Moses is a biblical figure in the Old Testament. Hobbes repeatedly refers to Moses at Mount Sinai, where Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt on God’s command, after which the Israelites entered into a covenant with God via Moses to be God’s “peculiar people” on Earth. According to Hobbes, the Israelites were “peculiar” because they accepted God as their civil sovereign, over and above the spiritual power God already claims over all of humankind. Hobbes refers to Moses as God’s “first Lieutenant,” which gives Moses the authority to speak God’s words. In Hobbes’s opinion, Moses was a true prophet, and the work he did on God’s behalf in Egypt, like the parting of the Red Sea, can rightly be considered miracles. Moses is the prophet who spoke to God most directly, but, Hobbes points out, even Moses’s communication with God was mediated through an angel, which supports Hobbes’s argument that the voice of God cannot be comprehended by human ears.