It is called the Exodus
The Exodus
Yes, Moses lead the 'children of Israel' out of Egypt.
He was his understudy or apprentice. He was also Moses' successor and took his place when the children of Israel entered Canaan.
Moses
Actually moses does not put his foot in the promised land. It was Joshua who took over from Moses , who lead the people to Canaan.
God called Abram (Avram in Hebrew) to leave his home in Ur and go to Canaan. In Genesis 12, God calls to Avram and tells him to go to the land He would show him. Abram then took up and headed toward Canaan. There he settled in the province town called Shechem with his wife Sarai.
The red sea was split by God and Moses led the people out of Egypt.
It was Jehovah God who gave the Hebrews the promised land. He used Moses to get them released from bondage to Egypt. For the next 40 years, Moses guided them as they wandered in the wilderness. When they reached the end of the 40 years, it was Joshua who led the people into the promised land.
Moses took the people to Palestine.AnswerHe took the ex-slaves into the wilderness. It was Joshua who took them into the Holy Land.
According to the Bible, the journey through the wilderness took forty years. According to more than 90 per cent of scholars, the Exodus never really happened and there was no journey through the wilderness.
Egypt, Canaan (now Israel/Palestine), and geographic places between.
He brought the Jews out of Egypt under God's guidance and gave them God's Torah.
Moses never settled during the forty remaining years of his life that followed the exodus. He served as political and military leader of the Children of Israel during their trek from Egypt to the promised land, and died just before they entered it. Not only did he spend the last 40 years of his life traveling, but it's startling to realize that Moses, the great leader of the new Jewish nation, never in his life ever once set foot in the promised land, not before, during, or after the period of bondage in Egypt. Moses was born and raised in Egypt, self-exiled in Midian for forty years, and finally one of the "wandering" multitude in the desert. Only two individuals released in the exodus entered the promised land, and neither of them was Moses.