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Basic Of Sikhism

Oct 14, 2007
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No.18
5. Humility
The individual alone, must overcome his own ego and pride. This is most easily done on the path of humility, regarding oneself as the lowest of the low and considering all others as being superior. The humble man, will serve others without material motive or the expectation of reward. He does this through his love of God and man. God is present in every living soul, and therefore to injure the feelings of another person is to hurt the God in him. Those who are vain and the haughty have an inflated ego and as such do not mind exploiting their fellow-men. Even some holy men are not free from pride and prejudice. Guru Tegh Bahadur warned pious people of that pride, which is subtle and unobstrusive.
Modesty is generally appreciated as a virtue. A tree laden with fruit bends downward. Humility is not depreciation of oneself, but rather a recognition of one’s own faults and of how much one falls short of the ideal. It was a practice among the Sikhs before Guru Gobind Singh, to greet each other by touching the other’s feel This was an expression of the Sikh’s humility. In the Sikh religion, the opportunity to touch the feet of saintly beings or even the dust of the feet of the congregation, is regarded as a great blessing. The Gurus in their compositions have called themselves ‘unworthy and without merit.’ This reflects their own sense of humility. Guru Ramdas says:

“O my Master. I am silly, save me, 0 my Lord-God!
Thy slave’s praise in thine own glory!” (AG, 166)

 
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Frequently Asked Questionssikhspirit.comThis list of questions will be added to from time to time. If you have a question submit it by email and we will endeavour to post an answer here.What do Sikhs believe about God?
God Almighty is impersonal, formless, the ultimate reality and is the Creator, personal saviour, inner teacher, omniscient, omnipotent, and incorporeal. The belief is summed up in the Mool Mantar, the core belief which appears at the beginning of the Sikh Holy Scripture, the Guru Granth Sahib. Also the morning prayer, Jaap Sahib, lists hundreds of different attributes of God.
What do Sikhs call God?
God has no name, yet man gives God so many names. Throughout the Sikh scripture many different words are used to refer to God including words such as Allah and Ram which are used in Muslim and Hindu Faiths. Sikhs do however have a favourite word for God. Waheguru (wonderful enlightener).


Do Sikhs believe in incarnations of God?
No. God reveals and manifests through all in the universe, but no finite form can be worshipped as God, who is infinite. God chose to embody the Divine Light in Guru Nanak and in nine gurus successively, and finally to the scriptures themselves, but none are to be worshipped as God.


What is the Sikhs belief on the origin of the Universe and Life?
God existed in deep meditation of the void for countless ages until deciding to create the universe and life. Only God knows how and when the universe and life were created. The Jap Ji Sahib prayer states that God created with one Word and creation


What happens after death?
One’s soul is continually reborn until liberated by the Grace of God, at which time the soul merges with God (Guru). The daily evening prayer, Rehraas Sahib states that this is your one chance to meet God and so it is important to live your life so that you can beak the cycle in this life. You may not get another chance!


Why is there Evil?
Sikhs do not believe in original sin, nor in any evil being such as Satan. God has no enemy or opposite. Humans are inherently prone to succumb to temptations. God created all and gave people free will. Evil occurs when the ego takes over.

How does one achieve salvation?
Salvation is enlightenment, granted by God’s grace only, resulting in liberation from the cycle of rebirth. The soul merges with God (the Supreme Soul) after death. There is also the concept of Jeevan Mukt, liberation while in this life that few people may achieve. Liberation comes after the elimination of the human vices of lust, anger, greed, attachment, and pride (or ego). Frequent prayer, mediation, and song in praise of God, initiation into the Khalsa brotherhood, selfless service to others (seva), charitable works, morality, and obeying God’s Will demonstrate devotion to God and help on the journey.


What about undeserved suffering?
Suffering is not inflicted directly by God but is permitted by God as a test of courage and faith. Suffering is appreciated for the good that it often brings out in humanity, e.g. compassion. Suffering is seen as the remedy and pleasure the disease.
 
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Prayer

img_gt.jpg
Beginning the day with prayer puts us in a positive and peaceful frame of mind. It fortifies our self-confidence, generates new energy and in the process equips us mentally & emotionally to face the daily ordeals of life.

When you sit in prayers, your mind is filled with soothing moral & spiritual thoughts that makes it a self-purifying, self-improving and spiritually enriching experience.

Prayer helps us through illness & tragedy. It puts us in positive frame of mind & revives hope. We gain courage and the ability to face the reality of life.

Affects not only the person who is praying, it affects the entire moral environment in which we live. Thoughts of peace and goodwill from the mind, sends waves of happiness.

And yet we pray only in time of sadness.
 
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Prayer
Worship and prayer and one's relationship with God is central to the Sikh faith. Here are some of the basic principles of prayer as practiced by Sikhs.
Sikhs believe that a true prayer is a wonderful channel through which the powerful love current flows from the humble and yearning heart of a sikh to the Lotus feet of his beloved Satguru. It unites the Lover with the beloved Satguru in a true bond of love relationship. A sincere prayer from the heart cannot go unheard, unheeded and unresponded.
A true prayer is a total submission. It is the total surrender at the lotus feet of the Lord. It rises from total humility of the heart; 'I' ego and 'Haumain' remains neutralized. There is no assertion of individuality. A true sense of meekness or nothingness takes over during prayer.
[FONT=trebuchet ms,arial,helvetica]True Bliss is experienced when ego is non-existent. True Bliss fills the void created by the exit of ego, of total surrender of ego at the lotus feet of the Lord. With ego surrendered, there is no more seeking, all desires disappear, the Sweet Will and Bliss of the Lord takes over.
Guru Granth Sahib
[/FONT][FONT=trebuchet ms,arial,helvetica]​
When you are free of ego (haumain) a direct divine channel is established between you and the God and in this channel flows Divine Grace, Bliss, peace to the yearning and thirsting soul. The greater the sense of humility the higher the force of flow of Grace and Bliss.
Sikhs also believe that you should not limit yourself to prayer in the morning and in the evening like others do. You should be praying continuously. Your actions and service are part of your prayer.
Prayer should not be contaminated with materialistic desires of greed and lust. Do not approach prayer with a business or bargaining attitude. Lord is certainly not in need of money and other offerings as He bestows these on all.
[/FONT][FONT=trebuchet ms,arial,helvetica]Real prayer needs no words, no gesture, no thoughts. A real prayer only comes from the Lord.
In true prayer there is no worshipper and worship; there is only the worshipped.
A true prayer needs no reward; it is a reward in itself.
Baba Narinder Singh
[/FONT][FONT=trebuchet ms,arial,helvetica]​
[/FONT]
 
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ਦੁਨੀਆ ਖੇਲੁ ਬੁਰਾ ਰੁਠ ਤੁਠਾ ॥
दुनीआ खेलु बुरा रुठ तुठा ॥

Ḏunī­ā kẖėl burā ruṯẖ ṯuṯẖā.
The drama of the world is bad; it brings sadness and then happiness.
Guru Arjan Dev
 
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ਮਉਲਾ ਖੇਲ ਕਰੇ ਸਭਿ ਆਪੇ ॥
मउला खेल करे सभि आपे ॥

Ma­ulā kẖėl karė sabẖ āpė.
The Lord Himself stages all this drama.
Guru Arjan Dev - [SIZE=-1]view Shabad/Paurhi/Salok[/SIZE]
 
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ਆਪੇ ਪਿੜ ਬਾਧੀ ਜਗੁ ਖੇਲੈ ਆਪੇ ਕੀਮਤਿ ਪਾਈ ਹੇ ॥੫॥
आपे पिड़ बाधी जगु खेलै आपे कीमति पाई हे ॥५॥

Āpė piṛ bāḏẖī jag kẖėlai āpė kīmaṯ pā­ī hė. ||5||
You Yourself staged the drama in the arena of the world, and You Yourself evaluate the players. ||5||
Guru Nanak Dev
 
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ਆਪੇ ਕੀਤੋ ਖੇਲੁ ਤਮਾਸਾ ॥
आपे कीतो खेलु तमासा ॥

Āpė kīṯo kẖėl ṯamāsā.
He Himself stages His wondrous dramas and plays.
Guru Nanak Dev
 
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ਗੁਰਮਤਿ ਸਾਇਰਿ ਪਾਹਣ ਤਾਰੇ ॥
गुरमति साइरि पाहण तारे ॥

Gurmaṯ sā­ir pāhaṇ ṯārė.
Through the Guru's Teachings, Rama floated stones across the ocean.
Guru Nanak Dev
 
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"God is everything, God is everything. Without God, there is nothing at all.
As one thread holds hundreds and thousands of beads,
He is woven into His creation."
Bhagat Namdev, Rag Asa, pg. 485

THE ESSENCE OF A SIKH
The essence of a Sikh is the the search for Waheguru. The path towards reaching this goal is most elusive. It requires tempering one’s mind, colouring one’s mind with thirst for reaching this goal and love for Waheguru and everything within Waheguru’s creation.
Ultimately, it is the mind alone that holds the key. But the mind is not easily tempered. It is so easily distracted. Try sitting even for a few minutes closing your eyes and thinking of one thing, and the mind quickly jumps elsewhere. The mind both holds the key and presents the greatest obstacle. It quickly angers at the slightest provocation, becomes enamoured with the opposite sex, seeks to have all of that which it does not have, grows attached to that which it does have, and, worst of all, thinks only of its own immediate pleasures.
Sorat Mahala 9
man re, kon kumat tai leeni
Oh mind, where have learned such filthy habits

par dara nindia ras rachio
Engrossed in lust and slander,
ram bhagat nai keeni
You have refrained from meditating on Waheguru.
Though the obstacles seem insurmountable, Gurbani, the experience of the Gurus, can serve as a guide. The essence of being a Sikh is to allow the experience of the Guru’s to serve as our guide. The Guru’s have tread this path, faced these same obstacles that we face, and they overcame these obstacles and reached their goal, through both simran and seva, meditation and service. But, from the Guru’s experiences, it is also clear that one cannot tread this path alone. One requires two elements in one’s life. One is sangat, the company of those who also walk on this path. Our sangat, the people we hang around with, has such an influence over us that with time we begin to mould ourselves into the shape of our sangat. If our sangat’s focus is on sports, then we will mould ourselves to also enjoy those sports. If our sangat’s focus is on drugs, then eventually we will be led towards experimenting with drugs and maybe addiction. If our sangat’s focus is on reaching Waheguru, then the influence of that sangat will awaken a spiritual thirst amongst our own selves as well.
vadhbaghi har sangat bhavai
The very fortunate ones find the sangat that is focussed on Waheguru
bhagheen bhram chota khavai
The unfortunate ever dwell in doubt and confusion, and suffer pain
bin bhaga sat sang na labai
Without good fortune, one does not find the true sangat
bin sangat mael pareejai jio
Without such sangat, the mind is ever consumed by filth.
But Sangat is just one ingredient. The second is discipline. Reaching any goal requires discipline. Ask any olympic athlete how much discipline they have had to have in their own lives in order to reach the stage they have. The spiritual goal, perhaps more difficult than any other endeavour in life, requires much discipline in every aspect of our lives (emotional, mental, and physical). And, though the spiritual journey towards Waheguru is purely an internal one, the mind is so affected by external influences that one must seek to eliminate negative external influences in one’s life and surround themselves with positive external influences that will assist them on the internal journey. Sangat, for instance, is one external influence. Receiving Amrit, one chooses to follow the Sikh way, and one adopts an external form that is intended to promote disciplined living. The kakkar’s, the daily routine of Nitnem, all of these should be used to one’s advantage towards a disciplined lifestyle.
This is not to say that all of those that adopt the external form of a Sikh are living a disciplined lifestyle and making progress on the spiritual journey. Many, perhaps most, are not. The inward journey is so difficult that many who have sought to walk on this spiritual path have fallen from it, due to their inability to disengage their minds from the vices the mind covets, and the inability to temper their minds with love for Waheguru. For them, the external manifestations are all that remain to show that, once, they had attempted to walk on this path. For them, the external manifestations are a constant, daily, reminder that they must make the attempt again. They may fail again, but if the external remains, the self, which is so easily affected by external queues, will eventually pick itself up and make the attempt again to walk on the spiritual path. Life, for many who try to walk on this path, becomes a constant struggle, but without the external queues to remind them of their journey, there may be no struggle towards Waheguru at all. The one that has struggled but failed in the spiritual journey is richer still than the one that has never even attempted the journey.
Then too, many who have adopted the external form of a Sikh do so merely because it has become a tradition in their families. Perhaps, in many such cases, other than wearing the symbols of Sikhi, there is no evidence of Sikhi in their lives. Perhaps, one day, they will also attempt to tread on the spiritual path. Perhaps they will not.
Our minds, it seems, constantly seek out the negative in others, to convince ourselves that we are doing pretty well ourselves (even if we are not). Seeing other people engaged in things we perceive as wrong provides us an opportunity to forgive our own mistakes and feeds our egos. It is not "society", Sikh or otherwise, that is hypocritical. It is our own minds that are hypocritical.
Even my use of the word "our" in the above seeks to hide my own hypocrisy. I am the greatest hypocrite. I see only the weaknesses in others, and I overlook their strengths. And, I hide my own weaknesses from others, and present to the world only the facade that I consider my strengths.
man tu garab aitia garab ladia jayai maya mohni mohiya
Oh mind, you are laden with filth, and thus laden you will depart from this world, Maya (worldly attachments) the enchantress has trapped you,
phir phir juni pavayai garab ladia jayai
and it will cause you to traverse over and over the cycle of life and death. You walk forward loaded with filth
mugad man ant gaiya pashtai
oh foolish mind, in the end you will regret it
ahankar tisna rog laga birtha janam gavayai
Riddled with the disease of ego and desires, you are wasting your life
manmukh mugad chetai nahi agay gaya pachtavhai
The foolish person does not not remember Waheguru and later regrets it
eho kahe Nanak man tu garab atia
Thus says Nanak, oh mind, you are laden with filth,
garab ladia jayai
and thus laden you will depart from this world.
The important thing is to not look towards those who have fallen from the path and be disuaded from walking it yourselves, because on any journey, there will always be more people that attempted and failed than have reached their goals successfully. For the millions of children that toil with their footballs on a daily basis and dream of playing professionally, most will not succeed. But it is the few that do succeed that inspire others to continue to try to make the attempt. The important thing, in the spiritual journey, whether you walk on that path as a Sikh or otherwise, is to look at the example of those that have tread that path and succeeded, and to gain inspiration from them.
 
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Some experiences
http://www.sikhe.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=344&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0

Clinging To The Naam
By Kamalla Rose Kaur
Sunday, April 27, 2003 - 05:30 PM IDLW

The Sikh scripture (which is every Sikh's only Guide and Guru), the Sri Guru Granth, has one main tip to convey to humanity.

"Practice the Naam!" the Sri Guru Granth instructs.

That is all there is too it! Simply drop everything else and focus all your attention on the Naam!

Yet what does that mean?

Literally the "Naam" means "God's Name" or "God's Identity".

"God's Reality" might be another way of understanding the meaning of the Naam.

Practicing the Naam is being constantly aware that God is really real. God exists and cares, and God is watching, and God is participating in your life. God is your audience. God knows your every thought and feeling and intention. You cannot hide anything from God. God knows the truth. In fact God IS the truth! Everything else is just fibs and lies and false claims and con jobs. Sat Naam!

You are also God's audience, particularly when God blesses you with the ability to see God everywhere, in everything. Attempting to see God everywhere in everything is practicing the Naam. The Naam is experiencing each and every situation, day to day, moment to moment, as coming directly from God; in the form of blessings and lessons and challenges.

The Sri Guru Granth instructs us to gear our lives towards pleasing God so that in our last moments in these bodies this life (when our life stories flash before our eyes) God and our souls will be happy with the movie we witness.

Now the Naam is also, in a more mundane sense, the act of repeating and invoking God's Name as a mantra. Sikhs use "waheguru, waheguru....", Christians call on the Name of Jesus.

Repeating the Naam, invoking God by calling God's Name as a mantra, is a technique and a meditation that we can use that helps us practice constant awareness of God.

The Sikh scripture and teacher also instructs God's faithful to get together with other humble God-consecrated people and sing hymns, and share God's Praises! The Sikh scripture does not care what religion these sisters and brothers practice, as long as they are eager to taste the Naam with us!

The Sri Guru Granth explains:

Devotees everywhere worship God in loving adoration. We thirst for the True One, with infinite affection. We beg and implore God; in love and affection. Devotee's consciousness is at peace.

Chant the Naam and take to God's Sanctuary. The Naam is the boat to cross over the world-ocean, so practice this way of life.

(Pause and contemplate these teachings)

O my mind, even death wishes you well when you remember God through the Word of the True Teachings. My intellect receives treasure; both knowledge of reality and supreme bliss, by repeating the Naam with my mind.

The fickle consciousness wanders around chasing after wealth; it is intoxicated with worldly love and emotional attachment. Yet devotion to the Naam gets permanently implanted within your mind, when you are attuned to the True Universal Teachings, the Shabad (the Word).

By wandering around, doubt is not dispelled. Afflicted by reincarnation, this world is being ruined.

But God's eternal throne is free of this affliction. You are truly wise when you take the Naam as your meditation.

This world is engrossed in attachment and transitory love; it suffers the terrible pains of birth and death. Run to the Sanctuary of the True Teacher; chant the Naam in your heart, and you shall swim across.

Following the True Universal Teachings, the mind becomes stable - the mind accepts, and reflects, in peaceful poise.

That mind is pure which enshrines Truth within. Truth is the jewel of spiritual wisdom.

By the Fear of God, and the Love of God - by devotion - we cross over the terrifying world-ocean, focusing our consciousness on the God's Lotus Feet.

The Naam, the most pure and sacred, is within my heart. My body is Your Sanctuary, God.

The waves of greed and avarice are calmed within us when we treasure the Naam. Please subdue my restless mind, O Pure Immaculate One. Says Nanak, I have entered Your Sanctuary.

- SGGS page 505


Kindly refer to the link above
 
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Sikhism - " Waheguru: The Ineffable Divine Light "..........
Dr. Harbans Lal, Professor and Chairman, Department of Pharmacology, University of North Texas, Fort Worth, Texas, USA
********************************************************************************


Waheguru - The Ineffable Divine Light, by Dr. Harbans Lal



Overview:

In the Sikh tradition, Waheguru is a focal word around which every activity of a Sikh revolves. Waheguru simran(meditation) serves as a constant expression of an
internal awareness of the Divine, and the term Waheguru is included in daily vocabulary as a social expression of Divine consciousness. Thus, in the life of a Sikh,
continuous chanting of Waheguru becomes

1. A state of mind
2. A conceptual formulation of theology
3. An observance of ritual
4. A mode of communication among fellow beings.

When a Sikh meditates, he/she adores the Creator as Waheguru as the prescence of the ineffable Divine light, as well as an act of thanksgiving to God. Here,
thanksgiving is to express gratitude for numerous gifts received in life. When Sikhs join in community prayer, they glorify their heroes and their history by chanting
loudly, Waheguru.


Term Waheguru translated:

Waheguru is made up of two words, "Waha", and "Guru"; the word "guru" is further made up of "Gu", and "Ru". Waha is a form of addressing the greatness of God
as marvellous, wonderful, ineffable, unspeakable or simply as an expression of feeling blissful; the word Guru personifies God into illuminating energy which removes
the darkness of illusion. In Sikh tradition it is the object of deity for worship. The most accepted translation today was given by the eminent Sikh historian, Bhai
Santokh Singh, in his book 'Nanak Prakash'.

The gurmukhi verse was translated by Sikh theologian, Sardar Kapur Singh as below:

"Wahe means wondorous, that which cannot be described by means of a proposition or syllogism, Gu, means, inertia, matter, nascence, transience and Ru, means,
the destroyer of them, the Light that animates and sustains pure consciousness."

The term Waheguru was introduced in Gurmat by Guru Nanak who is said to ordain recitation of Waheguru as a tool(mantar) of meditation or simran. Once, Guru
Nanak asked His companion Bhai Mardana, that he should continously chant Waheguru as they wished to cross the river by doing so. Perhaps, there was a hint to
cross the ocean of life with the strength of Waheguru recitations.

The practice of simran by recitation of mantar was meant to bring to mind the object of worship with singular attention. Thus, Waheguru is meant to serve both as a
tool and the object in the Sikh practice of simran.

Poet laureates of Guru's court, Bhats, witnessed Guru Amar Dass meditating on Waheguru. Their testimony is referred in Sri Guru Granth Sahib as:

"Guru Amar Dass meditates by chanting Waheguru and thus He lives in bondage with the Creator."

Guru Gobind Singh included a recitation of Waheguru in the Holy ritual of Baptism and ordained His followers to employ Waheguru as Gur-mantar. Since then, the
recitation of Waheguru has been continuously emphasized in the Sikh injunctions.

In Sri Guru Granth Sahib, there are several references to the rehat of reciting Waheguru. It is said that those who look up to the Guru for their guidance always
recite Waheguru, to the contrary of those who rather listen to their own intutions and poison themselves to spiritual death.

"You are ordained to always recite Waheguru as the Waheguru recitation pleases your Guru.

The followers of Guru recite Waheguru always, in their sleep as well as in their awakened hours.

'Says Nanak, they who contemplate all the time are cleansed'.
'Says Nanak, those who recite Waheguru from the deapth of their heart, will achieve salvation and will not be answerable to the Angles of Judgement'.



Waheguru as an expression of the Creator:

The word Waheguru adorns the Divine as, one equal to whom is none other. Thus it is said in Sri Guru Granth Sahib:

"Waha Waha bani
nirankar hai...."

'The term Waha or Waheguru denotes the Formless who is Matchless'.
'The term Waha(or Waheguru) denotes praise of the Lord as it is realized by those seeking guidance from the Guru'.
'The term Waha(or Waheguru) denotes the transcendental Truth through which the seekers may reach the Lord'.



Waheguru as an expression of gratitude for the gift of life:

The Guru ordains recitation of Waheguru as an act of thanksgiving to God. Thanksgiving is an expression of gratitude for numerous gifts received. Through chanting
of Waheguru, a Sikh transforms the entire creation as an occassion to experience the Divine and to live in the gratitude of God for the gift of life and numerous other
bounties.

"Wahu khasam tu Wahu
jin rach rachna ham kiye"

'Indescribable is Waheguru who brought us to this world through His creation'.
'Praise the Waheguru who blesses us with livelihood'.
'Praise Waheguru who is the master of my soul'.



Waheguru as a means of purification:

In the Sikh tradition, cleansing deeds are especially stressed. They are expressed as 'isnaan' which is one leg of Sikh tripod. The corporal personality of a Sikh
stands on three legs namely:

1. Naam - worship of the Supreme Being
2. Daan - charity(sharing of intellect, wealth and bodily skills with others)
3. Isnaan - consists of truthful living, practice of honesty in trade and profession, and in dealing with others.

Further, isnaan ordains seeking of constant company of other seekers and men of God to facilitate the path of salvation. Expression of gratitude by singing
Waheguru is also said to be a cleansing deed or isnaan. As illustrated below through a verse from Sri Guru Granth Sahib, the virtue of expressing gratitude through
recitation of Waheguru is to purify your mind, body and thought processes. Such a deed scrubs the stains of ego from one's consciousness. This effort of purification
is a necessary step towards acquisition of the Divine consciousness and towards developing a link with the Ultimate Truth.

"Recitation of Waheguru as expression of gratitude cleanses your mind and salvages your consciousness from the perversion of illusionary ego"



Waheguru as a means of salvation:

Meditation of Waheguru was ordained by the Guru as means of pleasing the Creator and of achieving salvation.

"Nanak Wah Wah kartya
Prabh paya karam prapat hoey"

'Says Nanak, by meditating on Waheguru one achieves the Lord and receives His grace'.
'Says Nanak, those who recite Waheguru from the deep of their heart, will achieve salvation and will not be answerable to the Angles of Judgement'
 
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CONCEPT OF NAM (DIVINE NAME):

According to Gurmat (Guru's teaching), before the creation, God lived
Absolutely by Himself, Formless. When He made Himself manifest, He
first
formed Himself into NAM (Divine Name) and then created Nature. After
creating Nature, He did not go away from it, rather He sustained His
creation with His Own presence into it, and felt delighted.

"Aapinai aap sajio aapinai rachio Nao
Dui kudrat sajiai kar asan ditho chao."
(Asa Mohalla 1- pauri 1, p-463)

"God created Himself and assumed Name
Second besides Himself He created Nature
Seated in Nature He watches with delight what He creates."
(Translation of the above)

1) NAM (Divine Name) and God are not two different entities. Nam is
just
another aspect of the Almighty, still Formless. Nam is the total
expression of all that God is. Nam sustains everything:

"Nam sustains and controls all beings
Nam supports the universe and its regions."
(Gauri Sukhmani Mohalla 5, 16-5, p-284)

2) Nam is not expressed as mere noun and it does not mean that
there
is
a special name of God and by enchanting of which, one will meet Him.
He
is Infinite and can be called with infinite names, but who can count
His
infinite names? The enlightened and the blessed ones remember Him
through His Attributes:

"Tav sarb nam kathai kavan
Karm nam barnat sumat."
(Guru Gobind Singh- Jap Sahib)

3) God may be called by countless names by the devotees, who create
these names according to the attributes of their Godhead, but the
first
and the foremost name of God is clearly depicted as 'SAT' (Eternal
Truth) which shows the ever-existence of God:

"Kirtam nam kathai terei jihba
Satnam tera pra purbla."
(Maru Mohalla 5, p-1083)

4) The word NAM is a mystic Word used in practical religious life
and
in
discipline of meditation. God is remembered by His attributive names.
There is another aspect of it called true Name which emanates from a
prophet's personal experience. It emerges from a vision that the
Prophet
has of the Divine Being. Such a mystic Word in Sikh religion is
called
'Waheguru' or Wonderful God or 'Thou art Wonderful'. True Name is not
the word by which we describe an object, but the total power, quality
and character of Reality. Through the word 'Waheguru' the prophet has
tried to sum up mystic power and experience of His presence all
around.
Prophets have given us Divine Names of the nameless God, which
reflect
His presence in our consciousness. Contemplation or meditation on
true
Name (Waheguru) is called practicing the presence of God in one's
conscious.

5) Gurbani (Divine Word) itself is NAM.

a) Gurbani itself is Nam:
"Gurmukh bani nam hai, nam ridai vasaie."
(Sarang ki Var-pauri, p-1239)

b) The term 'Nam Japo' means to remember God and to invoke His
presence
in one's conscious. All modes of meditation take the devotee into the
presence of God, but according to Gurbani, Hari Kirtan, the musical
recitation of Gurbani, is the super form of meditation. It invokes
one's
consciousness to the maximum level, into the presence of God:

"Har kirat utam Nam hai vich kaljug karni sar."
(Kanre ki Var Mohalla 4, p-1314)

c) The Gurmat explains that the recitation of the word 'Har Har..'
is
Nam Japna:

"Har har har har nam hai gurmukh pavai koei."
(Kanre ki Var Mohalla 4, p-1313)

d) Salvation cannot be attained without Nam. In other words
anything
that delivers salvation is Nam. Since Gurbani delivers salvation,
therefore, Gurbani is Nam:

"Sachi bani mithi amritdhar
Jinh piti tis mokhdwar."
(Malar Mohalla 1, p-1275)

'The True Bani is sweet-nectar
Whosoever is devoted to it, attaineth salvation."
(Translation of the above)

"Sachi bani sion dhare piyar
Tako pavai mokhdwar."
(Dhanasari Mohalla 1, p-661)

Whosoever devoted to Eternal Bani
Will get deliverance."
(Translation of the above)

It is therefore, very clear and evident that any form of recitation
of
Gurbani, may be simple reading with attention and devotion or
meditation
on any Sabad of Gurbani or Kirtan of Gurbani, is fully deemed as Nam
Japna (meditation on Nam), that is to invoke the presence of God in
one's conscious.

It may be mentioned here that there are small sects who mislead the
innocent Sikhs on the subject of Gurbani and Nam. These sect leaders
very emphatically say to the innocent Sikhs," Gurbani says that one
must
meditate on Nam, but Gurbani is not Nam. Come on, we will give you
Nam."
Then they whisper in their ears some broken sentence of Gurbani which
they call Nam, and warn them not to tell any one; if ever they
disclose
this Nam to any one, some curse will fall on them. In this way they
run
their cults (shops). Thus, innocent Sikhs and others are lured and
misled into their fold. The Sikhs should, therefore, be very careful
from such sects. Those who try to say that Gurbani is not Nam, they
are
either misguided or are deceitful. According to Gurmat (Guru's
teaching), Gurbani is everything:

Gurbani is Nam:

"Gurmukh bani Nam hai.."
(Sarang ki Var-pauri, p-1239)

Gurbani is Guru:
"Bani Guru, Guru hai Bani..."
(Nat Mohalla 4, p-982)

Gurbani is Nirankar:"Wauh wauh bani nirankar hai
Tis jiwad avar na koi."
(Slok Mohalla 3, p-515)

'Wauh wauh Bani is the Formless One
There is none as great as He."
(Translation of the above)

Gurbani is every Nad and Ved:
"Sabh nad beid gurbani
Man rata sarang pani."
(Ramkli Mohalla 1, p-879)

It is, therefore, Nam that ultimately leads a person to Eternal
Bliss.
For God consciousness, one must come in contact with Nam, but without
Guru one cannot attain Nam and would wander away in the darkness.

"Were a hundred moons to appear
Were a thousand suns to arise
There would still be utter darkness
If there were no Guru."
(Asa di Var, Mohalla 2, p-463)

"Let no one in the world remain in doubt
That it could ever be possible to be saved without the Guru."
(Gaund Mohalla 5, p-864)

"In this age of falsehood, Nam lieth hidden
Though the Lord filleth all hearts,

The Jewel of Nam becomes manifest in the hearts of only those
Who resort to the Guru's refuge."
(Parbhati Mohalla 3, p-1334)

"All repeat God's Name, yet He is not attained
But when through the Grace of the Guru
God comes to reside in the mind
It is only then one's life becomes fruitful."
(Gujri Mohalla 3, p-491)

This article taken from book published by
Sikh Missionary Center
P.O. Box 02664
Detroit, Michigan 48202


BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Sri Guru Granth Sahib Jee
2. Bhai Gurdas- Varan
3. Bhai Vir Singh- Santhia Sri Guru Granth Sahib
4. Dr. Kartar Singh- Sikh Fundamentals
5. Prof. Sahib Singh- Jiwan Birtant of the Gurus

Concept of Naam (Divine Name)
 
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What Should man do
Prani kaun upao karai
SGGS Page 632
Raga Sorath

O what should man do.
To attain the love of God.
And dispel the fear of death. Refrain.
What work should he do?
What knowledge he must acquire?
What virtue must he practise?
What divine Name should he contemplate?
To cross the perilous ocean of life.1
In this dark age of ignorance.
There is but one divine Name.
The Name of the merciful Lord.
Contemplating which liberation can be gained.
This is the highest Religion.
So do the scriptures proclaim.2
The Lord who is above joy and sorrow.
Ever resides within us.
Like the image in the mirror.3


"Religious life" acording to Guru Tegh Bahadur has twofold
propose to dispel the fear of death and attain the love of God.
These are two fundamental aims of all higher religions."Fear and love"
says Guru Nanak, go side by side. The fear of God is reverence and awe
and not the fear that strikes terror. It is a fear (bhau) which changes
ito love (bhao). This love is the descent of the illumined Spirit into
the body and the soul. There is one practical path, a spiritual exercise,
recognized by all higher religions: that is to attain the revelation of
God within us through intense devotion and dedication. With this devotion
is connected the spiritual discipline of the contemplation of His Name.

This spiritual discipline is the Nama-sidhannta, or Nama Japa called Zikar
in sufi tradition. It is the meditative contemplation of the mystic Word,
the Name of God, imparted by the Gurus, the divine Preceptor. It is
considered by the Gurus to be the easiest and most efficacious path for
liberation. It has great bearing on the art and music of North and South
India. The Name is at first the symbol, the collective attribute of God.
When the music of the Name sinks into our consciousness, it becomes the
essence of the One whose Name is sung. The Name becomes the Spirit and
Being of God.


From Hymns of Guru Tegh Bahadur
Translation and commentary by Trilochan Singh.
What Should man do
 
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ATMA...Soul...Jiv.......

ATMA, Sanskrit atman, originally meant `breath`. Later the term came to connote `soul` or `principle of life`. The different systems of Indian philosophy gave it further semantic shades. NyayaVisesaka considered atma a substance and endowed it with qualities of cognition, pleasure, pain, desire, aversion and effort.

Sarikhya recognized it as an object of inference. BhattaMimansa held it as the object of internal perception (manaspratyaksa). PrabhakaraMimansa considered it to be the knowing ego revealed in the very act of knowledge and held it to be the subject and not the object of perception. The Upanisads regarded it as the object of higher intuition and equated it with Brahman, the Impersonal Absolute. Sarikara`s advaita Vedanta held it to be pure consciousness above the distinction of subject and object, knowable by an immediate intuitive consciousness. Ramanuja, however, rejected Sarikara`s concept of atma as pure consciousness and considered it to be nothing but the knower or ego. The SIKH concept is nearest to the UpanisadicAdvaitic viewpoint. In Sikh lore, atma is considered to be of the nature of pure resplendent [
shining brightly; full of splendor; dazzling; splendid ]consciousness : man turi joti sarupu hai apna mulu pachhanu 0 my Self ! you are of the nature of light; do recognize your origin (GG, 441). `Light` here signifies consciousness. The Self (atma) is conscious while the nonself is the object of consciousness. Though itself not an object of consciousness, atma is apprehended by unmediated intuition. "As the Self realizes, enlightenment grows without effort" (GG, 87). In fact, consciousness is directed outwards to objects, inwards to atma. Atma is pure consciousness without any content. Thus the contentless consciousness within is atma. Atma is not different from Paramatma, the Cosmic Consciousness, but is only a fraction thereof. Kabir designated it as Ram ki ans (a fraction of Ram). It is the subtlest, purest essence of life: nirmal joti nirantari jatipurest light constantly seen inside (GG, 1039). It remains unperturbedatma ado/u na do/at (GG, 87) through life`s vicissitudes, pleasures and pains. Uninterrupted tranquillity is its hallmark. In its corporeal attire, it passes through cycles of transmigration. Through Divine Grace, it can merge back into the Cosmic Soul (Paramatma) and escape the throes of birth and death again and again. It is equated with Brahman : atam mahi parbrahmu lahante they discover Parbrahma in atma (GG, 276). The individual soul and the Cosmic Soul are indistinguishable one from the other: atma paratma eko karai (he) reckons the personal soul and Cosmic Soul as one (GG, 661). The atma is Divine, the Divine is atma: atam deu deu hai atamu (GG, 1325). Atma is also equated with the Creator: atam pasara karanhara prabh bina nahi janiai. The Self is the creator of the entire universe, beyond it reckon naught (GG, 846). It is also equated with the immanent God: atam Ramu ravia sabh antari the immanent Self pervades everything (GG, 916). The experiential realization of this identification is the summum bonum of Sikh mysticism. Atam dhian (selfabsorption) is the operational mode for such an attainment and atam gian (selfknowledge) is its apprehension. The empirical ego (Aaumai) is only an object of consciousness. There must be a witness of the empirical ego, otherwise there can be no unity of apperception in our knowl edge of the external objects and that of the empirical ego. Atma, in fact, is such witness. However, atma itself is not an object of knowledge; it is the presupposition of all knowledgethe knowledge of objects as well as that of the empirical ego. Atma is thus the transcendental Self as distinguished from the empirical ego. Intuitive apprehension of this is atam gian and its actual experience is atam claras, vision of the Self. Such experiential absorption in the Self is attended with the highest aesthetic pleasure, atam ras or atam rangaesthetic, because it is based on an experience of ultimate beauty. 1. Sher SINGH, The Philosophy ofSikhism. LAHORE, 1944
2. Avtar Singh, Et/iics of the SIKHS. PATIALA, 1970
3. Jodh Singh, Bhii, Gurmati Nirnaya. Lahore, 1932
4. Nripinder Singh, The Sikh Moral Tradition. Delhi, 1990
 
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The Sikh Review
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The author is a Psychiatrist by profession, and one-time consultant with the World Health Organization and the United Nations Development Program. Dr. Neki is renowned as a writer, poet, and theologian. This paper was presented at the Parliament of World's Religions in Chicago in 1993. All references are from Guru Granth Sahib.

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REALIZING THE DIVINE WITHIN: THE SIKH SPIRITUALITY

Dr. Jaswant Singh Neki



What most traditions call 'spirit' is the deepest centre of a person which is open to the transcendent dimension and through which the individual may experience the Ultimate Reality. Spirituality therefore, is that aspect of religious life which is concerned with the experience of the ultimate reality. It appears as the unifying core of all religions. What appears to be divisions and conflicts between religions are in reality based on political, economic and socio-political discensions and are not spiritual in nature. In fact, in the midst of social, political and economic chaos, there appears to be a growing clamor for some sembelance of order. As the prevalent disintegration deepens, the human society will have to turn to spirituality.

The pathways and approaches to spiritual growth might appear to be diverse, but they all essentially converge upon the one objective: realization of the Ultimate Reality, namely God.

Sikh spirituality, while sharing this major concern with almost all religions, has a distinctive approach of its own. It would be our endeavour in this presentation to examine its various aspects and to delineate the distinctive stresses of Sikh spirituality so that its exact impact could be appreciated.

The modicum of the Divine that is within us is our Real Self. It is not the same as our empirical self with which we are ordinarily familiar. The empirical self is oriented only towards our personal survival in the outside world. It gathers its information about the external world with the help of the sense organs and makes responses appropriate through the organs of action. This is how it fends itself against perils of life and dangers of death and tries to survive in an environment wherein only the fittest may survive.

The mental fulcrum of all such self-protective activity is the empirical self or ego, called 'haumai' in the Sikh parlance. It is the centriactive reference point of all our transactions with the external world. It mentally segregates us from the undifferentiated reality and creates for us the illusion of a distinctive circumscribed entity of our own which we begin to defend. It makes us intensely aware of our thus differentiated identity and readily responds to a given name that comes to represent it. From its very inception it engages itself in self-assertion and self defense which are the twin processes of the worldly rat-race called 'dhaturbazi' or 'dhat' in the Sikh parlance.

The Real Self, on the contrary, is not dependent on our sense organs. It is self resplendent:

"O my mind, thou art of the nature of resplendence - pray, recognize thuself." (p.441)

Our sense organs are mere key holes into the external world. They do not inform us of reality. They only provide us of information barely sufficient for our survival. They can sample only an infinitesimal fragment of reality. The eye can only see; it cannot hear or smell or taste and so on. And even here it is provided merely a chunk into the seeable. Of the infinite wavelengths of rays around us, our eye is capable of picking up only the spectral light. It is irresponsive to all the ultraviolet and the infrared wavelengths. The same kind of limitation applies to all other sense organs. While the eye can only see, the ear can only hear and so on. However, although so exclusively specialized, they are all developed from the self same source namely the zygote. This potentially appears to inhere in the Real Self which can:

"See without the eyes and hear without the ears." (p.130)

It is this real self which illumines even our limited sense organs. The Real Self can be realized by making a journey inwards contrasted to the journey outwards i.e. the chase of 'dhat', the journey inwards is called 'liv'. Thus we have at our disposal these two orientations - the outward orientation or 'dhat' conducive to our physical survival and the inward orientation or 'liv' conducive to getting in tune with the modicum of the infinite within ourselves.

The Gurus instructed us how to adjust to the worldly orientation while developing the inward orientation which alone can lead us to our real destination, namely, experiencing the ultimate reality whom we call 'Waheguru' or the Wonderful Lord of the Universe. The feverish racing of the 'dhat' is aimed essentially at acquiring comforts and pleasures, and avoiding pain or threat. Behind such an approach lurks human desire ("kama") which bifurcates everything in the world into such binary categories as desirable - undesirable, pleasurable - hurtful, satisfying - disgusting, and so on. Such a binary perspective further consolidates the illusion of diversity that we impose over the basic unity of the universe.

"And man seems to have no option but to
accept this fate,
Into Cosmic Illusion has this world fallen;
Rare is the person who understands this." (p.558:10)

Ridden by desire man races on. Should his desire be obstructed he frets and fumes in anger ("krodha"). Whatsoever he acquires, and whatsoever he is able to possess, with that he develops attachment ("moha"). When his desire makes him hanker after acquirements beyond his requirements, he gets beset with avarice ("lobha"). If his acquirements and achievements outshadow those of others, he develops pride ("ahankara"). All these moral afflictions, 'kama' or desire, 'krodha' or anger, 'lobha' or avarice, 'moha' or attachment, and 'ahankara' or pride are nothing but superstructures rising from the edifice of the ego. An egocentric individual afflicted by these malevolences in Sikh parlance, is called 'manmukh' or one oriented to his own vain mentality.

A legitimate question arises here, as to who planted the seed of 'haumain' or ego-consciousness in man? Sikh thought does not posit a separate being, like Satan, to hold responsible for it. The Guru affirms that it was by Divine Ordinance that man got his ego-consciousness.

"The affliction of egoism He Himself gave man." (p.1140:16)

In fact, this is how, He wanted His world to run. The generation of egos is considered fundamental to the very act of Creation:

"By raising ego after egos were creatures brought into being." (p.466:5)

This is how He spread His whole game wherein ego are the playthings vying with one another in their struggle for mundane survival, but at some rare moment also craving for spiritual immortality.

"Egoism is a pernicious malady, no doubt, but its remedy inheres withi it." (p.466:18)

Creation thus is a centrifugal process emerging out of and spreading outwards from the Creator. Propelled by the force of 'maya' (Cosmic Illusion), it establishes multi-centered ego-entities which compete and co-operate, dare and endure, and vie with one another in the materialistic struggle.

Such is the condition that comes to prevail in the world and every creature and ego gets conditioned to it. It is thus that everyone gets adrift in the great flux of 'dhat'. Yet He who pushed us into such vicissitude, fully knows our predicament:

"Our affliction Thou knowest all.
Who else does." (P.670:4)

"My God, my True Guru, compassionate to the humble
Here and hereafter you are our protector." (p.628:3)

He who watches us at every step and saves us from every danger, would not leave us tossing forever from birth to death and from death to rebirth in a perpetual cycle of suffering. His unbounded impelling Grace provides mankind with portals after portals of salvation. The Guru is one such portal who, in this Age, holds the key to human salvation:

"The Mind's Chamber has the ceiling of the body:
It is locked by Attachment; and the key is the Guru himself.
Without him the mind's door opens not
For no one else holds the key." (p.1237:11)

Let us dwell a little on the institution of the Guru. Sikhism makes no claim of providing the only gateway for human salvation. In every Age messengers of God, the prophets, the 'avatars' have been and shall continue to be Divine agents for the emancipation of mankind. In the present Age of Kaliyuga, it is the Guru who has been commissioned for the task.

The Sikhs had ten historic Gurus, the first of whom was Guru Nanak who was commissioned by God Himself. The hagiographic chronicles of his life ("janamsakhis") describe in detail his Divine commissioning as a critical event of his life. It was his daily practice to go to the river for his morning ablutions. One day he went as usual but did not return for full three days. That was an interval of vivid mystical experience for him which the 'Puratan Janamsakhi' describes in terms of direct communion with God.

"As per the Supreme Lord's wishes, Nanak, the devotee, was escorted to His exalted Presence. A cup filled with 'amrit' (nectar) was offered to him which he gratefully accepted. A command was then given to him. This is the draught of adoration. Drink it. I am with thee and hereby do bless and exalt thee. This cup of amrit that I have given thee is a pledge of my regard. Who-so follows thee will have My Favour. Go and rejoice in my Name and instruct others to do so.....I bestow upon thee the gift of my Name.....Let this be your calling. Nanak then stood up and made salutation. The voice spoke again, Nanak! do you discern my will? And Nanak recited what the Sikh tradition now knows as the mool mantra (the Prime Revelation)

The One Transcendent God,
The Truth Eternal,
Creator of the Universe,
The Person All-Pervading,
Sans fear and rancour,
The Form that exists beyond Time,
Unborn,
Self-resplendent,
Whose Grace knows no bounds."

The voice was heard again:

"He who receives your Grace, Nanak, shall abide in Mine. My name is the Supreme Lord, Yours, the Divine Guru. From the Heavenly Court a robe of honour was conferred upon him and he was ferried back."

Guru Nanak, the first Guru, was thus commissioned by God Almighty Himself. The commissioning of the second Guru is a story with a difference. Guru Angad, before he came to Guru Nanak, was no extraordinary person. Once, on his way to the shrine of the goddess whom he worshipped, he heard of Guru Nanak and decided to pay him a visit. After that visit, he could not depart from there. Completely abandoning himself to the will of the Guru, and carrying out his spiritual instructions, he, step-by-step, became perfectly attuned with him and thereby with the Infinite. His spiritual discernment became perfect. Bypassing his own sons, Guru Nanak then installed him in reverence, and spent the rest of his life under his tutelage. Thus was established the unique discipline of discipleship in which the role of the perceptor and the perceptee eventually became reversed. Guruship found such successive transfers another eight times, but every time:

"The Light was the same, the Method was identical,
Only the body changed." (p.966:18)

So it really was, because it was his own Revelation that God had installed in the Guru. The latter only proclaimed it to the world:

"He Himself installed (the Word) in the Guru,
And the Guru manifestly proclaimed it aloud." (p.166:8)


Turning To The Revealed Word
---------------------------------

Every disciple, therefore, must turn to this Revealed Word to receive spiritual guidance. Guru Granth Sahib, which embodies for us the Revealed Word, is neither a systematic doctrinal treatise nor a compendium of parables; nor even a testament of the Guru's lives. Compiled at first by the Fifth Guru, it embodies sublimelyaesthetic God - inspired lyrical compositions not only of the Sikh Gurus, but also of some outstanding Hindu saints and Muslim Sufis. This Scripture is not only truly ecumenical, it also enshrines the spiritual tradition that extended over full five centuries from the birth of Sheikh Farid (1173 AD) to the passing away of Guru Tegh Bahadur (1675 AD). It is perhaps the only Scripture recorded and preserved by those on whom it was revealed. Thus it can claim real validity.

The two important liturgical texts for morning recitation by the Sikhs are the "Japu" of Guru Nanak and the "Jap" of Guru Gobind Singh. Both of these are texts for meditation. The latter, by and large, pronounces obeisance to the many Attributive Names of the Almighty, while the former describes both the path and the stage of spiritual ascent. In the very begining the Guru raises this fundamental question:

"How can we demolish the wall of falsehood and become true to the Creator?"

And the Guru himself proceeds to provide the answer:

"By following His Will, inborn in us, ingrained." (p.1:7)

The Guru appears clearly to be instructing us, here, to relinquish our egocentric mentality in favour of orientation towards the Divine Will. It is in this context that the Guru makes a revolutionary departure from the past tradition.

Hitherto, it had been believed that egocentric mentality developed as a consequence of our living in the world, where it seemed to be essential for our identity. Therefore, renunciation seemed to be an obligatory prescription for those desirous of pursuing their spiritual quest. In the Guru's eyes, it was not the 'material world' but the 'material outlook' that had to be foresaken. Renouncing the world was tantamount to becoming a renegrade from the arena of duty ("Dharma"). How can a renegrade from the arena of duty become a hero in the realm of spirituality? One need not relinquish the world, but participate in its affairs with a spirit of dis-attachment:

"As remains the lotus untouched by water
and the swan untouched by the stream,
Let man abide in the world, untouched by it."

If you live thiswise in the world and follow the Will ("Hukam") of God, your own ego-directed mentality ("Haumain") shall disappear:

"Saith Nanak, should one understand God's Will,
His own will (haumain) he will assert no more." (p. 1:10)

But here one may ask:

Who can understand God's Will and how?

The Guru alludes to many possibilities. God's Will manifests itself at least in the form of the great Bounties that He showers on us. God's Will also manifests itself in some of His more discernible attributes - His transcendence, His immanence, His exalted state, His indefatigable creativity, His mighty power of destruction, of taking away life and restoring it and so on. This world of our's itself reflects His immanence, a manifestation of His Will.

"This world is the Chamber of the True Lord, in it is His abode."

When one observes with such intent, one is bound to discover that

"The Lord is recognizable in Nature." (p.141:14)

Not only would one recognize Him there, one would really go into a rapturous ecstasy ("vismad") at such a discovery. "Vismad" or wonder, may very well lead to a deep mystic experience of the extroversive kind.

But a much greater stress, in Sikhism, is discernible in the introversive mysticism of "Naam". Literally, Naam means name, but as a theological term it signifies a spectrum of connotations. Everything has a form ("roop") and its name ("naam"). Since God has no form, He cannot be perceived with our senses. He can only be conceived (in the original sense of the world). Hence, we can only be familiar with His name. A name signifies the essence of what it names. Hence, "Naam" (essence of word) stands for all that God essentially is, that is God Himself. It may stand for His creative Will as in the following verse:

"His own Self He Himself created, and
manifested Himself as Naam.
In the second place, then, He created nature." (p.463:6)

Or it might even signify Himself as the Sustainer of the universe:

"All beings by the might of Naam are sustained,
By Naam are sustained continents and universes,
By Naam are sustained Smritis, Vedas and Puranas,
And the process of listening, knowing and meditating." (p.284:11)

Meditative practice in Sikhism are considered appropriate only if 'naam' pervades them. This type of practice is specifically of uninterrupted meditation on the Word. While the practitioner repeats the Name of the Lord sub-audibly or silently, he simultaneously practices the prescence of God with rapt attention. Through a continuing practice of this type the practitioner gets in tune with God's Will. When that happens, one's own egoistic will ("haumai") simply vanishes. The 'naam' practiced in sub-vocal tones, may be heard when spoken aloud, practised in the congregation or sung collectively ("kirtan"). The Guru himself affirms this:

"One who with his heart meditates on the Naam
Nowise can talk of his ego." (p.286:18)

"Haumain and Naam are to each other opposed
The two cannot abide together." (p.560:12)

Haumain is nothing but the surface-conditioning of our real Self to the world. During sustained and deepening meditation, a stage comess when this surface encrustation gives way and the resplendent Real Self begins to shine forth in its full glory.

One then begins to appreciate that it really is this haumain that is the divisive wall separating us from the Divine, the unitary matrix of all being. In the Guru's words, one becomes aware also of the fact that:

"Whatever is in the Cosmos is present in the Self as well." (p.695:15)

When one finds the selfsame Prescence throbbing with life in all the beings, where is the scope of considering a separate ego of one's own? Where is the possibility of reckoning another as a stranger or as an enemy?

"He who seeth the one Lord in all life
Cannot talk of his own ego." (p.432:13)

We need to bear in mind, here, the fact that meditation can also be secular, in which one just empties one's mind and lets a pure state of consciousness, without any content of consciousness, to prevail. Awareness then simply becomes aware of itself, nothing else being there. This state has been designated as a state of "shunya" or emptiness, in yogic parlance.

But Sikh mysticism would not stop merely at emptying of one's mind or at deconditioning it from the worldly ways. It wants the mind to become positively conditioned Godwards. That is why it prescribes meditation on 'naam' from the very begining, because

"As the Master whom one serves,
So does the servant become." (p.549:11)

In fact, this way, not only does one realize God, one also comes to acquire Godly qualities.

This unison essentially is union of Love; because God is love, no union is possible with Him without Love.

The Sikh concept of God is that of a Loving God par excellence. The Divine motivation behind creation itself was to be able to give vent to the Divine impulse of Love. Even after creation

"Here, there and everywhere He spread Himself as Love." (Jap Sahib)

It is Divine Love that the spiritually evolved Sikh would cherish, not empty salvation or 'moksha'.

"Empty salvation is by the enlightened cast aside." (p.1078:7)

The liberated and love intoxicated soul does not feel content with having attained personal salvation. It now yearns, in love, to work for the salvation of others. Such an exalted soul automatically exacts the utmost adoration of everyone. The Guru himself says:

"Liberated himself who sets himself to
bringing liberation to all
To such a liberated one I'd perpetually
bow in reverence." (p.295:2)

In order to be able to practice such a spiritual love, one essentially has to be in the world. That is why renunciation of the world has been proscribed in Sikhism.

One who thus becomes God-intoxicated, no longer participates in the world as an ordinary man of the world. He becomes a soldier of God, not only promoting good, but also protecting the good from being tormented by the evil. Guru Gobind Singh says:

"I have for this cause taken birth:
To propogate Dharma,
To uphold the saints
And to root out the evil." (Bachittar Natak)

That is why Guru Gobind Singh created an Order of such soldiers of God. It is called the 'Order Of The Khalsa'. The word Khalsa has two connotations. It means 'the pure' and it stands for a monarch's specifically personal domains. Both these connotations, in a way, apply to the members of the Order of the Khalsa. They are expected not only to observe the purity of life, but also consider themselves directly answerable to God and subservient to no other authority.

Such, then is the concept of spiritual attainment according to the Sikh thought. The mundane egocentric mind shatters the fetters of egocentricity through the Guru's Grace, discovers the Real Self as one with Divine, and experience the immensity of Divine Love. Then this liberated Self imbued with the touch of Divine Love yearns to work for the salvation of mankind.

I conclude with an invocation of the Supreme Wonderful Lord, WAHGURU, with a prayer for which I draw a befitting verse from Guru Granth Sahib, our Holy Scripture:

"O God, be Merciful to all and keep everyone in Thy care
Bless us abundantly with our sustenance,
Rid us of poverty and pain,
Ferry us across (the Sea of Material Existence)" (p.125:8)


*****************************
Sikh Spirituality - Realizing The Divine Within

[P.S : In case Font size appears to be on lower side please press cntrl and + [it works very well with mozila firefox.]
 

Astroboy

ਨਾਮ ਤੇਰੇ ਕੀ ਜੋਤਿ ਲਗਾਈ (Previously namjap)
Writer
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Jul 14, 2007
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ਚਤੁਰਾਈ ਨ ਪਾਇਆ ਕਿਨੈ ਤੂ ਸੁਣਿ ਮੰਨ ਮੇਰਿਆ ॥
चतुराई न पाइआ किनै तू सुणि मंन मेरिआ ॥
Caurā­ī na pā­i­ā kinai ū su man mėri­ā
Through cleverness, no one has found Him; listen, O my mind.
Guru Amar Das - [SIZE=-1]view Shabad/Paurhi/Salok[/SIZE]
 
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Sachkhand
Deconstructing Religious Misperceptions
Combating the Myth of Sikhism as a Derivative Religion


The scientific fact about Sikhism is that it is neither a syncretism, an amalgam and intellectual extraction from other religions and creeds nor a sect of Hinduism or Islam as has been variously asserted from time to time by numerous authorities. It is an autonomous, independent religion, complete and whole, with its validity inhering in its own revelations and proclamations such as are repeatedly made in the Sikh Scripture, its pious literature and its historical movement.
- Sirdar Kapur Singh, An Incomparable Prophet: Guru Amar Dass

Sikhism asserts its own unique scriptural canon, prophets, places of worship, traditions, ceremonies, and institutions. There are over 20 million followers of the Sikh faith worldwide. In terms of the number of adherents, it is the fifth largest religion in the world.
Sikhism teaches that only one God exists. God's name is synonymous with the Truth. God is the sole Creator, Destroyer, and Caretaker. God is described as Omnipotent, Eternal, Fearless, and Without Enmity. God is Self-Illuminated, Self-Existent and is experienced through the grace of the Guru (Master, Enlightner).

Whereas the sphere of this essay does not permit a detailed treatise on Sikhism, it is important to provide a brief history of the religion and outline a few key concepts that serve as the core of the religion. Approximately five centuries ago, Sikhism's founder, Guru Nanak, denounced the disunity in society caused by religious divisions. He emphasized complete equality and strove to create a spiritual community where social hierarchy, gender biases and caste divisions would be dissolved, and all would be recognized as One.

The Sikh Gurus initiated profound social reforms and created institutions as well as traditions to facilitate spiritual and worldly upliftment. In 1699, Guru Gobind Singhthe tenth Sikh Guruestablished the Khalsa (meaning "belonging only to the Divine"), a new, voluntary order of the Sikhs. The Khalsa consists of Sikhs who undergo an initiation ceremony and dedicate themselves to the high standards of the Sikh Gurus, by attempting to practice Sikh principles at all times. They maintain a distinct physical appearance by wearing a uniform consisting of five articles of faith. Guru Gobind Singh passed the status of eternal Guruship to the Khalsa, and the Sikh Scripture as enshrined in the Sri Guru Granth Sahib (SGGS), an anthology of sacred revelations documented by the Sikh Gurus and selected Saints.

A Sikh's ultimate goal is to experience constant oneness with God. The Sikh Gurus have prescribed certain means to achieve this: simran (loving remembrance, faith and meditation on God) and seva (selfless service towards all humanity).

The Sikh Rehit Maryada (Code of Conduct) was formulated in the 1940s by the Sikh community to provide concrete guidelines and promote this discipline. For example, it promotes praying three times a day, in the morning, evening, and before bedtime, to remember and thank God throughout the day. The Sikh Scripture is very clear in saying that meditation in seclusion alone is not enough to reach communion with God. Sikhs must maintain the highest moral values and be virtuous in their actions. Sikhs should earn an honest living through hard work and share what they earn with others. They must commit to community service and the betterment of society by combating social ills, inequality, injustice, and oppression. This very political aspect of the religion has led some outside observers to label it not just a religion but a way of life.

The Sikh Scripture (Sri Guru Granth Sahib) incorporates hymns of spiritually accomplished individuals who were considered Muslim or Hindu, as a unique feature. Perhaps this inherently catholic nature of Sikhism has led other traditions to claim it as their own child sect. Being a relatively young religion that has always been surrounded by a large Hindu community, Sikhism has interacted with Hinduism quite a bit. Thus, Hindu culture has socially influenced the Sikh community and vice-versa. However, the assertion that Sikhism is a sect or "offshoot" of Hinduism, or Islam for that matter, remains false. A very definitive scriptural and theological basis clearly depicts this.

Broadly, there are two main types of claims about Sikhism being a subset of Hinduism:

Based on the early scholarship on Sikhism in the English language: European scholars discovered Sikhism during the late 19th century. The early work on Sikhism was rather superficial and unfortunately, the views of those scholars are still broadly accepted. This is so because a small number of scholars have done adequate research on Sikhism until the present time. Moreover, a textbook chapter in a book on something as broad as Eastern Religions typically contains a few paragraphs on Sikhism and says only a few simple things about the religion. Usually, the most easy-to-understand -but incorrect - introduction about Sikhism is to consider it a syncretism of Hinduism and Islam, or a sect of Hinduism.

More recent scholarship in Western academia, in the past two decades, has understood Sikhism as an independent religion in its own right. Unfortunately, this research has not been reflected in introductory textbooks or general books covering Eastern or World religions broadly.


Claims from the traditionally dominant Hindu institutions and their scholars which have propagated hegemony over scriptural, intellectual, philosophical, and sociopolitical aspects of Sikhism, as well as other religions originating in the Indian subcontinent, including Buddhism and Jainism. These are the very institutions and personalities whose authority is unequivocally rejected by the Sikh Scripture in principle, and by the actions of Sikhs over the course of their history.
The Sikh Scripture asserts its originality and completeness:
The Sikh scriptural canon makes clear, emphatic and repeated assertions about Sikhism being nothing short of a complete religion, in its own right, as well as in contrast with Islam and Hinduism. The Janam Sakhis which document many tales from the life of the founding Master of Sikhism, Guru Nanak, tell that Guru Nanaks first sermon was based on his direct encounter with God:
As God willed, Nanak, his devotee, was escorted to His presence, to the divine presence, and then a cup filled with Liquid of Immortality was given him, accompanied by the command: Nanak, pay attention. This is the cup of holy adoration of my Name; drink it. I am with thee, and thee I do bless and exalt. Go, rejoice in my Name, the Name of God, and preach to others to do the same. Let this be thy calling.
Guru Nanak himself refers to this divine assignment with deep gratitude: "I, an unemployed minstrel, was assigned a very rewarding task, indeed." [Var Majh M.1 SGGS 150]. The Janam Sakhis further tell us that Guru Nanaks first sermon was na ko Hindu, na Mussalman, "there is no Hindu, no Muslim." Guru Nanaks own Word denies any distinctions among humankind. Thus, to consider him as a Hindu saint or reformer is thus erroneous. Furthermore, the Sikh scriptures deny deriving any authority or inspiration from any scriptures of any religion, and repeatedly refute the authority of the Vedas and other Hindu texts.
Gauri Ki Vaar, Mahla 4, page 308, SGGS:
O Sikhs of the Guru, know that the Bani, the Word of the True Guru, is true, absolutely true. The Creator Lord Himself causes the Guru to say it.

Raag Bhairo, M. 5, p. 1136, SGGS:

I do not keep fasts, nor do I observe the month of Ramadaan. I serve only the One, who will protect me in the end. || 1 ||

The One Lord, the Lord of the World, is my God Allah. He administers justice to both Hindus and Muslims. || 1 || Pause ||

I do not make pilgrimages to Mecca, nor do I worship at Hindu sacred shrines. I serve the One Lord, and not any other. || 2 ||

I do not perform Hindu worship services, nor do I offer the Muslim prayers. I have taken the One Formless Lord into my heart; I humbly worship Him there.||3||

I am not a Hindu, nor am I a Muslim. My body and breath of life belong to Allah to Raam the God of both. || 4 ||

O Kabeer, this is what I say: meeting with the Guru, my Spiritual Teacher, I realize God, my Lord and Master. || 5 || 3 ||

Raag Ramkali, M.3, Anand, p. 920, SGGS:

Bani, the Word, other than that of the True Guru, is false.

Raag Maru, M.3, p. 1066, SGGS:

The Bani (Word) of the Guru prevails throughout this world. Through this Bani, Gods Name is obtained.

Raag Maru, M.1, p. 1028, SGGS:

Accept as True, Perfectly True, the Word of the True Guru's Bani.

In this way, you shall merge in the Lord, the Supreme Soul. || 14 ||

This central message of Revelation from the Guru is the crucial foundation of the Sikh faith. Throughout the SGGS, the ultimate guide of Sikhs, this message is repeated and emphasized to solidly instill it in the minds of Sikhs. The great Sikh evangelist, Bhai Gurdas, who lived and worked in the presence of several Gurus, elaborates this message in several beautiful compositions (called Vaaraan, Ballads).
Sikhism is a strictly monotheistic religion:
The SGGS begins with the Mool Mantra, Guru Nanaks description of God:
One God exists and is Omnipresent. Gods Name is Truth. God is the Creator, the Doer, Fearless, and without Animosity. God is Timeless, Unborn, Self-Illuminated and Self-Existent. One experiences God by the Grace of the True Guru.
Thus, Sikhism is more akin to the Semitic religions, than Hinduism. A Hindu might worship one or more of several Avatars reincarnations of God or any of countless gods and goddesses, or nothing at all. The Sikh practice of congregational prayer parallels Semitic prayer as well.
Unlike Hinduism and several other religions, Sikhism rejects the possibility of incarnations of God. The One True God is Timeless and Unborn, beyond the mortal cycle of Life and Death. This should be recognized as an axiomatic difference between Hinduism and Sikhism.

Sikhism denies the divine authority of classic Hindu scriptures:
Although it remains difficult to define what Hindu texts can be considered the indisputable scriptural canon of Hinduism, most scholars generally have taken the Vedas and additions made to them (Upanishads, several Puranas, Samhitas and Smritis) as classic religious texts of Hinduism. The unclear and fluid boundaries of Hindu scriptural canon are in sharp contrast to the very structured Sikh scriptural texts. The Sikh Gurus themselves compiled the Sikh scriptures in a meticulously indexed and marked fashion. The Sikh Scripture, unequivocally and unambiguously, rejects the divine authority of the Vedas and other Hindu texts, as well as Semitic texts.
Raag Tilang, Kabir, p. 727, SGGS:
There is but one God, the creator, obtained by the grace of the True Guru.

The Vedas and the Scriptures are only make-believe, O Siblings of Destiny; they do not relieve the anxiety of the heart. If you will only center yourself on the Lord, even for just a breath, then you shall see the Lord face-to-face, present before you. || 1 ||

O human being, search your own heart every day, and do not wander around in confusion. This world is just a magic-show; no one will be holding your hand. || 1 || Pause ||

Reading and studying falsehood, people are happy; in their ignorance, they speak nonsense. The True Creator Lord is diffused into His creation; He is not in the image the dark-skinned Krishna of legends. || 2 ||

Raag Asa, M.5, p. 397, SGGS:

He (God) is beyond the world of the Vedas and the Semitic texts.

The Supreme King of Nanak is immanent and manifest. || 4 || 3 || 105 ||

The Tenth Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh, rejected the authority of Hindu texts, saying, "All the Smritis, Shastras, Vedas etc. claim to reveal many divine secrets, but I do not recognize even one of these." The Gurus message recognizes these texts as well as holy books of other faiths as possible useful sources of knowledge and that may benefit humankind. However, the source of liberation, the channel for mankinds union with God is the True Guru. Moreover, for a Sikh, the Word of the True Guru, as enshrined in the SGGS, remains the ultimate spiritual guide:
Raag Malaar, M.3, p. 1276, SGGS:
The world is involved with the words of the Vedas, thinking about the three gunas - the three dispositions. Without the Name, it suffers punishment by the Messenger of Death; it comes and goes, in cycles of births and deaths, over and over again. Meeting with the True Guru, the world is liberated, and finds the Door to Salvation. || 1 ||

Raag Ramkali, M.3, Anand, p. 920, SGGS:

The [Hindu] Smritis and the Shaastras discriminate between good and evil, but they do not know the true essence of reality. They do not know the true essence of reality without the Guru; they do not know the true essence of reality. The world is asleep in the three modes and doubt; it passes the night of its life sleeping. Those humble beings remain awake and aware, within whose minds, by Guru's Grace, the Lord abides; they chant the Ambrosial Word of the Guru's Bani. Says Nanak, they alone obtain the essence of reality, who both night and day remain lovingly absorbed in the Lord; they pass the night of their life awake and aware. || 27 ||

Sikh practices make a clean and abrupt break with Hindu practices:
The Sikh scriptures do not malign any other religion, and in fact instruct Sikhs to respect the beliefs and practices of other faiths. However, the Sikh Gurus do "call a spade for a spade." They openly criticize the tyrant, oppressor, hypocrite, or any behavior or practice which takes one ****her away from experiencing the Truth. In the Zafarnama (Epistle of Victory), Guru Gobind Singh openly criticizes Aurangzeb, a powerful Moghul Emperor, for his tyranny and destructive ways. The Gurus over and over criticize the Brahmin priests for their hypocrisy and promotion of caste ideology and inequality.
Raag Asa, M. 1, p. 471-72, SGGS
They wear their loin cloths, apply ritual frontal marks to their foreheads, and carry their rosaries, but they eat food with the Muslims. O Siblings of Destiny, you perform devotional worship indoors, but read the Islamic sacred texts, and adopt the Muslim way of life. Renounce your hypocrisy. Embrace the true Lord, and attain salvation. || 1 ||

The man-eaters say their prayers. Those who wield the knife wear the sacred thread around their necks. In their homes, the Brahmins sound the conch. They too have the same taste. False is their capital, and false is their trade. Speaking falsehood, they take their food. The home of modesty and Religion is far from them. O Nanak, they are totally permeated with falsehood. The sacred marks are on their foreheads, and the saffron loin-cloths are around their waists; in their hands they hold the knives - they are the butchers of the world! Wearing blue robes, they seek the approval of the Muslim rulers. Accepting bread from the Muslim rulers, they still worship the [Hindu] Puraanas. They eat the meat of the goats, killed after the Muslim prayers are read over them, but they do not allow anyone else to enter their kitchen areas. They draw lines around them, plastering the ground with cow-dung. The false come and sit within them. They cry out, "Do not touch our food, or it will be polluted!" But with their polluted



bodies, they commit evil deeds. With filthy minds, they try to cleanse their mouths. Says Nanak, meditate on the True Lord. If you are pure, you will obtain the True Lord. || 2 ||

Raag Gauri. Bhagat Kabir, p. 324-25, SGGS

While dwelling in the womb man hath not family or caste; All men have sprung from the same seed of Brahm. || 1 ||

Say, O Pandit, since when hast thou been a Brahman? Waste not thy life in calling thyself a Brahman. || 1 || Pause ||

If thou art a Brahman born of Brahmani mother, why hast thou not come some other way? || 2 ||

How art thou a Brahman and I a low caste? How am I of blood and you of milk? || 3 ||

Says Kabeer, one who contemplates God, is the true Brahmin among us. || 4 || 7 ||

Many of Hindu practices were created by the Brahmin priest caste to take advantage of the lower castes and promote their position as the controllers and channels of "divine" knowledge. Thus, Sikhism rejects major Hindu practices such as idol worship, caste system, ritual taboos, social taboos (i.e. untouchability), food taboos (in cooking and eating), vegetarianism, ritual sacrifices, religious fasting, auspicious and inauspicious days, astrological superstition, ancestor-worship, spirit-worship, pilgrimages, and more.
Raag Gujri, Bhagat Ravidas, p. 525, SGGS
"The calf hath spoiled milk in the cows udder by tasting it; The bumblebee hath spoiled the flowers, and the fish the water. || 1 ||

My mother, where shall I find anything to offer in Gods worship? I cannot perform Gods adoration and worship according to Hindu rites || 1 || Pause ||

Numerous rituals and taboos are involved in Hindu ceremonies and worship practices. In order to combat these customs, the Sikh Gurus established new ceremonies for the occasions of birth, marriage and death. During these ceremonies, Sikhs sing hymns from the SGGS and pay respect to the SGGS as well as the congregation, instead of conducting it under the stewardship of a priest or paid clergy with recitations and chanting of mantras, as well as other rituals. In fact, no priestly class exists in the Sikh Religion. Anyone can be trained to perform the aforementioned ceremonies.
The Tenth Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh, established the Order of the Khalsa and issued an injunction to the Sikhs to keep the distinct Sikh appearance and code of conduct, including the rejection of their previous caste. Sikhs are required to keep the five articles of faith and live according to the discipline inherent in the teachings of the religion.

Sikhs do not consider themselves Hindus:
Any practicing Sikh with even a small amount of awareness and knowledge of the Sikh Scripture would deny being a Hindu just as strongly as they would resent being labeled a Muslim, Christian, etc. Even though many Sikhs may have descended from Hindu families, live in a part of the world where Hindus are in great majority, share languages, culture and social relationships with Hindus, does not make Sikhism a sect of Hinduism.
The assertion that Sikhs have fought against Muslims in order to save India and Hinduism also remains false. Sikhs consider it a religious duty to defend all those who stand in need of protection, and oppose tyranny and oppression be it from those who are considered Hindu or Muslim or anything else.

Historically, Sikhs provided support to Hindus against colonial tyranny of the Mughal rulers. In fact, the Ninth Nanak, Guru Tegh Bahadur, gave the supreme sacrifice when he was martyred in 1675 to preserve the freedom of choice and religion of many thousand Brahmins of Kashmir who were under severe persecution by the Indian imperial authorities. Is it not ironic that Guru Nanak, at the age of nine, refused to allow the Brahmin to place the jenoo ("sacred thread") on him as it represented social apartheid, yet in his ninth form, stood up for the Brahmins' right to make the religious choice to wear it. It may be ironic that the Tenth Nanak fought more defensive battles with "upper caste" Hindus than with Muslim rulers.

Great numbers of Hindus have become Sikhs over the span of 500 years of Sikhism. None of this, however, can refute the fundamental features of Sikhism, which render it a distinct religion. Moreover, there have been and are many Sikhs who are descendents of Muslims, Christians and Jews, among others.

Following are a few more excerpts from the Sri Guru Granth Sahib and the Dasam Granth, which includes the writings of the Tenth Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh. These writings further clarify that Sikhism is not a sect of Hinduism or any other religion. The quotes included are only a small sampling and a thorough study of the Sikh Scripture is necessary to grasp its universality.

Rag Bhairo, M. 5, p. 1136, SGGS:
ONE UNIVERSAL CREATOR GOD. OBTAINED BY THE GRACE OF THE TRUE GURU:

Setting aside all other days, it is said that the Lord was born on the eighth lunar day. || 1 ||

Deluded and confused by doubt, the mortal practices falsehood. The Lord is beyond birth and death. || 1 || Pause ||

You prepare sweet treats and feed them to your stone god. God is not born, and He does not die, you foolish, faithless cynic! || 2 ||

You sing lullabies to your stone god - this is the source of all your mistakes. Let that mouth be burnt, which says that our Lord and Master is subject to birth. || 3 ||

He is not born, and He does not die; He does not come and go in reincarnation. The God of Nanak is pervading and permeating everywhere. || 4 || 1 ||

Savaiya, M. 10, p.254, Dasam Granth:

Since I have clung to thy feet, never have I reckoned any other deity.

(Incarnations like) Ram and Rahim, (and scriptures like) Puranas and the Quran, preach various creeeds, but I do not believe in any one.

All the Smritis, Shastras, and Vedas preach various ways (to meet the Lord), but I have acknowledged none.

O Timeless One, with Sword in Thy Hand! Its by Thy Grace, and not my endeavor, that I have described Thy Glory.

Raag Kalyan, Shabad Hazare,M. 10, p. 710, Dasam Granth:

Do not worship any one other than the Creator. Regard God, who was from the beginning unborn, invincible and indestructible, as the supreme being. ||1|| Pause ||

What does it matter if Vishnu came into the world and killed the demons? By showing his wiles to people, he exhorted them to call him God. How can he (Vishnu) be called God, the Destroyer, the Creator, the Omnipotent, the Eternal? He (Vishnu) could not save himself from the blow of the sword of death. || 2 ||
O fool, listen, how can he, who himself is sunk in the ocean of the world, save you? You can escape from the noose of Death only if you seek the refuge of the One who existed before the world came into being. || 3 || 1 ||

Raag Bilaaval, Shabad Hazare, M. 10, Dasam Granth, p. 711.

Why should God appear in human form? The Sidds have failed to see him anywhere, in spite of their meditations. . || 1 || Pause ||

(Ancient Indian sages) Narad, Bias, Prasur and Dhru have sincerely meditated on God without avail. The Vedas and Puranas have failed and given up their effort for realizing him. || 1 ||

There are numerous other instances in the Sikh Scripture that validate Sikhism as an independent religion. The Guru Granth Sahib simply points out the Sikh world-view through simile and metaphor of the Gurus experience of the One Lord Almighty. The Sikh religion strongly emphasizes the oneness of all humanity, transcending ethnic, religious, social and other classifications.
To be a Sikh means to be completely guided, in personal and corporate life, by the teachings of the Sikh scriptures and the example of the lives of the Sikh Gurus. The Sikh Scripture stresses the independent foundation of Path of the Guru, a vital precept in Sikhism. No amount of cultural, ethnic, geographical similarities, chronological sequences or any other arguments can invalidate the fundamental features unique to Sikhism. Upon examining the Sikh scriptural canon, the lives of the Sikh Gurus, the institutions, traditions and the historical movement cherished by Sikhs, one cannot escape the conclusion that Sikhism is recognizable as a world religion.

REFERENCES:


Sri Guru Granth Sahib. Several Translations.
Writings by the Tenth Guru from the Dasam Granth. Several Translations
Vaaraan by Bhai Gurdas.
Hum Hindu Nahin (We are not Hindus) (Punjabi) by Kahan Singh Nabha, originally published 1898; Fifth Edition 1920, reprinted 1992 by Singh Brothers, Amritsar, Punjab, India.
Some Insights into Sikhism by Sirdar. Kapur Singh, published by Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, Punjab, India, 1995
Parasaprasna by Sirdar Kapur Singh, same as above. published by Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, Punjab, India, 1995
A Brief History of the Sikhs by Ganda Singh and Teja Singh, published by Punjabi University, Patiala, 1989.
(c) Copyright Sikh Mediawatch and Resource Task Force, 1999.
All Rights Reserved.
For more information on the religion or history of the Sikhs people, please contact SMART at: info@sikhmedia.org or visit SMARTs web site at http://www.sikhmedia.org.

[Reproduction and redistribution without alteration is permitted provided the above copyright notice and this note is retained. If you wish to use only a portion of this document, or alter it for your use, please obtain written permission from SMART by writing to: info@sikhmedia.org or PO Box 1761, Germantown, MD 20875-1761 or call SMART at (301) 428-3593.
]
Re: Did Guru Nanak Dev Ji Worship Krishna?
 
Oct 14, 2007
3,369
54
Sachkhand
http://www.sikhmediawatch.org/resources/publications/misperceptions.htm

Combating the Myth of Sikhism as a Derivative Religion

The scientific fact about Sikhism is that it is neither a syncretism, an amalgam and intellectual extraction from other religions and creeds nor a sect of Hinduism or Islam as has been variously asserted from time to time by numerous authorities. It is an autonomous, independent religion, complete and whole, with its validity inhering in its own revelations and proclamations such as are repeatedly made in the Sikh Scripture, its pious literature and its historical movement.

- Sirdar Kapur Singh, An Incomparable Prophet: Guru Amar Dass

Sikhism asserts its own unique scriptural canon, prophets, places of worship, traditions, ceremonies, and institutions. There are over 20 million followers of the Sikh faith worldwide. In terms of the number of adherents, it is the fifth largest religion in the world.
Sikhism teaches that only one God exists. God?s name is synonymous with the Truth. God is the sole Creator, Destroyer, and Caretaker. God is described as Omnipotent, Eternal, Fearless, and Without Enmity. God is Self-Illuminated, Self-Existent and is experienced through the grace of the Guru (Master, Enlightner).

Whereas the sphere of this essay does not permit a detailed treatise on Sikhism, it is important to provide a brief history of the religion and outline a few key concepts that serve as the core of the religion. Approximately five centuries ago, Sikhism?s founder, Guru Nanak, denounced the disunity in society caused by religious divisions. He emphasized complete equality and strove to create a spiritual community where social hierarchy, gender biases and caste divisions would be dissolved, and all would be recognized as One.

The Sikh Gurus initiated profound social reforms and created institutions as well as traditions to facilitate spiritual and worldly upliftment. In 1699, Guru Gobind Singh?the tenth Sikh Guru?established the Khalsa (meaning "belonging only to the Divine"), a new, voluntary order of the Sikhs. The Khalsa consists of Sikhs who undergo an initiation ceremony and dedicate themselves to the high standards of the Sikh Gurus, by attempting to practice Sikh principles at all times. They maintain a distinct physical appearance by wearing a uniform consisting of five articles of faith. Guru Gobind Singh passed the status of eternal Guruship to the Khalsa, and the Sikh Scripture as enshrined in the Sri Guru Granth Sahib (SGGS), an anthology of sacred revelations documented by the Sikh Gurus and selected Saints.

A Sikh?s ultimate goal is to experience constant oneness with God. The Sikh Gurus have prescribed certain means to achieve this: simran (loving remembrance, faith and meditation on God) and seva (selfless service towards all humanity).

The Sikh Rehit Maryada (Code of Conduct) was formulated in the 1940?s by the Sikh community to provide concrete guidelines and promote this discipline. For example, it promotes praying three times a day, in the morning, evening, and before bedtime, to remember and thank God throughout the day. The Sikh Scripture is very clear in saying that meditation in seclusion alone is not enough to reach communion with God. Sikhs must maintain the highest moral values and be virtuous in their actions. Sikhs should earn an honest living through hard work and share what they earn with others. They must commit to community service and the betterment of society by combating social ills, inequality, injustice, and oppression. This very political aspect of the religion has led some outside observers to label it not just a religion but a way of life.

The Sikh Scripture (Sri Guru Granth Sahib) incorporates hymns of spiritually accomplished individuals who were considered Muslim or Hindu, as a unique feature. Perhaps this inherently catholic nature of Sikhism has led other traditions to claim it as their own child sect. Being a relatively young religion that has always been surrounded by a large Hindu community, Sikhism has interacted with Hinduism quite a bit. Thus, Hindu culture has socially influenced the Sikh community and vice-versa. However, the assertion that Sikhism is a sect or "offshoot" of Hinduism, or Islam for that matter, remains false. A very definitive scriptural and theological basis clearly depicts this.

Broadly, there are two main types of claims about Sikhism being a subset of Hinduism:

Based on the early scholarship on Sikhism in the English language: European scholars discovered Sikhism during the late 19th century. The early work on Sikhism was rather superficial and unfortunately, the views of those scholars are still broadly accepted. This is so because a small number of scholars have done adequate research on Sikhism until the present time. Moreover, a textbook chapter in a book on something as broad as Eastern Religions typically contains a few paragraphs on Sikhism and says only a few simple things about the religion. Usually, the most easy-to-understand -but incorrect - introduction about Sikhism is to consider it a syncretism of Hinduism and Islam, or a sect of Hinduism.

More recent scholarship in Western academia, in the past two decades, has understood Sikhism as an independent religion in its own right. Unfortunately, this research has not been reflected in introductory textbooks or general books covering Eastern or World religions broadly.


Claims from the traditionally dominant Hindu institutions and their scholars which have propagated hegemony over scriptural, intellectual, philosophical, and sociopolitical aspects of Sikhism, as well as other religions originating in the Indian subcontinent, including Buddhism and Jainism. These are the very institutions and personalities whose authority is unequivocally rejected by the Sikh Scripture in principle, and by the actions of Sikhs over the course of their history.
The Sikh Scripture asserts its originality and completeness:
The Sikh scriptural canon makes clear, emphatic and repeated assertions about Sikhism being nothing short of a complete religion, in its own right, as well as in contrast with Islam and Hinduism. The Janam Sakhis which document many tales from the life of the founding Master of Sikhism, Guru Nanak, tell that Guru Nanak?s first sermon was based on his direct encounter with God:
As God willed, Nanak, his devotee, was escorted to His presence, to the divine presence, and then a cup filled with Liquid of Immortality was given him, accompanied by the command: ?Nanak, pay attention. This is the cup of holy adoration of my Name; drink it. I am with thee, and thee I do bless and exalt. Go, rejoice in my Name, the Name of God, and preach to others to do the same. Let this be thy calling.?
Guru Nanak himself refers to this divine assignment with deep gratitude: "I, an unemployed minstrel, was assigned a very rewarding task, indeed." [Var Majh M.1 SGGS 150]. The Janam Sakhis further tell us that Guru Nanak?s first sermon was na ko Hindu, na Mussalman, "there is no Hindu, no Muslim." Guru Nanak?s own Word denies any distinctions among humankind. Thus, to consider him as a Hindu saint or reformer is thus erroneous. Furthermore, the Sikh scriptures deny deriving any authority or inspiration from any scriptures of any religion, and repeatedly refute the authority of the Vedas and other Hindu texts.
Gauri Ki Vaar, Mahla 4, page 308, SGGS:
O Sikhs of the Guru, know that the Bani, the Word of the True Guru, is true, absolutely true. The Creator Lord Himself causes the Guru to say it.

Raag Bhairo, M. 5, p. 1136, SGGS:

I do not keep fasts, nor do I observe the month of Ramadaan. I serve only the One, who will protect me in the end. || 1 ||

The One Lord, the Lord of the World, is my God Allah. He administers justice to both Hindus and Muslims. || 1 || Pause ||

I do not make pilgrimages to Mecca, nor do I worship at Hindu sacred shrines. I serve the One Lord, and not any other. || 2 ||

I do not perform Hindu worship services, nor do I offer the Muslim prayers. I have taken the One Formless Lord into my heart; I humbly worship Him there.||3||

I am not a Hindu, nor am I a Muslim. My body and breath of life belong to Allah ? to Raam ? the God of both. || 4 ||

O Kabeer, this is what I say: meeting with the Guru, my Spiritual Teacher, I realize God, my Lord and Master. || 5 || 3 ||

Raag Ramkali, M.3, Anand, p. 920, SGGS:

Bani, the Word, other than that of the True Guru, is false.

Raag Maru, M.3, p. 1066, SGGS:

The Bani (Word) of the Guru prevails throughout this world. Through this Bani, God?s Name is obtained.

Raag Maru, M.1, p. 1028, SGGS:

Accept as True, Perfectly True, the Word of the True Guru's Bani.

In this way, you shall merge in the Lord, the Supreme Soul. || 14 ||

This central message of Revelation from the Guru is the crucial foundation of the Sikh faith. Throughout the SGGS, the ultimate guide of Sikhs, this message is repeated and emphasized to solidly instill it in the minds of Sikhs. The great Sikh evangelist, Bhai Gurdas, who lived and worked in the presence of several Gurus, elaborates this message in several beautiful compositions (called Vaaraan, Ballads). Sikhism is a strictly monotheistic religion:
The SGGS begins with the Mool Mantra, Guru Nanak?s description of God:
One God exists and is Omnipresent. God?s Name is Truth. God is the Creator, the Doer, Fearless, and without Animosity. God is Timeless, Unborn, Self-Illuminated and Self-Existent. One experiences God by the Grace of the True Guru.
Thus, Sikhism is more akin to the Semitic religions, than Hinduism. A Hindu might worship one or more of several Avatars ? reincarnations of God ? or any of countless gods and goddesses, or nothing at all. The Sikh practice of congregational prayer parallels Semitic prayer as well.
Unlike Hinduism and several other religions, Sikhism rejects the possibility of incarnations of God. The One True God is Timeless and Unborn, beyond the mortal cycle of Life and Death. This should be recognized as an axiomatic difference between Hinduism and Sikhism. Sikhism denies the divine authority of classic Hindu scriptures:
Although it remains difficult to define what Hindu texts can be considered the indisputable scriptural canon of Hinduism, most scholars generally have taken the Vedas and additions made to them (Upanishads, several Puranas, Samhitas and Smritis) as classic religious texts of Hinduism. The unclear and fluid boundaries of Hindu scriptural canon are in sharp contrast to the very structured Sikh scriptural texts. The Sikh Gurus themselves compiled the Sikh scriptures in a meticulously indexed and marked fashion. The Sikh Scripture, unequivocally and unambiguously, rejects the divine authority of the Vedas and other Hindu texts, as well as Semitic texts.

Raag Tilang, Kabir, p. 727, SGGS:
There is but one God, the creator, obtained by the grace of the True Guru.

The Vedas and the Scriptures are only make-believe, O Siblings of Destiny; they do not relieve the anxiety of the heart. If you will only center yourself on the Lord, even for just a breath, then you shall see the Lord face-to-face, present before you. || 1 ||

O human being, search your own heart every day, and do not wander around in confusion. This world is just a magic-show; no one will be holding your hand. || 1 || Pause ||

Reading and studying falsehood, people are happy; in their ignorance, they speak nonsense. The True Creator Lord is diffused into His creation; He is not in the image the dark-skinned Krishna of legends. || 2 ||

Raag Asa, M.5, p. 397, SGGS:

He (God) is beyond the world of the Vedas and the Semitic texts.

The Supreme King of Nanak is immanent and manifest. || 4 || 3 || 105 ||

The Tenth Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh, rejected the authority of Hindu texts, saying, "All the Smritis, Shastras, Vedas etc. claim to reveal many divine secrets, but I do not recognize even one of these." The Gurus? message recognizes these texts as well as holy books of other faiths as possible useful sources of knowledge and that may benefit humankind. However, the source of liberation, the channel for mankind?s union with God is the True Guru. Moreover, for a Sikh, the Word of the True Guru, as enshrined in the SGGS, remains the ultimate spiritual guide:
Raag Malaar, M.3, p. 1276, SGGS:
The world is involved with the words of the Vedas, thinking about the three gunas - the three dispositions. Without the Name, it suffers punishment by the Messenger of Death; it comes and goes, in cycles of births and deaths, over and over again. Meeting with the True Guru, the world is liberated, and finds the Door to Salvation. || 1 ||

Raag Ramkali, M.3, Anand, p. 920, SGGS:

The [Hindu] Smritis and the Shaastras discriminate between good and evil, but they do not know the true essence of reality. They do not know the true essence of reality without the Guru; they do not know the true essence of reality. The world is asleep in the three modes and doubt; it passes the night of its life sleeping. Those humble beings remain awake and aware, within whose minds, by Guru's Grace, the Lord abides; they chant the Ambrosial Word of the Guru's Bani. Says Nanak, they alone obtain the essence of reality, who both night and day remain lovingly absorbed in the Lord; they pass the night of their life awake and aware. || 27 ||

Sikh practices make a clean and abrupt break with Hindu practices:
The Sikh scriptures do not malign any other religion, and in fact instruct Sikhs to respect the beliefs and practices of other faiths. However, the Sikh Gurus do "call a spade for a spade." They openly criticize the tyrant, oppressor, hypocrite, or any behavior or practice which takes one ****her away from experiencing the Truth. In the Zafarnama (Epistle of Victory), Guru Gobind Singh openly criticizes Aurangzeb, a powerful Moghul Emperor, for his tyranny and destructive ways. The Gurus over and over criticize the Brahmin priests for their hypocrisy and promotion of caste ideology and inequality.
Raag Asa, M. 1, p. 471-72, SGGS
?They wear their loin cloths, apply ritual frontal marks to their foreheads, and carry their rosaries, but they eat food with the Muslims. O Siblings of Destiny, you perform devotional worship indoors, but read the Islamic sacred texts, and adopt the Muslim way of life. Renounce your hypocrisy. Embrace the true Lord, and attain salvation. || 1 ||

The man-eaters say their prayers. Those who wield the knife wear the sacred thread around their necks. In their homes, the Brahmins sound the conch. They too have the same taste. False is their capital, and false is their trade. Speaking falsehood, they take their food. The home of modesty and Religion is far from them. O Nanak, they are totally permeated with falsehood. The sacred marks are on their foreheads, and the saffron loin-cloths are around their waists; in their hands they hold the knives - they are the butchers of the world! Wearing blue robes, they seek the approval of the Muslim rulers. Accepting bread from the Muslim rulers, they still worship the [Hindu] Puraanas. They eat the meat of the goats, killed after the Muslim prayers are read over them, but they do not allow anyone else to enter their kitchen areas. They draw lines around them, plastering the ground with cow-dung. The false come and sit within them. They cry out, "Do not touch our food, or it will be polluted!" But with their polluted bodies, they commit evil deeds. With filthy minds, they try to cleanse their mouths. Says Nanak, meditate on the True Lord. If you are pure, you will obtain the True Lord. || 2 ||

Raag Gauri. Bhagat Kabir, p. 324-25, SGGS

While dwelling in the womb man hath not family or caste; All men have sprung from the same seed of Brahm. || 1 ||

Say, O Pandit, since when hast thou been a Brahman? Waste not thy life in calling thyself a Brahman. || 1 || Pause ||

If thou art a Brahman born of Brahmani mother, why hast thou not come some other way? || 2 ||

How art thou a Brahman and I a low caste? How am I of blood and you of milk? || 3 ||

Says Kabeer, one who contemplates God, is the true Brahmin among us. || 4 || 7 ||

Many of Hindu practices were created by the Brahmin priest caste to take advantage of the lower castes and promote their position as the controllers and channels of "divine" knowledge. Thus, Sikhism rejects major Hindu practices such as idol worship, caste system, ritual taboos, social taboos (i.e. untouchability), food taboos (in cooking and eating), vegetarianism, ritual sacrifices, religious fasting, auspicious and inauspicious days, astrological superstition, ancestor-worship, spirit-worship, pilgrimages, and more.
Raag Gujri, Bhagat Ravidas, p. 525, SGGS
"The calf hath spoiled milk in the cow?s udder by tasting it; The bumblebee hath spoiled the flowers, and the fish the water. || 1 ||

My mother, where shall I find anything to offer in God?s worship? I cannot perform God?s adoration and worship according to Hindu rites || 1 || Pause || ?

Numerous rituals and taboos are involved in Hindu ceremonies and worship practices. In order to combat these customs, the Sikh Gurus established new ceremonies for the occasions of birth, marriage and death. During these ceremonies, Sikhs sing hymns from the SGGS and pay respect to the SGGS as well as the congregation, instead of conducting it under the stewardship of a priest or paid clergy with recitations and chanting of mantras, as well as other rituals. In fact, no priestly class exists in the Sikh Religion. Anyone can be trained to perform the aforementioned ceremonies.
The Tenth Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh, established the Order of the Khalsa and issued an injunction to the Sikhs to keep the distinct Sikh appearance and code of conduct, including the rejection of their previous caste. Sikhs are required to keep the five articles of faith and live according to the discipline inherent in the teachings of the religion. Sikhs do not consider themselves Hindus:
Any practicing Sikh with even a small amount of awareness and knowledge of the Sikh Scripture would deny being a Hindu just as strongly as they would resent being labeled a Muslim, Christian, etc. Even though many Sikhs may have descended from Hindu families, live in a part of the world where Hindus are in great majority, share languages, culture and social relationships with Hindus, does not make Sikhism a sect of Hinduism.

The assertion that Sikhs have fought against Muslims in order to save India and Hinduism also remains false. Sikhs consider it a religious duty to defend all those who stand in need of protection, and oppose tyranny and oppression ? be it from those who are considered Hindu or Muslim or anything else.

Historically, Sikhs provided support to Hindus against colonial tyranny of the Mughal rulers. In fact, the Ninth Nanak, Guru Tegh Bahadur, gave the supreme sacrifice when he was martyred in 1675 to preserve the freedom of choice and religion of many thousand Brahmins of Kashmir who were under severe persecution by the Indian imperial authorities. Is it not ironic that Guru Nanak, at the age of nine, refused to allow the Brahmin to place the jenoo ("sacred thread") on him as it represented social apartheid, yet in his ninth form, stood up for the Brahmins' right to make the religious choice to wear it. It may be ironic that the Tenth Nanak fought more defensive battles with "upper caste" Hindus than with Muslim rulers.

Great numbers of Hindus have become Sikhs over the span of 500 years of Sikhism. None of this, however, can refute the fundamental features of Sikhism, which render it a distinct religion. Moreover, there have been and are many Sikhs who are descendents of Muslims, Christians and Jews, among others.

Following are a few more excerpts from the Sri Guru Granth Sahib and the Dasam Granth, which includes the writings of the Tenth Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh. These writings further clarify that Sikhism is not a sect of Hinduism or any other religion. The quotes included are only a small sampling and a thorough study of the Sikh Scripture is necessary to grasp its universality.

Rag Bhairo, M. 5, p. 1136, SGGS:
ONE UNIVERSAL CREATOR GOD. OBTAINED BY THE GRACE OF THE TRUE GURU:

Setting aside all other days, it is said that the Lord was born on the eighth lunar day. || 1 ||

Deluded and confused by doubt, the mortal practices falsehood. The Lord is beyond birth and death. || 1 || Pause ||

You prepare sweet treats and feed them to your stone god. God is not born, and He does not die, you foolish, faithless cynic! || 2 ||

You sing lullabies to your stone god - this is the source of all your mistakes. Let that mouth be burnt, which says that our Lord and Master is subject to birth. || 3 ||

He is not born, and He does not die; He does not come and go in reincarnation. The God of Nanak is pervading and permeating everywhere. || 4 || 1 ||

Savaiya, M. 10, p.254, Dasam Granth:

Since I have clung to thy feet, never have I reckoned any other deity.

(Incarnations like) Ram and Rahim, (and scriptures like) Puranas and the Quran, preach various creeeds, but I do not believe in any one.

All the Smritis, Shastras, and Vedas preach various ways (to meet the Lord), but I have acknowledged none.

O Timeless One, with Sword in Thy Hand! Its by Thy Grace, and not my endeavor, that I have described Thy Glory.

Raag Kalyan, Shabad Hazare,M. 10, p. 710, Dasam Granth:

Do not worship any one other than the Creator. Regard God, who was from the beginning unborn, invincible and indestructible, as the supreme being. ||1|| Pause ||

What does it matter if Vishnu came into the world and killed the demons? By showing his wiles to people, he exhorted them to call him God. How can he (Vishnu) be called God, the Destroyer, the Creator, the Omnipotent, the Eternal? He (Vishnu) could not save himself from the blow of the sword of death. || 2 ||

O fool, listen, how can he, who himself is sunk in the ocean of the world, save you? You can escape from the noose of Death only if you seek the refuge of the One who existed before the world came into being. || 3 || 1 ||

Raag Bilaaval, Shabad Hazare, M. 10, Dasam Granth, p. 711.

Why should God appear in human form? The Sidds have failed to see him anywhere, in spite of their meditations. . || 1 || Pause ||

(Ancient Indian sages) Narad, Bias, Prasur and Dhru have sincerely meditated on God without avail. The Vedas and Puranas have failed and given up their effort for realizing him. || 1 ||

There are numerous other instances in the Sikh Scripture that validate Sikhism as an independent religion. The Guru Granth Sahib simply points out the Sikh world-view through simile and metaphor of the Gurus? experience of the One Lord Almighty. The Sikh religion strongly emphasizes the oneness of all humanity, transcending ethnic, religious, social and other classifications.
To be a Sikh means to be completely guided, in personal and corporate life, by the teachings of the Sikh scriptures and the example of the lives of the Sikh Gurus. The Sikh Scripture stresses the independent foundation of Path of the Guru, a vital precept in Sikhism. No amount of cultural, ethnic, geographical similarities, chronological sequences or any other arguments can invalidate the fundamental features unique to Sikhism. Upon examining the Sikh scriptural canon, the lives of the Sikh Gurus, the institutions, traditions and the historical movement cherished by Sikhs, one cannot escape the conclusion that Sikhism is recognizable as a world religion.

Deconstructing Religious Misperceptions

http://www.sikhmediawatch.org/resources/publications/misperceptions.htm
 
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