gopair makhe pratihate vraja-viplavÄya
deve 'bhivará¹£ati paśūn ká¹›payÄ riraká¹£uḥ
dhartocchilÄ«ndhram iva sapta-dinÄni sapta-
varṣo mahīdhram anaghaika-kare salīlam
gopaiḥ - by the cowherd men; makhe - in offering a sacrifice to the King of heaven; pratihate - being hampered; vraja-viplavÄya - for devastating the whole existence of VrajabhÅ«mi, the land of Kṛṣṇa's pastimes; deve - by the King of heaven; abhivará¹£ati - having poured down heavy rain; paśūn - the animals; ká¹›payÄ - by causeless mercy upon them; riraká¹£uḥ - desired to protect them; dharta - held up; ucchilÄ«ndhram - uprooted as an umbrella; iva - exactly like that; sapta-dinÄni - continuously for seven days; sapta-vará¹£aḥ - although He was only seven years old; mahÄ«dhram - the Govardhana Hill; anagha - without being tired; eka-kare - in one hand only; salÄ«lam - playfully.
Children play with an umbrella generally known as a frog’s umbrella, and Lord Kṛṣṇa, when He was only seven years old, could snatch the great hill known as the Govardhana Parvata at Vá¹›ndÄvana and hold it for seven days continuously with one hand, just to protect the animals and the inhabitants of Vá¹›ndÄvana from the wrath of Indra, the heavenly King, who had been denied sacrificial offerings by the inhabitants of VrajabhÅ«mi.
Factually there is no need of offering sacrifices to the demigods for their services if one is engaged in the service of the Supreme Lord. Sacrifices recommended in the Vedic literature for satisfaction of the demigods are a sort of inducement to the sacrificers to realize the existence of higher authorities. The demigods are engaged by the Lord as controlling deities of material affairs, and according to the Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ, when a demigod is worshiped the process is accepted as the indirect method for worshiping the Supreme Lord. But when the Supreme Lord is worshiped directly there is no need of worshiping the demigods or offering them sacrifices as recommended in particular circumstances. Lord Kṛṣṇa therefore advised the inhabitants of VrajabhÅ«mi not to offer any sacrifices to the heavenly King Indra. But Indra, not knowing Lord Kṛṣṇa in VrajabhÅ«mi, was angry at the inhabitants of VrajabhÅ«mi and tried to avenge the offense. But, competent as the Lord was, He saved the inhabitants and animals of VrajabhÅ«mi by His personal energy and proved definitely that anyone directly engaged as a devotee of the Supreme Lord need not satisfy any other demigods, however great, even to the level of BrahmÄ or Åšiva. Thus this incident definitely proved without a doubt that Lord Kṛṣṇa is the Personality of Godhead and that He was so in all circumstances, as a child on the lap of His mother, as a boy 7 years old, and as an old man of 125 years of age. In either case He was never on the level of the ordinary man, and even in His advanced age He appeared a young boy 16 years old. These are the particular features of the transcendental body of the Lord.