Modern spirituality assumes that what matters most is inward sincerity, personal meaning, and private relationship with God. Book 6 chapter 3 complicates that assumption by describing heavenly registration as familial, historical, and lineage-based.

This creates a real tension, not just a rhetorical one. It means the issue is not merely whether I feel close to God, but whether my life is actually attached to a restored order larger than myself.

That tension matters for both theology and pastoral honesty. It clarifies why Unification theology sounds demanding, and it also explains why many people’s lived spiritual experience does not line up neatly with its most concrete claims.