My point is that your question regarding whether anyone who'd been involved in the arrest, prosecution or execution of Jesus would have worshiped him as divine is rather pointless. What does it have to do with Jesus' historicity?
Actually, that was your own question that you now consider pointless.
I was exposing a stupid argument by a poster who argued that Roman soldiers were not in Paul's audience when he had no evidence whatsoever of such a thing if Paul did exist and preach in Jerusalem.
In an Epistle to the Corinthians the Governor of Damascus attempted to capture Paul and had the gates guarded with a GARRISON [a group of Troops]
Paul escaped from Damascus and ended up in Jerusalem.
Incrediblly, Paul ended up in the same Jerusalem, where the supposed obscure HJ was crucified by Roman Soldiers, after escaping from Troops of Soldiers in Damascus.
2 Cor. 11
32 In Damascus the governor under Aretas the king kept the city of the Damascenes with a garrison , desirous to apprehend me: 33 And through a window in a basket was I let down by the wall, and escaped his hands.
Paul was a wanted man in the NT. Paul was wanted in Damascus.
How did a wanted man who boasted about and documented his own escape from Damascus manage to elude the Romans for over 17 years while publicly breaking the Laws of the Romans?
The HJ argument does not make sense.
The Pauline Corpus is not history ---it is stupidity.
Paul, A wanted man publicly documented his escape from Damascus and went to Jerusalem and Rome to preach that HJ was raised from the dead and was God's own Son.
The Pauline Corpus is idiocy--stupid fables and lies.
The Pauline Corpus cannot help the HJ argument.