Moses was around 80 years old when he saw the burning bush.
MOSES!
When Moses saw the burning bush his curiosity got the better of him and as he went nearer god told him to remove his sandals as the ground was to holy.And god spoke from the burning bush.
Moses' age when he saw the burning bush is not specifically mentioned in the Bible. However, traditionally it is said that Moses' life can be divided into three sections of forty years. He was forty years old when he fled from Egypt after killing an Egyptian taskmaster. He spent the next forty years in the wilderness working as a shepherd for his father-in-law Jethro, married two women and had two sons. At the end of these forty years Moses sees the burning bush so he would have been eighty years old at the time. He then receives a call from God to lead the Hebrew people out of Egypt and spends the last forty years of his life leading them in the desert. He dies at the age of 120 years and God buries him on the top of of the mountain.
He saw a burning bush and it caught his attention because it was burning.
Moses was attracted to the burning bush because it caught his attention as an unusual sight - a bush that was on fire but not consumed. This miraculous sight prompted Moses to approach and investigate what was happening. Ultimately, it was through this burning bush that God called out to Moses.
Moses saw the burning bush on Mount Horeb, which is also known as Mount Sinai. This event held great significance for him as it was where God spoke to him and called him to lead the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt. It marked the beginning of Moses' journey as a prophet and leader of his people.
We can find that in the book of Exodus chapter 3 it says Moses was keeping the flocks of sheep of his father in law Jethro at Mount Horeb. . when he saw the burning bush.So he came near to see it.
It means that the bush was burning, but was not burned up.
Maybe because Moses was threading on Hallowed land?
______________ We should not attempt to establish scientific explanations for miracles we read about in the Bible. Either the Bible contains a literally true record of this event, in which case this was God himself for some reason making himself known to Moses as a burning bush, or this is not a literally true record of the event. If there was not really a burning bush at all, we do not need to explain it. In support of the notion that there was no burning bush is the scholarly view that there was no biblical Exodus from Egypt, and therefore no Moses.
Pythagorus maybe?
The definition of being a prophet is one who speaks of divine things to people so all the real prophets heard or saw visions of God in one way of another. For example, Moses heard God speak in the burning bush, and Ezekiel saw a vision.