Yep, Data-Dog, the marvelous invention of "Original Sin" by Christians would make any deity look like a failure.
Why would a Messiah perform miracles of healing for a few people, then swear them to secrecy but expect everyone to believe in him? Why not tell or heal everybody? If you are really of G-d then surely you know of our need for proof! If you want to save the world, why not show the world?
When YHWH appeared to Moses, YHWH gave Moses signs to show everybody. Then Adonai told Moses that what he experienced on a small scale with the burning bush, the entire nation of Israel would experience on a large scale when G-d would bring them back to the same mountain and appear in a similar fashion for all to see as proof that it was YHWH who appeared to Moses. Miracles were not hidden. The nation as a whole was offered oracles and miracles publicly.
But the Jesus Story is all about something that happens on the outskirts of Jewish society, of miracles and transfigurations only a few see, of a raising from the dead and ascension to Heaven that the Jewish public never witnesses. How is this the Prophet like Moses? Secret visions and non-public resurrections of Jesus in the New Testament sounds like Mormonism and the many cults where each and every preacher claims G-d spoke to them and no other, like the men who claimed they saw the gold plates of the Book of Mormon while no one else did. This is not enlightenment or a more loving deity than One who Proves Himself publicly.
Even if you believe that the G-d of the Hebrew Bible is a myth, surely you can see that a G-d who gives everyone the opportunity to believe is far different from a secret club when you have to believe things that only a few select witnesses claim happened and then follow their direction or be condemned to hell because you want to use your mind and logic and prefer letting evidence speak for itself.
It's like someone is trying to pass off the New Testament as a badly produced sequel to the Jewish Scriptures, where the promised protagonist never matches what is expected in the first volume and there is no real continuity between the two.