Caitanya Mahaprabhu — Scriptural Proofs of His Avatarahood and Divinity. Part 7

In his commentary on stanzas 11.5.31–32 of the Bhāgavata-purāṇa, Viśvanātha states that the words channaḥ kalau (“hidden in Kali”) imply Caitanya and mean that avatāra-s descend in the age of Kali with a mission different from the missions of avatāra-s in other yuga-s.
The explanations of this verse by thinkers of other schools, including that of Jīva, do not contain any hint of special avatāra-s. According to Śrīdhara, the God in the form of avatāra-s protects worlds by punishing enemies, but he does not do so in the age of Kali, so he is called Triyuga. A commentary attributed to Vijayadhvaja Tīrtha (Dvaita) expresses the same thought: “You protect dharma on the four pillars [truthfulness, compassion, purity and asceticism]. In age of Kali you do not do this [became hidden in kali-yuga], so you are a Triyuga.” Śukadeva of the Nimbārka school in the Siddhānta-pradīpa believes that stanza 7.9.38 is talking about the Buddha. According to Bhagavatprasādācārya of the Vallabha school, channaḥ kalau means that the Lord appears in the age of Kali concealing the six chief possessions (bhāga): knowledge, might, etc. And this echoes one of the meanings of the word “triyuga”: “three by two,” i.e., “six” – “possessing six properties,” where yuga means “two” or “pair” (yugala).
The following conclusion can be drawn from Prabhupāda’s explanation: the God descended in the age of Kali to save the fallen souls, but he conceals his divinity as he might be mistaken for an impostor. Although some intelligent Bengalis and Oriyas, the so-called “companions of Caitanya,” considered him a God, yet he denied it. From Prabhupāda’s point of view, channaḥ kalau is Caitanya’s concealment and denial of his divinity. Only Viśvanātha and Prabhupāda connect stanza 7.9.38 with Caitanya.
After Viśvanātha, 130 years passed. During this time, qualitatively new “prophecies” of Caitanya’s appearance from the Upaniṣads and Purāṇas with more biographical details appeared. While the proposed earlier “prophecies” were just timid attempts to present Caitanya as an avatāra, the new ones became a direct reference to him. Bhaktivinoda’s work falls in the same period. Bhaktivinoda did not skimp on new dogmas, interpretations and revelations.
If we turn to the words of the Bhāgavata-purāṇa 10.8.13, rather than Nārāyaṇa Mahārāja’s translation, we see a very different picture:
“[He — Kṛṣṇa] was already of three colours, incarnating through the ages: his body was white, red, then yellow/green, [and] now [it is] black.”
Garga Muni states that in the age of Dvapara the Lord’s body was green (pīta), but now it is black in colour. In place of the colour of śyāma (11.5.27, description of the God in the dvāpara-yuga), Garga has the colour of pīta. Karabhājana describes the colour of God by yuga in the following order: śukla, rakta, śyāma, kṛṣṇa.
In the avatarology of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, the dvāpara-yuga-avatāra is considered to be Kṛṣṇa. In support of this idea they quote stanza 11.5.27 of the Bhāgavata-purāṇa, but the name of the avatāra is not mentioned in the stanza itself, and the word “avatāra” is also absent. The conclusion that the dvāpara-yuga-avatāra is Kṛṣṇa is drawn by the presence of the colour śyāma in the stanza, traditionally considered to be the colour of Kṛṣṇa. Here the colour śyāma is “dark” or “black”. In the translation of stanza 11.5.27 and in his commentary on it, Prabhupāda writes (see commentary on the Caitanya-caritāmṛta 2.20.337):
“In Dvāpara-yuga the Personality of Godhead appears in a blackish hue. He is dressed in yellow, He holds His own weapons, and He is decorated with the Kaustubha jewel and the mark of Śrīvatsa. That is how His symptoms are described… The śyāma color is not exactly blackish. Śrīla Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura compares it to the color of the atasī flower. It is not that Lord Kṛṣṇa Himself appears in a blackish color in all the Dvāpara-yugas. In other Dvāpara-yugas, previous to Lord Kṛṣṇa’s appearance, the Supreme Lord appeared in a greenish body by His own personal expansion. This is mentioned in the Viṣṇu Purāṇa, Hari-vaṁśa and Mahābhārata.”
According to the Bhāgavatam, the body of the Lord in the dvāpara-yuga is of the colour śyāma, and the words of Garga (10.8.13) are about Kṛṣṇa, the newborn son of Vasudeva, being of a dark colour (kṛṣṇa). In stanza 11.5.27 it is said that the lord of the colour śyāma was already worshipped in the dvāpara-yuga. “Already” means “before Kṛṣṇa’s birth” (see Prabhupāda’s translation and commentary on the Caitanya-caritāmṛta 2.20.337), and Garga’s words (10.8.13) refer to Kṛṣṇa, the newborn dark-coloured son of Vasudeva, born at the very end of the dvāpara-yuga. The Garga lists the colours in the following order: śukla (kṛta-yuga), rakta (tretā-yuga), pīta (dvāpara-yuga), kṛṣṇa (kali-yuga). If the avatarology of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness is correct and Kṛṣṇa is considered the dvāpara-yuga-avatāra, then to whom does the yellow-green colour pīta mentioned by Garga refer if, according to Prabhupāda, in dvāpara-yuga the Lord is dark-coloured (śyāma)?
Sandhyā
The end of dvāpara-yuga is the border time (sandhyā), the period of change of epochs. We can say that sandhyā is the out of yuga period. Kṛṣṇa is born between the yuga-s and is present in the kali-yuga for a very short time, so it is as if He is hidden (channaḥ kalau) in the kali-yuga. This is stated in the Mahābhārata (Śānti-parvan):
saṃdhau tu samanuprāpte tretāyāṃ dvāparasya ca rāmo dāśarathir bhūtvā bhaviṣyāmi jagatpatiḥ
dvāparasya kaleś caiva saṃdhau paryavasānike prādurbhāvaḥ kaṃsahetor mathurāyāṃ bhaviṣyati (82)
“When the sandhyā of tretā-yuga comes with dvāpara-yuga, I, the Lord of the world, will become the son of Daśaratha, Rāma. At the end of the sandhyā of Dvāpara and Kali, I will descend for Kaṃsa in Mathurā.”
In the Āraṇyaka-parvan, Hanumān says to Bhīmasena:
dvāpare ’pi yuge dharmo dvibhāgonaḥ pravartate viṣṇur vai pītatāṃ yāti ca- turdhā veda eva ca
tāmasaṃ yugam āsadya kṛṣṇo bhavati keśavaḥ vedācārāḥ praśāmyanti dharmayajñakriyās tathā
“In dvāpara-yuga, dharma decreases into two parts (quarters), Viṣṇu is of the colour of pīta, and Veda is divided into four parts. On the onset of the age of darkness, Keśava becomes dark-coloured [kṛṣṇa], life according to Veda comes to naught along with dharma, offerings and duties.”
Chronologically kali-yuga, which began in 3201 BC, is counted, according to one version, from the battle on the field of Kuru, according to another — from the departure of Kṛṣṇa, but Kali was already in the world, only the presence of Kṛṣṇa did not let him show himself.
In Indian astrology the time from sunset to sunrise is divided into four parts. Of these, three are considered to be night, and 1/8 after sunset and 1/8 before sunrise are considered to be the border period, sandhyā. Nevertheless, the time after sunset is already considered almost night. Therefore, there is nothing contradictory in the fact that the śāstra sometimes speaks of Kṛṣṇa’s appearance in kali-yuga. This is already the time of Kali, but the chronological countdown starts later, as Kṛṣṇa’s presence does not allow Kali to fully manifest.
Bhāgavata-purāṇa 12.2.30:
yāvat sa pāda-padmābhyāṃ spṛśann āste ramāpatiḥ tāvat kalir vai pṛthivīṃ parākrāntuṃ na cāśakat
“As long as Ramā’s consort touched the earth with His lotus feet, Kali could not subdue it.”
Śrīdhara says the same in his commentary on the Bhāgavata-purāṇa 12.2.30: “It may be objected: after all Kali entered the earth in the form of sandhyā when Kṛṣṇa was still present on it. True. But at that time he could not prevail, which is what the stanza says.”
Strophe 11.5.27 of the Bhāgavata-purāṇa describes God in dvāpara-yuga. Garga’s conversation (“The Lord was already of three colours according to the ages, but now He is of a dark colour”, 10.8.13) takes place at the junction of dvāpara-yuga and kali-yuga, in sandhyā, which is why the God was already there and had already been worshipped for an entire age. Kṛṣṇa has just been born, so there is no way he can be a dvāpara-yuga-avatāra who has already been worshipped for an entire dvāpara-yuga once upon a time.
The description of the God in stanza 11.5.27 could be attributed to Kṛṣṇa if Garga’s conversation had taken place before the dvāpara-yuga and Garga’s words did not include “The Lord was already of the colour of pīta and had already been worshipped for an entire epoch”. In that case Prabhupāda’s words would have a basis. But this version is ruled out by the words of the same Garga, because the Lord already was (āsan) the colour of pīta before Kṛṣṇa was born. Garga’s words refute the śyāma idea of the representatives of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness.
A reasonable question is: why is Caitanya a kali-yuga-avatāra of golden/yellow colour (implied by Garga’s pīta colour in stanza 10.8.13), if Garga says that in dvāpara-yuga the Lord was already of pīta colour, but now he is dark (of kṛṣṇa colour)? I will say more about this below, in a commentary on the proof from the Bhāgavata-purāṇa 11.5.32.