![]() ![]() ![]() Heads must be covered, shoes must be taken off when reciting any Bani in the Guru Granth Sahib. The powerful verses of Japji Sahib contain the wisdom of Sri Guru Granth Sahib and help relate to your higher self. Recitation of Japji Sahib helps to strengthen the soul when one feels weak, scared or sad. ![]() Jap means recite/chant, Sahib Ji is to show respect and referred to as ones soul also. The Japji Sahib is the most important set of verses or Bani and recited daily in the mornings by everyone who practises the faith. Japji Sahib also emphasises that one can realise Waheguru only by the kindness of the Guru. Japji Sahib describes the God – Waheguru – as fearless, one without any form and beyond the cycle of birth and death. It begins with Mool Mantra and then follow 38 paudis (stanzas) and completed with a final Salok by Guru Angad Dev ji. It was composed by Guru Angad dev ji, and is mostly the writings of Guru Nanak Dev ji the founder of Sikhism. The first part of the Guru Granth Sahib starts with the Japji Sahib hymn. Japji Sahib is the Sikh thesis, that appears at the beginning of the Guru Granth Sahib the scripture of the Sikhs. The Mool Mantra (beginning), 38 hymns (main), then the final Salok (end), all appearing in the opening verse of the Sikh Holy book Guru Granth Sahib, is what the Japji Sahib consists of. A universal Sikh hymn called Japji Sahib was composed by the founder of the Sikh faith Guru Nanak Dev Ji. ![]()
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