Krishna

Krishna is a divine being, an incarnation of the Godhead, an avatar, and he is one of the most celebrated Indian heroes of all time. He has captured the imagination and devotion of Hindus everywhere in his many forms—whether as a frolicking, mischievous child, as the lover of shepherdesses, or as the friend and wise counsellor of the mighty warrior Arjuna.
Krishna is known as the eighth incarnation of Vishnu, the Second Person of the Hindu Triad. His story is told in the Bhagavad Gita, the most popular religious work of India, composed between the fifth and second centuries B.C. and part of the great Indian epic, the Mahabharata.
When we send devotion to Krishna through mantra and sacred song, we open a highway of our love to the heart of Krishna, and he opens the other half of the highway. He sends back our devotion multiplied by his manyfold.
The historical Krishna
Some scholars see Krishna as an historical figure who lived about 650 B.C. Sanskrit scholar David Frawley believes that astronomical references in Hindu texts as well as recent archaeological findings reveal that Krishna lived at least as early as 1400 B.C. Hindu tradition says Krishna was born in 3102 B.C., the beginning of the present age, known as the age of the Kali Yuga—the Age of Strife.
The name Krishna is derived from the Sanskrit word meaning “black” or “dark blue.” He is often depicted as having dark skin—sometimes blue, sometimes blue-black or black.
Information about Krishna comes to us from various Hindu scriptures. They relate detailed episodes from Krishna’s life, including his early days as a mischievous child and amorous youth. Most scholars believe that these stories are an embellishment of the historical Krishna. Here are some of the highlights that are recounted.
Childhood and Youth
Krishna was born in a region south of Delhi, India. Before his birth a voice from heaven prophesies that he will destroy his uncle, the wicked king Kamsa. Immediately after Krishna’s birth his father, through divine intervention, smuggles the newborn to safety to live among the cowherds.
Kamsa attempts to kill Krishna by sending his henchmen and demons to slaughter all the male babies. But the baby Krishna miraculously slays these demons, one by one. As a child, Krishna is brought up by Nanda, the leader of the cowherds, and his wife Yasóda.
The Sanskrit word for cowherds is gopas. Female cowherds are gopis. Gopala and Govinda are names that refer to Krishna as a young cowherd. Gopala means “protector of the cows” and Govinda means “one who is pleasing to the cows and the senses.” What we realize is that this is symbolical of Krishna being the protector of all souls and also the one who quickens and activates our spiritual senses.
Author David R. Kinsley paints the picture of the child Krishna:
Krishna’s life suggests the freedom of the divine. As a child, Krishna behaves with utter spontaneity. He scrambles around the cowherd village with his elder brother, plays with his own shadow, rolls in the dust, dances to make his bangles jingle, eats dirt despite his mother’s warning against it, laughs to himself or sits quietly absorbed in his own imaginings. Krishna passes his time in play, following every whim, acting without calculation, delighting the entire cowherd settlement.[1]
As a boy, Krishna was fond of mischievous pranks such as stealing butter. This is the story of Krishna’s butter thefts based on A. S. P. Ayyar’s account in his book Sri Krishna, The Darling of Humanity.
[Krishna] had a host of friends among the cowherds of Nanda’s clan. The gopis gave Krishna newly prepared butter, but it was never enough for him and his friends. So he used to go into their houses with his friends and take as much butter as he wanted and distribute it.
Many were the complaints made to his mother. She chastised him and asked him to take as much butter as he liked from his own house, but she would not give him enough for all his friends. But Krishna told his mother that the butter he took stealthily from the other houses tasted sweeter!
Sometimes, the gopis caught him in the act of taking the butter, and they struck him with the churning-rods. He received the blows without wincing. This made the tender-hearted gopis atone for their cruelty by giving him as much butter as he wanted for himself and his friends. Krishna came to be known as “Fresh Butter Krishna.”
The butter left after Krishna helped himself had a finer flavor and was much in request among the buyers. They readily paid twice the price and fought for it. The gopis began to complain if Krishna did not go to their houses and help himself. Many gopis watched with great pleasure from behind a door as Krishna and his friends helped themselves to the butter.[2]
Ayyar says the symbology of this is that devotees love to watch their offerings being accepted by the Lord.
Butter is significant to Hindus. Clarified butter, called ghrita or ghee, is the fuel in butter lamps used in Hindu religious services. To Hindus ghee symbolizes illumination and mental clarity. David Frawley points out that the word Christ, from the Greek word Christos (meaning anointed one), is related by derivation to the Sanskrit word ghrita.[3] And so the interplay between the precious child Krishna and his friends represents the relationship between God and the soul on the path of bhakti yoga, the path of union with God through love. Kinsley explains the comparison:
As an infant and a child, Krishna is approachable. Particularly as an infant (but also as an adolescent and lover) Krishna is to be doted upon and coddled. He is to be approached with intimacy with which a parent approaches a child.
God, revealing himself as an infant, invites man to dispense with formality and undue respect and come to him openly, delighting in him intimately. The adorable, beautiful babe, so beloved by the entire Hindu tradition, does not demand servitude, pomp and praise when he is approached. His simplicity, charm, and infant spontaneity invite an intimate, parental response.[4]
Throughout Krishna’s infancy and youth the wicked Kamsa sends numerous demons to kill Krishna. But Krishna dispatches them all with playful aplomb. One of Krishna’s most famous encounters is his fight with the many-headed serpent Kaliya. Kinsley relates:
Kaliya lives in a nearby stream and has poisoned its waters, causing the death of many cattle. Krishna arrives on the scene, surveys the situation, climbs into a tree and leaps into the poisonous waters, where he begins to bait the monster by swimming and playing there. The enraged Kaliya emerges from his lair beneath the waters and the battle begins.
Kaliya seems to get the upper hand at first, gripping Krishna in his coils. But Krishna is only humoring him. Freeing himself from Kaliya’s coils, he begins circling the demon until the serpent’s head begin to droop with exhaustion. Seeing his chance, Krishna jumps onto the heads of the serpent and begins to dance. By rhythmically stamping his feet Krishna tramples his enemy into submission.
Battered and bloody from Krishna’s dancing, Kaliya finally admits defeat and seeks refuge in Krishna’s mercy. Krishna, at the pleading of Kaliya’s wives, grants him his life but banishes him to an island in the ocean.... The mighty child Krishna is invincible.[5]

Krishna and the gopis
As a youth, Krishna embodies joy, grace and the transcendent beauty that magnetizes all who behold him. He plays on his flute and the magic of its sound enchants the gopis. When the gopis hear the sound of his flute, they stop whatever they are doing and run to Krishna. The otherworldly sound of the flute even distracts the gods! Says Kinsley:
The whole creation can concentrate on nothing but the sound of the flute.... Its sound puts an abrupt end to man’s mechanical, habitual activity as well as to the predictable movements of nature.... The sound of Krishna’s flute is more than a melody. It is a summons. It calls souls back to their Lord. [6]
The greatest love existed between Krishna and Radha, the most beautiful of the gopis. Radha is the embodiment of pure devotion and divine bliss. Krishna is everything to her. She is considered by some to be the incarnation of Lakshmi, the consort of Vishnu who vowed to be with him in all his incarnations.
Krishna’s love for the gopis and the gopis’ love for him are symbolic of the divine romance between God and the soul, the Guru and the chela. Just as the gopis pine for Krishna, so the soul pines for God.
Later years
When Krishna becomes a young man, he and his brother return to the city and kill the wicked king Kamsa. Krishna then goes to the western coast of India and establishes a fortress city at Dwarka. As is the custom of the time, he has a large harem and sires many children.
At the outset of a great war both warring factions request Krishna’s aid. He lends his army to one side and serves as charioteer on the other side. Krishna is the charioteer of the great warrior Arjuna, his friend and disciple. On the eve of the battle Krishna instructs Arjuna about the four paths of union with God. The Bhagavad Gita recounts their dialogue.
After the war Krishna returns to Dwarka. One day the people of the city take to drinking and fighting. A kind of madness overtakes them and they slaughter each other. Krishna retreats to the forest. A huntsman mistakes him for a deer and shoots him in the heel, his only vulnerable point. Krishna dies from this wound.
Krishna and Arjuna
Bhagavad Gita means “Song of God.” It is written as a dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna. Krishna describes himself as “the Lord of all that breathes” and “the Lord who abides within the heart of all beings,” meaning one who is in union with God, one who has attained that union that is God. He says: “When goodness grows weak, when evil increases, my Spirit arises on earth. In every age I come back to deliver the holy, to destroy the sin of the sinner, to establish righteousness.”[7]
Arjuna is Krishna’s friend and disciple. The setting is the eve of a great battle to determine who will rule the kingdom. Krishna is to be the charioteer for Arjuna. Just before the battle begins, Arjuna falters because he will have to fight and kill his own kinsmen. Krishna explains to Arjuna that he must enter the battle because it is his dharma—his duty or his reason for being. He is a member of the warrior caste, and come what may, he must fight.
The traditional Hindu interpretation of the battle is twofold. First, the battle represents the struggle Arjuna must engage in to fulfill his dharma and to reclaim the kingdom. Second, the battle represents the war he must wage within himself between good and evil forces—his higher and lower natures.
Krishna teaches Arjuna about the four yogas, or paths of union with God, and says that all the yogas should be practiced. The four yogas are knowledge (jnana yoga), meditation (raja yoga), work (karma yoga) and love and devotion (bhakti yoga). By self-knowledge, by meditation on the God within, by working the works of God to balance karma and increase good karma and by giving loving devotion, we fulfill the four paths of the four lower bodies—the memory body, the mental body, the desire body and the physical body.

Christ and Krishna
In the Bhagavad Gita Arjuna says to Krishna, “If, O Lord, You think me able to behold it,... reveal to me your immutable Self.”[8] When Krishna reveals his Divine Being to Arjuna, Arjuna beholds the whole universe inside of Krishna. Based on this passage many have concluded that Krishna is the supreme God and the supreme Lord. And of course he is. But just as Lord Jesus never declared himself to be the exclusive Son of God, so Lord Krishna never declared himself to be the exclusive supreme God or supreme Lord.
I believe that Lord Krishna unveiled himself to Arjuna as the incarnation of Vishnu, the Second Person of the Eastern and Western Trinity. Krishna revealed his Godhood so that all of us, as Arjunas, as disciples, could see the goal of our Divinity before us. Truly the one who has attained union with God is become that God. There is no separation.
I see Arjuna as the archetypal soul of each of us and Krishna as the charioteer of our soul. Krishna is one with your Higher Self right now, your Holy Christ Self. Visualize Lord Krishna in his incarnation as Vishnu (the Cosmic Christ) as your Higher Self. See him occupying the position of your Holy Christ Self on the Chart of Your Divine Self as the Mediator between your soul and your I AM Presence, your charioteer for life. He will drive that chariot with you there at his side all the way back to the Central Sun. Lord Krishna can be thought of as your “Holy Krishna Self,” if you will. He can place his presence over each person.
The idea is God-identification. We have identified ourselves as humans. God descends into incarnation as an avatar and so we see what was our original blueprint, what were we intended to be, how far have we strayed from this incarnation of God. What do we see in ourselves that is no longer acceptable when we see ourselves in the mirror and look in that mirror and see Krishna, see Jesus Christ, see Gautama Buddha? We begin to see very quickly there are things we can simply do away with.
Lord Krishna can place his Presence one with your Holy Christ Self, multiplying himself a billion times a billion. Yet there is only one Krishna, one Universal Krishna consciousness. This is something you come to understand as you move into the vibration of Krishna. He is Universal God consciousness as well as Universal Christ consciousness. Does that mean that Jesus is not? Of course not. Does that mean that Gautama is not? Of course not.
This is the great mystery of the breaking of the bread at the Last Supper, that each crumb and each morsel is the equivalent of the whole loaf. Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ embodies the Universal Christ consciousness. So does Lord Maitreya, Lord Gautama, Lord Sanat Kumara, the Dhyani Buddhas. Lord Krishna and Lord Jesus teach us the way of Godhood and Sonship respectively. And they—with untold numbers of the heavenly hosts who have realized Christ consciousness, Buddha consciousness and Krishna consciousness—are with us every hour to show us how we can become as they are: God-free beings fulfilling our respective roles as we are a part of the Mystical Body of God.
The ascended masters and all hosts who make up the heavenly hierarchy are surely not in competition with each other for “who is greatest in the kingdom.” They know that one drop in the ocean is as good as the whole ocean. And they know that God has broken the bread of Life so that each one in his own time may become the whole loaf—but never exclusively.

Healing the inner child
Lord Krishna has pledged to help heal the inner child as we sing mantras and bhajans to him. His request is to visualize his Presence over you at the age when you experienced any emotional trauma, physical pain, mental pain, from this or a previous lifetime. You can ask for these events in your life to pass before your third eye like slides moving across a screen or even a motion picture. Assess the age you were at the moment of the trauma. Then, visualize Lord Krishna at that age—six months old, six years old, twelve years old, fifty years old—and see him standing over you and over the entire situation.
If there are other figures in this scene through whom the pain has come, see the Presence of Lord Krishna around them also. Give the devotional mantra and song until you are pouring such love to Lord Krishna that he is taking your love, multiplying it through his heart, passing it back through you and transmuting that scene and that record. If you see Lord Krishna superimposed over every party to the problem, to the anger, to the burden, you can understand that you can affirm in your heart that there really is no Reality but God. Only God is Real, and God is placing his Presence over that situation through the personification of himself in Lord Krishna.
For more information
Elizabeth Clare Prophet has released an audio recording of devotional songs, Krishna: The Maha Mantra and Bhajans, that can be used in the exercise of healing painful memories. Available from www.AscendedMasterLibrary.org.
Sources
Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and Their Retreats, s.v. “Krishna.”
Lecture by Elizabeth Clare Prophet, “Krishna, the Divine Lover of Your Soul,” July 1, 1993. Available from www.AscendedMasterLibrary.org.
- ↑ Kinsley, The Sword and the Flute: Kālī and Kṛṣṇa, Dark Visions of the Terrible and the Sublime in Hindu Mythology (University of California Press, 1975), p. 13.
- ↑ A. S. P. Ayyer, Sri Krishna, The Darling of Humanity (Madras Law Journal Office, 1952), pp. 9-10.
- ↑ Frawley, Gods, Sages and Kings, p. 222.
- ↑ Kinsley, p. 18.
- ↑ Kinsley, p. 22.
- ↑ Kingsley, pp. 39, 40, 33.
- ↑ Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood, trans., Bhagavad Gita (Hollywood, Calif.: Vedanta Press, 1987), p. 58; Juan Mascaro, trans., The Bhagavad Gita (New York: Penguin Books, 1962), pp. 61–62.
- ↑ Swami Nikhilanda, trans., The Bhagavad Gita (New York: Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Center, 1944), p. 254.