I should have been more clear about the fact that I was talking about
pious jews who kept the com mandment to worship ONLY the One God.
That was a much later invention that only certain Israelites kept to. The law, in the first commandment, admits there are other gods that can be worshiped. Scripture does not support your position.
In my comments I'm trying to make a distinction between the words deity
(that which is worshipping) and divinity(that which merits "special"
appreciation. ie: hebrews 13:17)
It's a false distinction. The fact that ancient Jewish writings had prohibitions against worshiping angels proves that worship of the divine (and not deity) was happening in the Jewish community. You're making a distinction without difference.
Divinity being less than God and having some attributes of God in a
limited way...holiness and godliness without the miraculous, so to
speak.
Look up hypostasis and henotheism. Again, angels were worshipped, the mysterious "Son of Man" was often equal to god and often not, men were elevated to the divine and God walk around as a human. There was THE god, local gods and personal gods, all in the Bible. There was a continuum of divinity and deity. All in the Bible.
because they taught that all believers should strive for holiness and
godliness and Jesus Himself said "be perfect as I am perfect"...I get
the sense that divinity is in view here. A "higher calling". An early
example of this higher calling is the one referred to as, saint john the
divine.
Why should they strive to be holy and godly unless that was something they could attain? They had examples of Jesus, Enoch and others being elevated to heaven and worthy or worship, men become gods. What were they striving for if not the same thing?