I don’t know. I mean if the most important thing in life is to know & worship the correct God and God came all the way down from heaven to show us the way, you’d think that He’d be very clear on Who He is & Who we are to worship. He showed us by His actions that He worshipped God (not Himself) through prayer & prostration and He taught us to pray to God, not to Jesus-Himself. - these are the types of things I’m hearing from sincere people who have researched the Bible (& some also Church History) & then left behind the dogma that Jesus is God.
The first part of being able to know and defend the true nature of Almighty God is to understand what it means to be a triune God, to exist in a Trinity. You say that Jesus worshipped God (the Father) and not himself, well of course he did, and that does not contradict the Trinity.
God exists in 3 distinct persons, who had no beginning, who are all powerful, and all knowing “persons.” These 3 distinct “persons” share the same uncreated nature, the Father is not the Son/Holy Spirit, the Son is not the Father/Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit is not the Father or the Son; but each is God.
Jesus prayed to God the Father in the Heavens, and because he was and is human, it was right to do so. Does that make it wrong for a dying Stephen to call out
directly to Jesus (Acts 7:59,) which can only be described as an act of prayer immediately before his death? Jesus called out to his God (as a man) right before his death (Luke 23:46,) likewise Stephen called out to his God right before his death as well and prays for the same thing, “receive my spirit,” please welcome me into your kingdom!
2 Corinthians 12:7-10, Paul is clearly praying directly to Jesus 3 different times, and Jesus responds to him directly! Jesus doesn’t ignore Paul, he doesn’t tell Paul that he is wrong to pray to him directly, he responds and provides Paul with the message that he needs to hear, Amen!
So what does this all mean, since it appears as if there could be contradictions? Well I asked the question, and I will answer the question with the Word of God.
John 21:25, And there are also many other things that Jesus did, which if they were written one by one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that would be written. Amen.
Each of these events, men praying to Jesus, and worshipping Jesus, are absolutely correct and not violating God’s law for us as Christians. The reason being, is scripture does not provide the situation and then say, “this is wrong to pray directly to Jesus,” or “this is wrong to worship Jesus.” These events happen and there is not one single correction of the action, therefore it must be in accordance to God’s will. Afterall, there are so many things that were taught to the early Christians that were “lived out” in scripture after they were taught by Jesus and his oringinal 12. Just because the
physical act or statement from Jesus teaching the apostles that they can pray and worship him isn’t written in scripture, doesn’t negate the fact that these same men did indeed pray and worship him, which is written in scripture.