God Exhibits His Supreme Fighting Spirit
In the material world, violence and fighting are generally considered symptoms of a degraded, passionate, or ignorant mentality. Consequently, many philosophers and religionists struggle with the concept of a God who engages in combat, preferring to envision the Absolute Truth as a passive, perpetually peaceful force. However, this limited view fails to grasp the completeness of the Supreme Person. If God is the origin of everything, then the fighting spirit must also find its supreme, pure expression within Him. The Vedic literatures vividly describe the spectacular battles of the Supreme Lord, explaining that His combat is never born of material frustration, but of pure, transcendental bliss. Śrīla Prabhupāda masterfully explains how the Lord occasionally desires to fight, how He specifically chooses His pure devotees to act as worthy opponents, and how His chivalrous pastimes serve to protect the universe and delight His followers. By understanding the absolute nature of God's fighting, we can appreciate the dynamic, all-encompassing personality of the Supreme Lord.
The Origin of the Fighting Spirit
The tendency to fight is not an anomaly in creation; it is a direct reflection of a tendency that exists within the Supreme Lord Himself. Śrīla Prabhupāda explains that because God is a complete person, He naturally possesses a wide variety of desires, including the desire to occasionally engage in combat.
- The Lord sometimes desires to fight. The fighting spirit also exists in the Supreme Lord, otherwise how could fighting be manifested at all.
- It is natural that sometimes Lord Visnu wants to fight. Just as He has the tendencies to create, to enjoy, to be a friend, to accept a mother and father, and so on, He also has the tendency to fight.
- Although Jaya and Vijaya assumed the bodies of asuras, they remained more powerful than anyone, thus proving that the Supreme Personality of Godhead desired to fight because the fighting spirit is also within Him.
- When He desires to fight with someone, He has to find an enemy, but in the Vaikuntha world there is no enemy. Therefore He sometimes comes to the material world as an incarnation in order to manifest His fighting spirit.
Fighting with His Own Devotees
When the Lord desires to fight, He faces a practical problem: no ordinary being is powerful enough to withstand Him. Śrīla Prabhupāda reveals the fascinating truth that the Lord actually arranges for His own intimate associates to descend to the material world as powerful demons, just to provide Him with a satisfying battle.
- He (the Supreme Personality of Godhead) is the original in everything, but when He desires to fight He must fight with a devotee.
- He wanted to exhibit such fighting spirit, so who will fight with Him? Ordinary living being cannot fight with the Supreme Lord. Therefore some of His devotees, some of His associates, must fight with Him.
- The Lord wanted to exhibit His fighting spirit. And who will fight with Him? Therefore two of His devotees were resigned that they should go in the material world and fight with the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
- The Lord felt Hiranyaksa's striking on His body to be like flowers offered for worship. In other words, the Lord desired to fight in order to enjoy His transcendental bliss; therefore He enjoyed the attack.
Incarnations and Historic Battles
Throughout history, the Supreme Lord has incarnated in various magnificent forms to rid the world of demonic burdens. Śrīla Prabhupāda vividly recounts the awe-inspiring battles of Lord Varāha, Lord Nṛsiṁhadeva, and Lord Rāmacandra, highlighting how easily they dispatched even the most terrifying adversaries.
- Maitreya continued: My dear Vidura, I have explained to you the Personality of Godhead's coming down as the first boar incarnation and killing in a great fight a demon of unprecedented prowess as if he were just a plaything.
- My Lord, as the original boar within this universe, You fought and killed the great demon Hiranyaksa. Then You lifted me (the earth) from the Garbhodaka Ocean on the end of Your tusk, exactly as a sporting elephant plucks a lotus flower from the water.
- These soldiers had come in thousands to fight with Him with raised weapons and were very faithful followers of Hiranyakasipu, but Lord Nrsimhadeva killed all of them merely with the ends of His nails.
- When mother Sita was kidnapped by Ravana and the Raksasas, Lord Ramacandra, as the Supreme Personality of Godhead, could have married hundreds and thousands of Sitas, but to teach us how faithful He was to His wife, He fought with Ravana and finally killed him.
The Playful and Chivalrous Fighting of Kṛṣṇa
In His original form as Lord Kṛṣṇa, the Supreme Personality of Godhead exhibits the fighting spirit in a variety of ways, ranging from innocent childhood play to the noble duties of a royal prince. Śrīla Prabhupāda describes how Kṛṣṇa perfectly plays the role of a kṣatriya to protect His citizens and secure His queens.
- Gold is natural, and similarly God is natural. In His childhood pastimes, in the lap of His mother, He is God; while He is playing with His boyfriends, He is God; while He is dancing, He is God; while He is fighting at Kuruksetra.
- Sometimes, Their ankle bells tinkling, They (Krsna and Rama) would play football with fruits like bael and amalaki. Sometimes They would cover Themselves with blankets and imitate cows and bulls and fight with one another, roaring loudly.
- Ksatriya's business is to give protection. Just like Krsna was playing as a ksatriya in Dvaraka. As soon as there is some attack, immediately whole family goes to fight - Krsna, Balarama, Pradyumna.
- Lord Sri Krsna discharged such responsibility fully because although He had more than sixteen thousand wives, in each and every case He fought like a chivalrous ksatriya and thus secured a wife.
Conclusion
A systematic study of the Vedic literatures completely expands our understanding of the Absolute Truth beyond the confines of a static, emotionless deity. As Śrīla Prabhupāda so clearly explains, because the Supreme Personality of Godhead is the origin of everything, the fighting spirit must originally exist within Him. God is a dynamic person who relishes various transcendental mellows, including the chivalrous thrill of combat (vīra-rasa). However, because no ordinary entity can withstand the Lord's power, and because the spiritual world is devoid of enmity, the Lord orchestrates grand cosmic pastimes. He arranges for His own exalted devotees, such as Jaya and Vijaya, to descend into the material world in the terrifying forms of demons like Hiraṇyākṣa and Hiraṇyakaśipu. When the Lord engages in these monumental battles, He does not experience mundane pain or anger; rather, He feels the heavy blows of the demons as a shower of soft flowers, thoroughly enjoying the transcendental exchange. Throughout the ages, the Lord has descended in magnificent forms—as Lord Varāha lifting the earth, as Lord Nṛsiṁhadeva protecting Prahlāda, and as Lord Rāmacandra vanquishing Rāvaṇa—to exhibit His supreme prowess and protect religious principles. In His original form as Lord Kṛṣṇa, His fighting takes on a deeply personal flavor, whether He is playfully wrestling with His cowherd friends in the forests of Vṛndāvana, or flawlessly executing the protective duties of a kṣatriya king in Dvārakā. Ultimately, by hearing about and meditating on the glorious fighting pastimes of the Supreme Lord, the conditioned soul is purified of material aggression and awakened to the dynamic, blissful reality of eternal devotional service.
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Śrīla Prabhupāda lives within his instructions. This article is a summary of the profound truths found in the Vaniquotes category God's Fighting. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.