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Glossary›Guru Granth Sahib

Glossary

Guru Granth Sahib

The eternal Guru and central scripture of Sikhism, a 1,430-page compilation of devotional hymns by Sikh Gurus and Hindu-Muslim saints in musical ragas.

What is Guru Granth Sahib?

The Guru Granth Sahib is the supreme spiritual authority and perpetual Guru of the Sikh faith, a voluminous scripture containing 1,430 pages of devotional poetry composed by six Sikh Gurus, fifteen Hindu bhagats, eleven Muslim Sufi saints, and four bards. Unlike most religious texts treated as historical documents, the Guru Granth Sahib holds living Guru status—Sikhs bow before it, place it on elevated thrones, and consult it for spiritual guidance as they would a human teacher. The text is organized not by author or chronology but by thirty-one ragas (classical Indian melodic frameworks), emphasizing that these verses are meant to be sung, not merely read. Its central teaching is the unity of divine reality (Ik Onkar) and the dissolution of ego through naam simran (remembrance of the divine name), rejecting caste hierarchy, ritualism, and religious sectarianism in favor of devotional surrender and ethical living.

Origins & Lineage

The compilation began in 1604 when the fifth Sikh Guru, Guru Arjan Dev (1563–1606), assembled hymns from the first four Gurus—Guru Nanak (1469–1539), Guru Angad, Guru Amar Das, and Guru Ram Das—along with his own compositions and writings of Hindu devotional poets like Kabir, Namdev, and Ravidas, and Muslim mystics including Sheikh Farid. Guru Arjan dictated this compilation to Bhai Gurdas in the Punjabi language using Gurmukhi script, installing the first volume at Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple) in Amritsar. This original recension, known as the Adi Granth, contained 974 hymns.

In 1704, the tenth and final human Guru, Guru Gobind Singh (1666–1708), added hymns of his father, Guru Tegh Bahadur, bringing the total to 5,894 hymns from thirty-six contributors. Before his death in 1708, Guru Gobind Singh formally conferred Guruship upon the scripture itself, ending the line of human Gurus and establishing the Guru Granth Sahib as the eternal, living Guru of the Sikhs. This act—unique in world religions—transformed a text into a continuous spiritual authority, not to be revised or amended.

How It’s Practiced

In gurdwaras (Sikh temples), the Guru Granth Sahib rests on a raised platform called a manji sahib under an ornate canopy. Attendants wave a chaur sahib (ceremonial whisk) over it as a sign of respect. Before entering its presence, devotees remove shoes, cover their heads, and bow with foreheads to the ground. Gurbani kirtan—the musical recitation of passages set to traditional ragas—forms the heart of Sikh worship, performed by ragis (trained musicians) using harmonium, tabla, and sometimes rabab.

Daily practice includes reading from or listening to the Guru Granth Sahib, often focusing on specific compositions like Japji Sahib (morning prayer) or Kirtan Sohila (evening prayer). An Akhand Path—continuous, uninterrupted reading of the entire scripture—takes approximately 48 hours and is performed for significant occasions, with readers rotating in shifts. Sikhs practice vak lao (taking guidance) by opening the Guru Granth Sahib at random and reading the hymn at the top of the left page, interpreting it as divine counsel.

Guru Granth Sahib Today

Contemporary seekers encounter the Guru Granth Sahib primarily through gurbani kirtan at gurdwaras worldwide, where services include communal singing, scriptural exposition, and langar (free communal meals). Organizations like Nanak Naam and the Sikh Research Institute offer online archives with transliterations, translations, and audio recordings in multiple languages. Kundalini Yoga communities, influenced by Yogi Bhajan’s teachings, frequently chant excerpts from the Guru Granth Sahib, particularly Japji Sahib, though this practice remains controversial among orthodox Sikhs who emphasize the text’s religious context.

Scholarly engagement has expanded through universities offering Sikh studies programs and accessible translations by scholars like Nikky-Guninder Kaur Singh and Pashaura Singh. Digital platforms provide verse-by-verse commentary and notation for ragas, making the musical tradition accessible to non-Punjabi speakers. Annual celebrations like Vaisakhi and Gurpurabs (Guru birth anniversaries) feature extended kirtan performances and public readings.

Common Misconceptions

The Guru Granth Sahib is not a Punjabi ethnic scripture but a multilingual compilation including verses in Sanskrit, Persian, and various Prakrit dialects, reflecting the pan-Indian devotional (bhakti) movement’s diversity. It is not primarily a theological treatise or legal code—it contains no origin myths, cosmological speculation, or prescriptive laws comparable to Leviticus or Sharia. The text does not establish Guru Gobind Singh as a contributor; his compositions appear in the separate Dasam Granth, which holds respected but non-Guru status.

While revered as Guru, the Guru Granth Sahib is not worshiped as a deity—Sikhs direct devotion through the scripture toward the formless divine (Waheguru), not toward the physical book. The practice of bowing is respect for the Guru’s authority, not idolatry. Additionally, the Guru Granth Sahib is not a meditation manual in the Buddhist or yogic sense; its verses are meant for singing and contemplative listening rather than silent mantra repetition, though naam simran involves mental recitation of divine names.

How to Begin

For those new to the Guru Granth Sahib, start by attending a gurdwara service to experience gurbani kirtan in its traditional context—most gurdwaras welcome visitors regardless of background. Listen to recordings of Japji Sahib, the foundational morning prayer composed by Guru Nanak, available with English translations on platforms like SikhNet and YouTube channels dedicated to kirtan. The translation “The Guru Granth Sahib” by Sant Singh Khalsa provides accessible English renderings, though reading with awareness that translation cannot capture the musical and poetic nuances.

Engage with Nikky-Guninder Kaur Singh’s “The First Sikh: The Life and Legacy of Guru Nanak” for historical context, or Eleanor Nesbitt’s “Sikhism: A Very Short Introduction” for overview. If drawn to devotional practice, learn basic Gurmukhi script to chant phonetically, and explore recordings by classical ragis like Bhai Harjinder Singh Srinagar Wale. Approach the text not as philosophical literature to be analyzed but as sacred song meant to evoke devotional states and dissolve the separation between the singer and the divine.

Related terms

gurbani kirtanwaheguru mantrasatsang circlesacred writingvedic chanting
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