"The
Palace of the Lord God is so beautiful. Within it, there are
gems, rubies, pearls and flawless diamonds. A fortress of gold
surrounds this Source of Nectar. How can I climb up to the
Fortress without a ladder? By meditating on the Lord, through
the Guru, I am blessed and exalted. The Guru is the Ladder, the
Guru is the Boat, and the Guru is the Raft to take me to the
Lord’s Name. The Guru is the Boat to carry me across the
world-ocean; the Guru is the Sacred Shrine of Pilgrimage, the
Guru is the Holy River. If it pleases Him, I bathe in the Pool
of Truth, and become radiant and pure."
(Guru Nanak, Sri Rag, pg. 17)
The
word "Guru" is a Sanskrit word meaning teacher,
honoured person, religious person or saint. Sikhism though has a
very specific definition of the word Guru. It means the descent
of divine guidance to mankind provided through ten Enlightened
Masters. This honour of being called a Sikh Guru applies only to
the ten Gurus who founded the religion starting with Guru Nanak
in 1469 and ending with Guru Gobind Singh in 1708; thereafter it
refers to the Sikh Holy Scriptures the Guru Granth Sahib. The
divine spirit was passed from one Guru to the next as "The
light of a lamp which lights another does not abate. Similarly a
spiritual leader and his disciple become equal, Nanak says the
truth."
"They
distinguish and separate one Guru from the other. And rare is
the one who knows that they, indeed, were one. They who realised
this in their hearts, attained Realisation of God." (Guru
Gobind Singh, Dohira, Vachitra Natak)
Pictures of the Gurus
Sikhism rejects any form of idol worship including worship of
pictures of the Gurus. Although some of the Gurus did pose for
paintings, unfortunately none of these historical paintings have
survived. Artists renditions are for inspirational purposes only
and should not be regarded as objects of worship themselves.