Are you being serious? You don't agree with the scholars--who nearly universally--believe in HJ?
As I said, after quite a bit of enquiry into the topic (including but by no means limited to Ehrman's book), I find no clincher either for an HJ or for no HJ.
And are you seriously asking whether Jesus is reputed to have done something that shows what an objective God is?
Nope. I'm asking you what real quality Jesus would have if he were God that he wouldn't have if he weren't God, what test would have told any impartial onlooker whether he were indeed God or not.
Resurrection from the dead was a rare thing back then.
No, resurrections were very common. Even in the bible tales ─
* Samuel came back after his death and spoke with Saul (though arguably he was a ghost, not a resurrected body.)
* Elijah raised the Zarephath woman’s son (1 Kings 17:17+).
* Elisha raised the Shunammite woman’s son (2 Kings 4:32+).
* The man whose dead body touched Elisha’s bones was resurrected (2 Kings 13:21)
* Matthew describes the faithful dead at large in the streets of Jerusalem (Matthew 27:52-53).
* Jesus raised the Nain widow’s son (Luke 7:12+).
* Jesus raised Lazarus (John 11:41-44).
* Peter raised Tabitha / Dorcas (Acts 9:36-40).
and outside the bible there are endless examples, of which the following is a tiny sample ─
In Egypt, the god Osiris and in Greece, the god Dionysos, were put to death and came back to life.
In Greece,
Herakles, son of Zeus, died, was resurrected and became a god.
The mortal physician Asklepios raised Lykourgos, Kapaneos and Tyndareos from the dead, and dying was himself resurrected and became a god.
Glaukos, Hippolytos and Orion were resurrected too.
Eurydike (and Scandanavia’s Baldur) nearly made it back.
Sumer’s Dumuzi and Greece's Persephone and Adonis had to spend only half their time in the Underworld.
And so on. In those days, a divine figure who didn't have a good resurrection yarn was a nobody.
And in every single case, the evidence was as good as Jesus' ─ namely stories with various versions, none by an eyewitness, none contemporary.