Chapter 6 presents earthly life as the season in which a person ripens into something that can be harvested by heaven. It uses the language of fruit, judgment, passports, and registration to say that eternity evaluates embodied results rather than intentions alone.

The chapter is severe but clarifying. Heaven is not pictured as a vague destination entered by sentiment, but as a realm that recognizes a life proven through love, substance, and public responsibility.

Its positive center is just as strong as its warnings: what lasts is love for God and love for the world, not the credentials or comforts people accumulate here.