because god told him what to do throught he burning bush
Moses' staff.Moses' staff.Moses' staff.Moses' staff.Moses' staff.Moses' staff.
God told Moses to throw the staff, and God turned it into bronze and it was known to be the Nehushtan staff. When this happened, the staff turned into a snake. God ordered Moses to pick up the staff and when Moses did, it turned back to it's original self. Many people in Moses' time destroyed it for other goods.
God.
He had a staff.
Jewish Midrash (Va Yosha 42-44) teaches that Moses received his staff from Jethro (and God) to earn Zipporah's hand for marriage. A great read is Goldin (2006):The Family Book of Midrash: 52 Jewish Stories from the Sages
Manna? God ordered Moses to speak to the rock and it would gush forth with water. Instead, Moses struck the rock with his staff. God still provided water to the people, but Moses' punishment for disobeying what Jehovah had spoken was he would not be allowed into the promised land.
Moses is not typically considered a "god," although Biblical language does allow that we are "to be like gods," so this is technically correct. We do not know the birthdate of Moses.
The Bible often uses the staff or rod to symbolize the authority one has or the authority vested in him by another. Moses' staff became a symbol of his authority and commission from God when he appeared before the older men of Israel, also when he appeared before Pharaoh and the magic-practicing priests of Egypt. (Exodus 4:29-31; 7:9-12) And at God's direction, Moses lifted up his staff over the sea and "split it apart" that the Israelites might escape on dry land. Afterward God had Moses stretch out his staff again, and the waters plunged down on the Egyptians, drowning them all including Pharaoh! (Exodus 14:21-3; Psalm 136:15)
The answer to #1 is that the 'stick" of Moses is the typological sign of the Cross - through the cross, Jesus, the true deliverer brings His Church, Israel, to the true Promised Land of Heaven, through the "sea of the World" (Red Sea). Moses works all of his wonders with the staff, to signify that God will work all of His wonders for his people under the Cross. Additionally, a staff represents authority, and by being made of wood, the staff of Moses represents God's desire to choose the humble and the obedient over the mighty in the eyes of the world. A king's staff would have been made of metal, or a precious material. As for question #2 - your question is unclear.
first of all God turned the staff into the snake, and second, the magicians where helped by satin (WHICH IS A VERY MEAN PERSON)
According to The Bible/Tanakh/Old Testament, when Moses went before Pharoah, Moses' staff changed into a snake/serpent, and then back into a staff again. (Exodus 4:1-5)
no he was possessed by the devil. sure.