Is God a person under Law?

Scott, you don’t sue gods, you kill them. RE: Deicide
But, don’t forget to burn their bones so their spirits (holy ghost) will rise and they will be remembered forever.

I forgot to put in the last post, getting old, I guess.
RE: Corporations
During the Roman Empire more banking was done in Greece than in Rome because Greece allowed LLC’s where Rome did not. And this would have been in the OT timeline.

Assuming for the moment that God is real and that It is a person under law. Does this mean we can sue God? For say emotional trauma? And, can God be charged under law? For say murder, reckless endangerment, criminal neglect, etc?
No, he'd be protected from such inconveniences, just as corporations are. And he'd probably get fat bonuses, too.
I forgot to put in the last post, getting old, I guess. RE: Corporations During the Roman Empire more banking was done in Greece than in Rome because Greece allowed LLC’s where Rome did not. And this would have been in the OT timeline.
Yeah, its funny how people forget their origins. I've never heard of the limited liability concept from those days though. I know that it was considered a sin to profit in early Christianity though. Simony and usury were extreme sins back then. The Jews were not prevented from this and so became quite useful for many Christians to take advantage of this loophole. It's no wonder they became proficient at it back then.

This is before the Christians were around. The LLC’s were not called LLC’s but the contracts operated the same as an LLC. The interest rates were the same from Ireland, Babylon or Egypt. In Egypt a lot of the farmers would get together and form a bank. But they by law had to charge ½% less if they loaned to a temple (bank). The rate was 5% until Alexander the Great who raised the rate by one half of a point.