No not really. God sent the ten commandments to Moses but instead, he threw it at the people so God gave him another one. Good question!
Generally attributed to Moses. It was Jehovah who gave it.
Mount Sinai
He was herding his father-in-law's sheep.
"....no graven images..." (not to worship anything but God)
It refer to the law given by God to Moses, there are 613 commandments for jews to follow. you can mainly refer to Exodus and Deuteronomy. and after Jesus come, He fulfilled the law, give a new commandment, which is "to love god and love your neighbor".
God can and will call anyone to work for him, Moses was called when he was looking after the sheep that belonged to his father in law jethro. God spoke to Moses from the burning bush.
God inscribed the Law on the first pair of tablets. When Moses came back down from the mountain, though, he discovered that the people had already broken the law and were sinning greatly. In anger Moses smashed the tablets. After this God commanded Moses to return to the mountain, create two more tablets of stone, and inscribe the Law on these replacements. Presumably Moses had memorized what was on the first tablets, or God told Moses what to write.
It was the law of God and he knew the lord and knew how powerful he is.
When Moses came down from the mountain with the original commandment, they contained the Higher Law for the people. Moses broke the tablets when he saw what evil the people were doing by worshiping the golden calf. God gave other commandments to replace the original ten, but they were of a lesser law. This law was called the Mosaic law named after Moses. This law is contained all through the Bible from that time one. No where in the bible is contained the Higher Law unless you refer to the teachings of Christ when He was alive. This law would have to be given to the people when the time was right that they were able to live it.
Moses was an Israelite himself, and led his people for 40 years from Egypt to the border of the Promised Land. Moses was also given the Law to pass on to the Israelites from God.
No. Jesus did not come to undo or abolish the law of Moses, but to fulfill it (Matthew 5:17).
It was even more impossible to perform than the rabbis' teaching of the law of Moses, being an enlargement of that law, and showing that man could please God only by faith in Jesus.