Japanese name
Japanese names (日本人の氏名, nihonjin no shimei) in modern times usually consist of a family name (surname), followed by a given name. Middle names are not generally used. Japanese names are usually written in kanji, which are characters usually Chinese in origin but Japanese in pronunciation. The kanji for a name may have a variety of possible Japanese pronunciations, but parents might use hiragana or katakana when giving a birth name to their newborn child. Names written in hiragana or katakana are phonetic renderings, and so lack the visual meaning of names expressed in the logographic kanji.
Japanese family names are extremely varied: according to estimates, there are over 100,000 different surnames in use today in Japan. The three most common family names in Japan are Satō (佐藤), Suzuki (鈴木) and Takahashi (高橋). This diversity is in stark contrast to the situation in other nations of the East Asian cultural sphere, there being very few Chinese surnames (a few hundred common, 20 comprise half the population), and similarly Korean names (250 names, of which three comprise almost half the population) and Vietnamese names (about 100 family names, of which three comprise 60% of the population). This difference reflects a different history: while Chinese surnames have been in use for millennia and were often reflective of an entire clan or adopted from nobles (with or without any genetic relationship) – and were thence transferred to Korea and Vietnam via noble names, modern Japanese family names date only to the 19th century, following the Meiji restoration, and were chosen at will. The recent introduction of surnames has two additional effects: Japanese names became widespread when the country had a very large population (over 30,000,000 during the early Meiji era – see Demographics of Imperial Japan) instead of dating to ancient times (population estimated at 300,000 in 1 CE, for instance – see Demographics of Japan before Meiji Restoration), and since little time has passed, Japanese names have not experienced as significant surname extinction as has occurred in the much longer history in China.
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Pernell Harrison, No Living It Up on Sabbath - Columbia SDA Church
Pernell Harrison, President/Speaker/Evangelist (Pernell Harrison Ministries) delivers a message of the sermon entitled, No Living It Up on Sabbath. This sermon gives practical ways to Honor God's Holy Sabbath Day.
Key Text: Isaiah 58:13-14 (NKJV).
After the sermon, the closing hymn, Don't Forget the Sabbath is found on # 388 in the Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal.
1. Don't forget the Sabbath, The Lord our God hath blest, Of all the week the brightest, Of all the week the best; It brings repose from labor, It tells of joy divine, Its beams of light descending, With heavenly beauty shine.
2. Keep the Sabbath holy, And worship Him today, Who said to His disciples, I am the living way; And if we meekly follow Our Savior here below, He'll give us of the fountain Whose streams eternal flow.
3. Day of sacred pleasure! Its golden hours we'll spend In thankful hymns to Jesus, The children's dearest Friend; O gentle loving, Savior, How good and kind Thou art, How precious is Thy promise To dwell in every heart!
Refrain:
Welcome, welcome, ever welcome, Blessed Sabbath day. Welcome, welcome, ever welcome, Blessed Sabbath day.
Video recorded on March 12, 2016 at Columbia Seventh-day Adventist Church in Columbia, Tennessee USA
Columbia Seventh-day Adventist Church; Columbia, Tennessee
(CC) Closed-captioned for the Hearing Impaired (English).
Subtitles now available: Spanish, Tamil, French, Russian, German, Norwegian, Swedish, Chinese, Filipino, Dutch, Japanese, Portuguese, Hindi, Arabic, Greek, Hebrew, Turkish, Thai, Indonesian, Icelandic, Ukrainian, Georgian, Italian, Lao, Slovak, Swahili, Danish, Polish, Finnish, Macedonian, Korean, Nepali, Khmer, Persian (Farsi), Telugu, Vietnamese, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Myanmar (Burmese), Croatian, Romanian, Czech
Scripture quotations marked NKJV TM are taken from the New King James Version. Copyright (c) 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All Rights reserved.
Other websites to be helpful...
Seventh-day Adventist Church
SabbathTruth.com
MySDATV
Amazing Facts
3ABN
Hope Channel
The Sabbath App
Also another resource from Amazing Facts, it's a sharing magazine entitled, The Rest of Your Life! This sharing magazine contains information about the Seventh-day Sabbath to honor and to keep God's Day of Rest. You can order a copy or additional copies to the following link below...