This is one of the many anomalies presented to those who assert that Moses wrote the Book of Exodus. When raised, this anomaly would usually be answered by the further assertion that God told Moses about Canaan. Ultimately the rational response is to accept the verdict of nearly all scholars that there was no Exodus from Egypt as described in The Bible. The Book of Exodus is considered to have been written by an anonymous source later in the first millennium BCE.
Moses did not write about Jesus specifically in the Bible. The Old Testament, which includes the books traditionally attributed to Moses, contains prophecies and foreshadowing of Jesus, but Moses himself did not write about him.
A:An old tradition says that Moses wrote the Pentateuch (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy). A a readily apparent problem with this hypothesis is that the Book of Deuteronomy describes the death of Moses, something that no normal person could do. Two solutions have been devised to resolve this problem. One is that Moses did indeed write about his own death (always writing in the third person), because God told him what to write. Another solution was that the last verses in Deuteronomy, covering the death of Moses, were written by Joshua. Biblical scholars say there is no doubt that Moses could not have written the Pentateuch - it even has different names in different places, for his own father-in-law. They say that the Pentateuch actually had four principal authors, all of whom were anonymous, and that it was written many centuries after the time attributed to Moses. He did not write the Pentateuch and did not write about his own death.
Moses was committed to God mostly as he did write the ten commandments.
No
not everyone knows there could be thousands or millions no one knows.
In a sense, yes. Moses was commanded by God to write a copy of the law (Torah) as seen in Exd. 24:4 and before his death, Moses stated to the elders in Deut. 27:2-3 to write the words of the law to take with them into the promised land. The priests were the keepers of the writings, and it was commanded in Deut. 17:18 that all future kings were to write a copy of Torah with their own hands and govern according to it.
According to Jewish tradition, Moses was raised in the Egyptian royal court and would have been taught to read and write by Egyptian tutors.
God was but when moses smashed the 1st set God made him write the next.
There was no Bible for Moses to use because he was the first man that wrote the Bible. Moses was inspired to write the first five books that are now a part of the Bible as we know it today. Moses was born in 1593 B.C. and the exodus from Egypt took place in 1513 B.C. Soon after the Exodus, Moses began writing (under divine inspiration) and by 1473 B.C. (40 years) he compiled all the them: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers & Deuteronomy. After Moses death in 1473 B.C., Joshua continued recording the history of the nation of Israel. Moses got his strength from his very strong relationship with Almighty God Jehovah.
No.. Moses wrote the book of Genesis
14 years
Great question! Moses perhaps? The first books of the bible are guessed to be written down by Moses.