There is no temple because God allowed Rome to destroy the temple, the city, and the nation, and drive the Jews out of the land in 70AD.
He allowed this because the Jews continued to practice the temple worship system that was an abomination to God after they murdered His Son, their Messiah.
All throughout the Bible, God wanted the Israelites to repent and return to obedience to the Mosaic Law, so it is absurd to think that it is an abomination to God to do that. Jesus was going around teaching good news and healing people, so he was extremely popular with the people. Jesus was arrested in the middle of the night and rushed through an illegal trial, so the vast majority of the Jewish population had no idea about what had happened until it was already too late. There was one crowd that was stirring up against Jesus out of the millions of Jews who were in Jerusalem. Moreover, on the cross, Jesus prayed to forgive them for they knew not what they were doing.
If you insist on doing as the Jews did, it to is an abomination to God because it rejects what Jesus did on the cross.
He confirmed the new covenant of grace, mercy, forgiveness, and life with His precious sinless blood on the cross.
In Titus 2:14, Jesus gave himself to redeem us form all lawlessness and to purify for himself a people of his own possession who are zealous for doing good works, so becoming zealous for doing good works in obedience to the Mosaic Law is the way to believe in what Jesus accomplished through the cross (Acts 21:20) while returning to the lawlessness that he gave himself to redeem us from is the way to reject what he accomplished. Jesus spent his ministry teaching his followers to obey the Mosaic Law by word and by example and he did not establish the New Covenant for the purpose of negating anything that he spent his ministry teaching, but rather the New Covenant still involves following the Mosaic Law (Jeremiah 31:33).
[qoote]The veil of the temple was rent, signifying the temple worship was no longer valid or acceptable to God.[/quote]
The Bible does not say that the veil being torn signifies that, but rather that's just what you've made up.
Go study Hebrews. It is very clear that the Law, the old covenant has been fulfilled and replaced with the new covenant God promised in Jeremiah.
You best be very careful in what you are doing and teaching concerning your denying what Jesus did for you.[/QUOTE]
"To fulfill the law" means "to cause God's will (as made known through His law) to be obeyed as it should be", so Jesus spent his ministry fulfilling the law by teaching how to correctly obey it by word and by example. According to Galatians 5:14, anyone who has ever loved their neighbor has fulfilled the entire law, so it refers to correctly obeying it as it should be, not to something unique that Jesus did to replace it. In Galatians 6:2, bearing one another's burdens fulfills the law of Christ, so again it refers to correctly obeying, but you don't consistently interpret that as saying that we replace the Law of Christ by bearing one another's burdens. In Romans 15:18-19, Paul fulfilled the Gospel by brining Gentiles to obedience to it in word and in deed, which refers to fully preaching it, not to replacing it.
I am by no means denying what Jesus did for us, but rather repenting and becoming zealous for obeying the Mosaic Law is the way to believe in what he did for us (Acts 21:20). You should be careful with speaking against following what God has commanded.
In Deuteronomy 13:1-5, the way that God instructed His people to determine that someone is a false prophet who is not speaking for Him is if they teach against obeying the Mosaic Law, so if you think that the authors of the NT did this, then according to God you should consider them to be false prophets, so though the reality is that they were servants of God who never spoke against obeying Him. The bottom line is that we must obey God rather than man, so we should be quicker to disregard everything that any man has said than to disregard anything that God has commanded. The author of Hebrews should not be interpreted as speaking against obeying God.