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.
he is a "born again Christian" (protestant)
Sodom and Gamorra.
It is because the burning bush was not burning
burning bush :)
At the burning bush. The preposition is AT.
No. Burning Bush leaves are simple! -Anonymous Smiley :)
The burning bush is on mount Horeb the mountain of God.
he didn't escape he talked to the burning bush because it was God
The story of the Burning Bush is Old Testament.
As it was burning without the bush burning Moses came to look at it and God spoke to him.
God spoke to Moses from a burning bush, not Patrick.
You are mistaken as God asked Moses a, and not Abraham from the burning bush.