Belief overview

Kirat Karni e vida no mundo

A vida espiritual deve ser vivida com trabalho honesto e responsabilidade cotidiana.

66%
Confidence
2
Supportive
0
Contrary
1
Neutral

O que é: Kirat Karni é o ideal de ganhar a vida honestamente e viver espiritualmente no meio da sociedade, sem fuga necessária para isolamento ascético.

Como a tradição entende: A santidade não depende de abandonar o mundo, mas de viver nele com retidão, trabalho digno, disciplina e consciência de Deus.

Base textual e contexto: A tradição sikh frequentemente opõe esse ideal a hipocrisias religiosas, ociosidade e exploração econômica.

Debates e variações: O princípio é amplamente consensual, embora suas aplicações sociais mudem conforme o tempo e a diáspora.

Supportive

Guru Granth Sahib on honest work

sikhism,kirat-karni,work,ethics

Passages tied to the ideal of dignified labor.

Reference: Passages of the Guru Granth Sahib associated with Kirat Karni.
Content: The teaching relates spirituality, honesty, and upright working life.
Use in debate: It supports the ideal of honest work and life in the world.

Guru Granth Sahib on true asceticism

sikhism,asceticism,life-in-the-world,critique

A critique of outward asceticism without ethical and devotional life.

Reference: Passages of the Guru Granth Sahib that criticize merely external renunciation.
Content: The text insists that true discipline is inward and can be lived in the world.
Use in debate: It is important for the ideal of spiritually engaged life within ordinary existence.

Neutral

Bhagavad Gita 4.34

comparison,hinduism,sikhism,guru

A comparative Indian source on the teacher-disciple relationship.

Reference: Bhagavad Gita 4.34.
Content: The text recommends approaching the wise with reverence, questions, and service.
Use in debate: It can be used comparatively to discuss spiritual authority and teaching, although Sikhism interprets it within its own framework.