ISBN-13: 9780692876633 / Angielski / Miękka / 2017 / 160 str.
Wearing a tailored suit and holding a bible, Bart Baxter walks out of prison with one goal in mind--to make money and lots of it.
Follow along as Bart exploits religion and manipulates his followers for personal gain. Question your own moral code as you're drawn into Bart's world. Meet Mrs Christianson, Bishop Ronny, Mitch the Finance Guy, Bassist Joey and other memorable characters.
Humor. Suspense. Televangelist.From the back cover: "Sure, a boring church can stay afloat by getting a few lonely saps together every week to gossip and exchange business cards, but for a church to thrive?"Bart tucks in his shirt and zips up his new pants--they're white."For a church to thrive, Julie, it needs to be entertaining. It needs music, it needs laughter, and most of all it needs a leader to look up to."Bart grabs a white jacket to match his pants and slides into it. He continues his lecture while surveying himself in the mirror."It needs a shepherd who offers them reassurance every week. A person who tells them that in this great big scary world, everything is gonna be alright."Bart studies his face in the mirror. "That person isn't God, Julie." He dabs oil from his forehead with a towel."That person is me."
Wearing a tailored suit and holding a bible, Bart Baxter walks out of prison with one goal in mind--to make money and lots of it.
Follow along as Bart exploits religion and manipulates his followers for personal gain. Question your own moral code as you're drawn into Bart's world. Meet Mrs Christianson, Bishop Ronny, Mitch the Finance Guy, Bassist Joey and other memorable characters.
Humor. Suspense. Televangelist.From the back cover:“Sure, a boring church can stay afloat by getting a few lonely saps together every week to gossip and exchange business cards, but for a church to thrive?”Bart tucks in his shirt and zips up his new pants—they’re white.“For a church to thrive, Julie, it needs to be entertaining. It needs music, it needs laughter, and most of all it needs a leader to look up to.”Bart grabs a white jacket to match his pants and slides into it. He continues his lecture while surveying himself in the mirror.“It needs a shepherd who offers them reassurance every week. A person who tells them that in this great big scary world, everything is gonna be alright.”Bart studies his face in the mirror. “That person isn’t God, Julie.” He dabs oil from his forehead with a towel.“That person is me.”