This presentation contends that a discernible pattern exists between a person’s attachment relationships to their primary caregivers and their attachment relationship (or nonattachment relationship) to the living God—the God of personal spiritual experience. Each of the four attachment relationship patterns has implications for how therapists work with spiritually curious or spiritually grounded clients. How can therapists talk about a client’s attachment relationship to God as a displacement of—or defense against—their attachment relationships to parents? How can therapists talk about a client’s attachment relationships to parents as a displacement of—or defense against—their attachment relationship to God? Transforming these attachment relationships to restore wholeness and unity is a crucial treatment goal of Attachment-Informed Psychotherapy (AIP) and the central topic of this presentation. I will demonstrate how therapists can use AIP to enhance clients’ understanding and lived practice of their attachment relationships to God and to significant others. For AIP is uniquely positioned to address the underlying relationship wounds that so often derail a client’s spiritual journey and their everyday relationships. The goal of AIP is to uncover and work through resentment and guilt toward parents, often coinciding with a need for their approval, and often carried over into one’s relationship to God as a parent figure. The client’s latent spirituality can become a lever of both psychological and spiritual transformation. Although there are many methods of harnessing clients’ spirituality, this presentation references the principles of attachment theory to articulate one specific approach that audience members will find easy to comprehend and apply to their own clients. This approach leverages our understanding of the four attachment relationship patterns that govern the construction and maintenance of all relationships, both to God and to significant others. A case illustration of AIP applied to a client’s relationship to God is offered.