Acharya Prashant explains that the sacredness and power found in scriptures like the Ashtavakra Gita or Jaap Sahib arise from a fundamental commitment to the truth. He describes the world as a manifestation of truth for those who love it, whereas for those who deny truth, the world becomes a mere substitute or competitor. When an individual is completely dedicated to the truth, everything about them—their words, their body, and their actions—becomes aligned with that truth and serves as a scripture for others. This alignment is what creates the 'magic' that cuts through a listener's mental chains and ego. The speaker emphasizes that humans naturally crave completeness because their daily existence is marked by inadequacy and limitation. He suggests that the most logical and common-sensical approach to life is to surrender one's incomplete, material existence to the service of the complete. Using a financial analogy, he explains that just as one would invest a small amount to gain a larger sum, a wise person invests their limited life, intellect, and knowledge to reach the infinite. He concludes that the truly smart individuals are the saints who use their earthly existence to target the ultimate truth, rather than those who are merely successful in the material world.