Chapter 10 frames restoration as the recovery of the true family lost at the Fall. Because the first household corrupted love, life, and lineage, salvation cannot end with isolated individuals being helped; it must culminate in a restored family that can expand outward into tribe, people, nation, and world.

The chapter repeatedly names Adam’s family as the actual target of providential history. Religion, the Messiah, and restoration history are all ordered toward the emergence of true parents, true children, and a God-centered lineage.

It also presents Jesus in explicitly family terms. His mission included establishing the restored family that the first Adam failed to build, which is why chapter 10 treats family restoration as the decisive unit in the logic of salvation.