It was God who spoke from the burning bush, and not Moses. it happened once.
Moses met god on many occasions through prayer and meditation. His most famous encounter with god was on Mount Horeb where he met God who was in the form of a burning bush. This is also where God met Moses and gave him the Ten Commandments. Where the mountain is located in current times remains unknown.
'Nec tamen consumebatur' (Latin) - 'Yet it was not consumed', an allusion to Exodus 3:2 and the Burning Bush, used as the emblem and motto of The Church of Scotland. Another Answer: It also spoke to Moses telling him that that burning bush was God. Not many bushes burning or otherwise do that very often.
Helena, mother of Emperor Constantine, in 327 CE established the Chapel of the Burning Bush on the very spot where she said the burning bush was located.Helena also located, to her own complete satisfaction, many other previously unknown but important sites such as the very spot where Jesus was crucified and the original location of his tomb, as well as important relics such as the True Cross of Jesus. With so many improbable finds attributed to just one person, there is reason to doubt the veracity of the supposed location of Moses' burning bush. There is good reason to say that we will never know the exact location, or even that there was no burning bush.
Helena, mother of Emperor Constantine, in 327 CE established the Chapel of the Burning Bush on the very spot where she said the burning bush was located.Helena also located, to her own complete satisfaction, many other previously unknown but important sites such as the very spot where Jesus was crucified and the original location of his tomb, as well as important relics such as the True Cross of Jesus. With so many improbable finds attributed to just one person, there is reason to doubt the veracity of the supposed location of Moses' burning bush. There is good reason to say that we will never know the exact location, or even that there was no burning bush.
The Lord told Moses to take off his sandals, for the ground he was standing on was holy, and to go to Pharaoh to bring the Israelites out of Egypt.
Moses is mentioned 829 times in the KJV Bible.
Actually several Presbyterian denominations use the burning bush as their central symbol: The Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., The Church of Scotland, The Presbyterian Church in Ireland, The Presbyterian Church in Canada, and I suspect many continental Reformed churches use it as well. The use of the symbol in the Reformed/Presbyterian tradition appears to date back to the sixteen century.
8 times
George Bush. George Bush.
Often times Moses...
Never Again the Burning Times has 322 pages.
To many times!