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God in Sikhism

In Sikhism, God is conceived as the Oneness that permeates the entirety of creation and beyond. It abides within all of creation[1] as symbolized by the symbol Ik Onkar.[2] The One is indescribable yet knowable and perceivable to anyone who surrenders their egoism and meditates upon that Oneness.[3] The Sikh gurus have described God in numerous ways in their hymns included in the Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scripture of Sikhism, but the oneness of formless God is consistently emphasized throughout.

The Sikh Symbol "Ik Onkar", often used to symbolize God in Sikhism

God is described in the Mul Mantar (lit. the Prime Utterance),[4][5] the first passage in the Guru Granth Sahib:

ੴ ਸਤਿ ਨਾਮੁ ਕਰਤਾ ਪੁਰਖੁ ਨਿਰਭਉ ਨਿਰਵੈਰੁ ਅਕਾਲ ਮੂਰਤਿ ਅਜੂਨੀ ਸੈਭੰ ਗੁਰ ਪ੍ਰਸਾਦਿ ॥
ikk ōankār sat(i)-nām(u) karatā purakh(u) nirabha'u niravair(u) akāla mūrat(i) ajūnī saibhan(g) gur(a) prasād(i).
There is only one God, and It is called the truth, It exists in all creation, and It has no fear, It does not hate, and It is timeless, universal and self-existent! You will come to know it through the grace of the Guru.

— Sri Guru Granth Sahib, page 1

General conceptions edit

Monotheism edit

Sikhi is monotheistic and believes that there is only One God. Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhi strongly denounces any type of Pakhand (hypocrisy or duality). Nanak prefixed the numeral "IK" (one) to the syllable Onkar to stress the idea of God's oneness; that the Creator, Preserver, and Destroyer is One.[6] Sikh thought begins with the One Almighty and then universalising God, coming down to the cosmic reality of all-pervading creator.[7] While God is described as without gender, God is also described through numerous metaphors, such as:

ਏਕੁ ਪਿਤਾ ਏਕਸ ਕੇ ਹਮ ਬਾਰਿਕ ਤੂ ਮੇਰਾ ਗੁਰ ਹਾਈ ॥

"Ek(u) pitaa ekas ke ham baarik"

"The One God is the Father of all;

We are His children."

— SGGS. Ang (limb) 611

Panentheism edit

Some scholars have defined Sikhism's conceptualization of God as a form of panentheism.[8][9][10]

Priority Monism edit

Sikhi complies with the concept of Priority Monism, a view point that all existing things go back to a Source that is distinct from them. It is the belief that all that our senses comprehend is illusion; God is the sole reality. Forms being subject to Time, shall pass away. God's Reality alone is eternal and abiding.[11] The thought is such that Aatmaa (soul) is born from and a reflection of ParamAatma( Supreme Soul),[12] and would again merge into it just as water merges back into the water, like a drop of water merging with the ocean.

ਜਿਉ ਜਲ ਮਹਿ ਜਲੁ ਆਇ ਖਟਾਨਾ ॥

Ji'u Jala Mahi Jala Ā'i Khaṭānā ||

As water comes to blend with water,

ਤਿਉ ਜੋਤੀ ਸੰਗਿ ਜੋਤਿ ਸਮਾਨਾ ॥

Ti'u Jōtī Saṅi Jōti Samānā ||

Their light blends into the Light.

— SGGS. Ang 278

God and Soul are identical in the same way as Fire and its sparks; fundamentally same as is stated in SatGuru Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji, "Aatam meh Ram, Ram meh Aatam", which means "The Ultimate Eternal Lord is the soul and the soul is the Ultimate Eternal Lord". As from one stream, millions of waves arise and yet the waves, made of water, again become water; in the same way all souls have sprung from the Universal Being and would blend again into it.[13]

Waheguru edit

There are frequent references to God in the perspective of all the various religions in the Guru Granth Sahib. The Guru Granth Sahib acknowledges perspectives of God in all religions.[14] Guru Granth Sahib teaches that God is one almighty power.[15]

Specific conceptions edit

Great Architect edit

Sikh philosophy believes that the Oneness is the Great Architect of Universe. It alone is the Creator, Sustain-er, and Destroyer; Ek.[16] God is Karta Purakh, the Creator-Being[11] who created the spatial-temporal Universe from their own Self; the Universe is their own emanation. Guru Arjan advocates: “The One is true and true is Its creation [because] all has emanated from God Itself” (SGGS Ang294).

Before creation, God existed all alone as Nirgun (attributeless) in a state of Sunn Samadhi, deep meditation, as says Guru Nanak.[17]

"There was darkness for countless years.

There was neither earth nor sky; there was only Its Will.

There was neither day nor night, neither sun nor moon.

They (God) were in deep meditation.

There was nothing except Itself."

— SGGS. Ang 1035

Then, God willed and created the Universe, and diffused Itself into the nature as Sargun (with attributes).[18]

Creation edit

It is believed in Sikhi that the Universe was created by a single word of the God.[16] Whilst the universe was created, a sound was produced as a result. The sound is noted in the first word in the Guru Granth Sahib – ੴ, Ik Oangkar. The syllable "Oang" is the sound that was created whilst the universe was created. The Transcendent God expressed themselves in "Naam" and "Sabad" that created the world. "Naam" and "Sabad" are the 'Creative and Dynamic Immanence of God'.[6]

ਕੀਤਾ ਪਸਾਉ ਏਕੋ ਕਵਾਉ ॥

Keethaa Pasaao Eieko Kavaao ||

You created the vast expanse of the Universe with One Word!

ਤਿਸ ਤੇ ਹੋਏ ਲਖ ਦਰੀਆਉ ॥

This Thae Hoeae Lakh Dhareeaao ||

Hundreds of thousands of rivers began to flow.

— SGGS. Ang 3

Creation of the universe edit

 
'Baba Nanak and Nirankara (formless reality, Waheguru, or the Supreme God)', early 19th century Janamsakhi painting from a Kashmiri manuscript

Sikh philosophy enunciates the belief that the limits of Time and Space are known only to God. Answers to the questions of "When did the Universe come into existence?" or "How big is this Universe?" are beyond human understanding. The best course, as Guru Nanak declares, is to admit a sense of wonderfulness or Vismad, since "the featureless Void was in ceaseless Existence".[19] As to the Time of Creation, Nanak, in Jap(u) Sahib, recites that:

What was that time, and what was that moment? What was that day, and what was that date?

What was that season, and what was that month, when the Universe was created?

The Pandits, the religious scholars, cannot find that time, even if it is written in the Puranas.

That time is not known to the Qazis, who study the Koran.

The day and the date are not known to the Yogis, nor is the month or the season.

Attributes edit

Eternalness edit

God, as stated in the Guru Granth Sahib, is Akal Murat, the Eternal Being;It is beyond time and ever the same.[20] "Saibhan(g)", another attribute to God means that no one else but God created the creation. They are, shall be, was not born, and will not die; never created and hence, shall never be destroyed.[21] The phrase "Ad(i) Sach", True in the Primal Beginning, in the Mool mantar proves the notion of the eternalness of God in Sikhi.

Transcendence and Immanence edit

Sikhi advocates a panentheistic tone when it enunciates the belief that God is both, transcendent and immanent, or "Nirgun" and "Sargun" (as stated in the Sikh terminology), at the same time. God created the Universe and permeates both within and without.[22]

ਸਰਗੁਨ ਨਿਰਗੁਨ ਨਿਰੰਕਾਰ ਸੁੰਨ ਸਮਾਧੀ ਆਪਿ ॥

Saraguna Niraguna Niraṅkāra Sunna Samādhī Āpi ||

He possesses all qualities; He transcends all qualities;

He is the Formless Lord. He Himself is in Primal Samaadhi.

— SGGS. Sukhmani Sahib Ang 290

When it pleases God, them become Sarguna (Sanskrit Saguna = with attributes) and manifests Himself in creation. He becomes immanent in His created universe, which is His own emanation, an aspect of Himself.[23]

Omnipotence edit

"God himself is the Creator and the Cause, the Doer and the Deed."[24] Sikh thought is strictly monotheistic and believes that this Universe is creation of God. Its origins are in God, it operates under the Command of God (Hukam), and its end is in God; God is the Omnipotent being, the sole cause of Creation, Preservation, and Destruction.[25] It consults none in creating and demolishing, giving and taking and does everything Itself. The Nirbhau (lit. Fearless) Almighty does not fear anyone and exercises Its unquestionable will.

Omnibenevolence edit

It is kind and merciful, the Omnibenevolent Lord. The Bestow-er of all things (Divanhaar); apart from It, there is no other Giver. It provides the body, the breath, food to Its creations. It is also a great Pardoner; pardoning all our mistakes, they bestows Virtue on the repenting souls and adds Blessedness on the  striving virtuous.[24] The Almighty sustains His Creation compassionately and benevolently. In SatGuru Granth, God is called as "Kareem" (Merciful); the complacent Lord who, in Its compassion, blesses the miserable with Its Nadar (graceful vision).[26] The Nirvair (lit. without enmity/hatred) God does not hate anyone and glances their merciful vision on every being, indifferently. All are one Its view.

"The Lord is kind and compassionate to all beings and creatures; His Protecting Hand is over all." (SGGS. Ang 300)

Gender edit

Main Article - Gender of God in Sikhism

According to Sikhi, God has "No" Gender. Mool Mantar describes God as being "Ajuni" (lit. not in any incarnations) which implies that God is not bound to any physical forms. This concludes: the All-pervading Lord is Gender-less.[27]

ਸੁੰਨ ਮੰਡਲ ਇਕੁ ਜੋਗੀ ਬੈਸੇ ॥ ਨਾਰਿ ਨ ਪੁਰਖੁ ਕਹਹੁ ਕੋਊ ਕੈਸੇ ॥ ਤ੍ਰਿਭਵਣ ਜੋਤਿ ਰਹੇ ਲਿਵ ਲਾਈ ॥ ਸੁਰਿ ਨਰ ਨਾਥ ਸਚੇ ਸਰਣਾਈ ॥

Sunna maṇḍala iku Jogī baise. Nāra na purakhu kahahu ko'ū kaise. Tribhavaṇ joti rahe liva lā'ī. Suri nara nātha sace saraṇā'ī

The Yogi, the Primal Lord, sits in the Realm of Absolute Stillness (state free of mind's wanderings or Phurne). (Since God) is neither male nor female; how can anyone describe Him? The three worlds center their attention on His Light. The godly beings and the Yogic masters seek the Sanctuary of this True Lord.

— SGGS. Ang 685

However, the Guru Granth Sahib consistently refers to God as "He" and "Father" (with some exceptions), typically because the Guru Granth Sahib was written in north Indian Indo-Aryan languages (mixture of Punjabi and Sant Bhasha, Sanskrit with influences of Persian) which have no neutral gender. English translations of the teachings may eliminate any gender specifications. From further insights into the Sikh philosophy, it can be deduced that God is, sometimes, referred to as the Husband to the soul-brides, in order to make a patriarchal society understand what the relationship with God is like. Also, God is considered to be our Father, Mother, and Companion.[28]

Names for God edit

Main Article – Names for God in Sikhism

Sikhi greatly emphasizes the name of God. The Adi Granth emphasizes Naam, the name of the God as through meditating on the Naam, one can meet God, opening up ones tenth spiritual gate and experience 'Anand' indescribable bliss. Sikhi believes in Monotheism. God has been called by many Attributive names [action-related names, Kirtan Naam (SGGS. Ang 1083), or Karam Naam (Dasam Granth, Jaap Sahib) in Sikh literature, picked from Indian and Semitic traditions.[3]

They are called in terms of human relations as our Father, Mother, Brother, Companion, Friend, Lover, Beloved, and Husband.[28]

Other names, expressive of His supremacy are Thakur (lit. Lord), Prabhu (lit. God), Swami, Shah (lit. King), Paatshah (lit. Master King), Sahib, Allah (God), Khuda (Persian word for Allah), Rahim, Karim, Sain (Lord, Master).

God has also been referred to, in Sikh literature as Hari, Sridhar, Kamla-pati, SriRang, Vishwambhar, Krishna, Saringdhar, ParaBrahma, Paramatma, Pyara, Nath, GopiNath, Jagannath, ChakraPan, Ram, Narayan, Govind, Gopal and many more.

Though these names are mentioned in the Guru Granth Sahib. Sikhs are ordered by the Gurus to meditate by chanting Waheguru, the Name of God, to meet God and experience 'Anand', which Bhai Gurdas states in his Varan to signify, Wah (Praise) Hey (you) Guru (God).

Other attributive names include Nirankar (Formless), Niranjan (without sin), Data or Datar (lit. The Giver), Karta or Kartar (lit. The Doer), Dayal (Compassionate), Kripal (Benevolent) and many more.

Names peculiar to Sikhism for God are Naam (lit. name), Shabad (word) and Waheguru (Wow true Master). While Naam and Shabad are mystical terms standing for the Divine Manifestation, Waheyguru is a phrase expressing awe, wonder, and ecstatic joy of the worshiper as he/she comprehends the greatness and grandeur of the Lord and their Creation.[29]

Beliefs edit

Reincarnation edit

The center belief of Sikh thought is the soul would reincarnate in this universe unless it attains the state of mukti (liberation), which is to be achieved through the grace of God.[1] In its corporeal attire, the soul passes through cycles of transmigration. Through Divine Grace and ones actions, it can merge back into the Absolute Soul (Paramatma) and escape the throes of birth and death again and again. [12]

Revelation edit

 
A Scene of Revelation. From the Guler set of Janam-sakhi painting. Attributed to the Seu-Nainsukh workshop. Pahari. Last quarter of the eighteenth century

The Mool Mantar ends with Gurparsad(i) (lit. by God's Grace), which expresses the belief of Sikh thought that God would be revealed to the Soul through SatGuru's grace. In Sikh theology SatGuru appears in three different but allied connotations, viz. God, the ten Sikh SatGurus, and the gur-shabad as preserved in the Guru Granth Sahib.

"Blessing us with His Grace, the Kind and Compassionate All-powerful Lord comes to dwell within the mind and body. (SGGS. Ang 49)"

Knowledge of the ultimate Reality is not a matter for reason; it comes by revelation of the ultimate reality through nadar (grace) and by anubhava (mystical experience). Guru Nanak says, budhi pathi na paiai bahu chaturaiai bhai milai mani bhane which translates to "He is not accessible through intellect, or through mere scholarship or cleverness at argument; He is met, when He pleases, through devotion" (SGGS, Ang 436).

Mysticism edit

Mysticism is the experience of becoming one with The Almighty, which Guru Nanak states as Sach-Khand (Realm of Truth), where the soul is immersed completely in the Divine Will.[30] The primal belief of Sikhism is of the Spirit to get merged into the Divinity. The Guru Granth Sahib proclaims human incarnation as a chance to meet God and to enter into the Mystic Reality.

ਭਈ ਪਰਾਪਤਿ ਮਾਨੁਖ ਦੇਹੁਰੀਆ ॥

भई परापति मानुख देहुरीआ ॥

Bẖa▫ī parāpaṯ mānukẖ ḏehurī▫ā.

This human body has been given to you.

ਗੋਬਿੰਦ ਮਿਲਣ ਕੀ ਇਹ ਤੇਰੀ ਬਰੀਆ ॥

गोबिंद मिलण की इह तेरी बरीआ ॥

Gobinḏ milaṇ kī ih ṯerī barī▫ā.

This is your chance to meet the Lord of the Universe.

— SGGS. Ang 12

It is a devoted meditation (simran) that enables a sort of communication between the Infinite and finite human consciousness. There is, chiefly, the remembrance of God through the recitation of their name[31] and surrendering of the self to God's presence, often metaphorized as surrendering one's self to the Lord's feet.[32] The ultimate destination of a Sikh is to lose his egoism completely in the love of the Lord and finally merge into him. 

Practices edit

Five Vices edit

Those, who follow the instincts of their mind, under the influence of the five vices – lust, anger, greed, attachment, and pride – and ego will wander miserably in the cycle of birth and rebirth. They are known as Manmukhs.[3]

  1. Kaam (Lust)
  2. Krodh (Wrath)
  3. Ahankar (Ego)
  4. Lobh (Greed)
  5. Moh (Attachment)

Three Duties edit

  1. Naam Japo (Meditating via Chanting God's Name)
  2. Kirat Karo (Honestly work to earn livelihood)
  3. Vand Chhako (Share what you have with the needy)

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Sabadarth Sri Guru Granthsar, 1959
  • Jodh Singh, Bhai, Gurmati Nirnaya. Amritsar, 1932
  • Pritam Singh, ed., Sikh Phalsaphe di Rup Rekhla. Amritsar, 1975
  • Sher Singh, The Philosophy of Sikhism. Lahore, 1944
  • Kapur Singh, Parasaraprasna. Amritsar, 1989

References edit

  1. ^ a b "BBC – Religions – Sikhism: Sikh Beliefs". Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  2. ^ "Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People". www.sikhs.org. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  3. ^ a b c "Different Names of GOD incorporated in Sri Guru Granth Sahib ji". www.speakingtree.in. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  4. ^ Indif.com. "The Sikh Mool Mantra – Ik Omkar". www.indif.com. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  5. ^ "BBC – GCSE Bitesize: The Mool Mantar". Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  6. ^ a b "Sikhism and Monotheism". fateh.sikhnet.com. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  7. ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. "Monotheism in Guru Granth Sahib". Guru Granth A Perspective. pp. 138.
  8. ^ Takhar, Opinderjit Kaur (2016). Sikh Identity: An Exploration of Groups Among Sikhs. Routledge. ISBN 9781351900102. Since the Sikh concept of the divine is panentheistic, the divine is always greater than the created universe, its systems such as karma and samsara, and all phenomena within it. In Sikhism, due to the sovereignty of God, the doctrines of Nadar and Hukam override all systems, both concepts reinforcing panentheism. Hence one becomes a jivanmukt only in accordance with the Hukam.
  9. ^ Reynolds, William M.; Webber, Julie A. (2004). Expanding Curriculum Theory: Dis/positions and Lines of Flight. Routledge. p. 90. ISBN 9781135621278. Like the God-of-process theologians in the West (Whitehead, Cobb, Griffin, Hartshorne), the God of Sikhism is a dynamic God, a process moving within humankind, pervasive within the hearts of people, yet transcendent and eternal. The Sikh God is one with whom devotees become wholly absorbed: "As the fish, I find the life of absorption in the water that is God" (Sri Guru Granth. 1988, p. 166). As the fish is absorbed in the water that is God, the soul is absorbed in the lightness that is God. The fish, even though absorbed in the water that is God, does not lose its fishness, its fish identity-formation, even though absorbed in the light that is God. A panentheistic system, such as Sikhsim, allows the soul to retain its soulness while merging with God. The soul, in other words, is not identical with God, even after merging with God, but one might say God is part of the soul. A strict identity soul = God is incarnationism and this is considered anathema in Sikhism. The Granth uses the beloved/lover metaphor for the relation of the self to God. God is the beloved and the devo tee is the lover. The lover retains her identity yet merges with her beloved.
  10. ^ Singh, Pashaura; Mandair, Arvind-Pal Singh (2023). The Sikh world. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780429848384. In looking at the teachings of the Gurus as a whole, it seems that Lourdunathan overstates the degree to which Sikh scripture is anti-monistic. Guru Nanak famously referred to the world as a "palace of smoke" (GGS: 138) and made countless references to the idea of maya (Illusion). While the Gurus did not teach a radical nondualism, it is perhaps more accurate to suggest that some aspects of Sikh thought constitute a qualified nondualism (in which Creator and Creation are part of the same whole) (GGS: 125) or panentheism (in which the Creator pervades the natural world) (GGS: 24), while many others are monotheistic, including passages in Japji Sahib, where God is described as the King of Kings (GGS: 6). These different interpretations lend themselves to varying understandings of the relationship between the natural world and divinity.
  11. ^ a b "The Idea Of The Supreme Being (God) In Sikhism – Sikhism Articles – Gateway to Sikhism". Gateway to Sikhism. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  12. ^ a b Gujral, Maninder S. "ATMA". The Sikh Encyclopedia -ਸਿੱਖ ਧਰਮ ਵਿਸ਼ਵਕੋਸ਼. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  13. ^ Singh, Jagraj (2009). A Complete Guide to Sikhism. Unistar Books. p. 266. ISBN 9788171427543.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-01-01.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-01-01.
  16. ^ a b "BBC – GCSE Bitesize: The origins of the universe". p. 1. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  17. ^ Munde, Amarpreet Singh. "Introduction to Sikhism – Section II: God and His Universe". www.gurmat.info. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  18. ^ "BBC – GCSE Bitesize: Evolutionary biology". Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  19. ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. "Cosmology in Guru Granth Sahib". Guru Granth A Perspective. pp. 129.
  20. ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. "Monotheism In SatGuru Granth Sahib". Guru Granth A Perspective. pp. 140.
  21. ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. "Monotheism In Guru Granth Sahib". Guru Granth A Perspective. pp. 144.
  22. ^ "Sargun Nirgun Nirankar". www.speakingtree.in. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  23. ^ "Sargun Nirgun | Gurbani Blog | ਗੁਰਬਾਣੀ ਬਲੌਗ". www.gurbani.org. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  24. ^ a b www.DiscoverSikhism.com. Guru Granth A Perspective. pp. 145.
  25. ^ Singh, Jagraj (2009). A Complete Guide to Sikhism. Unistar Books. p. 252. ISBN 9788171427543.
  26. ^ The Sikh and Sikhism. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. p. 44.
  27. ^ "IS GOD MALE OR FEMALE?". www.gurbani.org. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  28. ^ a b "God's Gender". www.sikhwomen.com. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  29. ^ "Name Of God – Waheguru". The Many Names Of God And Their Meanings. 2012-10-20. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  30. ^ "Sikhism And Sachkhand". Sikh Philosophy Network Forum. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  31. ^ "Sri Granth: Sri Guru Granth Sahib". www.srigranth.org. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  32. ^ "Sri Granth: Sri Guru Granth Sahib". www.srigranth.org. Retrieved 2017-12-11.

sikhism, sikhism, conceived, oneness, that, permeates, entirety, creation, beyond, abides, within, creation, symbolized, symbol, onkar, indescribable, knowable, perceivable, anyone, surrenders, their, egoism, meditates, upon, that, oneness, sikh, gurus, have, . In Sikhism God is conceived as the Oneness that permeates the entirety of creation and beyond It abides within all of creation 1 as symbolized by the symbol Ik Onkar 2 The One is indescribable yet knowable and perceivable to anyone who surrenders their egoism and meditates upon that Oneness 3 The Sikh gurus have described God in numerous ways in their hymns included in the Guru Granth Sahib the holy scripture of Sikhism but the oneness of formless God is consistently emphasized throughout The Sikh Symbol Ik Onkar often used to symbolize God in Sikhism God is described in the Mul Mantar lit the Prime Utterance 4 5 the first passage in the Guru Granth Sahib ੴ ਸਤ ਨ ਮ ਕਰਤ ਪ ਰਖ ਨ ਰਭਉ ਨ ਰਵ ਰ ਅਕ ਲ ਮ ਰਤ ਅਜ ਨ ਸ ਭ ਗ ਰ ਪ ਰਸ ਦ ikk ōankar sat i nam u karata purakh u nirabha u niravair u akala murat i ajuni saibhan g gur a prasad i There is only one God and It is called the truth It exists in all creation and It has no fear It does not hate and It is timeless universal and self existent You will come to know it through the grace of the Guru Sri Guru Granth Sahib page 1 Contents 1 General conceptions 1 1 Monotheism 1 2 Panentheism 1 3 Priority Monism 1 4 Waheguru 2 Specific conceptions 2 1 Great Architect 2 2 Creation 2 3 Creation of the universe 3 Attributes 3 1 Eternalness 3 2 Transcendence and Immanence 3 3 Omnipotence 3 4 Omnibenevolence 3 5 Gender 3 6 Names for God 4 Beliefs 4 1 Reincarnation 4 2 Revelation 4 3 Mysticism 5 Practices 5 1 Five Vices 5 2 Three Duties 6 See also 7 Bibliography 8 ReferencesGeneral conceptions editMonotheism edit Sikhi is monotheistic and believes that there is only One God Guru Nanak the founder of Sikhi strongly denounces any type of Pakhand hypocrisy or duality Nanak prefixed the numeral IK one to the syllable Onkar to stress the idea of God s oneness that the Creator Preserver and Destroyer is One 6 Sikh thought begins with the One Almighty and then universalising God coming down to the cosmic reality of all pervading creator 7 While God is described as without gender God is also described through numerous metaphors such as ਏਕ ਪ ਤ ਏਕਸ ਕ ਹਮ ਬ ਰ ਕ ਤ ਮ ਰ ਗ ਰ ਹ ਈ Ek u pitaa ekas ke ham baarik The One God is the Father of all We are His children SGGS Ang limb 611 Panentheism edit Some scholars have defined Sikhism s conceptualization of God as a form of panentheism 8 9 10 Priority Monism edit Sikhi complies with the concept of Priority Monism a view point that all existing things go back to a Source that is distinct from them It is the belief that all that our senses comprehend is illusion God is the sole reality Forms being subject to Time shall pass away God s Reality alone is eternal and abiding 11 The thought is such that Aatmaa soul is born from and a reflection of ParamAatma Supreme Soul 12 and would again merge into it just as water merges back into the water like a drop of water merging with the ocean ਜ ਉ ਜਲ ਮਹ ਜਲ ਆਇ ਖਟ ਨ Ji u Jala Mahi Jala A i Khaṭana As water comes to blend with water ਤ ਉ ਜ ਤ ਸ ਗ ਜ ਤ ਸਮ ਨ Ti u Jōti Saṅi Jōti Samana Their light blends into the Light SGGS Ang 278 God and Soul are identical in the same way as Fire and its sparks fundamentally same as is stated in SatGuru Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji Aatam meh Ram Ram meh Aatam which means The Ultimate Eternal Lord is the soul and the soul is the Ultimate Eternal Lord As from one stream millions of waves arise and yet the waves made of water again become water in the same way all souls have sprung from the Universal Being and would blend again into it 13 Waheguru editThere are frequent references to God in the perspective of all the various religions in the Guru Granth Sahib The Guru Granth Sahib acknowledges perspectives of God in all religions 14 Guru Granth Sahib teaches that God is one almighty power 15 Specific conceptions editGreat Architect edit Sikh philosophy believes that the Oneness is the Great Architect of Universe It alone is the Creator Sustain er and Destroyer Ek 16 God is Karta Purakh the Creator Being 11 who created the spatial temporal Universe from their own Self the Universe is their own emanation Guru Arjan advocates The One is true and true is Its creation because all has emanated from God Itself SGGS Ang294 Before creation God existed all alone as Nirgun attributeless in a state of Sunn Samadhi deep meditation as says Guru Nanak 17 There was darkness for countless years There was neither earth nor sky there was only Its Will There was neither day nor night neither sun nor moon They God were in deep meditation There was nothing except Itself SGGS Ang 1035 Then God willed and created the Universe and diffused Itself into the nature as Sargun with attributes 18 Creation edit It is believed in Sikhi that the Universe was created by a single word of the God 16 Whilst the universe was created a sound was produced as a result The sound is noted in the first word in the Guru Granth Sahib ੴ Ik Oangkar The syllable Oang is the sound that was created whilst the universe was created The Transcendent God expressed themselves in Naam and Sabad that created the world Naam and Sabad are the Creative and Dynamic Immanence of God 6 ਕ ਤ ਪਸ ਉ ਏਕ ਕਵ ਉ Keethaa Pasaao Eieko Kavaao You created the vast expanse of the Universe with One Word ਤ ਸ ਤ ਹ ਏ ਲਖ ਦਰ ਆਉ This Thae Hoeae Lakh Dhareeaao Hundreds of thousands of rivers began to flow SGGS Ang 3 Creation of the universe edit nbsp Baba Nanak and Nirankara formless reality Waheguru or the Supreme God early 19th century Janamsakhi painting from a Kashmiri manuscript Sikh philosophy enunciates the belief that the limits of Time and Space are known only to God Answers to the questions of When did the Universe come into existence or How big is this Universe are beyond human understanding The best course as Guru Nanak declares is to admit a sense of wonderfulness or Vismad since the featureless Void was in ceaseless Existence 19 As to the Time of Creation Nanak in Jap u Sahib recites that What was that time and what was that moment What was that day and what was that date What was that season and what was that month when the Universe was created The Pandits the religious scholars cannot find that time even if it is written in the Puranas That time is not known to the Qazis who study the Koran The day and the date are not known to the Yogis nor is the month or the season Attributes editEternalness edit God as stated in the Guru Granth Sahib is Akal Murat the Eternal Being It is beyond time and ever the same 20 Saibhan g another attribute to God means that no one else but God created the creation They are shall be was not born and will not die never created and hence shall never be destroyed 21 The phrase Ad i Sach True in the Primal Beginning in the Mool mantar proves the notion of the eternalness of God in Sikhi Transcendence and Immanence edit Sikhi advocates a panentheistic tone when it enunciates the belief that God is both transcendent and immanent or Nirgun and Sargun as stated in the Sikh terminology at the same time God created the Universe and permeates both within and without 22 ਸਰਗ ਨ ਨ ਰਗ ਨ ਨ ਰ ਕ ਰ ਸ ਨ ਸਮ ਧ ਆਪ Saraguna Niraguna Niraṅkara Sunna Samadhi Api He possesses all qualities He transcends all qualities He is the Formless Lord He Himself is in Primal Samaadhi SGGS Sukhmani Sahib Ang 290 When it pleases God them become Sarguna Sanskrit Saguna with attributes and manifests Himself in creation He becomes immanent in His created universe which is His own emanation an aspect of Himself 23 Omnipotence edit God himself is the Creator and the Cause the Doer and the Deed 24 Sikh thought is strictly monotheistic and believes that this Universe is creation of God Its origins are in God it operates under the Command of God Hukam and its end is in God God is the Omnipotent being the sole cause of Creation Preservation and Destruction 25 It consults none in creating and demolishing giving and taking and does everything Itself The Nirbhau lit Fearless Almighty does not fear anyone and exercises Its unquestionable will Omnibenevolence edit It is kind and merciful the Omnibenevolent Lord The Bestow er of all things Divanhaar apart from It there is no other Giver It provides the body the breath food to Its creations It is also a great Pardoner pardoning all our mistakes they bestows Virtue on the repenting souls and adds Blessedness on the striving virtuous 24 The Almighty sustains His Creation compassionately and benevolently In SatGuru Granth God is called as Kareem Merciful the complacent Lord who in Its compassion blesses the miserable with Its Nadar graceful vision 26 The Nirvair lit without enmity hatred God does not hate anyone and glances their merciful vision on every being indifferently All are one Its view The Lord is kind and compassionate to all beings and creatures His Protecting Hand is over all SGGS Ang 300 Gender edit Main Article Gender of God in SikhismAccording to Sikhi God has No Gender Mool Mantar describes God as being Ajuni lit not in any incarnations which implies that God is not bound to any physical forms This concludes the All pervading Lord is Gender less 27 ਸ ਨ ਮ ਡਲ ਇਕ ਜ ਗ ਬ ਸ ਨ ਰ ਨ ਪ ਰਖ ਕਹਹ ਕ ਊ ਕ ਸ ਤ ਰ ਭਵਣ ਜ ਤ ਰਹ ਲ ਵ ਲ ਈ ਸ ਰ ਨਰ ਨ ਥ ਸਚ ਸਰਣ ਈ Sunna maṇḍala iku Jogi baise Nara na purakhu kahahu ko u kaise Tribhavaṇ joti rahe liva la i Suri nara natha sace saraṇa iThe Yogi the Primal Lord sits in the Realm of Absolute Stillness state free of mind s wanderings or Phurne Since God is neither male nor female how can anyone describe Him The three worlds center their attention on His Light The godly beings and the Yogic masters seek the Sanctuary of this True Lord SGGS Ang 685 However the Guru Granth Sahib consistently refers to God as He and Father with some exceptions typically because the Guru Granth Sahib was written in north Indian Indo Aryan languages mixture of Punjabi and Sant Bhasha Sanskrit with influences of Persian which have no neutral gender English translations of the teachings may eliminate any gender specifications From further insights into the Sikh philosophy it can be deduced that God is sometimes referred to as the Husband to the soul brides in order to make a patriarchal society understand what the relationship with God is like Also God is considered to be our Father Mother and Companion 28 Names for God edit Main Article Names for God in SikhismSikhi greatly emphasizes the name of God The Adi Granth emphasizes Naam the name of the God as through meditating on the Naam one can meet God opening up ones tenth spiritual gate and experience Anand indescribable bliss Sikhi believes in Monotheism God has been called by many Attributive names action related names Kirtan Naam SGGS Ang 1083 or Karam Naam Dasam Granth Jaap Sahib in Sikh literature picked from Indian and Semitic traditions 3 They are called in terms of human relations as our Father Mother Brother Companion Friend Lover Beloved and Husband 28 Other names expressive of His supremacy are Thakur lit Lord Prabhu lit God Swami Shah lit King Paatshah lit Master King Sahib Allah God Khuda Persian word for Allah Rahim Karim Sain Lord Master God has also been referred to in Sikh literature as Hari Sridhar Kamla pati SriRang Vishwambhar Krishna Saringdhar ParaBrahma Paramatma Pyara Nath GopiNath Jagannath ChakraPan Ram Narayan Govind Gopal and many more Though these names are mentioned in the Guru Granth Sahib Sikhs are ordered by the Gurus to meditate by chanting Waheguru the Name of God to meet God and experience Anand which Bhai Gurdas states in his Varan to signify Wah Praise Hey you Guru God Other attributive names include Nirankar Formless Niranjan without sin Data or Datar lit The Giver Karta or Kartar lit The Doer Dayal Compassionate Kripal Benevolent and many more Names peculiar to Sikhism for God are Naam lit name Shabad word and Waheguru Wow true Master WhileNaamandShabadare mystical terms standing for the Divine Manifestation Waheyguru is a phrase expressing awe wonder and ecstatic joy of the worshiper as he she comprehends the greatness and grandeur of the Lord and their Creation 29 Beliefs editReincarnation edit The center belief of Sikh thought is the soul would reincarnate in this universe unless it attains the state of mukti liberation which is to be achieved through the grace of God 1 In its corporeal attire the soul passes through cycles of transmigration Through Divine Grace and ones actions it can merge back into the Absolute Soul Paramatma and escape the throes of birth and death again and again 12 Revelation edit nbsp A Scene of Revelation From the Guler set of Janam sakhi painting Attributed to the Seu Nainsukh workshop Pahari Last quarter of the eighteenth century The Mool Mantar ends with Gurparsad i lit by God s Grace which expresses the belief of Sikh thought that God would be revealed to the Soul through SatGuru s grace In Sikh theology SatGuru appears in three different but allied connotations viz God the ten Sikh SatGurus and the gur shabad as preserved in the Guru Granth Sahib Blessing us with His Grace the Kind and Compassionate All powerful Lord comes to dwell within the mind and body SGGS Ang 49 Knowledge of the ultimate Reality is not a matter for reason it comes by revelation of the ultimate reality through nadar grace and by anubhava mystical experience Guru Nanak says budhi pathi na paiai bahu chaturaiai bhai milai mani bhane which translates to He is not accessible through intellect or through mere scholarship or cleverness at argument He is met when He pleases through devotion SGGS Ang 436 Mysticism edit Mysticism is the experience of becoming one with The Almighty which Guru Nanak states as Sach Khand Realm of Truth where the soul is immersed completely in the Divine Will 30 The primal belief of Sikhism is of the Spirit to get merged into the Divinity The Guru Granth Sahib proclaims human incarnation as a chance to meet God and to enter into the Mystic Reality ਭਈ ਪਰ ਪਤ ਮ ਨ ਖ ਦ ਹ ਰ ਆ भई पर पत म न ख द ह र आ Bẖa i parapaṯ manukẖ ḏehuri a This human body has been given to you ਗ ਬ ਦ ਮ ਲਣ ਕ ਇਹ ਤ ਰ ਬਰ ਆ ग ब द म लण क इह त र बर आ Gobinḏ milaṇ ki ih ṯeri bari a This is your chance to meet the Lord of the Universe SGGS Ang 12 It is a devoted meditation simran that enables a sort of communication between the Infinite and finite human consciousness There is chiefly the remembrance of God through the recitation of their name 31 and surrendering of the self to God s presence often metaphorized as surrendering one s self to the Lord s feet 32 The ultimate destination of a Sikh is to lose his egoism completely in the love of the Lord and finally merge into him Practices editFive Vices edit Those who follow the instincts of their mind under the influence of the five vices lust anger greed attachment and pride and ego will wander miserably in the cycle of birth and rebirth They are known as Manmukhs 3 Kaam Lust Krodh Wrath Ahankar Ego Lobh Greed Moh Attachment Three Duties edit Naam Japo Meditating via Chanting God s Name Kirat Karo Honestly work to earn livelihood Vand Chhako Share what you have with the needy See also edit nbsp Religion portal Conceptions of God God Existence of God Names of God Jaap Sahib WaheguruBibliography editSabadarth Sri Guru Granthsar 1959 Jodh Singh Bhai Gurmati Nirnaya Amritsar 1932 Pritam Singh ed Sikh Phalsaphe di Rup Rekhla Amritsar 1975 Sher Singh The Philosophy of Sikhism Lahore 1944 Kapur Singh Parasaraprasna Amritsar 1989References edit a b BBC Religions Sikhism Sikh Beliefs Retrieved 2017 12 07 Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People www sikhs org Retrieved 2017 12 07 a b c Different Names of GOD incorporated in Sri Guru Granth Sahib ji www speakingtree in Retrieved 2017 12 11 Indif com The Sikh Mool Mantra Ik Omkar www indif com Retrieved 2017 12 07 BBC GCSE Bitesize The Mool Mantar Retrieved 2017 12 07 a b Sikhism and Monotheism fateh sikhnet com Retrieved 2017 12 10 www DiscoverSikhism com Monotheism in Guru Granth Sahib Guru Granth A Perspective pp 138 Takhar Opinderjit Kaur 2016 Sikh Identity An Exploration of Groups Among Sikhs Routledge ISBN 9781351900102 Since the Sikh concept of the divine is panentheistic the divine is always greater than the created universe its systems such as karma and samsara and all phenomena within it In Sikhism due to the sovereignty of God the doctrines of Nadar and Hukam override all systems both concepts reinforcing panentheism Hence one becomes a jivanmukt only in accordance with the Hukam Reynolds William M Webber Julie A 2004 Expanding Curriculum Theory Dis positions and Lines of Flight Routledge p 90 ISBN 9781135621278 Like the God of process theologians in the West Whitehead Cobb Griffin Hartshorne the God of Sikhism is a dynamic God a process moving within humankind pervasive within the hearts of people yet transcendent and eternal The Sikh God is one with whom devotees become wholly absorbed As the fish I find the life of absorption in the water that is God Sri Guru Granth 1988 p 166 As the fish is absorbed in the water that is God the soul is absorbed in the lightness that is God The fish even though absorbed in the water that is God does not lose its fishness its fish identity formation even though absorbed in the light that is God A panentheistic system such as Sikhsim allows the soul to retain its soulness while merging with God The soul in other words is not identical with God even after merging with God but one might say God is part of the soul A strict identity soul God is incarnationism and this is considered anathema in Sikhism The Granth uses the beloved lover metaphor for the relation of the self to God God is the beloved and the devo tee is the lover The lover retains her identity yet merges with her beloved Singh Pashaura Mandair Arvind Pal Singh 2023 The Sikh world London New York Routledge ISBN 9780429848384 In looking at the teachings of the Gurus as a whole it seems that Lourdunathan overstates the degree to which Sikh scripture is anti monistic Guru Nanak famously referred to the world as a palace of smoke GGS 138 and made countless references to the idea of maya Illusion While the Gurus did not teach a radical nondualism it is perhaps more accurate to suggest that some aspects of Sikh thought constitute a qualified nondualism in which Creator and Creation are part of the same whole GGS 125 or panentheism in which the Creator pervades the natural world GGS 24 while many others are monotheistic including passages in Japji Sahib where God is described as the King of Kings GGS 6 These different interpretations lend themselves to varying understandings of the relationship between the natural world and divinity a b The Idea Of The Supreme Being God In Sikhism Sikhism Articles Gateway to Sikhism Gateway to Sikhism Retrieved 2017 12 13 a b Gujral Maninder S ATMA The Sikh Encyclopedia ਸ ਖ ਧਰਮ ਵ ਸ ਵਕ ਸ Retrieved 2017 12 12 Singh Jagraj 2009 A Complete Guide to Sikhism Unistar Books p 266 ISBN 9788171427543 Sri Granth Sri Guru Granth Sahib Archived from the original on 2020 01 01 Sri Granth Sri Guru Granth Sahib Archived from the original on 2020 01 01 a b BBC GCSE Bitesize The origins of the universe p 1 Retrieved 2017 12 11 Munde Amarpreet Singh Introduction to Sikhism Section II God and His Universe www gurmat info Retrieved 2017 12 11 BBC GCSE Bitesize Evolutionary biology Retrieved 2017 12 11 www DiscoverSikhism com Cosmology in Guru Granth Sahib Guru Granth A Perspective pp 129 www DiscoverSikhism com Monotheism In SatGuru Granth Sahib Guru Granth A Perspective pp 140 www DiscoverSikhism com Monotheism In Guru Granth Sahib Guru Granth A Perspective pp 144 Sargun Nirgun Nirankar www speakingtree in Retrieved 2017 12 11 Sargun Nirgun Gurbani Blog ਗ ਰਬ ਣ ਬਲ ਗ www gurbani org Retrieved 2017 12 11 a b www DiscoverSikhism com Guru Granth A Perspective pp 145 Singh Jagraj 2009 A Complete Guide to Sikhism Unistar Books p 252 ISBN 9788171427543 The Sikh and Sikhism Atlantic Publishers amp Distri p 44 IS GOD MALE OR FEMALE www gurbani org Retrieved 2017 12 08 a b God s Gender www sikhwomen com Retrieved 2017 12 08 Name Of God Waheguru The Many Names Of God And Their Meanings 2012 10 20 Retrieved 2017 12 11 Sikhism And Sachkhand Sikh Philosophy Network Forum Retrieved 2017 12 12 Sri Granth Sri Guru Granth Sahib www srigranth org Retrieved 2017 12 11 Sri Granth Sri Guru Granth Sahib www srigranth org Retrieved 2017 12 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title God in Sikhism amp oldid 1219394941, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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