CSG Book 7 presents attendance to God as more than holding true ideas. The chapter keeps returning to ordinary actions of seeing, hearing, speaking, feeling, and loving, and insists these should all be centered on God rather than the isolated self.

That makes spirituality perceptual. The issue is not only whether a person assents to a doctrine, but whether daily experience is being interpreted as a child living before Heavenly Parent. Theology becomes embodied in what the senses are trained to notice and how the heart reflexively responds.

This is sermon-worthy because it sharpens a neglected question: not just “What do you believe?” but “What has your faith taught you to notice?” A person may profess attendance while still perceiving life as fundamentally self-centered. The chapter argues that real attendance changes the whole interpretive posture of daily life.