yes there are sequential events which are explanatory chains but to say all chains are sequential in time is wrong. Since The building you are standing in is contingent on its solid foundations which are contingent on solid ground.
And the foundations could not have been put there if there was not solid ground already there - solid ground is a prerequisite of solid foundations, and has to occur earlier in the time sequence. Identifying it now as a necessary step is to implicitly require that it was there at an earlier point, even if I wasn't there to witness it.
So what if there is a time delay between a quark and the proton it comprises although is there?
If you're attempting to establish necessity then demonstrating one must pre-date the other is, dare I say it, a necessary part of the argument - you can't conclude until you've met the prior conditions.
But since you are insisting on time being the thing things are dependent on by which all is explained you have arrived at time as the necessary.
No, I've said that time is necessary for necessity - if you don't have time, you can't have necessity, but you can have a timeless reality.
You see ......it doesn't go away.
It doesn't need to go away, it was never there.
Would you now agree that infinite stuff is dependent on infinite Time?
No.
O.