(1) |
Krishna was miraculously conceived and born of the Virgin Devaki ("Divine One") as a divine incarnation.
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(2) | He was born at a time when his family had to travel to pay the yearly tax. |
(3) | His father was a carpenter yet Krishna was born of royal descent. |
(4) |
His birth was attended by angels, wise men and shepherds, and he was presented with gifts.
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(5) |
He was persecuted by a tyrant who ordered the slaughter of thousands of infants who feared that the divine child would supplant his kingdom.
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(6) |
His father was warned by a heavenly voice to flee the tyrant who sought the death of the child. The child was then saved by friends who fled with them in the night to a distant country. When the tyrant learned that his attempt to kill the child failed, he issued a decree that all the infants in the area be put to death. Writing about Krishna in the eighteenth century, Sir William Jones stated, "In the Sanskrit dictionary, compiled more than two thousand years ago, we have the whole history of the incarnate deity, born of a virgin, and miraculously escaping in infancy from the reigning tyrant of his country." (Asiatic Researches, Vol. I, p. 273).
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(7) |
The Bible states that Jesus and family fled to Egypt afterward to escape from King Herod. According to the Christian apocryphal text "the Gospel of the Infancy," the family traveled to Maturea, Egypt. Krishna was born in Maturea, India, hundreds of years earlier.
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(8) | He was baptized in the River Ganges. |
(9) | The missions of Krishna and Jesus were the same - the salvation of humanity. |
(10) |
Krishna worked miracles and wonders such as raising the dead and healing lepers, the deaf and the blind.
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(11) | Krishna used parables to teach the people about charity and love. |
(12) |
Jesus taught his disciples about the possibility of removing a mountain by faith. According to tradition, Krishna raised Mount Goverdhen above his disciples to protect his worshipers from the wrath of Indra.
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(13) | "He lived poor and he loved the poor." |
(14) | Krishna washed the feet of the Brahmins and transfigured before his disciples. |
(15) |
Krishna's teachings and Jesus' teachings were very similar. The celebrated French missionary and traveler, Evarist-Regis Hucv, who made a journey of several thousand miles through China and Tibet, stated, "If we addressed a Mogul or Tibetan this question, 'Who is Krishna?' the reply was instantly 'The savior of men." According to Robert Cheyne, "All that converting the Hindoos to Christianity does for them is to change the object of their worship from Krishna to Christ." Appleton's Cyclopedia says this about the teachings of Krishna: "Its correspondence with the New Testament is indeed striking."
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(16) |
There is an extra-canonical Hindu tradition which states that Krishna was crucified. According to some traditions, Krishna died on a tree or was crucified between two thieves.
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(17) |
He descended to hell, rose bodily from the dead, and ascended to heaven which was witnessed by many.
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(18) |
Krishna is called the "shepherd god" and "lord of lords," and was considered "the redeemer, firstborn, sin bearer, liberator, universal Word."
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(19) |
He is the second person of the trinity, and proclaimed himself the "resurrection" and the "way to the Father."
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(20) |
He was considered the "beginning, the middle and the end," ("alpha and omega"), as well as being omniscient, omnipresent and omnipotent.
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(21) | His disciples bestowed upon him the title "Jezeus," meaning "pure essence." |
(22) |
Krishna is to return again riding a white horse to do battle with the "prince of evil," who will desolate the Earth.
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