Translation: Glorification of the Supreme Personality of Godhead is performed in
the paramparaa system, that is, it is conveyed from the spiritual master to disciple.
Such glorification is relished by those no longer interested in the false, temporary
glorification of this cosmic manifestation. Descriptions of the Lord are the right medicine
for the conditioned soul undergoing repeated birth and death. Therefore, who will cease
hearing such glorification of the Lord except a butcher or one who is killing his own self?
In the Western countries, when someone sees the cover of a book like Krishna, he immediately
asks, Who is Krishna? Who is the girl with Krishna? etc.
The immediate answer is that Krishna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. How is that? Because
He conforms in
exact detail to descriptions of the Supreme Being, the Godhead. In other words, Krishna is the
Godhead because He is all attractive. Outside the principle of all attraction, there is no
meaning to the word Godhead. How is it one can be all attractive? First of all, if one is
very
We have seen many rich persons, many powerful persons, many famous persons, many beautiful
persons, many learned and scholarly persons, and persons in the renounced order of life
unattached to material possessions. But we have never seen any one person who is
unlimitedly and simultaneously
wealthy, powerful, famous, beautiful, wise and unattached, like Krishna, in the history of
humanity. Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is a historical person who appeared
on this earth 5,000 years ago. He stayed on this earth for 125 years and played exactly like
a human being, but His activities were unparalleled. From the very moment of His appearance
to the moment of His disappearance, every one of His activities is unparalleled in the history
of the world, and therefore anyone who knows what we mean by Godhead will accept Krishna as the
Supreme Personality of Godhead. No one is equal to the Godhead, and no one is greater than Him.
That is the import of the familiar saying God is great.
There are various classes of men in the world who speak of God in different ways, but according
to the Vedic literatures and according to the great aacharyas, the authorized persons versed in
the
knowledge of God in all ages, like aacharyas sanskara, Raamanuja, Madhva, Vishnu Svaami, Lord Chaitanya
and all their followers by disciplic succession, all unanimously agree that Krishna is the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. As far as we, the followers of Vedic civilization, are concerned,
we accept the Vedic history of the whole universe, which consists of different planetary systems,
called Svargaloka, or the higher planetary system, Martyaloka, or the intermediary planetary
system, and Paataalaloka, or the lower planetary system. The modern historians of this earth
cannot supply historical evidences of events that occurred before 5,000 years ago, and the
anthropologists say that 40,000 years ago Homo sapiens had not appeared on this planet
because evolution had not reached that point. But the Vedic histories, such as the
Puranas and Mahaabhaarata, relate human histories which extend millions and billions of
years into the past.
For example, from these literatures we are given the histories of Krishna's appearances
and disappearances millions and billions of years ago. In the Fourth Chapter of the Bhagavad gitaa
Krishna tells Arjuna that both He and Arjuna had had many births before and that He (Krishna)
could remember all of them but Arjuna could not. This illustrates the difference between the
knowledge of Krishna and that of Arjuna. Arjuna might have been a very great warrior, a
well cultured member of the Kuru dynasty, but after all, he was an ordinary human being,
whereas Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is the possessor of unlimited knowledge.
Because He possesses unlimited knowledge, Krishna has a memory that is boundless.
Krishna's knowledge is so perfect that He remembers all the incidents of His appearances
some millions and billions of years in the past, but Arjuna's memory and knowledge are limited
by time and space, for he is an ordinary human being. In the Fourth Chapter Krishna states that
He can remember instructing the lessons of the Bhagavad gitaa some millions of years ago to
the sungod, Vivasvaan.
Nowadays it is the fashion of the atheistic class of men to try to become God by following
some mystic process. Generally the atheists claim to be God by dint of their imagination or
their meditational prowess. Krishna is not that kind of God. He does not become God by
manufac-turing some mystic process of meditation, nor does He become God by undergoing the severe
austerities of the mystic yogic exercises. Properly speaking, He never becomes God because He
is the Godhead in all circumstances.
Within the prison of His maternal uncle Kansa, where His father and mother were confined,
Krishna appeared outside His mother's body as the four handed Visnu Naarayana.
Then He turned Himself into a baby and told His father to carry Him to the house of
Nanda Mahaaraja and his wife Yasodaa. When Krishna was just a small baby the gigantic
demoness Putana attempted to kill Him, but when He sucked her breast He pulled out her
life. That is the difference between the real Godhead and a God manufactured in the mystic
factory. Krishna had no chance to practice the mystic yoga process, yet He manifested
Himself as the Supreme Personality of Godhead at every step, from infancy to childhood,
from childhood to boyhood, and from boyhood to young manhood.
wealthy, if he has great riches, he becomes attractive to the people in general. Similarly,
if someone is very powerful, he also becomes attractive, and if someone is very famous,
he also becomes attractive, and if someone is very beautiful or wise or unattached to
all kinds of possessions, he also becomes attractive. So from practical experience we
can observe that one is attractive due to (1) wealth, (2) power, (3) fame, (4) beauty,
(5) wisdom and (6) renunciation. One who is in possession of all six of these opulences
at the same time, who possesses them to an unlimited degree, is
understood to be the Supreme Personality of Godhead. These opulences of the Godhead are
delineated by Paraasara Muni, a great Vedic authority.