She didn't want him killed by the king and he was found by someone and raised up
The mother of Moses put him in a basket, and out him in the river Nile.
Moses mother made a basket and put it in the river Nile with the baby in it.
It was his mother Jochebed.
The basket that Moses was put into was referred to as an ARK.
Moses was found in the river Nile.(Exodus 2:2-5)
No; it was Moses whose mother "took an ark of bulrushes for him, daubed it with asphalt and pitch, put the child in it, and laid it in the reeds by the river's bank." (Exodus 2:3).
There is no record either in written history or oral tradition that tells of the Virgin Mary putting anyone in a basket, much less anyone in a basket in a river. You have probably confused the Virgin Mary with the mother of Moses who, to preserve her child, placed him in a basket and sent him down river that he might not be killed in the population purge decreed by Pharaoh. Moses survived the purge because of this, having been rescued by Pharaoh's own daughter, and grew up to be chosen by God to deliver the Israelites from Egypt.
One of Pharaoh's daughter's came down to bathe in the river and found baby Moses floating in a basket in Exodus 2:1-10. The Pharaoh was the King of Egypt, which was the superpower at the time. Some historians believe Queen Hatsheput (1501-1482 BC), daughter of Pharaoh Thutmose I, was the princess that found and adopted Moses.
no one really knows how Moses grew up, we just know that his mother put him in a basket, and put the basket in the river. the river took him to Pharoah's daughter, and later he, with God's help, delivered the Isrealites from Egypt.
No. The basket in the Nile story is associated with Moses. After the birth of Moses, his sister Miriam placed him in a reed basket and sent him up the Nile, hoping he would find a better life than he would have with their family. He was found by the pharaoh's daughter, and he was raised as a royal son. Moses was born centuries before Jesus.
Moses' mother placed him in a basket to float down the river to protect him from Pharaoh's decree that all Hebrew male infants be killed. Fearing for his safety, she sought a way to save him while still complying with the law. By putting him in the river, she hoped he would be found and cared for, which ultimately led to his adoption by Pharaoh's daughter. This act was both a desperate measure and a profound act of love and courage.
A box-shaped basket made of reeds.