Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Did Dinosaurs really once exist on this Planet? In this regards no one should follow any belief blindly or sentimentally, what ever is claimed MUST be proven by proper research beyond any doubt.

Did Dinosaurs once really exist?

So what does Prabhupada mean when he says -

Srila Prabhupada  - "There is no such thing as extinction of species, all animals on this planet ALWAYS exist?" (July 3, 1976, Washington, D.C)

We should try to understand what Prabhupada really means here.

Maybe the answer is simple, what Srila Prabhupada means is the material creation is always repeating its "cycles of creation and annihilation" happening in ever day of Lord Brahma. This further means that all species of life again exist fully when every new day of Brahma begins. So technically all species of life ALWAYS exist when every day of Brahma begins.

The following 45 year old conversation from 1976 in Washington DC with Prabhupada about the discovery of Dinosaur bones, was back then in its infancy and needs more research to understand what the truth really is.

Frankly, with what we know today in 2021, speaks volumes. What I have personally seen in outback Australia in the 1990s, proves without a doubt that large dinosaurs CERTAINLY did once exist. We just cannot ignore this evidence, no matter what some claim Sastra (scripture) says.

By Personally putting these bones together and seeing the out come of these gigantic animals they once were, was certainly NOT my imagination!

In other words, Dinosaurs once DID exist all over the planet and to denying this fact is simply ignorance. No one should follow any belief blindly or sentimentally, what ever one claims, even Guru must have his checks and balances. In other words, what ever Guru says MUST be proven beyond any doubt.

Yes, Sastric (religious texts) are also needed as solid evidence too, but so are basic scientific "out in the field facts" knowledge too.

We are always told the material senses are faulty and therefore we cannot make judgements based on our senses.

This is simply NOT true.

The material senses have faults, but we ALWAYS depend on them to know heat from cold, when and when not to cross the road etc.

To just say we cannot see and feel properly through our faulty material senses, is only partly right in a Spiritual way however, the fact is, everyday we depend on the decisions made with our material sense.

So NOT by Sastra (scripture) alone can we see EVERYTHING around us and should therefore ignore the physical evidence in the fields around us, like discovering thousands of bones they ARE finding, proving Dinosaurs DID exist. And this is NOT the imagation of archeologicists as some have ignorantly claimed!

Religion without scientific knowledge is sentimental nonsense, and Science without Religion is impersonal materialistic nonsense.

There MUST be a balance that looks at ALL evidence.

And based on that evidence today, to deny that Dinasauras DID once exist is ridiculous.

So what does Prabhupada mean when he says -

Srila Prabhupada  - "There is no such thing as extinction of species, all animals on this planet ALWAYS exist?" 

We should try to understand what he really means here.

Maybe the answer is, he means because the material creation is always repeating its cycles of creation and annihilation in ever day of Brahma, all species of life technically ALWAYS exist.

Srila Prabhupāda - "So, as far as possible, you can give explanation from Bhāgavatam. Otherwise, how you can..."

Devotee - "So by giving these examples then they might think this has very good explanatory power, and they will therefore accept it".

Srila Prabhupāda - "So the general division in the higher planetary system is the devatās, beginning from sun, moon and other planetary systems, they are in modes of goodness prominent. Less, below that, bhūr bhuvaḥ, they are passionate, and below that, they are ignorant".

Devotee - "Do the number of demigods have something to do with the number of species, like there are thirty-three million demigods?"

Srila Prabhupāda - "There are thirty-three million. Thirty crores. There are also divisions, Gandharvas, Apsarās".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "Do they belong to these species? They are also included in these eight million four hundred? These Gandharvas?"

Srila Prabhupāda - "Yes".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "So they are counted, what, as human beings?"

Srila Prabhupāda - "Some of them are devatās, some of them are human being".

Rūpānuga - "When we say four hundred thousand species of human beings, that doesn't include all the demigods then".

Srila Prabhupāda - "The demigods are like human beings".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "Prabhupāda told me that when you become a devotee, you are a demigod. (laughs)"

Srila Prabhupāda - "The whole evolutionary process means to bring the living entity to the platform of goodness and then transcend that platform also, come to pure goodness. That is devotion".

Devotee - "Prabhupāda? You explained that all those forms are already existing. What is the meaning of all those forms if there is no one inhabiting them? Why is it that they all exist without..."

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, no, how you can say nobody is inhabiting?"

Devotee - "You said that they are there, you just go to the different forms. So that means they are existing without anyone living there?"

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, form, a class of form. It can be immediately, that A class, B class, C class, D class. So if you are fit for D class, immediately form for you, a D class body is there, made".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "It is also existing in the sense that in the unmanifested form, before it is manifested, the form is there".

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, no. That is species. Form is there already. They are existing. So you require to get another form, but the same class. First-class compartment is there. If it is, one bogey is already, first-class filled up, then railroad company brings another bogey and gives place to the passengers. That's all, there is no difficulty. What is the difficulty? Put him into this particular mother's womb and he gets a form, that's all. Parāsya śaktir vividhaiva śrūyate (Cc. Madhya 13.65, purport). Don't compare Kṛṣṇa's power with your power. He can do anything, anyone, immediately".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "So called Acintya. (pause) What is the biological concept of species?"

Sadāpūta - "All they can do is base it on the similarity of what the animals look like. They have trouble counting species. Śrīla Prabhupāda? Are there different meanings, this day of Brahmā? Are there different creations and annihilations of species? Different Manus, they are sometimes flooding the whole earth".

Srila Prabhupāda - "There are different, when Brahmā goes to sleep, that is one kind of devastation, and when he dies there is one kind. And during Brahmā's days there are other devastations, manvantara".

Sadāpūta - "After a devastation, do the..."

Srila Prabhupāda - "Different classes of devastation. There are many devastations during Brahmā's day, and there is another devastation during Brahmā's sleep, and another devastation when Brahmā dies".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "And during different Manus also".

Srila Prabhupāda - "That is day. Such devastation takes place during Brahmā's day. Fourteen Manus".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "Do we know that in detail, Śrīla Prabhupāda? What type of species are extinct? Not all the species extinct. As it is during Brahmā's day, that partial annihilation, devastation, now some species are extinct?"

Srila Prabhupāda - No species extinct. What you are reading? This is garbage.(?)"

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "The physical forms".

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, nothing is extinct. Everything is going on".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "At that point, they are going to come up with the point that "How about dinosaurs?" They are going to ask like that".

Srila Prabhupāda - "That is imagination, where is dinosaur finding".

Svarūpa Dāmodara - "They say they have all the bones".

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, they are describing maybe another animal. That is existing. That is Timiṅgila, they can swallow up big, big whale fishes. That big, bones, they are living still. Nothing is extinct. They are already there".

Rūpānuga - "Did these dinosaurs exist, or is it just their imagination?"

Srila Prabhupāda - "The big animal exists. I call it dinosaur or finosaur, that is your choice. Big animals existing. Timiṅgila, I said the name, Timiṅgila, still exist".

Rūpānuga - "Still exist".

Srila Prabhupāda - "Oh, yes. They are always existing. Water elephants. There are elephants in water. Everything".

Rūpānuga - "So there is no such thing as extinction".

Srila Prabhupāda - "No extinction, there is no question of extinction".

Rūpānuga - "If these animals were on this planet some millions of years ago, they are still here, is that correct?"

Srila Prabhupāda - "Yes. What do you know what are there within the water? You can take information from the śāstras. It is not possible for you to see and go into the water, how big, big animals are there". (Discussions -- July 3, 1976, Washington, D.C)






Sunday, November 15, 2020

Sankirtan should be happening in every Town, Village and City around the globe, so the trapped souls in these temporary material bodily vessels, begin their journey back home back to Godhead.

The most important activity of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu's great street Sankirtan Movement of the street chanting of Hare Krishna, should be introduced at a very young age. 

Sankirtan should be happening in every Town, Village and City around the globe, so the trapped souls in these temporary material bodily vessels, begin their journey back home back to Godhead, and out of this decomposing material creation of repeated birth, youth, old age and death.



























Friday, November 13, 2020

Did Hitler have the Atomic Bomb during World War 2 and did not use it because he was a gentleman, as Prabhupada claims in letter below?

The fact is, we know today in 2021, that Hitler did NOT have the Atomic Bomb! He was not even close to building it. And he certainly was no Gentleman explained below.

Yes we know today that Hitler NEVER had the Atomic bomb as Dr Patel tries to explain to Prabhupada below.

Therefore, Prabhupada's "speculative opinion" by him and those young devotees around him at that time, did not have all the proper historical facts, going by the evidence we now have today in 2021.

If Hitler had the Atomic Bomb, he would of definitely used it just like he ordered advanced V2 rocket attacks to bomb London and Paris killing thousands indiscriminately.

And how can one justify the misinformed comment that Hitler was a gentleman because he never used the Atomic Bomb after the devastation, human rights abuses and murder Hitler caused in Russia and Ukraine (Soviet Union), killing 26 million Soviet Citizens?

Just in Leningrad alone in two years, German troops killed more people than what Great Britain, the United States and France lost in the ENTIRE war!! 

Over one million Soviet people died in the siege of Leningrade!!

How can anyone believe such a nonsense claim? Therefore Hitler was certainly NO gentleman as Prabhupada claimed in that nonsense letter below! 

When Prabhupada gives spiritual instructions they are perfect. however, his opinions of world events is often clearly wrong.

Saying that Hitler never used the Atomic Bomb because he believed it is too destructive and devastating on the population, is a ridiculous comment! And complete nonsense said by Prabhupada!

No, such a misinformed letter below by Prabhupada is nonsense according to WW2 Historians.

And even when the Atomic Bomb was detonated over Japan twice by the Americans, top German scientists did not believe it because they did not believed such a bomb was possible according to historical accounts.

The Nazis were not even close to building an Atomic Bomb during WW2.

German born scientists, many of them Jews, got out of Germany before or during WW2 however, they did build the Atomic Bomb in the United States under the heading the Manhatten project and American scientists.

In conclusion, to say Hitler had the Atomic Bomb, said below in letter by Prabhupada, and that he did not use it because he was a gentleman, is ridiculous, a total misinformed comment that is historically incorrect.

Do not just follow blindly, NOT even Prabhupada on material events like these misinformed speculative letters below, check everything. "No, no, Hitler DIDN'T know about the Atomic Bomb!"

Morning Walk -- June 10, 1975, Honolulu:

Siddha-svarūpa - "The Japanese didn't have any atom bombs to send back, though".

Srila Prabhupāda -"No. It was in possession of Hitler. And your American stolen and kept it. Hitler wanted to use it, but, good sense, he did not like. He said that "I can do it immediately, but I will not do it." So three bombs they kept ready, and when Germany was in awkward condition these Americans, they stolen, and they used it in Japan. This was manufactured by the German". (Morning Walk, June 10, 1975, Honolulu)

What a nonsense comment above by Prabhupada!! 

Morning Walk -- November 20, 1975, Bombay:

Dr. Patel - "They smuggled away the secret of atom bomb from America".

Srila Prabhupāda - "The Germans".

Dr. Patel - "No, the Russians smuggled away. Germans came to America, taking that..."

Srila Prabhupāda - "They understood from the Germans".

Dr. Patel - "Yes, sir, but it is said that the German scientist ran away to America because they were afraid of Hitler. If Hitler gets the secret of atom, he would bomb out the whole world".

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, no. Hitler knew it".

Dr. Patel - "No. They were not able to be successful to..."

Srila Prabhupāda - "No, no. He knew it, everything, but he did not like to do it. He said. He said. He was gentleman. But these people are not gentlemen. He knew it perfectly well. He said that "I can smash the whole world, but I do not use that weapon." The Germans already discovered. But out of humanity they did not use it. And all the, your American, other countries, they have stolen from German ideas".

Dr. Patel - "I think, sir, German scientists ran away during the wartime to America and built the bomb".

PHOTO - Prabhupada with Dr. Patel






"Bhu-Mandala" is our small material universe that has 14 Planetary Systems within it, and is surrounded on all sides by a massive spherical shaped larger outer material universal shell called a "Brahmanda". This Brahmanda outer shell that encases our smaller Bhu-Mandala universe, is made up of 7 layers of material energy.

 ''A Description of Jambūdvīpa''

Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 5 Chapter 16 Text 1 to Text 29

By His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.

(Our small earth globe is 24,901 miles in circumference and is 7,917.5 miles in diameter)

It is also very clear our small Earth globe is NOT Bhu-Mandala that is described in Srimad Bhagavatam which is almost 4 billion miles in diameter and 12.34 billion miles in circumference.

No, our Earth globe is way too small to be Bhū-maṇḍala according to Vedic Cosmologist and ISKCON scientist Sadaputa Dasa ACBSP.

"Bhu-Mandala" is actually almost the size of our entire small 4 billion mile diameter material universe that has 14 Planetary Systems within it, and is surrounded on all sides by a massive spherical shaped larger outer material universe called a "Brahmanda". 

This outer Brahmanda Universe is made up of 7 layers of material energy such as -

1 - Earth,
2 - Water,
3 - Fire,
4 - Air,
5 - Sky,
6 - Total material energy (Mahat-tattva)
7 - False Ego.

That are all together are a massive 44 Quadrillion 444 Trillion 444 Billion miles in diameter and possible just from one side of Bhu-Mandala that is situated in the center of the Brahmanda, meaning it is double that figure in diameter.

Our 4 Billion mile diameter inner Bhu-Mandala Universe is just a spec deep with this Brahmanda Universal shell shaped spherical material universe that comes from Maha Vishnu along with Billions of others, all in different sizes too.

His Divine Grace AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada explains our small Earth planetary global round sphere within our 4 Billion diameter Bhu-Mandala Universe as a global sphere and NOT flat as primitive minded people believed.

Srila Prabhupada - "Within this material energy there are innumerable universes, in every universe there are innumerable material planets, and the earth is one of these planets. Thus we can understand what an insignificant part of the entire cosmos is this globe on which we live''. (Light of the Bhāgavata 47)

While describing the character of Mahārāja Priyavrata and his descendants, Śukadeva Gosvāmī also described Meru Mountain and the planetary system known as Bhū-maṇḍala.

Bhū-maṇḍala universe is in the lotus stem, and its seven islands are compared to the whorl of the lotus.

The place known as Jambūdvīpa is in the middle of that whorl. In Jambūdvīpa there is a mountain known as Sumeru, which is made of solid gold. The height of this mountain is 84,000 yojanas, of which 16,000 yojanas are below the earth.

Its width is estimated to be 32,000 yojanas at its summit and 16,000 yojanas at its foot. (One yojana equals approximately eight miles.)

This king of mountains, Sumeru, is the support of the planet earth.

On the southern side of the land known as Ilāvṛta-varṣa are the mountains known as Himavān, Hemakūṭa and Niṣadha, and on the northern side are the mountains Nīla, Śveta and Śṛṅga.

Similarly, on the eastern and western side there are Mālyavān and Gandhamādana, two large mountains. Surrounding Sumeru Mountain are four mountains known as -

Mandara,
Merumandara,
Supārśva
Kumuda,

Each 10,000 yojanas long and 10,000 yojanas high.

On these four mountains there are trees 1,100 yojanas high — a mango tree, a rose apple tree, a kadamba tree and a banyan tree. There are also lakes full of milk, honey, sugarcane juice and pure water. These lakes can fulfill all desires.

There are also gardens named Nandana, Citraratha, Vaibhrājaka and Sarvatobhadra.

On the side of Supārśva Mountain is a kadamba tree with streams of honey flowing from its hollows, and on Kumuda Mountain there is a banyan tree named Śatavalśa, from whose roots flow rivers containing milk, yogurt and many other desirable things.

Surrounding Sumeru Mountain like filaments of the whorl of a lotus are twenty mountain ranges such as

Kuraṅga,
Kurara,
Kusumbha,
Vaikaṅka
Trikūṭa.

To the east of Sumeru are the mountains Jaṭhara and Devakūṭa, to the west are Pavana and Pāriyātra, to the south are Kailāsa and Karavīra, and to the north are Triśṛṅga and Makara.

These eight mountains are about 18,000 yojanas long, 2,000 yojanas wide and 2,000 yojanas high. On the summit of Mount Sumeru is Brahmapurī, the residence of Lord Brahmā.

Each of its four sides is 10,000 yojanas long. Surrounding Brahmapurī are the cities of King Indra and seven other demigods. These cities are one fourth the size of Brahmapurī.

SB 5.16.1

King Parīkṣit said to Śukadeva Gosvāmī: O brāhmaṇa, you have already informed me that the radius of Bhū-maṇḍala extends as far as the sun spreads its light and heat and as far as the moon and all the stars can be seen.

Purport:

In this verse it is stated that the planetary system known as Bhū-maṇḍala extends to the limits of the sunshine. According to modern science, the sunshine reaches earth from a distance of 93,000,000 miles.

If we calculate according to this modern information, 93,000,000 miles can be considered the radius of Bhū-maṇḍala. In the Gāyatrī mantra, we chant om bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ.

The word bhūr refers to Bhū-maṇḍala. Tat savitur vareṇyam: the sunshine spreads throughout Bhū-maṇḍala. Therefore the sun is worshipable.

The stars, which are known as nakṣatra, are not different suns, as modern astronomers suppose. From Bhagavad-gītā (10.21) we understand that the stars are similar to the moon (nakṣatrāṇām ahaṁ śaśī).

Like the moon, the stars reflect the sunshine. Apart from our modern distinguished estimations of where the planetary systems are located, we can understand that the sky and its various planets were studied long, long before Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam was compiled.

Śukadeva Gosvāmī explained the location of the planets, and this indicates that the information was known long, long before Śukadeva Gosvāmī related it to Mahārāja Parīkṣit. The location of the various planetary systems was not unknown to the sages who flourished in the Vedic age.

SB 5.16.2

My dear Lord, the rolling wheels of Mahārāja Priyavrata’s chariot created seven ditches, in which the seven oceans came into existence. Because of these seven oceans, Bhū-maṇḍala is divided into seven islands. You have given a very general description of their measurement, names and characteristics. Now I wish to know of them in detail. Kindly fulfill my desire.

SB 5.16.3

When the mind is fixed upon the Supreme Personality of Godhead in His external feature made of the material modes of nature — the gross universal form — it is brought to the platform of pure goodness.

In that transcendental position, one can understand the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Vāsudeva, who in His subtler form is self-effulgent and beyond the modes of nature. O my lord, please describe vividly how that form, which covers the entire universe, is perceived.

Purport:

Mahārāja Parīkṣit had already been advised by his spiritual master, Śukadeva Gosvāmī, to think of the universal form of the Lord, and therefore, following the advice of his spiritual master, he continuously thought of that form.

The universal form is certainly material, but because everything is an expansion of the energy of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, ultimately nothing is material. Therefore Parīkṣit Mahārāja’s mind was saturated with spiritual consciousness. Śrīla Rūpa Gosvāmī has stated:

prāpañcikatayā buddhyā
hari-sambandhi-vastunaḥ
mumukṣubhiḥ parityāgo
vairāgyaṁ phalgu kathyate

Everything, even that which is material, is connected with the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Therefore everything should be engaged in the service of the Lord. Śrīla Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura translates this verse as follows:

hari-sevāya yāhā haya anukūla
viṣaya baliyā tāhāra tyāge haya bhula

“One should not give up anything connected with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, thinking it material or enjoyable for the material senses.” Even the senses, when purified, are spiritual. When Mahārāja Parīkṣit was thinking of the universal form of the Lord, his mind was certainly situated on the transcendental platform.

Therefore although he might not have had any reason to be concerned with detailed information of the universe, he was thinking of it in relationship with the Supreme Lord, and therefore such geographical knowledge was not material but transcendental.

Elsewhere in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam (1.5.20) Nārada Muni has said, idaṁ hi viśvaṁ bhagavān ivetaraḥ: the entire universe is also the Supreme Personality of Godhead, although it appears different from Him.

Therefore although Parīkṣit Mahārāja had no need for geographical knowledge of this universe, that knowledge was also spiritual and transcendental because he was thinking of the entire universe as an expansion of the energy of the Lord.

In our preaching work also, we deal with so much property and money and so many books bought and sold, but because these dealings all pertain to the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement, they should never be considered material. That one is absorbed in thoughts of such management does not mean that he is outside of Kṛṣṇa consciousness.

If one rigidly observes the regulative principle of chanting sixteen rounds of the mahā-mantra every day, his dealings with the material world for the sake of spreading the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement are not different from the spiritual cultivation of Kṛṣṇa consciousness.

SB 5.16.4

The great ṛṣi Śukadeva Gosvāmī said: My dear King, there is no limit to the expansion of the Supreme Personality of Godhead’s material energy. This material world is a transformation of the material qualities [sattva-guṇa, rajo-guṇa and tamo-guṇa], yet no one could possibly explain it perfectly, even in a lifetime as long as that of Brahmā.

No one in the material world is perfect, and an imperfect person could not describe this material universe accurately, even after continued speculation. O King, I shall nevertheless try to explain to you the principal regions, such as Bhūloka, with their names, forms, measurements and various symptoms.

Purport:

The material world is only one fourth of the Supreme Personality of Godhead’s creation, but it is unlimited and impossible for anyone to know or describe, even with the qualification of a life as long as that of Brahmā, who lives for millions and millions of years.

Modern scientists and astronomers try to explain the cosmic situation and the vastness of space, and some of them believe that all the glittering stars are different suns.

From Bhagavad-gītā, however, we understand that all these stars (nakṣatras) are like the moon, in that they reflect the sunshine. They are not independent luminaries.

Bhūloka is explained to be that portion of outer space through which the heat and light of the sun extend. Therefore it is natural to conclude that this universe extends in space as far as we can see and encompasses the glittering stars.

Śrīla Śukadeva Gosvāmī admitted that to give full details of this expansive material universe would be impossible, but nevertheless he wanted to give the King as much knowledge as he had received through the paramparā system.

We should conclude that if one cannot comprehend the material expansions of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, one certainly cannot estimate the expansiveness of the spiritual world. The Brahma-saṁhitā (5.33) confirms this:

advaitam acyutam anādim ananta-rūpam
ādyaṁ purāṇa-puruṣaṁ nava-yauvanaṁ ca

The limits of the expansions of Govinda, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, cannot be estimated by anyone, even a person as perfect as Brahmā, not to speak of tiny scientists whose senses and instruments are all imperfect and who cannot give us information of even this one universe.

We should therefore be satisfied with the information obtainable from Vedic sources as spoken by authorities like Śukadeva Gosvāmī.

SB 5.16.5

The planetary system known as Bhū-maṇḍala resembles a lotus flower, and its seven islands resemble the whorl of that flower. The length and breadth of the island known as Jambūdvīpa, which is situated in the middle of the whorl, are one million yojanas [eight million miles]. Jambūdvīpa is round like the leaf of a lotus flower.

SB 5.16.6

In Jambūdvīpa there are nine divisions of land, each with a length of 9,000 yojanas [72,000 miles]. There are eight mountains that mark the boundaries of these divisions and separate them nicely.

Purport:

Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura gives the following quotation from the Vāyu Purāṇa, wherein the locations of the various mountains, beginning with the Himālayas, are described.

dhanurvat saṁsthite jñeye dve varṣe dakṣiṇottare; dīrghāṇi tatra catvāri caturasram ilāvṛtam iti dakṣiṇottare bhāratottara-kuru-varṣe catvāri kiṁpuruṣa-harivarṣa-ramyaka-hiraṇmayāni varṣāṇi nīla-niṣadhayos tiraścinībhūya samudra-praviṣṭayoḥ saṁlagnatvam aṅgīkṛtya bhadrāśva-ketumālayor api dhanur-ākṛtitvam; atas tayor dairghyata eva madhye saṅkucitatvena nava-sahasrāyāmatvam; ilāvṛtasya tu meroḥ sakāśāt catur-dikṣu nava-sahasrāyāmatvaṁ saṁbhavet vastutas tv ilāvṛta-bhadrāśva-ketumālānāṁ catus-triṁśat-sahasrāyāmatvaṁ jñeyam.

SB 5.16.7

Amidst these divisions, or varṣas, is the varṣa named Ilāvṛta, which is situated in the middle of the whorl of the lotus. Within Ilāvṛta-varṣa is Sumeru Mountain, which is made of gold. Sumeru Mountain is like the pericarp of the lotuslike Bhū-maṇḍala planetary system.

The mountain’s height is the same as the width of Jambūdvīpa — or, in other words, 100,000 yojanas [800,000 miles].

Of that, 16,000 yojanas [128,000 miles] are within the earth, and therefore the mountain’s height above the earth is 84,000 yojanas [672,000 miles].

The mountain’s width is 32,000 yojanas [256,000 miles] at its summit and 16,000 yojanas at its base.

SB 5.16.8

Just north of Ilāvṛta-varṣa — and going further northward, one after another — are three mountains named Nīla, Śveta and Śṛṅgavān. These mark the borders of the three varṣas named Ramyaka, Hiraṇmaya and Kuru and separate them from one another.

The width of these mountains is 2,000 yojanas [16,000 miles]. Lengthwise, they extend east and west to the beaches of the ocean of salt water. Going from south to north, the length of each mountain is one tenth that of the previous mountain, but the height of them all is the same.

Purport:

In this regard, Madhvācārya quotes the following verses from the Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa:

yathā bhāgavate tūktaṁ
bhauvanaṁ kośa-lakṣaṇam
tasyāvirodhato yojyam
anya-granthāntare sthitam

maṇḍode puraṇaṁ caiva
vyatyāsaṁ kṣīra-sāgare
rāhu-soma-ravīṇāṁ ca
maṇḍalād dvi-guṇoktitām
vinaiva sarvam unneyaṁ
yojanābhedato ’tra tu

It appears from these verses that aside from the sun and moon, there is an invisible planet called Rāhu. The movements of Rāhu cause both solar and lunar eclipses. We suggest that the modern expeditions attempting to reach the moon are mistakenly going to Rāhu.

SB 5.16.9

Similarly, south of Ilāvṛta-varṣa and extending from east to west are three great mountains named (from north to south) Niṣadha, Hemakūṭa and Himālaya. Each of them is 10,000 yojanas [80,000 miles] high. They mark the boundaries of the three varṣas named Hari-varṣa, Kimpuruṣa-varṣa and Bhārata-varṣa [India].

SB 5.16.10

In the same way, west and east of Ilāvṛta-varṣa are two great mountains named Mālyavān and Gandhamādana respectively. These two mountains, which are 2,000 yojanas [16,000 miles] high, extend as far as Nīla Mountain in the north and Niṣadha in the south. They indicate the borders of Ilāvṛta-varṣa and also the varṣas known as Ketumāla and Bhadrāśva.

Purport:

There are so many mountains, even on this planet earth. We do not think that the measurements of all of them have actually been calculated. While passing over the mountainous region from Mexico to Caracas, we actually saw so many mountains that we doubt whether their height, length and breadth have been properly measured.

Therefore, as indicated in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam by Śukadeva Gosvāmī, we should not try to comprehend the greater mountainous areas of the universe merely by our calculations. Śukadeva Gosvāmī has already stated that such calculations would be very difficult even if one had a duration of life like that of Brahmā.

We should simply be satisfied with the statements of authorities like Śukadeva Gosvāmī and appreciate how the entire cosmic manifestation has been made possible by the external energy of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The measurements given herein, such as 10,000 yojanas or 100,000 yojanas, should be considered correct because they have been given by Śukadeva Gosvāmī.

Our experimental knowledge can neither verify nor disprove the statements of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. We should simply hear these statements from the authorities. If we can appreciate the extensive energy of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, that will benefit us.

SB 5.16.11

On the four sides of the great mountain known as Sumeru are four mountains — Mandara, Merumandara, Supārśva and Kumuda — which are like its belts. The length and height of these mountains are calculated to be 10,000 yojanas [80,000 miles].

SB 5.16.12

Standing like flagstaffs on the summits of these four mountains are a mango tree, a rose apple tree, a kadamba tree and a banyan tree. Those trees are calculated to have a width of 100 yojanas [800 miles] and a height of 1,100 yojanas [8,800 miles]. Their branches also spread to a radius of 1,100 yojanas.

SB 5.16.13-14

O Mahārāja Parīkṣit, best of the Bharata dynasty, between these four mountains are four huge lakes. The water of the first tastes just like milk; the water of the second, like honey; and that of the third, like sugarcane juice. The fourth lake is filled with pure water.

The celestial beings such as the Siddhas, Cāraṇas and Gandharvas, who are also known as demigods, enjoy the facilities of those four lakes. Consequently they have the natural perfections of mystic yoga, such as the power to become smaller than the smallest or greater than the greatest.

There are also four celestial gardens named Nandana, Caitraratha, Vaibhrājaka and Sarvatobhadra.

SB 5.16.15

The best of the demigods, along with their wives, who are like ornaments of heavenly beauty, meet together and enjoy within those gardens, while their glories are sung by lesser demigods known as Gandharvas.

SB 5.16.16

On the lower slopes of Mandara Mountain is a mango tree named Devacūta. It is 1,100 yojanas high. Mangoes as big as mountain peaks and as sweet as nectar fall from the top of this tree for the enjoyment of the denizens of heaven.

Purport:

In the Vāyu Purāṇa there is also a reference to this tree by great learned sages:

aratnīnāṁ śatāny aṣṭāv
eka-ṣaṣṭy-adhikāni ca
phala-pramāṇam ākhyātam
ṛṣibhis tattva-darśibhiḥ

SB 5.16.17

When all those solid fruits fall from such a height, they break, and the sweet, fragrant juice within them flows out and becomes increasingly more fragrant as it mixes with other scents. That juice cascades from the mountain in waterfalls and becomes a river called Aruṇodā, which flows pleasantly through the eastern side of Ilāvṛta.

SB 5.16.18

The pious wives of the Yakṣas act as personal maidservants to assist Bhavānī, the wife of Lord Śiva. Because they drink the water of the river Aruṇodā, their bodies become fragrant, and as the air carries away that fragrance, it perfumes the entire atmosphere for eighty miles around.

SB 5.16.19

Similarly, the fruits of the jambū tree, which are full of pulp and have very small seeds, fall from a great height and break to pieces.

Those fruits are the size of elephants, and the juice gliding from them becomes a river named Jambū-nadī.

This river falls a distance of 10,000 yojanas, from the summit of Merumandara to the southern side of Ilāvṛta, and floods the entire land of Ilāvṛta with juice.

Purport:

We can only imagine how much juice there might be in a fruit that is the size of an elephant but has a very tiny seed. Naturally the juice from the broken jambū fruits forms waterfalls and floods the entire land of Ilāvṛta. That juice produces an immense quantity of gold, as will be explained in the next verses.

SB 5.16.20-21

The mud on both banks of the river Jambū-nadī, being moistened by the flowing juice and then dried by the air and the sunshine, produces huge quantities of gold called Jāmbū-nada.

The denizens of heaven use this gold for various kinds of ornaments. Therefore all the inhabitants of the heavenly planets and their youthful wives are fully decorated with golden helmets, bangles and belts, and thus they enjoy life.

Purport:

By the arrangement of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the rivers on some planets produce gold on their banks. The poor inhabitants of this earth, because of their incomplete knowledge, are captivated by a so-called bhagavān who can produce a small quantity of gold.

However, it is understood that in a higher planetary system in this material world, the mud on the banks of the Jambū-nadī mixes with jambū juice, reacts with the sunshine in the air, and automatically produces huge quantities of gold. Thus the men and women are decorated there by various golden ornaments, and they look very nice.

Unfortunately, on earth there is such a scarcity of gold that the governments of the world try to keep it in reserve and issue paper currency. Because that currency is not backed up by gold, the paper they distribute as money is worthless, but nevertheless the people on earth are very proud of material advancement.

In modern times, girls and ladies have ornaments made of plastic instead of gold, and plastic utensils are used instead of golden ones, yet people are very proud of their material wealth. Therefore the people of this age are described as mandāḥ sumanda-matayo manda-bhāgyā hy upadrutāḥ (Bhāg. 1.1.10).

In other words, they are extremely bad and slow to understand the opulence of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. They have been described as sumanda-matayaḥ because their conceptions are so crippled that they accept a bluffer who produces a little gold to be God. Because they have no gold in their possession, they are actually poverty-stricken, and therefore they are considered unfortunate.

Sometimes these unfortunate people want to be promoted to the heavenly planets to achieve fortunate positions, as described in this verse, but pure devotees of the Lord are not at all interested in such opulence. Indeed, devotees sometimes compare the color of gold to that of bright golden stool.

Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu has instructed devotees not to be allured by golden ornaments and beautifully decorated women. Na dhanaṁ na janaṁ na sundarīm: a devotee should not be allured by gold, beautiful women or the prestige of having many followers.

Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu, therefore, confidentially prayed, mama janmani janmanīśvare bhavatād bhaktir ahaitukī tvayi: “My Lord, please bless Me with Your devotional service. I do not want anything else.” A devotee may pray to be delivered from this material world. That is his only aspiration.

ayi nanda-tanuja kiṅkaraṁ
patitaṁ māṁ viṣame bhavāmbudhau
kṛpayā tava pāda-paṅkaja-
sthita-dhūlī-sadṛśaṁ vicintaya

The humble devotee simply prays to the Lord, “Kindly pick me up from the material world, which is full of varieties of material opulence, and keep me under the shelter of Your lotus feet.”

Śrīla Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura prays:

hā hā prabhu nanda-suta, vṛṣabhānu-sutā-yuta,
karuṇā karaha ei-bāra
narottama-dāsa kaya, nā ṭheliha rāṅgā-pāya,
tomā vine ke āche āmāra

“O my Lord, O son of Nanda Mahārāja, now You are standing before me with Your consort, the daughter of Vṛṣabhānu, Śrīmatī Rādhārāṇī. Kindly accept me as the dust of Your lotus feet. Please do not kick me away, for I have no other shelter.”

Similarly, Prabodhānanda Sarasvatī indicates that the position of the demigods, who are decorated with golden helmets and other ornaments, is no better than a phantasmagoria (tri-daśa-pūr ākāśa-puṣpāyate). A devotee is never allured by such opulences. He simply aspires to become the dust of the lotus feet of the Lord.

SB 5.16.22

On the side of Supārśva Mountain stands a big tree called Mahākadamba, which is very celebrated. From the hollows of this tree flow five rivers of honey, each about five vyāmas wide. This flowing honey falls incessantly from the top of Supārśva Mountain and flows all around Ilāvṛta-varṣa, beginning from the western side. Thus the whole land is saturated with the pleasing fragrance.

Purport:

The distance between one hand and another when one spreads both his arms is called a vyāma. This comes to about eight feet. Thus each of the rivers was about forty feet wide, making a total of about two hundred feet.

SB 5.16.23

The air carrying the scent from the mouths of those who drink that honey perfumes the land for a hundred yojanas around.

SB 5.16.24

Similarly, on Kumuda Mountain there is a great banyan tree, which is called Śatavalśa because it has a hundred main branches. From those branches come many roots, from which many rivers are flowing. These rivers flow down from the top of the mountain to the northern side of Ilāvṛta-varṣa for the benefit of those who live there.

Because of these flowing rivers, all the people have ample supplies of milk, yogurt, honey, clarified butter [ghee], molasses, food grains, clothes, bedding, sitting places and ornaments. All the objects they desire are sufficiently supplied for their prosperity, and therefore they are very happy.

Purport:

The prosperity of humanity does not depend on a demoniac civilization that has no culture and no knowledge but has only gigantic skyscrapers and huge automobiles always rushing down the highways.

The products of nature are sufficient. When there is a profuse supply of milk, yogurt, honey, food grains, ghee, molasses, dhotis, saris, bedding, sitting places and ornaments, the residents are actually opulent.

When a profuse supply of water from the river inundates the land, all these things can be produced, and there will not be scarcity. This all depends, however, on the performance of sacrifice as described in the Vedic literature.

annād bhavanti bhūtāni
parjanyād anna-sambhavaḥ
yajñād bhavati parjanyo
yajñaḥ karma-samudbhavaḥ

“All living bodies subsist on food grains, which are produced from rains. Rains are produced by performance of yajña [sacrifice], and yajña is born of prescribed duties.”

These are the prescriptions given in Bhagavad-gītā (3.14). If people follow these principles in full Kṛṣṇa consciousness, human society will be prosperous, and they will be happy both in this life and in the next.

SB 5.16.25

The residents of the material world who enjoy the products of these flowing rivers have no wrinkles on their bodies and no grey hair. They never feel fatigue, and perspiration does not give their bodies a bad odor. They are not afflicted by old age, disease or untimely death, they do not suffer from chilly cold or scorching heat, nor do their bodies lose their luster. They all live very happily, without anxieties, until death.

Purport:

This verse hints at the perfection of human society even within this material world. The miserable conditions of this material world can be corrected by a sufficient supply of milk, yogurt, honey, ghee, molasses, food grains, ornaments, bedding, sitting places and so on.

This is human civilization. Ample food grains can be produced through agricultural enterprises, and profuse supplies of milk, yogurt and ghee can be arranged through cow protection. Abundant honey can be obtained if the forests are protected.

Unfortunately, in modern civilization, men are busy killing the cows that are the source of yogurt, milk and ghee, they are cutting down all the trees that supply honey, and they are opening factories to manufacture nuts, bolts, automobiles and wine instead of engaging in agriculture. How can the people be happy? They must suffer from all the misery of materialism.

Their bodies become wrinkled and gradually deteriorate until they become almost like dwarves, and a bad odor emanates from their bodies because of unclean perspiration resulting from eating all kinds of nasty things. This is not human civilization.

If people actually want happiness in this life and want to prepare for the best in the next life, they must adopt a Vedic civilization. In a Vedic civilization, there is a full supply of all the necessities mentioned above.

SB 5.16.26.

There are other mountains beautifully arranged around the foot of Mount Meru like the filaments around the whorl of a lotus flower. Their names are Kuraṅga, Kurara, Kusumbha, Vaikaṅka, Trikūṭa, Śiśira, Pataṅga, Rucaka, Niṣadha, Sinīvāsa, Kapila, Śaṅkha, Vaidūrya, Jārudhi, Haṁsa, Ṛṣabha, Nāga, Kālañjara and Nārada.

SB 5.16.27

On the eastern side of Sumeru Mountain are two mountains named Jaṭhara and Devakūṭa, which extend to the north and south for 18,000 yojanas [144,000 miles]. Similarly, on the western side of Sumeru are two mountains named Pavana and Pāriyātra, which also extend north and south for the same distance.

On the southern side of Sumeru are two mountains named Kailāsa and Karavīra, which extend east and west for 18,000 yojanas, and on the northern side of Sumeru, extending for the same distance east and west, are two mountains named Triśṛṅga and Makara.

The width and height of all these mountains is 2,000 yojanas [16,000 miles]. Sumeru, a mountain of solid gold shining as brilliantly as fire, is surrounded by these eight mountains.

SB 5.16.28

In the middle of the summit of Meru is the township of Lord Brahmā. Each of its four sides is calculated to extend for ten million yojanas [eighty million miles]. It is made entirely of gold, and therefore learned scholars and sages call it Śātakaumbhī.

SB 5.16.29

Surrounding Brahmapurī in all directions are the residences of the eight principal governors of the planetary systems, beginning with King Indra. These abodes are similar to Brahmapurī but are one fourth the size.

Purport:

Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura confirms that the townships of Lord Brahmā and the eight subordinate governors of the planetary systems, beginning with Indra, are mentioned in other Purāṇas.

merau nava-pūrāṇi syur
manovaty amarāvatī
tejovatī saṁyamanī
tathā kṛṣṇāṅganā parā

śraddhāvatī gandhavatī
tathā cānyā mahodayā
yaśovatī ca brahmendra
bahyādīnāṁ yathā-kramam

Brahmā’s township is known as Manovatī, and those of his assistants such as Indra and Agni are known as Amarāvatī, Tejovatī, Saṁyamanī, Kṛṣṇāṅganā, Śraddhāvatī, Gandhavatī, Mahodayā and Yaśovatī. Brahmapurī is situated in the middle, and the other eight purīs surround it in all directions.

Thus end the Bhaktivedanta purports of the Fifth Canto, Sixteenth Chapter, of the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, entitled “A Description of Jambūdvīpa.”**.













Srila Prabhupada - "It is to be understood that although all the Vishnu-tattvas, from the original Krishna to Lord Chaitanya, Rama, Narasimha, Varaha, and so on, appear with different features in different ages, all are equally invested with supreme potency" (Adi 3.71, Purport)

Explaining the position of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu is a little complicated.

To start with, Krishna NEVER leaves Goloka Vrindavana, therefore when He comes to our Earth, He comes as His Vishnu-tattva expansion and plays the part of Krishna who NEVER leaves the Spiritual World of Goloka-Vrindavan.

Krishna in Goloka-Vrindavan actually never kills demons there because they do not exist there in the Spiritual World. 

Vaikuntha also means "without anxiety".

Only in the the "facsimile Vrindavana on this Earth globe in the material creation" do demons exist and are killed by Vishnu who is playing the role of Krishna here in the material creation.

So we understand that Krishna is the original Form of Godhead, meaning even Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu in the material creation, being a combination of Srimati Radharani and Krishna, are also Vishnu-tattva expansions of Krishna.

Srila Prabhupada - "In the category of Vishnu-tattva there is no loss of power from one expansion to the next, any more than there is a loss of illumination as one candle kindles another. Thousands may be kindled by an original candle, and all will have the same candle power. In this way it is to be understood that although all the Vishnu-tattvas, from Krishna and Lord Chaitanya to Rama, Narasimha, Varaha, and so on, appear with different features in different ages, all are equally invested with supreme potency. (Chaitanya-charitamrita, Adi 3.71, Purport)

Srila Prabhupada's candle analogy draws on a traditional example found in the Brahma-samhita (5.46), objectively establishing Krishna as supreme among manifestations of the Lord -

Srila Prabhupada - "The light of one candle being communicated to other candles, although it burns separately in them, is the same in its quality. I adore the primeval Lord Govinda [Krishna], who exhibits Himself equally in the same mobile manner in His various manifestations."

Brahma states this even more directly earlier in that same work (5.1) - 

"Krishna, who is known as Govinda, is the Supreme Godhead. He has an eternal blissful spiritual body. He is the ORIGIN of all. He has no other origin, and He is the prime cause of all causes."

And then again (5.39)

"I worship Govinda, the primeval Lord, who by His various plenary portions appeared in the world in different forms and incarnations, such as Lord Rama, but who personally appears in His supreme ORIGINAL form as Lord Krishna."

Brahma reiterates this point in the Srimad-Bhagavatam (10.14.14) after seeing Krishna produce innumerable Vishnu forms from His transcendental body. 

Addressing Krishna, Brahma says, 

“Are You not the original Narayana [Vishnu], O supreme controller, since You are the Soul of every embodied being and the eternal witness of all created realms? Indeed, Lord Narayana is Your expansion, and He is called Narayana because He is the generating source of the primeval water of the universe. He is real, not a product of Your illusory Maya.”

So, while full manifestations of Krishna are all equal, there is the fact that one comes first meaning Krishna is the original  Supreme Personality of Godhead. 

In this capacity He is known as avatari—the source of all incarnations—as opposed to avatara. Krishna and His full incarnations are the same Supreme Person in different guises for distinct purposes, ranging from accepting the regal worship of His servitors in the spiritual world to intimate exchanges with His confidential devotees in Vrindavan.

According to Srimad Bhagavatam, the oneness of Krishna's many expansions exists in the realm of "tattva", which means "philosophical truth". 

But there is a higher principle in Vaishnavism, known as rasa, or the ecstatic interactions of the spiritual realm.

It is true that several Vaishnava lines, such as the Sri Sampradaya, see Vishnu, also known as Narayana, is seen as the highest manifestation of God. That is their prerogative.

However, the devotees of Krishna understanding the common identity of Krishna and Vishnu, respect the devotion of Vishnu's devotees. 

When Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu met with members of this lineage, for example, He was pleased to see how devoted they were to Vishnu. 

Similarly, in Sanatana Goswami's Brihad-bhagavatamrita (2.4.99–107) we learn that the residents of Vaikuntha, the majestic kingdom of God, prefer Vishnu to Krishna. 

Sanatana Goswami reveals this to be their particular bhava, or emotion, and it is pleasing to Krishna that Narayana's devotees in Vaikuntha see Him in that way.

But those who come in the line of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, who revealed an esoteric side of the Vaishnava tradition, see Krishna as Supreme Personality of Godhead and cause of all causes, knowing Him to be the original Personality of Godhead and source of all Narayan and Vishnu forms of God. 

While this was certainly the bhava taught by Mahaprabhu, it can also be demonstrated objectively with texts such as the Srimad-Bhagavatam and the Brahma-samhita.

It is the Srimad Bhagavatam that makes the most famous statement about Krishna's primary position -

ete chamsha-kalah pumsah

krishnas tu bhagavan svayam

"All of the above-mentioned incarnations are either plenary portions or portions of the plenary portions of the Lord, but Lord Sri Krishna is the original Personality of Godhead." (Bhag. 1.3.28) 

The First Canto’s Third Chapter proves this point, its first four verses glorify the Vishnus who appear in the beginning of creation, and then it lists a number of important incarnations, including Krishna Himself. It is only at the end of the list that we find the words -

 "krishnas tu bhagavan svayam or Krishna is God Himself"

These words confirm Bhagavatam's statement that Krishna is the Supreme Godhead and cause of all causes.

Srila Prabhupada's commentary on this text is clear - 

Srila Prabhupada - "In this particular stanza Lord Sri Krishna, the Personality of Godhead, is distinguished from other incarnations. According to Srila Jiva Goswami's statement, in accordance with authoritative sources, Lord Krishna is the source of all other incarnations. It is not that Lord Krishna has any source of incarnation."

According to Sri Jiva Goswami, this verse (krishnas tu bhagavan svayam) is the paribhasa-sutra of the entire 18,000-verse Bhagavatam. 

A paribhasa-sutra states the central theme of a literary work. 

In his Krishna-sandarbha (Anuccheda 73), Sri Jiva elaborates, writing that the many verses of the Bhagavatam might be compared to an army, with this verse the monarch who commands that army. He further shows that, according to this verse and many others, Krishna is the original form of God and the ideal object of pure devotional service.

Jayadeva Goswami's Gita Govinda (circa twelth century) also proclaims Lord Krishna's primary position among incarnations, reinforcing the teaching of the Bhagavatam. 

After listing ten prominent incarnations of Vishnu in the book's first chapter, Jayadeva concludes by stating that Krishna is their original source. 

In fact, Jayadeva implies Krishna's preeminence throughout the Gita Govinda and states it explicitly in Act 1, Verse 16 (da śakriti-krite krishnaya tubhyam namah) -

"O Krishna, I offer my obeisances unto You, who assume these ten spiritual forms."

Krishna's Unique Qualities

In the Bhakti rasamrita sindhu, Rupa Goswami lists sixty-four characteristics or qualities exhibited by Krishna. 

Fifty of these attributes can be found in an ordinary soul (jiva-tattva) which is 78.125% of Krishna's 64 qualities that includes Lord Brahma and the demigods in the material creation (except for Shiva who is in a unique league of his own)

Lord Shiva possess fifty-five attributes (84.375% of Krishna's 64 qualities) and is neither jiva-tattva or Vishnu-tattva. 

Vishnu or Narayana displays up to sixty of these attributes (93.75%) out of Krishna's 64 qualities. 

But the remaining "four" are found ONLY in Krishna, and unique to ONLY Him, not found in all other manifestations of the Supreme like Vishnu and Narayana. 

The four qualities unique to Krishna are as follows -

1. Lila-madhurya: He exhibits numerous wonderful pastimes for the pleasure of His devotees.

2. Bhakta-madhurya: He interacts with loving devotees in intimate ways.

3. Venu-madhurya: He plays on His divine flute, thus attracting all souls.

4. Rupa-madhurya: His beautiful form is incomparable, unrivaled in all of existence.

Embedded in these explanations of Krishna's supreme position is something more fundamental: Krishna's supremacy underscores the superiority of love over power, sweetness over opulence.

Bhaktivinoda Thakura writes in the Navadvipa Bhava Taranga (118) - 

"As much as my Sri Krishna is endowed with utmost sweetness [madhurya], similarly the Lord of Vaikuntha is endowed with absolute opulence and grandeur [aishvarya]. Lord Krishna as Vrajendra-nandana [the darling of the king of Vraja] never gives up this same opulence, but such aspects of His spiritual grandeur are considered unimportant by His pure devotees."

In other words, while Krishna sometimes reveals an opulent side that parallels that of Vishnu, as, for instance, when He enacts His kingly pastimes in Dwarka, Vishnu never displays the sweetness associated with Krishna and His associates. 

Therefore, it can be said that Krishna has attributes not found in Vishnu—pastimes of intimate, familiar love.

But keep in mind, Krishna never leaves Goloka Vrindavana and when He comes to the facsimile Vrindavana in the material creation it is Vishnu playing the role of Krishna as painting below reveals.

Krishna never kills demons in the material creation, Vishnu does while playing the role of Krishna.

Most beliefs in God, even in the Vaishnava tradition, naturally evoke awe and reverence, such as in the Vaikuntha Planets with Narayana and Vishnu where the jiva souls have an all in reverence relationship with Vishnu who they know is God. 

However, in Goloka-Vrindavan it is different, no one's sees this young Cow herd boy Krishna as God, He is simply their dear friend who evokes intimacy, friendship, personal reciprocal relationships of loving exchanges and intimacy in Goloka-Vrindavan the top most Spiritual Planet. 

It is this, beyond all else, that distinguishes Him among manifestations of the Supreme. And love, as we all know, is the highest phenomenon in all of existence. 

In conclusion, the Gaudiya Vaishnava vision of the Divine is that all forms of Godhead are equal—since there is only one God—but Krishna enjoys a special position as the "candle who lights the other candles." 

In addition to His ontologically prior position as the source of all Vishnu manifestations of the Supreme, He exudes a sweetness and intimacy that eclipses the power and majesty of other divine forms. 

In fact, His all-attractive nature (Krishna means "the all-attractive one") even attracts other manifestations of the Lord. 

Srila Prabhupada explains that Krishna is known as Madana-mohana because He conquers the mind of Cupid (Madana). When He stands in a three-curved way, He attracts all living entities, including the demigods. Indeed, He even attracts the Narayana form presiding in every Vaikuntha planet.

Srila Prabhupada writes in Chapter Ten of Teachings of Lord Chaitanya-

Srila Prabhupada - "There is no beauty to compare with that of Krishna, who is the origin of Narayana and all other incarnations, for no one possesses beauty equal to or greater than Krishna’s. Otherwise, why would the goddess of fortune, the constant companion of Narayana, give up His association and engage herself in penance to gain the association of Krishna? Such is the superexcellent beauty of Krishna, the everlasting mine of all beauty. It is from that beauty that all other beautiful things emanate."**..