Honour and Shame

This article explores how Sikhism understands salvation, grace, and spiritual assurance through devotion, humility, and moral transformation. It explains why assurance is not central in Sikh thought, then carefully compares this with the Bible’s message of grace, forgiveness, and confidence grounded in God’s saving action.
This article explores how Sikhism understands moral failure through ego (haumai), karma, and spiritual discipline. It explains the Sikh path of transformation through devotion and service, then carefully compares this with the Bible’s diagnosis of sin, guilt, bondage, and the need for a new heart.
Sikhism teaches belief in one formless God, often called Waheguru, known through remembrance, obedience, and communal devotion rather than personal revelation. This article explores Sikh prayer, daily practices, honour–shame culture, and how Sikh devotion compares carefully with the Bible’s understanding of God’s name, character, and holiness.
This article introduces who the Sikhs are, exploring their origins in Punjab, the role of the Sikh Gurus, and the formation of a strong community identity. It explains how history, culture, and shared discipline shape Sikh faith and daily life, while gently setting the stage for thoughtful comparison with the Bible.
This launch page introduces Sikhism through the Zuko Explains series, offering a clear, respectful overview of Sikh beliefs, history, community life, and spiritual practices. It guides readers through key topics such as the Sikh Gurus, belief in one God, devotion, honour and service, while carefully preparing for thoughtful comparison with the Bible.