Acharya Prashant addresses the perceived conflict between Abrahamic religions, which condemn idol worship, and Hinduism, which appears to embrace it. He explains that the condemnation of idol worship in the Bible is directed at the act of elevating one specific, limited form to the status of God, which is a form of attachment that leads to suffering. However, he clarifies that Hinduism's approach is fundamentally different; it does not worship many gods, but rather recognizes the divine in all manifestations. By seeing every form—whether a stone, a river, or a person—as a 'letter from the beloved' or a servant sent by the Lord, the Hindu mind transcends the limitation of a single idol. When everything is worshipped without exception, it ceases to be idolatry and becomes a universal recognition of the formless truth within all forms. He further explains that the ability to see the divine externally is entirely dependent on the state of one's internal center. Drawing a parallel with the Kena Upanishad and the words of Jesus, he suggests that the world is an expression of the truth. If the heart is centered in God or pure emptiness, then the eyes will perceive that same divinity in everything. Conversely, if the ego dominates the heart, one cannot truly recognize godliness even in a prophet or the Son of God. Therefore, true worship is not about sticking to a particular statue, but about a state of mind where the internal emptiness allows one to see the divine unconditionally in all of existence.