Acharya Prashant explains that for a person, God will always be personified because humans are limited to perceiving things through names, figures, and forms. He asserts that when a person calls God beautiful or great, they are bringing the truth down to a human level, making it subjective and comparative. He suggests that the highest respect one can pay to God is to not talk about Him at all, as any description or conceptualization is a form of blasphemy that maligns the truth. Instead of focusing on God, Acharya Prashant advises individuals to examine their own situation and the nature of living as a person, which involves burdens of knowledge, expectations, and obligations. He emphasizes that real religiosity lies in thinking deeply about one's own condition rather than attempting to remember or define God, which only leads to contradictions and the creation of false images.