Well that depends upon whether you believe the hyperbole in the new testament or not. But my point is 'if' you accept the claims of witnesses in the NT then you actually undermine their credibility, as they suggest hundreds of people to have been eye witnesses to an astonishing miracle, yet christianity didn't gain a foothold. Something doesn't add up.
Well, first of all, the hundreds of witnesses is clearly made up.
Secondly, Christianity did gain a foothold. In fact, it's still here.
If you are trying to base an argument on Christianity not being popular in Palestine, it doesn't work because, as Paul tells us, there was a church in Palestine. There's no reason to believe Christianity was any less popular there than in Corinth or Rome.
And reading the stories in the NT Jesus wasn't just teaching to two men and a dog, but literally thousands of people who made the effort to come and see him.
Stories written forty years later by people who were Christians and who wanted to spread Christianity.
Despite some non-sense exaggeration I suspect the population of Jerusalem and Palestine would have been pretty small in those days
Have you done any research to find out how big the population was in the first century? This link might be a good starting point:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_history_of_Jerusalem#1st_century_JudeaI think we can probably safely assume there were a few hundred thousand people in the area in which Jesus operated.
As for "non-sense [sic] exaggeration", Tacitus and Josephus both seem to have exaggerated their figures by an order of magnitude. Has it not occurred to you that the Gospel authors could easily have done the same?
so thousands of witnesses would have represented a small, but sizeable chunk of the population, sufficient to garner a head of steam through word of mouth. Yet the early christians in Palestine remained a tiny, obscure and largely ignored group - the the majority continuing not to believe in their claims, despite having been the very populace around at the time when all those miracles, including the resurrection were purported to have happened.
I'm not quite sure what point you are trying to make. Christians everywhere were a tiny, obscure and largely ignored group for a couple of decades after Jesus died. There was a church in Jerusalem during the time Paul was operating and even he seems to consider that it was the centre of the Christian world. Its disappearance is easily explained by the destruction of Jerusalem in 70CE by the Romans.