God's Day in Court: All Our Claims
I heard about a woman who was suing God because He struck her property with
lightning. She said that she didn't expect Him to appear in court to try to
defend Himself against the charge, and if the court examined her past life
it would find her reputation blameless. I assume that she was contrasting
her reputation with God's. However, apparently no summons was served.
Lightning struck again when the David C. Cook Publishing Company published
Sylvia Smith's delightful map of Narnia and tried to distribute it to the
eager public. An agent of the anonymous international investors who own the
C. S. Lewis literary estate threatened to sue and blocked general
distribution, claiming that all places in C. S. Lewis's imaginary land are
private property under his control. That's very valuable unreal estate.
He had already been protecting it from musicians. Those who have produced
excellent original albums that use the words Narnia and Aslan have been
forced to withdraw them from the market because those words are said to be
copyrighted. It happens that Narnia is an ancient village on the river
Narn in Italy, and Aslan is the Turkish word for lion. It would be fun to
try to copyright the entire land of Italy and the whole Turkish language
just to see what happens.
It seems to me that map companies that make big money selling maps of the
real world could be forced to pay perhaps 10% of their profits to God for
the privilege of using God's original designs. The 10% could go to God by
way of the churches or religious groups of the map companies' choice. I
assume God would want it that way.
Of course profit-oriented map companies might resort to rather outdated
"God Is Dead" theology and insist that there is No One to pay. If this goes
to court and they win, I may go to court myself and sue for some property
coming to me as one of God's legal heirs. (I'll be happy to pay inheritance
tax on my share of the estate.) God's will is clearly stated in Matthew
5:5, "Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth." I will seek
to demonstrate to the court that although I am not entirely blameless, like
the woman who was suing God for damages, I am indeed meek. That's more than
brash blameless people can claim.
Meanwhile, we can be thankful that the USSR never got the idea of starting
to collect royalties for its portion of all the maps of the world. One has
to admit that for decades the USSR donated an inordinate amount of terrain
to capitalistic map makers who live off the fat of the land.
Then there is Lesotho, far younger, smaller, and less famous than Narnia.
It is a more recent creation. I'm not sure who controls it, but I'd like to
see him go to court and get a token payment from all the atlases that have
already used it without permission. That might double its hopes for the
future in this greedy and dangerous world.
If I were designing a new country with hopes that it would prosper, I
wouldn't name it Lesotho. I would name it Litigious, for clout. I am
fantasizing, of course, but this fantasy is my own property and may not be
used by any party for any purpose without my express permission, which I
definitely refuse to give.
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