The striking phrase in Chapter 2 is not only that people should love or obey True Parents, but that if they unite in heart and “breathe together” with them, they can come to understand their standard and inherit it. That makes inheritance atmospheric before it is informational.
This matters because it reframes what people actually receive in spiritual formation. They do not inherit only statements or commands. They inherit a way of noticing, valuing, reacting, and carrying heart under pressure. Inheritance flows through nearness of atmosphere and repeated relational reference.
That gives the chapter a strong cross-domain parallel to mentoring, parenting, and apprenticeship. In all of those settings, what matters most is often absorbed rather than formally transferred. The chapter’s theology of attendance works the same way.