Intermediate

Sikhism: Key Beliefs

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·AQA GCSE Religious Studies·AQA 8062·9 min
3.1.7.1 Beliefs and teachings

God in the Mool Mantra

The Mool Mantra ("root chant") is the opening verse of the Guru Granth Sahib (GGS 1a) and the foundational statement of Sikh belief about God. Guru Nanak composed it, and it encapsulates the nature of the divine in a series of attributes:

AttributeMeaning
Ik OnkarThere is one God
Sat NamWhose name is Truth
Karta PurakhThe Creator
NirbhauWithout fear
NirvairWithout enmity
Akal MuratBeyond time / immortal
AjooniUnborn (not subject to rebirth)
SaibhangSelf-existent
Gur PrasadKnown by the grace of the Guru

The Mool Mantra holds that God is both immanent — present in and through the created universe, so that creation reflects the divine — and transcendent — ultimately separate from and beyond the universe. These are not contradictions: God permeates creation while remaining beyond it.

The Mool Mantra is not a prayer addressed to God but a declaration of what God is. Sikhs recite it daily and it opens every section of the Guru Granth Sahib.

Human Life, Virtue, and Haumai

Sikhism teaches that human birth is a rare and precious opportunity — the only life-form capable of consciously uniting with God. Wasting it in selfish pursuits is the central failure human beings face.

The chief barrier to union with God is haumai (pride or ego) — the self-centred orientation that keeps a person turned away from God. A person dominated by haumai is called manmukh (man-centred or self-directed). A person who has overcome haumai and turned towards God is called gurmukh (God-centred, literally "facing the Guru").

To develop a gurmukh orientation, Sikhs cultivate a set of virtues encouraged throughout the Guru Granth Sahib:

VirtuePunjabi/Sanskrit term
Wisdomgian
Truthful livingsach
Justiceniau
Temperance
Self-controlsanjam
Patiencedhiraj
Couragehimmat
Humilitynimrata
Contentmentsantokh

In Sikh teaching, temperance and self-control are closely related — both draw on sanjam (restraint of ego and sense cravings). The AQA spec names them separately in English; no single distinct Punjabi term for "temperance" is standardly used in GCSE RS teaching.

The spec identifies seven barriers to mukti: illusion (maya), self-centredness (ahamkar), lust (kaam), anger (krodh), greed (lobh), worldly attachment (moh), and pride (ahankar). The last five — kaam, krodh, lobh, moh, and ahankar — are also called the panj vikaar (five thieves); maya and ahamkar are further barriers recognised in the Guru Granth Sahib. Overcoming all of them is necessary for spiritual progress.

Karma, Rebirth, and Mukti

Sikhs believe in karma — the moral law by which actions in this life shape the circumstances of future lives. Good actions generate positive karma; selfish or harmful actions generate negative karma. This cycle of birth, death, and rebirth is called samsara.

The aim of Sikh spiritual life is mukti (liberation) — breaking free from the cycle of rebirth and uniting the individual soul (jiv) with God. Mukti has two distinct aspects:

AspectMeaning
Positive (jiwan mukta)Active union with God — living in awareness of the divine while still embodied; a state of bliss and spiritual freedom
NegativeThe cessation of rebirth — no longer being subject to samsara

The journey towards mukti passes through five stages of liberation (five khands):

  1. Dharam khand — the realm of duty; living righteously
  2. Gian khand — the realm of knowledge; spiritual understanding dawns
  3. Saram khand — the realm of effort; the mind and intellect are refined
  4. Karam khand — the realm of grace; God's grace becomes active
  5. Sach khand — the realm of truth; the soul merges with God; mukti is achieved

Reaching Sach khand is not earned by effort alone — Sikh teaching emphasises that God's grace (nadar or kirpa) is essential. Good conduct opens the person to that grace; it cannot compel it.

Equality of All Humanity

A defining belief of Sikhism is the oneness of humanity — all people are equal before God regardless of caste, gender, religion, or background. This is not a social policy added later; it flows directly from the belief in one Creator who made all human beings.

This equality is expressed through three channels:

1. The lives of the Gurus

Guru Nanak (the first Guru) challenged the caste hierarchy of his day by eating and worshipping with people from all backgrounds. He famously refused to accept the sacred thread (janeu) at age eleven, saying inner purity mattered more than outward caste markers. He travelled widely and taught that God's grace was available to all.

Guru Gobind Singh (the tenth Guru) took equality further in 1699 by founding the Khalsa, the community of initiated Sikhs. He asked five men from different castes to step forward prepared to give their lives — then initiated them together and drank amrit from the same bowl as them, completely dissolving caste barriers.

2. The Guru Granth Sahib

The GGS contains hymns by Sikh Gurus alongside those of Hindu bhakti saints and Muslim Sufi poets from different castes and backgrounds, all presented as equally valid expressions of devotion to the one God. This inclusivity is itself a statement about equality.

3. Sikhism today

In practice, equality is expressed through the langar (shared communal meal, open to all), mixed seating in the gurdwara, and — in principle — equal roles for men and women. Amritdhari Sikhs (those who have undergone initiation) are expected to live out these values actively.

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Sewa and the Sangat

Sewa (selfless service) is one of the most important practical expressions of Sikh belief. Because all people are equal and created by one God, serving others is an act of worship — serving God's creation honours the Creator. Sewa has three dimensions:

TypePunjabiMeaning
Physical serviceTanService with the body — cleaning the gurdwara, serving food in langar
Mental serviceManService with the mind — planning, organising, teaching
Material serviceDhanService with wealth — donating money or resources

Sikh tradition regards tan sewa as spiritually valuable even for the wealthy because it develops humility and overcomes haumai. In many gurdwaras, prominent community members wash dishes or sweep floors alongside everyone else.

The sangat (holy congregation or religious community) is the community of Sikhs who gather to worship and serve together. The sangat is regarded as a sacred institution in itself — Sikh teaching holds that the presence of a sincere sangat draws God's grace. Being part of the sangat supports spiritual development, provides accountability, and enables collective sewa that individuals cannot accomplish alone.

Both sahajdhari Sikhs (who follow Sikh teachings but have not undergone Amrit Sanskar initiation) and amritdhari Sikhs (who have been formally initiated) participate in sangat and sewa, though amritdhari Sikhs take on the additional commitments of the Khalsa.

Exam Technique: 6- and 12-Mark Questions

Sikhism questions in Component 1 follow the five-part structure: 1, 1, 4, 6, 12 marks. SPaG is assessed on the 12-mark answer.

For 6-mark questions ("Explain two religious teachings about…"):

  • Name and explain two distinct teachings — do not repeat the same point in different words.
  • Include a textual reference where possible (Mool Mantra, GGS 1a, a specific hymn).
  • Link each teaching clearly to the question's theme.

For 12-mark questions ("'…' Evaluate this statement"):

  • Present contrasting views — within Sikhism (e.g. sahajdhari vs amritdhari perspectives) or between Sikhism and another tradition.
  • Include religious teaching to support each view.
  • Conclude with a justified personal viewpoint — it must logically follow from the arguments you've made.
  • SPaG is marked here — write in careful paragraphs, not bullet points.

A common error: writing the 12-mark answer as a list of points rather than a developed argument. Each view needs expansion and a textual or doctrinal basis.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Misquoting or misidentifying the Mool Mantra

The Mool Mantra is at GGS 1a — not "the beginning of the Guru Granth Sahib" as a vague description. Know its content (the key attributes of God) and its significance, not just its name.

2. Confusing haumai with the five thieves

Haumai is the overarching problem of ego/self-centredness. The five thieves (lust, anger, greed, attachment, pride) are specific manifestations. Haumai is the root; the five thieves are its branches.

3. Describing mukti only negatively

Mukti is not merely "escaping rebirth". Sikhism emphasises the positive dimension — jiwan mukta, active union with God, which can be experienced even in this life. Only describing it as "stopping rebirth" gives an incomplete answer.

4. Ignoring the role of grace

Saying Sikhs "earn" mukti through good karma alone misrepresents Sikh theology. God's grace (nadar) is essential — the five khands describe a journey on which God's grace is increasingly central, not a checklist completed by human effort.

5. Missing the equality of women

The spec explicitly requires equality of women with men. On a 12-mark question about equality, omitting women's equality loses a significant strand of teaching. Link it to Guru Nanak's challenge to caste norms and Guru Gobind Singh's founding of the Khalsa.

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