Acharya Prashant explains the biblical verse 'Watch and pray that you enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.' He clarifies that the focus is not on the temptation itself, but on the identity of the one facing it. He asserts that as long as an individual identifies with the body and the ego, they will remain weak and failure in the face of life's challenges is certain. The 'flesh' or the body is inherently weak and cannot overcome trials through its own strength. Therefore, the prayer to not enter into temptation is an acknowledgment of the ego's limitations and its inability to succeed on its own. He further elaborates that spirituality is centered on the question of 'Who am I?' If one operates from the ego, every situation in life appears as a frightening obstacle or a test because the ego is constantly seeking self-preservation. Acharya Prashant suggests that the goal is not to become a person who can overcome great hurdles, but to become someone for whom hurdles cease to exist. This state is achieved when the ego is dissolved. When there is no 'I' to be hurt or challenged, external events—even calamities like earthquakes—are no longer perceived as problems or trials. True spirituality, according to Acharya Prashant, is the end of the seeker's separate existence. He explains that a saint is not someone protected by divine intervention from disasters, but someone who does not perceive disaster as a problem in the first place. The saint's prayer to avoid temptation is answered by the dissolution of the self that experiences temptation. When the ego is gone, life's circumstances remain, but they no longer function as 'tests' or 'trials' because there is no one left to be tested. The weakness of the flesh is bypassed by identifying with the spirit rather than the limited self.