Mount Sinai

Mount Sinai is also known in the Bible as “Mount Horeb” or “the Mountain of Moses,” and in Arabic as Jabal Musa.


(Authorized for use by Holy Light Bible Geography Network)
Image: From the Red Sea to Mount Sinai, most of the route is relatively flat, following the Red Sea coast. It is only in the Wilderness of Sinai that the terrain becomes a plateau with hills. However, the path from the Wilderness of Sinai to the Wilderness of Paran is rugged and full of ravines, much more difficult to travel than the road to Mount Sinai. It is referred to as “that great and terrifying wilderness” (Deuteronomy 1:18).

Mount Sinai is a granite peak in the south-central Sinai Peninsula of Egypt, located in the South Sinai Governorate. It has an elevation of 2,285 meters and is surrounded by other high mountains. In Jewish history, this mountain is “the mountain of God,” a primary location for divine revelation. According to the Bible, Mount Sinai is where the angel of the Lord appeared to Moses in flames of fire from within a bush (Exodus 3:1-2). After leading the Israelites out of Egypt, Moses went to this mountain to receive the Law, the Ten Commandments, from the Lord on behalf of the Israelites. While Moses was on the mountain, Aaron created the golden calf for the Israelites to worship. When Moses descended and saw what was happening, he was so angry that he smashed the stone tablets inscribed with God’s Law. After a period of punishment and repentance, Moses returned to Mount Sinai with two newly carved stone tablets, and God wrote the “Ten Commandments” on the new tablets and instructed Moses to place them in the Ark of the Covenant.

Image: According to Jewish tradition, this plant is the burning bush that was not consumed by the fire. (Used with permission from “Holy Light Bible Geography.”)
Image: The desolate Sinai Peninsula. (Used with permission from “Holy Light Bible Geography.”)

In the Book of Kings, after the prophet Elijah defeated the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel, he fled to a wilderness near Beersheba to escape Queen Jezebel’s revenge. Exhausted, he lay down under a broom tree and prayed that he might die. An angel then came and provided him with food and water. Strengthened by the meal, he walked for forty days and forty nights until he reached Horeb, the mountain of God (which is Mount Sinai) (1 Kings 19:8). There, God gave Elijah a new mission.

Image: The broom tree (Retama raetam) at the Bible Botanical Gardens in Israel. This is a coniferous shrub that grows in arid regions. Although it is not tall, reaching a maximum height of about 3 meters, it provides valuable shade in the hot wilderness.

In summary, “Mount Sinai” appears multiple times in the Bible as the place where the Israelites directly encountered God and received the Law. It is the place where a scattered people found unity and a shared identity. In the hearts of the Jewish people, Mount Sinai is sacred and irreplaceable, an eternal site of pilgrimage.

(Compiled and edited based on the Chinese Union Version, “Holy Light Bible Geography,” and a comprehensive biblical interpretation.)

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