These verses only become a denial that Jesus is not also God (in addition to being man) if one or more of the following assumptions (which I believe are faulty) are held:
1. That the one God can only be in one place at a time.
assuming God is real, why assume more than anything written about him? there is nothing in the bible which says that God can be in more than one place at any time, other than by means of angels...which rove about the earth acting as the eyes of God, mentioned in several places.-- if God could be more than one place at a time, why mention these angelic "eyes"
2. That the one God must also exist as a unipersonal being. Thus if the person of the Father is called God then no one else with him can also be the same God (the asumption of unitarianism).
when the bible says before ME there was no god formed and after ME there continued to be none, I, I alone am God... that is in context with all the false gods, but it is also in the singular...it does not say WE or US as if there were more than one PERSON as the main GOD.... trinitarians claim 3 who's and 1 what...but clearly there is only ONE who which is seen as THE GOD and while the heavenly court, the beni-elohim are also called gods, it is always understood by jews that they are part of GOD's group apart from the false gods and only one of the Elohim, YHWH is THE BOSS, the main guy, etc.
3. That Jesus must exist in only one nature. Thus verses which show him to be a man by nature, prove then He cannot also be God by nature (the assumption that Christ must have only one nature.)
the arguement of natures is not something anyone can really say much about, but it does say that Jesus, prior to coming to earth, was the same as God [and the angels] in being a spirit entity of some sort [phil 2] but that when he came to earth he EMPTIED himself of that nature and took on the nature of a servant...and where else does it say otherwise, where does it say he has two natures at the same time?
4. That even if it is hypothetically possible for Christ to have more then one nature, that He must always be called by titles for each nature, in the same passages. Thus verses which show him to be called by human terms such as "Son of Man", are an argument against him also being God since He is not also called God (or an equivalent) in these same passages (the assumption of the argument from silence regarding titles).
As to titles, there is never one instance where Jesus and God are spoken of together as equals that I am aware....the FATHER is always seen as God in relationship to Jesus...and Jesus even calls him MY God and Your God....so who is Your God? is it the same ONE who is the God of Jesus, or someone else? Paul says to US there is only ONE God, the FATHER. [1 cor 8:5-6] and never does he say as clearly anything like that about any other god[s] nor does he ever say Jesus is our God...does he?