1 Chronicles 12:05: "Eluzai, Jerimoth, Bealiah, Shemariah and Shephatiah the Haruphite;"



2 Chronicles 12:05: Then the prophet Shemaiah came to Rehoboam and to the leaders of Judah who had assembled in Jeruzalem for fear of Shishak, and he said to them, "This is what the LORD says, 'You have abandoned me; therefore, I now abandon you to Shishak.'"



It's actually rather amusing that there are actual Chronicles verses that can go with the Aslan reference, though it's a shame they don't fit the picture.



But yeah, this is a rather interesting way of trying to explain the Trinity. I find the use of Neeson's Zeus as God the Father both fitting and disconcerting and discomforting. Fitting because a big complaint about last years Clash of the Titans was that Neeson was basically playing (Judeo-Christian) God with shiny armour. Disconcerting and discomforting because, as bad as a lot of naysayers make God out to be in Old Testament, God NEVER was the selfish, prideful, lustful, unfair, unfaithful, rapist tyrant that Zeus was.



Still, I can't help but wonder what an Old Testament book called Titans would have been like. Maybe it could have been an epic like Exodus, with God versus Greek Mythology.