First of all, there is no evidence that Moses ever parted the Red Sea, or even that there was an Exodus from Egypt as described in The Bible. In fact, there is near-unanimity among scholars that this did not really happen. If indeed the Red Sea was parted somewhere around 1440 BCE, then the Celts were then located far away in eastern Europe and would have been blissfully unaware of this momentous event.
There is no evidence of either Noah or Moses parting the Red Sea, in fact the weight of evidence is that there actually was no Exodus from Egypt.
Moses received the ten commandments after the parting of the red sea. It was the next miracle that took place following that incident.Not directly after, but yes, chronologically Moses did receive them after parting the red sea.
The parting of the Red Sea is an important event in Jewish history. Moses was just doing his job, and doesn't get the credit for it.
It all really depends on your own religious views. There is no historical evidence of it happening but there have been theories of seismic activity parting the sea.
the prince of egypt
Pharoh's Army
The story of Moses parting the red sea connects with the golden lotus, because Zazamankh parts the waters by holding up his wand like Moses holding out his staff when splitting the red sea in half.
In Deuteronomy ch.32, Moses called out to the heaven and the Earth to bear witness to God's teachings to the Israelites.
The biblical stories of Moses parting the Red Sea, and of Joshua parting the River Jordan are probably unique in ancient legend.
No, the story of the flood is found in the book of Genesis, not Moses. Moses is traditionally believed to be the author of the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, including Genesis.
Since the only evidence we have for Moses is in the Bible and the Bible explicitly claims the Moses was buried, there is no genuine source to counter this and say that Moses was incinerated.
The parting of the Red Sea was pretty major...