Moses did not use pestilence, God used it to show His power to Egypt.
God used a burning bush to attract Moses' attention on Mount Sinai. The bush was on fire but was not consumed, prompting Moses to approach and listen to God speaking to him.
Moses
Here it shows that god can call anyone, and also use anyone for his work.
God used Moses to direct his children out of Egypt. Moses was chosen by God to be the leader and deliverer of the Israelites from their bondage in Egypt. He led them through the Red Sea, guided them in the wilderness, and eventually brought them to the edge of the Promised Land.
As it was burning without the bush burning Moses came to look at it and God spoke to him.
The Ten Commandments are on two rocks that God had made for Moses
It depends entirely to what they were responding to and whose sense of justice you wish to use.
torah is the law of God as given to Moses. The Torah is important to follow
He used them in various ways like to show his powers (Moses) he used them as people to spread his word and when he was done he multiplied there family or gave them more years or both or other things
Moses was told to answer by saying that God had sent him, and if they did not believe him; he was told to perform three miracles. The particular name that he was told to use was "I am that I am" or in the original Hebrew "Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh".
The saying highlights something that most people miss most of the time: It is not about people and their efforts; it's about God and His will. It is similar to the saying that I like: Any old bush will do-- meaning that when Moses went up to the mountain, God could have used any old bush to show Moses as the burning bush-- it's the availability of the bush that is more important than the species. Moses didn't think that he could do what God wished for him to do; he may have had a speech impediment. He begged God to let Aaron take the job. God couldn't have cared less-- He will use us as He pleases, and our qualifications in the eyes of men and women have absolutely nothing to do with it. Saul "looked" more like a king than David. Jonah was a prejudiced whiner. It goes on and on.