Hezekiah Cleaveland is the pastor of New Testament Cathedral in California. He's married to the beautiful and ambitious to a fault Samantha Cleaveland; who happens to be the dynamo behind Pastor Cleaveland's television ministry. Samantha's ambitions cause her to often times become so cruel to the ministers and staff members of the church she leaves tears in her wake.
Together they are building a new 20,000 seat, forty-five million dollar mega church while homelessness plagues their city. Advocates for the homeless as well as the homeless themselves are not shy about verbalizing their feelings about the new building. One such mantra which caused even this reader to pause was from an elderly woman "how can you justify spending forty-five million dollars on a building that will only be open on Sunday mornings when you know that every night, of the year, thousands of men, women and children live and die on the streets of this city?" Pastor Cleaveland feels that since his ministry has given to the homeless plight over the last ten years they should be grateful for the handouts and not worry about his new church.
Come Sunday Morning shines the flashlight on greed, resentment and lavish lifestyles lived by this mega couple. But deferred dreams and empty souls present one bad decision after another which leads to murder in the church pulpit come Sunday morning. At times the book was a too little wordy. I felt the author was trying to impress me with how the Cleavelands lived. All in all it was a good read.
Hill's new novel offers a first-hand account of what could go wrong when a pastor isn't called as a shepherd but as a power hungry man.
A complimentary copy of this book was provided by the author for the purpose of this review.
Missy - Readers Paradise
3 book marks