Page:The Sikh Religion, its gurus, sacred writings and authors Vol 1.djvu/356

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THE SIKH RELIGION

The saints of God are absorbed in God's name, and have destroyed the pain and fear of transmigration.
They have found God the imperishable Being, and great honour is theirs in the earth's continents and the universe.
God, we poor, and wretched, are Thine; preserve us, preserve us, Thou greatest of the great!
The Name is Nanak's support and prop; I have obtained happiness through being absorbed only in God's name.


Guru Arjan, Rag Gauri Purbi

I pray you hear me, my friends, it is time to serve the saints.
Earn here the profit of God's name, and in the next world ye shall abide in happiness.
Human life groweth shorter every day and night;
O man, meet the Guru and arrange thine affairs.
This world is involved in wickedness and superstition; they who know God are saved.
He whom God awakeneth and causeth to drink the essence of His word, knoweth the story of the Ineffable.[1]
Purchase that[2] for which thou hast come into the world, and God by the Guru's favour will dwell in thy heart.
Thou shalt find a home with comfort and peace in God's own palace, and not return again to this world.
God, Searcher of hearts, Arranger,[3] fulfil the desires of my heart.
The slave Nanak craveth the happiness of being made the dust of the saints feet.

  1. This and the concluding portion of the preceding line are also translated—
    He whom the saint who knoweth God awakeneth, shall be saved,
    And shall quaff the essence of God's name: it is he who knoweth the story of the Ineffable.
  2. God's name.
  3. The gyānis often translate Bidhāta—He who gives man the fruit of his acts. The third Guru uses the expression in the same sense.