Daniel Cooper
(Age at beginning of series: 30)

Daniel Cooper was born in St. Louis, Missouri, but lived in many towns throughout the United States. His father, Cliff Cooper, was a congregational minister and went from one parish to another, preaching the word of God--and slowly building his reputation. Because of this, Daniel had to learn to fit in quickly, like an army or navy brat. He often got into mischief, went along with the crowd, because he wanted so desperately to fit in. Eventually, Cliff Cooper became a much sought after speaker and personality and traveled all around the world building his ministry--and leaving his wife and young son alone many times in his effort to spread the word.

Daniel rebelled against his father often throughout his childhood and teens, yet the one thing that he always believed in was that his father represented pure faith; his word was pure--that is until they moved to Irvine, California when Daniel was 15, and the TV cameras started rolling. Soon, his father's ministry turned into a glitzy show where the word and the piggy bank were pushed equally.

Seeing the opportunity before him, Cliff began to move away from the specifics of the congregational religion, finally morphing into a sort of vanilla religion available for the masses, a quick fix. Cliff Cooper was perfect for Southern California, smart, good looking, charismatic, and energetic. Most important, his church was all about making people feel good about themselves. He gave the people exactly what they wanted. He had an uncanny ability to make people feel like he was talking just to them. His ministry skyrocketed, and Cliff was its rising star. He quickly tapped into the media market, tapes, books, and an ever-expanding TV signal. His ministry's staff grew into the hundreds. With the ever-increasing salaries, overhead, advertising, etc., that became integral to running the ministry, more and more the quest for tithing became the focus of the sermons. It became harder and harder for Daniel to respect his dad as he watched him struggle for power.

Daniel attended college for four years, where he majored in literature and minored in music. This was followed by three years of theological school. As he traveled around throughout his life, Daniel managed to learn a lot, from helping his dad build habitats for humanity to cooking for the homeless with his mom--to where to buy the best cherry bombs (courtesy of a gang he hung with in Philadelphia).

Daniel's mother was the nurturer, a warm, loving woman who always took a back seat to her husband. Sadly, both she and Daniel were not the most important things in Cliff's life. Although Daniel's mother could see that the ministry put too much emphasis on money, she was also able to see the good that it gave people. This conflict caused an emotional dilemma for her.

Cliff Cooper is a charismatic man, who can get almost anyone to do just about anything--with a great emphasis on tithing. He is not an insincere man, but a driven man who sees his ministry as the absolute answer, and to keep that ministry running, money is necessary. For him everything is either black or white. Cliff's great desire is to be like Billy Graham with the kind of power that Billy wields over world politics and the powers that be in the business world. His jealousy of Billy eats at the heart of him. Where Billy has written 30 books--6 of which became bestsellers--Cliff has only written 3, the latest of which is the only one to receive major attention, having reached the NY Times bestseller list.

The beginning of the end for Daniel's relationship with his father came when he fell in love with Kathy (Kate) Sullivan, a Catholic girl whom Cliff found completely unsuitable for his son. Cliff believed that this girl was not "the one" for Daniel. Besides Kate was completely unsuitable by virtue of the fact that she was not a follower of the "church of Cliff." Dad's dream was for Daniel to finally "see the light" and to take over his ministry when he retires, and Kate being a nonbeliever would not fit with the program. Hoping that Daniel's relationship with Kate would fade, Cliff did nothing to interfere, but undermined it at every opportunity.

After dating for three years, Daniel told his father that he intended to marry Kate, but Cliff forbade the marriage. Daniel was not strong enough to go against his father's wishes. Instead, he asked Kate to be patient, hoping that his father would eventually give his blessing, but Kate knew that Cliff never would. Fearing that Daniel would never be able to stand up to his overbearing father, Kate gave him a final ultimatum, "leave with me today or lose me forever." Unable to break with his father, Daniel begged her for just another week, but Kate knew that another week would turn into months, then years, then forever. So she left on her own. Deciding to move as far away from Southern California as possible, she headed for Florida. Halfway across county, she had a fatal car accident.

Daniel was devastated by Kate's death. He fell into a deep depression and took out his anger on his father. After a bitter argument with Cliff over Kate, Daniel went over the edge. He hopped a plane for Las Vegas. There, he went on a five-day bender, gambling away tens of thousands of dollars using his American Express platinum credit card--which is how the ministry finally managed to track him down. On the sixth day, he woke up to a big surprise--while drunk, he'd married a showgirl named Stella. Within hours, the ministry swooped down and got him out of Las Vegas before the tabloids could get hold of him and send his father's ministry--and top selling book sales--into a tailspin. It is shortly after this that Daniel's part in our story begins.

Filled with self-doubt from the years of living in the shadow of his bigger than life father, Daniel strives to find his place in the world. He's determined to put his life in God's hands, and for the first time in his life, let himself be led by God. For Daniel, God is the north on the compass, the one he turns to for guidance. He addresses Him in a somewhat conversational way. It's his personal relationship with God that makes him so intriguing. Like the rest of us, he too struggles with the world and the pain that is inflicted on individuals and how to apply faith to give comfort. Having come from seeing his father patronize everyone in his TV ministry, Daniel does not patronize, but rather accepts the failings and differences of the people he meets with compassion and understanding.

Daniel is far from perfect, and he doesn't always give the right answers, not because he doesn't want to, but because he simply doesn't know the answer. If he sees he's made a mistake, he does his best to make sure he rights the situation. His heart is always in the right place.

Personality Traits:
Has naturalistic conversations with God
Hopeful
Full of self-doubt
Determined to prove himself
Finds himself to be a natural leader