God provided the manna (Exodus 16).
Sabbath Morning at Sea was created in 1839.
Synagogue
In the morning service for weekdays, as well as in the Sabbath and Festivals morning service.
It represents how God had led the Israelites out of Egypt. A cloud followed them by day and from evening til morning the cloud looked like fire...allowing the Israelites to travel at night and during the day to be hidden from the Egyptians. It represents how the Lord protected them.
Sabbath and festival prayers (the Torah is read), some weekday morning prayers, prayers on fast days, Purim, Rosh Chodesh, and Hannukah. Also the Bar Mitzva ceremony (which is incorporated in the Sabbath morning prayers).
The Torah establishes the Sabbath with commandments to keep the Sabbath day, to remember the Sabbath day, and constraining what may be done on the Sabbath. And, in the Jewish liturgy that emerged from this framework, the Sabbath morning service includes a Torah reading where, traditionally, about 1/52 of the Torah is read, so that over the course of the year, every Jew who attends Sabbath services on a regular basis will hear (and, we hope, learn from) the entire Torah.
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A small portion of the Torah is read each week ... on Monday, Thursday, and Sabbath mornings, plus Sabbath afternoons. Each week's portion follows the portion of the preceding week, so that the entire Torah is read once in a full year. As soon as the last words of the end-portion are read, the first words of the beginning portion are read at the same service.
In substance, there is no difference. It is just a matter of style.
The summary of the poem 'IN MORNING DEW'
In the very early morning, around dawn or earlier.
"Sabbath Morning at Sea" by Elizabeth Barrett Browning is a reflective poem that describes the poet's experience of being at sea on a Sunday morning. The poem explores themes of nature, spirituality, and the connection between humans and the divine. Browning uses vivid imagery and sensory details to convey a sense of awe and reverence for the natural world.