Chapter 4 presents the Completed Testament Age as a shift from restoration-through-struggle toward settlement-through-parental-love. The Ceremony of the Settlement of the Eight Stages is described as the point where the right of the eldest son, the right of the parent, and the right of kingship can begin to stabilize around love.
The chapter’s political-theological center is parenthood. Democracy and communism are treated as Cain-Abel structures that cannot resolve themselves; they need a parent-centered ideology grounded in the family and publicly declared through True Parents.
That makes proclamation more than messaging. In this chapter, proclamation changes jurisdiction, intensifies the role of the family as the bridge into history, and reframes restoration as something meant to settle into durable ownership under love.