Reniaa,
Wow, I thought this subject was covered long ago with everything to be said about it already done. And there is too much to read and consider in just this one thread. For you, here is a simple answer to your question:
Reniaa said: Why would jesus pick up the mans words if he actually was God?
Simple. God is just a word that signifies authority. It does not identify who this God is or why. It applies to humans like Moses and the Kings of Israel. It applies to Satan. It usually applies to the Supreme Being. It was even considered so sacred by Jews that they did not use it but often used the word "Heavens" instead like in the Kingdom of the Heavens instead of Kingdom of God. Generally it applies to anyone having more authority over them than they do over themselves. So when Christ uses it in the context you show it becomes someone over him or in this case the Supreme Being. But when Thomas or Nathaniel uses it then it becomes someone over them like his King. Joh 1:49 Nathanael answered and saith unto him, Rabbi, thou art the Son of God; thou art the King of Israel. It is not wrong to call Jesus our God and the scriptures do it. But it is wrong to call or mean that Jesus is the Supreme Being that the scriptures also call God. John who added to the genealogy lists contained in the other Gospels to complete them and identified the sinless source of our lives said it this way: 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2 The same was in the beginning with God.. The Word was God to us not to the God he was with. He would ( from the God he was with) from this beginning have authority over human creation for the God he was with. We see how John used words, how God’s authority was passed along and how he continued to use them like this in his Gospel. Even when angels used the very name of God as if they were God, we still know that they were simply messengers with His authority sent to represent Him personally. It is all context. We should know it even if the texts do not say it as plainly as this.
Joseph