Smiddy: » Moses has a history of what 80+ years as a servant of Jehovah? in one form or another.
What you say is true, but then, who gave Moses the Law? Who called him from the burning bush? When the Jews asked Jesus who he was, he said, “Before Abraham was, I Am!" The Jews were so angry at this affront, they tried to kill him.
Another time, Jesus looked upon Jerusalem from the mount of Olives. He said, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!"
How could he have gathered them anciently, in the days that the Jews killed the prophets, if he was not the God of Israel? Granted, he was not the Father, but as Yahweh he was the intercessor between God and man.
Isaiah, in Chapter 11, compared the “stem of Jesse" with Moses, and most Christian scholars agree that this stem of Jesse was Christ. And Isaiah, in the last few verses of Chapter 52 and all of Chapter 53 refer to Jesus. Clearly Moses could lead them, but gathering them and making himself a sacrifice for sin was beyond Moses' abilities, but like Moses he was a great law giver, only Moses delivered the Law and Jesus the Gospel.
The New Testament even states that Jesus was the one who went before Moses in the desert.
Anointed1 » Jesus too performed many miracles—including resurrection, yet none of the recipients came for his support nor for preaching after his death.
Well, we don't actually know whether they did or not as the scriptures don't tell us one way or the other. After Jesus was resurrected, he stayed with his disciples together of and on for 40 days. According to some accounts this is where he broke the news about them being ultimately rejected and killed. We don't know if any healing recipients stuck with him or not. They weren't exactly happy times, though.