Acharya Prashant explains that the Kingdom of God is not about meat and drink, yet people celebrate festivals through excessive consumption and the slaughter of millions of animals. He points out that a significant portion of this meat goes to waste, highlighting that mankind continuously goes wrong by refusing to understand the essence of spiritual teachings and instead living in the peripheral. He notes that while a figure like Jesus Christ arises from the essence and desires for others to reach that same state, the limitations of the physical body and a short lifespan make it difficult to transform others. The speaker explains that the birth of such a being is a mystery, often described as being fathered by the unknowable God. Acharya Prashant contrasts the Christian view of sacrifice and redemption with the Indian perspective of Lila, or the divine play. He describes the world as a continuous interplay between the force of Maya and the call of truth. He emphasizes that while the suffering or even the total disappearance of mankind makes no difference to the grand plan of the universe or to God, it makes a significant difference to the individual. He concludes that because the individual is the one who suffers, one must choose carefully to align with the truth rather than the superficiality of meat and drink during festivals.