Baby Krishna, Infant Christ: A Comparative Theology of Salvation

Front Cover
Orbis Books, 2011 - Religion - 246 pages
A ground-breaking work in comparative theology.

This stimulating work of comparative theology brings into conversation the stories of the infancy and youth Jesus with that of Krishna in the Hindu tradition. The early chapters tell the stories, first of Krishna and then of Jesus, and then describe the role each plays as savior for the faithful of that tradition.

Chapter 1: Comparative Theology and Learning about Jesus

Chapter 2: A Savior in Disguise the Stories

Chapter 3: Krishna and His Followers How He Saves

Chapter 4: Immanuel the Stories

Chapter 5: Jesus and His Disciples How He Saves

Chapter 6: All Grown Up Krishna and Jesus as Adults

The text is not only readable but engaging, particularly when it explores the playfulness of the young Krishna and compares Krishna's early years with those of Jesus as described in such non-canonical writings as the Infancy Gospel of Thomas. Through this comparison Largen demonstrates the unique role Jesus' nature as both human and divine has in our Christian understanding of salvation.

 

Contents

Comparative Theology and Learning about
9
PART I
21
Krishna and His FollowersHow He Saves
49
ImmanuelThe
75
The Birth Narrative According to Luke
81
What Are Apocryphal Gospels?
88
The Infancy Gospel of Thomas
94
Theological Ramifications of the Birth Narratives
100
PART III
147
Rethinking the Incarnation
191
Notes
219
Selected Bibliography
237
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