [and primary] trial before Sanhedrin, Jesus is condemned, misused
Third trial, immediately at dawn [meanwhile, Peter denies Jesus a third time; Jesus looks upon him]; the condemnation repeated, then Jesus taken to Romans
Fourth trial before Pilate [till “beginning at Galilee”]
Fifth trial before Herod [looks for miracle]
6th trial before Pilate
Jesus is scourged; the city cries, “Crucify Him or we will tell Rome!”
Jesus is finally turned over to be crucified
Jesus mocked (Roman soldiers); crown of thorns
Judas hangs himself
Jesus bears His cross to gate on north of city and is crucified around 9 am
1 This column represents standard First Century Jewish day/night cycles—sundown to sundown. Notice that slaying of the lambs “between the evenings” on Nisan 14 would in this case happen on Friday afternoon (which is when, according to John 18:28, the Jewish authorities intended to keep the feast).
2 This column represents the day/night cycles very possibly in popular usage among the Galilean Jews—sunup to sunup. Notice that slaying of the lambs “between the evenings” on Nisan 14 would in this case happen on Thursday afternoon (which is when Jesus and His disciples kept the feast).
3 This column represents modern day/night cycles—midnight to midnight.