Judaism There are many different layers of interpretations for the burning bush in Judaism: • The fire comes from a thorn bush and not a more majestic tree to show that God saw the suffering of the Jewish people. This interpretation says that Moses was worried that Egypt was going to completely destroy the Israelites. God showed him this magical bush to say that the Israelites will survive, just as the bush is burning but isn’t consumed. The
Zohar, a late 1200s work of
Kabbalah, also suggests that the burning bush was a hint that even though the Israelites were suffering in Egypt, they had God's protection, like the bush that was burning but not consumed. • The
Mekhilta de
Rabbi Shimon Ben Yochai, a major book of commentaries on the Bible's Exodus book, states that just as with a thorn bush, if a person inserts his hand into it, he is not harmed because its thorns point downward. But if he wishes to withdraw his hand, the thorns grasp it. Similarly, when the Israelites descended to Egypt, the Egyptians welcomed them, as it is written in the
Bible (Genesis 47:6): "The land of Egypt is before you; in the best of the land make your father and brothers to dwell." But when they wished to leave, the Egyptians held them back, per Exodus 5:2: "I will not let Israel go." • In the same source, God revealing himself in a simple bush is also meant to show that there is no place on earth, as humble as it can be, devoid of the Divine presence. • Some famous Sages commentaries, such as "Rabbenu Benchaya" (Rabbenu Bahya ibn Paquda, Jewish philosopher and Judge living in Spain between c.1050 and 1120), have outlined the connection between the burning bush and Mount Sinai, based on the Hebrew word for Bush, “Sneh”. It is meant to show the burning bush as a prefiguration of the Great Revelation of God to the Hebrew people after their liberation from Egypt at Mount Sinai. In both instances, God reveals himself through fire. And this revelation is symbolically the end goal of the journey started with the burning bush. The logo of the
Jewish Theological Seminary of America is also an image of the burning bush with the phrase "and the bush was not consumed" in both English and Hebrew.
Christianity , 1475-1476, by
Nicolas Froment in
Aix Cathedral Catholic church In the medieval
Catholic church the event was seen as a
typological parallel for the
Virgin Birth of Jesus from Mary, who conceived as a virgin, as the bush was burnt but not destroyed. Depictions in medieval Catholic art, such as the 15th-century
Burning Bush Triptych altarpiece, therefore typically show a
Virgin and Child in the middle of the bush or tree. The inscription on the base of the frame which translates (from Latin) as "In the bush which Moses saw burning without being consumed, we recognised, Holy Mother of God, your virginity wondrously preserved". The Eastern Orthodox view was similar.
Eastern Orthodoxy of Our Lady of the Burning Bush (
Neopalimaya Kupina). "Burning Bush" of the
Old Testament. 19th century,
Polissya,
Ukraine.
The Museum of Ukrainian home icons,
Radomysl Castle,
Ukraine In
Eastern Orthodoxy a tradition exists, originating in the early Christian
Church Fathers and its
Ecumenical Synods (or Councils), that the flame Moses saw was in fact God's
Uncreated Energies/Glory, manifested as light, thus explaining why the bush was not consumed. It is viewed as Moses being permitted to see these
Uncreated Energies/
Glory, which are considered to be eternal things; the Orthodox
definition of salvation is this vision of the
Uncreated Energies/
Glory, and it is a recurring theme in the works of Greek Orthodox theologians such as
John S. Romanides. In Eastern Orthodox parlance, the preferred name for the event is
The Unburnt Bush, and the theology and hymnography of the church view it as prefiguring the
virgin birth of Jesus; Eastern Orthodox theology refers to
Mary, the mother of Jesus as the
Theotokos ("God bearer"), viewing her as having given birth to
Incarnate God without suffering any harm, or loss of
virginity, in parallel to the bush being burnt without being consumed. There is an
icon-type by the name of
the Unburnt Bush, which portrays Mary in the guise of
God bearer; the icon's
feast day is held on 4 September (). While God speaks to Moses, in the narrative, Eastern Orthodoxy believes that the angel was also heard by Moses; Eastern Orthodoxy interprets the angel as being the
Logos of God, regarding it as the
Angel of Great Counsel mentioned in the
Septuagint version of
Isaiah 9:6; (it is
Counsellor, Mighty God in the
Masoretic Text).
Reformed tradition The burning bush has been a popular symbol among
Reformed churches since it was first adopted by the
Huguenots (
French Calvinists) in 1583 during its 12th National
Synod. The French motto
Flagror non consumor – "I am burned but not consumed" – suggests the symbolism was understood of the suffering church that nevertheless lives. However, given the fire is a sign of God's presence, he who is a consuming fire (Hebrews 12:29) the miracle appears to point to a greater miracle: God, in grace, is with his covenant people and so they are not consumed. • The current symbol of the
Reformed Church of France is a burning bush with the
Huguenot cross. • The motto of the
Church of Scotland is
Nec tamen consumebatur,
Latin for "Yet it was not consumed", an allusion to the biblical description of the burning bush, and a stylised depiction of the burning bush is used as the Church's symbol. Usage dates from the 1690s. • The burning bush is also used as the basis of the symbol of the
Presbyterian Church in Ireland, which uses the Latin motto
Ardens sed virens, meaning "Burning but flourishing", and is based on the biblical description of the burning bush. The same logo is used from the separated
Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster. • The burning bush is also the symbol of the
Presbyterian Church in Canada,
Presbyterian Church in Australia crest,
Presbyterian Church of Eastern Australia with the motto in English since its foundation in 1846: 'And the Bush was not consumed',
Presbyterian Church in New Zealand,
Presbyterian Church in Taiwan,
Presbyterian Church in Singapore,
Presbyterian Church of Brazil, the
Presbyterian Church in Malaysia, the
Free Reformed Churches of North America, and the
Christian Reformed Churches in the Netherlands.
Islam According to the
Qur’án, Moses (
Musa)
departed for Egypt along with his family after completing the time period. The Qur’án states that during their travel, as they stopped near the Tur, Musa observed a fire and instructed the family to wait until he returned with fire for them. When Musa reached the Valley of Tuwa, God called out to him from the right side of the valley from a tree, on what is revered as Al-Buq‘ah Al-Mubārakah (Arabic: الـبُـقـعَـة الـمُـبَـارَكَـة, "The Blessed Ground") in the Qur’án. The sacred valley of Tuwa is mentioned in the Qur’án at 20:12 and 79:16. Musa was commanded by God to remove his shoes and was informed of his selection as a prophet, his obligation of prayer and the Day of Judgment. Musa was then ordered to throw his rod which turned into a snake and later instructed to hold it. The Qur’án then narrates Musa being ordered to insert his hand into his clothes and upon revealing it would shine a bright light. God states that these are signs for the Pharaoh, and
orders Musa to invite Pharaoh to the worship of one God. In recounting the association between Moses and the Burning Bush, Bahá’u’lláh writes,Call thou to mind the days when He Who conversed with God tended, in the wilderness, the sheep of
Jethro, His father-in-law. He hearkened unto the Voice of the Lord of mankind coming from the Burning Bush which had been raised above the Holy Land, exclaiming, “O Moses! Verily I am God, thy Lord and the Lord of thy forefathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.” He was so carried away by the captivating accent of the Voice that He detached Himself from the world and set out in the direction of Pharaoh and his people, invested with the power of thy Lord Who exerciseth sovereignty over all that hath been and shall be. The people of the world are now hearing that which Moses did hear, but they understand not. -from
Tablets of Bahá’u’lláh Rastafari Some
Rastafari believe that the burning bush was
cannabis. ==See also==