Sikh's Do Not Have a God. Instead they follow the teachings of Guru Nanak. In total there were 9 living Gurus but the last one left a sacred text called the Guru Granth Sahib. It is usually covered with a cloth after it has been read.
the sikh's god is fair and cool
In Sikhism "Guru" is seen as somebody who instruct the Sikh (disciple) towards the God.Sikhs consider God's word as their Guru and therefore, the Sikh Holy Scripture which contains the teachings of Sikh Gurus and Sikh Bhagats is the Final and eternal Guru of Sikhs. Furthermore, since "Guru" is God's word. So there is essentially no difference between Guru and God. Whatever qualities God have, the same qualities Guru have.
Sikh's belief in one God, they call God Waheguru means 'Wonderful Lord'.
The beginning of Sikh Scripture is not an alphabet or word but a figure which is "1".And so on the whole of Sikh Gurus and Sikh Bhagats teachings emphasize only on the worship of One God who has created the universe, is sustaining it and will destroy it too.Worship is of One God alone, through out the scripture the Sikh Gurus and Sikh Bhagats have used different names and also the ways to relating with God but the oneness of God is throughout maintained.For Sikhs God is Formless without any shape, size,color, who is imminent in his/her creation but at the same time transcendtal.
Guru Nanak is not a Sikh god, Sikhs believe in one god. The Gurus are 1/2 god, 1/2 human
The Sikh word for God is "Vahiguru", and their concept of them is in some ways similar to that of Allah in Islam, or God in Judaism in that he is God singular, universal, all knowing and all powerful.
no namaste is not a Sikh word. it means hello in Hindu.
No they are not. Guru Nanak the Sikh god was first Hindu not Muslim.
wahe guru is a sikh's GOD
There is no god for the sikhs. There's only one god, the creator of everything.
"part of God"
sardar