Charity, Compassion, and Moral Responsibility- Lessons from Siri Guru Granth

May 23, 2026

Relating Charity with Compassion and Moral Responsibility

The following four quotes have been taken from the English translation of Siri Guru Granth [1], which is the central religious text of Sikhism, containing spiritual teachings, hymns, and guidance on equality, compassion, devotion, and truthful living. Quotes have been edited further for clarity by Dr Sara Rizvi Jafree.

“You may chant and meditate, practice austerities and self-restraint, and dwell at sacred shrines of pilgrimage; you may give donations to charity, and perform good deeds, but without the True One, what is the use of it all? As you plant, so shall you harvest. Without virtue, this human life passes away in vain.”

“Be kind to all beings- this is more meritorious than bathing at the sixty-eight sacred shrines of pilgrimage and the giving of charity.”

“Dedicate yourself to giving charity, chanting the Naam and purification. Worship the Lord with devotion, and get rid of your pride.”

“They hold fast to the Naam, to charity, to cleansing and purification; they remain awake in devotion to the Lord.”
“With great effort and exertion, the miser works to gather in the riches of Maya. He does not give anything in charity or generosity, and he does not serve the Saints; his wealth does not do him any good at all.”

Implications for Welfare Development

The selected teachings from Guru Granth Sahib present a powerful ethical vision of social welfare and community wellbeing rooted in compassion, humility, charity, and moral conduct.The quotations emphasise that religious devotion cannot be separated from ethical responsibility towards others. Ritual practices, pilgrimage, austerity, and outward displays of religiosity are described as incomplete without behavioural ethics such as truthfulness and kindness towards humanity. This understanding shifts the meaning of welfare beyond material support alone and frames it as a broader moral responsibility grounded in human ethics and compassionate behaviour.

A central theme across the quotations is that kindness towards all beings is among the highest forms of righteousness in humans. The teaching that compassion is “more meritorious” than ritual pilgrimage or charitable donation highlights that social welfare begins with humane conduct, empathy, and respect for others. Community wellbeing is therefore not achieved solely through financial giving, but through everyday acts of care, inclusion, dignity, and social responsibility. Such teachings encourage societies to value emotional support, peaceful coexistence, and ethical relationships alongside welfare initiatives that involve financial transfers.

The quotations also emphasise charity and generosity as essential responsibilities that purify both the individual and society. Wealth that is accumulated without sharing or service to others is portrayed as spiritually and socially meaningless. This carries important implications for welfare development by encouraging responsible use of resources, support for vulnerable populations, and systems that reduce social exclusion. Charity is presented not simply as occasional giving, but as a continuous social practice connected to humility, devotion, and freedom from pride and greed.

These teachings present welfare as a holistic social and moral lifelong project that combines ethical living, compassion, generosity, humility, and community service. Ultimately, strong and peaceful communities are built not only through economic development, but through the cultivation of kindness, moral responsibility, and collective care for the wellbeing of all people.

Multi-Sector Policy Responsibilities for Welfare Development

To secure this broader vision of welfare and community wellbeing, policy efforts must be mobilised across multiple sectors of society. Families and community networks play a foundational role in cultivating compassion, generosity, humility, and respect for others from an early age. Education sectors should promote ethical learning, social responsibility, interfaith understanding, and service-oriented values alongside academic development. Religious institutions and faith-based organisations can strengthen community cohesion through teachings that encourage charity, kindness, equality, and care for vulnerable populations. Social welfare sectors must move beyond material assistance alone to support dignity, inclusion, emotional wellbeing, and community-based care systems. The economic sector also holds responsibility in reducing inequality, encouraging ethical business practices, and creating opportunities for fair and dignified livelihoods. In addition, media and communication sectors can foster empathy, social harmony, and responsible public discourse by discouraging hate, greed, and social division.

[1] English translation of Siri Guru Granth by Dr. Sant Singh Khalsa- One Universal Creator God. The Name is Truth, https://www.sikhnet.com/files/ereader/Siri%20Guru%20Granth%20- %20English%20Translation%20(matching%20pages).pdf