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Wednesday, September 20, 2006

THE GURU IN THE SIKH

Gurbani - THE GURU IN THE SIKH:

This transformation comes not only through close association with the Guru, which is found in many other religions, but through the belief that the Sikh incorporates the Guru. He fills himself with the Guru, and then feels himself linked up with an inexhaustible source of power.

A Sikh, a pure-hearted Sikh, who follows the teaching of his Guru, is a great power in himself; but when such a Sikh gets into himself the dynamic personality of such a perfect exemplar as Guru Gobind Singh his powers acquire an infinite reach and he becomes a superman. He is called 'Khalsa' the personification of the Guru himself.

"The Khalsa says the Guru," is my other self; in him I live and have my being" "A single Sikh, a mere believer, is only one; but the equation changes when he takes Guru Gobind Singh in to his embrace. He becomes equal to 'one lakh and a quarter' in the Sikh parlance. This change occurs not only in his physical fitness, but also in is mental and spiritual outlook. His nature is so reinforced in every way that although hundreds may fall round him, he will resist to the last and never give way. Wherever he stands he will stand as a garrison of the Lord of Hosts, a host in himself, a host of one lakh and a quarter. He will keep the Guru's flag always flying. Whenever tempted, he will ask himself, "Can I lower the flag of Guru Gobind Singh ? Can I desert it ? I, as Budh Singh or Kahan Singh, can fall, but can ordinary powers and in times of emergency comes to his rescue long before he can remember anything relevant to the occasion recorded in history or scripture. Bhai Joga Singh's case is just in point. He was a devoted Sikh of Guru Gobind Singh, and had received baptism from the hands of the Guru himself. He was so loyal that when he received an urgent call from the Guru to proceed to Anandpur, he hastened from Peshawar without a moment's delay, not waiting even to see his own marriage through. And yet in movement of weakness, this paragon of Sikh purity was going to fall at the door of a public woman of Hoshiarpur. Who saved him in the emergency?

It was the vision of Guru Gobind Singh, reestablishing the personal contact by pointing out the signs of personation worm on his body, and reminding him that he was carven in the Guru's own image.

Author : Gurbaani.com

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