Temptation

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Temptation


What does it mean to face temptation—and what happens when it doesn’t let go?

Temptation is a gripping story of faith under pressure, where belief is tested by desire, doubt, and forces that refuse to stay buried.

Called to serve God, a young priest struggles with relentless inner battles and the weight of expectations that come with a life of devotion. As temptation intensifies—blurring the line between spiritual trial and psychological torment—he is forced to confront questions he can no longer ignore.

But the struggle doesn’t end at the church doors.

As his life expands into the real world—through law, crime, and unsettling truths—he encounters a darker side of humanity that challenges everything he thought he understood about morality, justice, and the Church itself.

Raw and thought-provoking, Temptation explores:

  • The battle between faith and human desire
  • The psychological toll of spiritual conflict
  • Corruption, secrecy, and moral gray areas
  • The search for truth in a world that resists it

This is more than a story about right and wrong. It’s about what happens when belief is pushed to its limits—and whether it can survive the test.

Reviews


Literary Titan Review – June 14, 2026

Temptation, by Pablo Zaragoza, is a work of religious fiction with strong elements of psychological drama and suspense. The novel follows Father Alex Sanchez, a Jesuit priest, psychologist, and lawyer who is sent to a Pittsburgh seminary to evaluate clergy and seminarians for moral, psychological, and legal risks. What begins as an institutional assignment soon becomes something far more personal. Alex is forced to confront corruption inside the Church, the damage caused by secrecy, and his own growing love for Millie, a woman who makes him question whether his calling was ever truly his path.

Zaragoza doesn’t write around temptation. He puts it on the page in raw, uncomfortable terms, and that choice gives the novel its restless energy. Alex’s inner life is messy, repetitive, guilty, and often painfully human. At times, I felt like I was sitting across from someone who was confessing more than he meant to. The prose can be blunt, but that also fits the character’s struggle. This isn’t a polished saint looking back on weakness from a safe distance. This is a man in the middle of it, trying to pray while his body, memory, doubt, and anger all pull in different directions.

I also appreciated how the book widens its focus beyond one priest’s private battle. Zaragoza uses Alex’s assignment to ask hard questions about accountability, hypocrisy, mercy, and institutional self-protection. The novel is candid about the Church’s failures, but it’s not simply anti-religious. The story keeps returning to faith, not as a tidy answer, but as something people use to justify themselves, punish themselves, comfort themselves, and sometimes find courage. I was especially drawn to the tension between rules and love. Alex’s relationship with Millie could have been written as a simple scandal, but instead it becomes part of a larger question: what does a life of faith look like when it is stripped of fear?

Temptation will appeal most to readers who like morally charged stories about faith, guilt, desire, and institutional secrets. It’s not a subtle book. But readers who appreciate candid spiritual drama, flawed narrators, and stories that wrestle openly with the cost of vows will find plenty to think about here. I would recommend it to those who want a provocative, character-driven novel that treats temptation not as an abstract sin, but as a daily, bodily, emotional test of who a person really is.

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