Acharya Prashant explains that the state of the faithful is beyond the description of the petty, conditioned mind. Quoting Guru Nanak from the Japuji, he emphasizes that anyone attempting to describe this state will ultimately regret it because human language and logic are insufficient to bear the weight of mystical truth. The mystic possesses a direct knowing that does not rely on external sources like books or sensory experiences, a concept that remains unfathomable to the common mind. This impossibility of intellectual capture is necessary, as it prevents the ego from turning spirituality into a commodity or a mere academic exercise. The speaker highlights that the mind's constant attempts to analyze and categorize the divine lead only to frustration and suffering. However, this very frustration holds the potential for redemption if it leads to total surrender. He critiques the audience for their lack of genuine etiquette, discipline, and attention, noting that they approach sacred texts and spiritual masters with the same casual or suspicious attitude they use for worldly matters. He asserts that the divine cannot enter a 'dirty house' or a mind filled with dishonesty, calculation, and egoic resistance. Finally, Acharya Prashant calls for a radical transformation of one's being, starting with an honest observation of one's own conduct and internal state. He points out that the audience's physical restlessness and lack of focus are symptoms of a deep-seated resistance to the truth. True knowing requires one to 'drop dead' to the ego and its old strategies. He challenges the listeners to recognize their own spiritual poverty and to cultivate the innocence and surrender necessary to approach the immeasurable, rather than trying to dissect it with a corrupted and suspicious mind.