Now that Hans has explained Nazareth for us... backtracking a bit:
davefoc, et al.
The supernatural is woven through the Gospels in an inextricable way. Even when Jesus does something that might not be exactly supernatural he is still displaying almost supernatural powers of insight into the situation.
Isn't "almost supernatural" a lot like "almost pregnant?"
Uri Geller and Paul, Superman and Jesus
Cultures differ in theories of magic. Most posters here live in a culture where individual gifts are a usual explanation of woo. Uri Geller bends spoons, he doesn't teach you how to bend spoons.
Retrojecting Superman onto a First Century Jewish
tzedek isn't going to work. Paul wanted everybody to bend spoons, thanking Jesus for showing us all what God can do for us.
Example stories of personal power, with(out) being a special person
IRL, I can walk around with a battery-powered computer. With it, I can solve problems in seconds that no human being who doesn't use computers can solve in a natural lifetime. Nevertheless, there is not much unusual about me personally. My computational excellence inheres to the time I live in, not to me personally.
An earlier version of the story, told in 1980, say, would have begun "I can sit at my desk..." My time performance would be hours, not seconds. My computational excellence would still inhere in the times, not in me personally. However, I would be much more of an unusual person, to have my very own computer when few people did, and few could use one anyway.
Generalizing: the less widely available a capability is perceived to be, the more special is anybody perceived to have access to the capability. The capability itself needn't inhere in any user of it. Both statements are independent of the absolute "wow-ness" of the capability available for use, although my press agent may choose to portray me as both special and highly wow-capable, depending on whether I am pursuing a Pauline or Gellerine business model.
Applying the examples to Jesus stories
Paul's story is that everybody, really everybody, can profit from the magic that the Jewish God is handing out. It is counterproductive for his Jesus to be different in kind than everybody else. Jesus is a hero, and heroes are good for business, but you can be a hero, too.
Time passes and the amount of magic that the Jewish God is handing out turns out to be paltry. Paul's people die just like everybody else. Change the business model or you're out of business.
The new version of the story should explain why magic worked well for Jesus, but not for you. Now, for the first time, there is a reason for Jesus to be different in kind from everybody else, rather than just really good at what anybody can do. Earliest Jesus was a man of God, then God's right hand man, then God's right hand. Post-canon, he is God. (By an amazing coincidence, the apostolic successors weren't as good at magic as the apostles, who themselves weren't as good as Jesus. The successors' successors sucked at magic, but were gifted at word play.)
Reading
Mark after reading the Nicene Creed is a different experience than reading
Mark back when the yet-to-come Nicene Creed would be blasphemous. Living readers may need an act of will to remember that Mark's Jesus is not Mark's God. John's Jesus is close to being John's God. Orthodox Nicene Jesus, nowhere in the New Testament, is exactly God.