The Infernal Gospels is a heretical novel about what happens after belief collapses—and something worse replaces it.
Set in a fractured Hong Kong ruled by cult leaders, tech prophets, and monetised desire, this book turns theology inside out. Hell is no longer punishment. Heaven is no longer reward. Power belongs to those who understand attention, hunger, and submission.
Lucifer watches from below, no longer interested in salvation.
Satan rises again as Setina Aguila, a modern goddess preaching freedom through excess, influence, and spectacle. Her followers don’t pray—they perform. Her religion doesn’t demand belief—it offers belonging.
Pulled into this chaos is Lucas Chan, a fallen disciple whose faith failed, whose ambition betrayed him, and whose survival depends on learning an uncomfortable Hell was never the lie. It was the last honest place left.
Darkly comic, obscene in spirit, and philosophically ruthless, The Infernal Gospels is a satire of modern spirituality, digital power, and the cults we pretend aren’t cults.