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Sikh Dharma: (literally *"student on the path of righteous
living") is one of the worlds major religions with 16 million
Sikhs worldwide. It is 500 years old and was founded by Guru Nanak.
Sikhs live by these principles:
- There is one Creator and that Creator lives in each of us
- To begin each day by consciously connecting oneself with ones
own infinity & divinity
- Work honestly and creatively, sharing what you earn, and neither exploit
or beg
- Live in harmony, neither fear others nor create fear in others; defend
the weak and helples
- "Sikh" translates as "seeker" or "student."
- "Dharma" translates as "the path of righteous living."
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- It means to make yourself small so that others may feel large.
- It means to make yourself a servant so that others may feel their
mastery.
- It means to give so that others who lack may receive.
- It means to love so that those who feel unloved may have someone who
never rejects them, someone with whom they can always identify themselves.
- It means to hold out your help to those who ask and help, and also
to those who do not ask.
- It means always to be there when you are needed, yet never to press
yourself on another when you are not wanted.
- It means to stay at peace so that those who are contentious will have
someone to whom they can turn to stabilize themselves.
- It means to keep a cheerful outlook so that those who are easily cast
down may have someone to lift them up.
- It means to keep faith, and to keep on keeping faith even when you
yourself find little reason for believing, so that those who have no
faith can find the courage to live.
- It means not merely to live a life of prayer, but to turn your prayers
into life , more life for you, more life for those to whom you minister.
- It means to be God centered and human hearted, to involve yourself
in the humanity of men and women, and to keep your vision on their divinity,
drawing forth this divinity in all around you.
- It means to share in the great moments of human life, in birth and
sickness and marriage and death, and at all these times, whether of
crisis or of celebration, to bring comfort and a blessing, and above
all a sense of a Presence that sometimes we cannot see and of a meaning
that often we overlook.
- This is what it means to be a minister of God and a minister to humankind.
http://sikhnet.com/
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