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At the time He was arrested and brought to Amul, He was increasingly viewed as the most eminent disciple of the new Faith. His knowledge was formidable, and seemed to spring from an unlimited source; His discourse, though He was unschooled, was matchless; and His modesty and virtue, despite His exceeding capacity was genuine and disarming. None could challenge Him; His enemies even feared confrontation. And these qualities, combined with His fearless nature and piercing insight, gradually revealed to the eyes of those who were straining every nerve to trample the new Faith, that He alone held the key to its ultimate life or death
(155:7)
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