To the Promised Land (Canaan; Israel). See also:
From a biblical perspective, Moses helped the Israelites escape from their lives of slavery in Egypt. From a historical perspective, Moses did not help the Israelites escape from anywhere. After all, it has been reported that over 90 per cent of scholars say that there never was an Exodus from Egypt.
Moses never used those words. Rather, he said 1) The Israelites will ask Your name; 2) Who am I to speak to Pharaoh and to lead the Israelites; 3) The Israelites won't believe me; and 4) I stutter. For each of these questions which Moses raised, God provided an answer: 1) He revealed two of the Divine Names to Moses 2) He said that His Presence will be with Moses 3) He granted certain miraculous acts to Moses 4) He gave Aaron as a spokesman.
He gets pants off
Moses was supposed to tell the Israelites that God had sent him to lead them out of slavery in Egypt and to the promised land. He was to convey God's message of deliverance and provide instructions for their journey and obedience to God's commands.
------------------------ Moses is important in Jewish belief because The Bible says that he led the Israelites out of captivity in Egypt, and that he gave the people the Ten Commandments. Moses would only be important in Israelite history if indeed the Exodus from Egypt really occurred. However, over 90 per cent of scholars are reported to say that the biblical Exodus from Egypt never really occurred. On this view, Moses probably never existed and certainly did not have an important place in Israelite history.
She was like Moses because she led her people out of bondage and slavery. She had no "Promised Land" as such since her connection to Moses was that she was a coordinator of slave liberation. However, you could reasonably say that Canada was her "Promised Land" since Blacks who escaped to Canada gained their freedom.
Answer:Exodus 3:12-14New International Version (NIV) 12 And God said, "I will be with you. And this will be the sign to you that it is I who have sent you: When you have brought the people out of Egypt, you[a] will worship God on this mountain."13 Moses said to God, "Suppose I go to the Israelites and say to them, 'The God of your fathers has sent me to you,' and they ask me, 'What is his name?' Then what shall I tell them?"14 God said to Moses, "I AM WHO I AM.[b] This is what you are to say to the Israelites: 'I AM has sent me to you.'"
According to Exodus 3: 1-4: 20; Acts 7: 30-36 God told Moses " I have seen the suffering of the Israelites. I will save them from the Egyptians and bring them to a good land. You are the one who will lead my people out of Egypt." The Israelites were forced to work hard as slaves. Jehovah sent Moses and Aaron to Pharaoh with this message: Let my people go so that they can wordship me in the wilderness.' Pharaoh proudly replied: ' I do not care what Jehovah says and I will not let the Israelites go.' Then Pharaoh forced them to work even harder. And that is when Jehovah God sent the Ten Plagues on Egypt. Read Exodus 5: 1-18; 7: 8-8: 19; Nehemiah 9: 9,10.
Moses led them up to the border of Canaan, and Joshua led them into the land itself (Joshua ch.3-4). See also:More about Moses and Joshua
Moses was married to Zipporah ( Exodus 2:21). "And Moses was content to dwell with the man: and he gave Moses Zipporah his daughter" The Bible does not say when she died, but because Moses lived to be 120 it can safely be taken that she died before him.
A:There has to be a religious answer and a historical answer to a question like this. The religious answer, based on biblical tradition, is that Abraham, as the first of the Patriarchs and ancestor of the Hebrew people, received a covenant from God, promising that his descendants would inherit the Promised land. The biblical tradition is that Moses led the Israelites out of bondage in Egypt and received the Ten Commandments from God. Many believes say that Moses actually wrote the first five books of the Old Testament. Finally, Abraham and Moses are credited with being the founders of Judaism.Historians say that the biblical account of Abraham conflicts too much with what we know about history, and that the available evidence is that he was purely mythical, not a historical person. Almost all scholars say that there was no Exodus from Egypt as described in The Bible, therefore the story of Moses is another unhistoric legend. The consensus is that the first five books of the Old Testament were actually written during the first millennium BCE, centuries after the time attributed to Moses. The historical answer is therefore that neither Abraham nor Moses has shaped the history of the Hebrews and Israelites, although the existence of the legends that surround them has had a very real influence.
In Exodus 32, God tells Moses that the Israelites have sinned by making a golden calf and worshiping it. He expresses His anger and intention to destroy them, but Moses intercedes on their behalf, pleading for God's mercy and reminding Him of His promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Ultimately, God relents from the disaster He planned, but Moses then confronts the people for their idolatry.