8 times
Moses went twice to the top of the Mount Sinai to get the ten commandments.
God called Moses to mount Sinai.
Moses climbed mount Sinai in Egypt.
Moses told Pharaoh to let the people go free ten times.
Moses made more than 2 trips upon Mount Sinai. In Exodus chapter 19, Moses go up the mountain talks with God, returns to the people, then returns to the mountain. Chapter 20 the Ten Commandments are given, Moses goes down to the people in chapter 32 and finds the Golden Calf, breaks the tablets. To really get the full story you need to read Exodus chapter 19 through chapter 34. These contain God /Moses conversations.
Moses went up in obedience to God's command. While up there, God gave him the Ten Commandments and a wide range of other instructions. === === And the LORD came down upon mount Sinai, on the top of the mount: and the LORD called Moses up to the top of the mount; and Moses went up.
Moses went up and down Mount Sinai two times to receive the law from God. The first time he received the tablets with the Ten Commandments, but when he came down he saw the Israelites worshiping a golden calf and broke the tablets. He then went back up to receive the tablets again.
There are 34 events. Three that I can think of are: Moses disobeys God causing him to not get to go to the promised land. He's allowed to see it from a mountain but that's all. Joshua takes Moses place as leader. Moses dies
Rocky and His Friends - 1959 The Missing Mountain or Peek-A-Boo Peak Go Down Moses or The Fall Guy 2-9 was released on: USA: 6 November 1960
In the 1956 film "The Ten Commandments," Charlton Heston, portraying Moses, famously says "Let my people go" a total of three times. This phrase is pivotal as it represents Moses' demand for the liberation of the Israelites from Egyptian slavery. The repetition emphasizes the urgency and importance of his plea to Pharaoh.
Moses the Raven is an old crow who occasionally visits the farm, regaling its denizens with tales of a wondrous place beyond the clouds called Sugarcandy Mountain, where he avers that all animals go when they die-but only if they work hard.
Moses, the raven in George Orwell's "Animal Farm," describes Sugarcandy Mountain as a paradise where animals go after they die. He portrays it as a place of eternal happiness and comfort, where there is no labor or hardship. Moses uses this idea to provide hope to the other animals, suggesting that their struggles on the farm will be rewarded in the afterlife, which serves to distract them from their current suffering. His tales of Sugarcandy Mountain reflect themes of religion and the use of propaganda to control and pacify the populace.