I suppose the best way is to read Jesus' response to Philip when he asked Jesus to show the disciples the Father.
You may read about this in John 14.
Jesus agreeing with the Jew's statement that he is 'the Christ, the Son of God', caused the Jewish elders to condemn him to death, (Matthew26.66)
His Virgin Birth,
His Transfiguration,
And His Resurrection from the Dead.
Divinity signs included healing, preaching the gospel. These are signs or activities carried out by divine ones.
Signs such as expelling demons, healing the sick, and raising the dead are all pretty impressive; but nothing really proves His divinity like coming back from the dead Himself.
Yes He Is. He Is the Second Person Of the Holy Trinity.
Paul.
In the Bible Jesus said, " If you have seen me then you have seen the Father."
The divinity of Jesus and the virgin birth of Jesus are both matters of faith only. It is possible to accept both, as most Christians do, either one but not the other, or not to accept either.
Only those who believe in Jesus' divinity and accept his gift of life will be saved. All have fallen short and need a savior, therefore should accept Jesus' grace and be saved regardless of what others say or do. People need to learn to think for themselves. Whether people believe or not does not alter the truth of who Jesus is and of His great love for all people. Jesus' divinity is central to who he is.
Hebrew. His divinity was written in the Hebrew Bible, which we read nowadays, and call it the Old Testament.
Zephaniah Ross has written: 'A defence of the divinity and merrits of Jesus Christ' -- subject(s): Divinity
It is not terribly hard for them to understand the belief; most Muslims are aware of how Christians have ascribed divinity to Jesus. They just disagree with the belief because the Qur'an holds that Jesus was not God, the Son of God, or some other Divinity. The Qur'an states quite clearly that Jesus was a Prophet, an important prophet, but nothing beyond human.
John's Gospel is considered to have a high Christology, as it presents Jesus as the divine Word who was with God and was God from the beginning. The Gospel emphasizes Jesus' divine nature, focusing on his role in the plan of salvation and his miracles as signs of his divinity.
Jesus was part of the divinity. So his decision was to seek the will of the Father in everything.
Jesus worked miracles to demonstrate his divinity and power, to fulfill prophecy, and to bring about healing and deliverance to those in need. His miracles served as signs to validate his teachings and to show God's love and compassion for humanity.
Of the four canonical Gospels - Matthew, Mark and Luke are known as the synoptic gospels because they contain a lot of the stories - in some cases with almost the exact same wording. Matthew was written primarily to the Jews, Mark to the Romans, Luke to the Gentiles. The Gospel of John focuses less on specific historical events (ex. Jesus' birth) in the synoptic Gospels, but zeroes in on the signs that Jesus is the Messiah. It starts out claiming that Jesus is the Logos or Word of God and continues showing signs pointing to his divinity as much as his humanity.