Acharya Prashant explains that the common notion of God is often used as a tool to evade personal responsibility and accountability. Many people use the idea of God as a creator to justify the ugliness or rottenness of the world, claiming it is God's will and must be accepted. He clarifies that Howard Roark's rejection of God in 'The Fountainhead' is actually a demolition of this myth. Roark asserts that the quality of human existence is not dictated by an external agency but by man's inherent freedom and capacity to choose. Man must take full responsibility for the shape he gives to his life and the earth. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that God is not an active interferer but a facilitator, much like a canvas, brush, and color provided to a painter. While God provides the space and power for creation, the design and the final painting are entirely the responsibility of the individual. He argues that true godliness is not found in praying to a fictitious father figure but in exercising one's faculty of choice in a transcendent way. To live on earth while choosing the 'sky'—that which is beyond immediate material conditions—is the true expression of faith and love for God.