(1) Fears of rulers of infants born to slay them (2) Divine conception
 (3) Harkening of the birth by heavenly hosts
 (4) "Saviors" being born in very humble surroundings 
 (5) Births on darkest night of month or year 
 (6) A bright shining light harkening the arrival of the saint
 (7) Savior taking on humble occupation 
 (8) Purification of (by) river waters
 (9) As a your, bold denial of claims of the priests (gods)
 (10) Teaching counter to orthodox view
 (11) Birth consistent with tradition and progression of prior births and 
prophesies (avatars and messiahs)   
 (12) Large battlefield (Armageddon, Kurukshetra) 
 and other similarities of Christ and Krishna

 

 Krishna was born to Devaki and her husband, Vasudeva, When Mother Earth became 
upset by the sin being committed on Earth, she thought of seeking help from 
Lord Vishnu. She went in the form of a cow to visit Lord Vishnu and ask for 
help. Lord Vishnu agreed to help her and promised her that he would be born on 
Earth. 
 [Vishnu had incarnated 7 times 
 

 On Earth in the Yadava clan, he was yadav according to his birth, a prince 
named Kansa sent his father Ugrasena (King of Mathura) to prison and became the 
King himself. One day a loud voice from the sky (Akash Vani in Hindi) 
prophesied that the 8th son of Kansa's sister (Devaki) would kill Kansa. Thus, 
Kansa sent his sister and her husband (Vasudeva) to prison. 
 

 Krishna belonged to the Vrishni clan of Yadavas from Mathura, and was the 
eighth son born to the princess Devaki, and her husband Vasudeva. Mathura (in 
present day Mathura district, Uttar Pradesh) was the capital of the Yadavas, to 
which Krishna's parents Vasudeva and Devaki belonged. King Kamsa, Devaki's 
brother,[56] had ascended the throne by imprisoning his father, King Ugrasena. 
Afraid of a prophecy from a divine voice from the heavens that predicted his 
death at the hands of Devaki's eighth "garbha", Kansa had the couple locked in 
a prison cell. After Kansa killed the first six children, Devaki apparently had 
a miscarriage of the seventh. However, in reality, the womb was actually 
transferred to Rohini secretly. This was how Balarama, Krishna's elder brother, 
was born. Once again Devaki became pregnant. Now due to the miscarriage, Kansa 
was in a puzzle regarding 'The Eighth One', but his ministers advised that the 
divine voice from the heavens emphasised "the eight garbha" and so this is the 
one. That night Krishna was born in the Rohini nakshatra and simultaneously the 
goddess Durga was born as Yogamaya in Gokulam to Nanda and Yashoda.
 

 Since Vasudeva knew Krishna's life was in danger, Krishna was secretly taken 
out of the prison cell to be raised by his foster parents, Yasoda and Nanda, in 
Gokula (in present day Mathura district). Two of his other siblings also 
survived, Balarama (Devaki's seventh child, transferred to the womb of Rohini, 
Vasudeva's first wife) and Subhadra (daughter of Vasudeva and Rohini, born much 
later than Balarama and Krishna).
 


 Lord Vishnu himself later appeared to Devaki and Vasudeva and told them that 
he himself would be their eighth son and kill Kansa and destroy sin in the 
world. 
 

 In the story of Krishna the deity is the agent of conception and also the 
offspring.Because of his sympathy for the earth, the divine Vishnu himself 
descended into the womb of Devaki and was born as her son, Vaasudeva (i.e., 
Krishna).
 

 This is occasionally cited as evidence that "virgin birth" tales are fairly 
common in non-Christian religions around the world. However, there is nothing 
in Hindu scriptures to suggest that it was a "virgin" birth. By the time of 
conception and birth of Krishna, Devaki was married to Vasudeva and had already 
borne 7 children. Virgin birth in this case should be more accurately 
understood as divine conception. Kunti the mother of the Pandavas referenced 
contemporaneously with the story of Krishna in the Mahabharata also has divine 
conception and virgin birth of Prince Karna.
 

 The Hindu Vishnu Purana relates: "Devaki bore in her womb the lotus-eyed 
deity...before the birth of Krishna, no one could bear to gaze upon Devaki, 
from the light that invested her, and those who contemplated her radiance felt 
their minds disturbed.” This reference to light is reminiscent of the Vedic 
hymn "To an Unknown Divine," which refers to a Golden Child. According to F. M. 
Müller, this term means "the golden gem of child" and is an attempt at naming 
the sun. According, to the Vishnu Purana Krishna is the total incarnation of 
Lord Vishnu. It clearly describes in the Vishnu Purana that Krishna was born on 
earth to destroy sin, especially Kansa.
 

 Nanda was the head of a community of cow-herders, and he settled in 
Vrindavana. The stories of Krishna's childhood and youth tell how he became a 
cow herder,[59] his mischievous pranks as Makhan Chor (butter thief), his 
foiling of attempts to take his life, and his role as a protector of the people 
of Vrindavana.
 

 Krishna killed the demoness Putana, disguised as a wet nurse, and the tornado 
demon Trinavarta both sent by Kansa for Krishna's life. He tamed the serpent 
Kāliyā, who previously poisoned the waters of Yamuna river, thus leading to the 
death of the cowherds. In Hindu art, Krishna is often depicted dancing on the 
multi-hooded Kāliyā.
 

 Krishna lifted the Govardhana hill and taught Indra, the king of the devas, a 
lesson to protect native people of Brindavana from persecution by Indra and 
prevent the devastation of the pasture land of Govardhan. Indra had too much 
pride and was angry when Krishna advised the people of Brindavana to take care 
of their animals and their environment that provide them with all their 
necessities, instead of worshipping Indra annually by spending their resources. 
 

 In the view of some, the spiritual movement started by Krishna had something 
in it which went against the orthodox forms of worship of the Vedic gods such 
as Indra.[62] In Bhagavat Purana, 
 Krishna says that the rain came from the nearby hill Govardhana, and advised 
that the people worshiped the hill instead of Indra. This made Indra furious, 
so he punished them by sending out a great storm. Krishna then lifted Govardhan 
and held it over the people like an umbrella.

 

 


 
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krishna#cite_note-66 
 
 Krishna - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krishna#cite_note-66 Krishna (/ˈkrɪʃnə/; Sanskrit: 
कृष्ण, Kṛṣṇa in IAST, pronounced [ˈkr̩ʂɳə] ( listen), meaning "black" or 
"dark") is a deity, worshipped across man...
 
 
 
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