I found Was Jesus God? by Oxford professor of philosophy Richard Swinburne very helpful. It is an apologetical book, but he also provides a very coherent outline of Christian doctrine and its philosophical coherence. For me it was absolutely formative: Other books I read proceeded by an accumulation of points; Swinburne provided a broad theoretical framework into which I could fit those points. I wish you the very best in your quest!
To be honest, I'm not your personal research assistant. If you are really interested in these questions (and you should be) the information is widely available for you to discover and review on your own. Here are five books to get you started.
Was Jesus God, Richard Swinburne [Emeritus professor of philosophy at Oxford]
Cold-Case Christianity, J. Warner Wallace [Veteran cold case detective and skeptic who researched the resurrection and came to belief]
Did the Resurrection Happen? Habermas and Flew [Flew, the most prominent atheist in Britain, dramatically changed his mind shortly after this interview with the historian Gary Habermas—not quite to Christianity, but some kind of deism. Still, he was very much on the brink, and that alone is a rather startling volte-face. He wrote, "The evidence for the resurrection is better than for claimed miracles in any other religion. It's outstandingly different in quality and quantity." See also his book There Is A God: How the World's Most Notorious Atheist Changed His Mind
Did Jesus Rise from the Dead, W. L. Craig [American analytical philosopher and theologian. He's much-maligned by fedora-wearing atheists but very respected by academic atheists on the debate circuit. Sam Harris confessed that, "He has put the fear of God into many an atheist." He also publicly drubbed Hitchens in a now-infamous debate. An atheist website went so far as to remark, "Craig spanked Hitchens like a foolish child."]
The Case for Christ, L. Strobel [Chicago Tribune writer who, like Wallace, was a skeptic until he studied the subject in an attempt to de-convert his wife but ended up converting himself]
If you have a Kindle, you can find them online.
I've seen you round here before, so it seems you have an interest in the subject. But it is equally clear you are not that well informed. So why not educate yourself properly? I'm no genius but I'm no intellectual slouch either. I've reviewed the whole corpus in detail and, like it or not, there truly are some very good arguments for Christianity. You are free to reject them, but you can't in good intellectual conscience do so until you have properly evaluated them as presented in their most promising form, by specialists and academics, with conviction and care.
I just don't believe going online and heaping casual scorn on believers is the way to go. Do some research. Read books from both sides of the battlefront. Then make an informed decision. And if you won't do that, you really need to ask yourself why you keep turning up here for arguments.
A reaction formation, perhaps? Something to think about.