No books of the Bible were written at the time Jesus was alive on earth. The old Testament books had already been written, and the New Testament books started to be written within a few years of Jesus' death. All were written by 70AD. Christians regard Jesus as still being alive, although not on earth.
All the Books in the Bible were only estimated to have been written to a certain year, nothing definite. Even who the Authors of the Books was/were are still being debated. So your question regarding when "each Chapter was written" is impossible to answer at this point in time.
A number written using numerals and words would still be considered a number, but it can't be like 5000 or Twenty because 5000 is only made up of numbers, and Twenty is made up of words. The answer would have to be something like 5 Thousand or 2 Tens. Hope this helped!
An abacus is a calculating tool used primarily in parts of Asia for arithmetic. The abacus was in use centuries before the written modern numeral system and is still used by merchants, traders and clerks in Asia and Africa.
Aquaducts, cement, roads, domed shaped roofing, andalso they were the first ones to have written laws ;)
Probably not, depending on the way the will was written. The beneficiary's heirs might inherit.
You are entitled to no proceeds from the life policy if the beneficiary or contingent beneficiary is still alive.
IF you are still the beneficiary on file for your ex-spouse then you are legally entitled to that money. If there was an updated beneficiary that lists other people as the beneficiary then you are not. On caveat is if you are listed as the beneficiary and the ex-spouse has a will in place that leaves the account to someone else, then you are not entitled.
yes. until you change the beneficiary they will stay on there
Of course. The beneficiary is the person designated to get the money, not the insured.
If you are the named beneficiary then of course you can claim it!
If the person has died, if you are beneficiary, the executor is required to notify you. If they are still alive, the only way is to ask them. There is no requirement that they tell you!
If the beneficiary of a policy has died, the estate of the beneficiary can still collect the insurance payment, assuming that the beneficiary does have an heir or heirs of some kind (as most people do). Note that this is a fairly unusual situation, because normally when a beneficiary dies, a new beneficiary is named. There is no reason to allow the policy to have no living beneficiary, unless the insured and the beneficiary happen to die at about the same time, and there is no time to name a new beneficiary.
No, executors are only involved in determining who to give money to, but they can't control what is done with the money by the people who receive it. Once you inherit money it is yours, to do with as you will. Sometimes wills have conditions attached to them. For example, my son will inherit $50,000 but only after he gets married. That restricts his ability to inherit the money, by placing a condition on the inheritance. However, once he does get married and does inherit the money, he can still spend it any way he chooses. If I were to say "My son will inherit $50,000 but I require him to spend it wisely" there is no way to enforce that. I might advise him to spend his money wisely, but in the end he will spend it the way he wishes, wisely or foolishly.
No Dumb@$$ we don't want you
That is the beauty of life insurance~! With a properly named beneficiary there are no taxes and it avoids probate!
Yes, the beneficiary of an inherited IRA (AKA beneficiary IRA) can name a beneficiary to that account. In the past, this was not really allowed so some form may still practice as such.