Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
역시 일본이 부럽다. 한국에서는 영상에 이런 제목 달아놓으면 경찰에 잡혀가는데... やっぱり日本がうらやましいです。 韓国では映像にこういうタイトルをつけると警察に捕まりますが…··· I'm so jealous of Japan. In South Korea, if you put a title like this on a video, you'll be arrested by the police...
Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
Outstanding cafeteria food prepared with love and care in a well organized clean kitchen. I knew that any catholic establishment will have a homely warm vibe and will be well kept and organized.
This is not a Catholic School, as you can see in 0:05 they have female priests which are NOT allowed in clergy. I've had a look at their official website, nowhere was there any mention of connection to Rome or any Catholic symbols for that matter. After skimping over the Wikipedia page apparently it's a Protestant branch church that had it's roots in a female missionary named Cornelia Judson
@@DiavalloX Whether a Catholic or Protestant denomination branch does not change the point. It is the religious attachment of the school that is the source of its homely warm vibe. Its publicized principle of "living with warmth and great love for others."" is indistinguishable from catholic schools and actually quite divergent from protestant evangelism self righteousness. Caronelia Judson was the financial funder of the school, not a missionary. The church was funded by a missionary named Jackson. This church has existed in Japan for over a century without western protestants interference and it could be considered having found its own Japanese christian path which is neither protestant nor catholic.
I found out that there is a Christian school in Japan. I knew that there were very few Christians in Japan, so I never thought there would be a Christian school.
@@Gift-i539 There are 53 elementary schools, 99 junior high schools, 111 high schools, 1 vocational/technical college, 11 junior colleges, and 19 universities in Japan that are members of the “Catholic Schools Association. The majority of students in Christian schools in Japan are not Christians.
Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
No... you wanna 'go' to Japan, you can't 'come' to Japan as you're not already there. Maybe you should attend the school there and get some English education...
Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
Oh! To live in Japan and to experience such a school life! When I was in high school it was like that arcade game called Whack-a-Mole. Crazy, undisciplined, and all over the place! I so admire the positive attitude and the work ethic.
Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
That is because Catholicism holds moral values high and is believes in doing good. That makes the whole difference with a secular (non religious) public school (or a protestant one).
@@lisamarieschnee Well Lisa, Germany is not known for its pastries. That would be France. I remember as a kid in high school in France, there was a student organization who would team up with a local pastry shop and bring every morning 3 crates of freshly backed croissant and rolls that they would sell for a small amount. They would sold out every single day. You should start a student organization that does the same. Local business owners would be more than happy to try it. Then the old dude can change job.
Comparing their lunches to what I ate in high school in the US I’m bummed. Makes my lunches look dystopian. Although taco Tuesdays were pretty boss but still I’m sure nothing compared to their lunches.
it's easy to make such comparisons. but the reality is that three Japanese have essentially stopped having children enough that entire towns' schools have closed due to having almost no children. that's why regions that still have a healthy population of children are being given such treatment.
Do parents care about what their kids eat at school? They pay their kids' education and lunches with taxes, so they should demand schools to do better job.
I’m considering doing a teaching role in Japan after I finish my degree. It seems like it would be a great place to live and work. These young men and women seem very polite and nice.
Owning Up to Sin But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done. -Psalm 38:18 The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation. Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.” The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.” Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done. All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.” There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us. What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.” John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9) This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us. But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.” But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious. Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change. Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!” Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us. So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
It's people, not any fantasy lord. People do all the amazing work and people educate the children. There is no god and never was. Gods are just man-made fairytales. 😘
As a former school teacher in the United States I am in awe of the care that the Japanese have for their children's food. The school lunches in the US are arguable worse than when I was growing up in the 1980s. I've seen kids handed prepackaged salads that consisted of shredded iceberg lettuce with maybe 4-5 pieces of diced tomato and a bit of shredded carrot. I've seen "spaghetti" that was worse than you get from a can. And the pizza was the worst, far inferior to even a store-bought frozen pizza. It is garbage food. Japan, please don't change. You are wonderful for doing this.
You visit very good schools and the students seem to be in good spirits! Love Japan and I am currently in the Australian Army and I have visited JSDF officers in Yokohama! Maybe I will leave Army and work as sn English teacher in Japan sometime 😂❤
They are so super clean, I am in love with their foods 🥗🥘🍱🍛🍙 and also want to take admission in this jap Christian school ⛪✝️🛐 Love from India. So sad that our india is not so super hygiene and clean in matter of school foods, hotels and no words for street food👎😔 god save stomach of india people. A bitter truth of India. As an indian after watching this so well neat hygiene organised foods from Catholic school, I literally feeling shame. Also, we have to learn more from them.
India has an overpopulation and different economy such that the same dynamics and organization cannot be transposed to India. The world is still in denial about overpopulation but it will become the main issue of the 21st century in our lifetime.
Never heard of purchasing a ticket to get a meal in school. When I went to school you paid for your meal and it was buffet style but staff served the food to you. The food looked very tasty and filling. Was funny that the one girl didn’t have enough yen for a ticket and her friend helped her. Never seen a kid in Japan without a lot of yen. They always seemed to have more yen on them than me lol. When I was in catholic school for grade school nuns had rulers and they would smack the back of your hand with it if you made a mistake.
Even as an adult I usually can't afford food that good, haha. Well, I do live in a third world country... But, yeah, even back in the 90s I went to school with only $0.25 or $0.50 cents, mostly only good for a small snack.
Я Россиянин и жил в Японии 3 месяца, ездил на Кюсю и могу сказать лишь о высочайшем качестае кухни Японии, чести, совести и честности Японцев. Для меня Россиянина Япония это знак Качества любой продукции. Я Багодарен вам Соседи за вашу Совесть и Честь. Суперкачество во Всем ❤ Но жить все таки лучше в России 😊
If you don't mind me asking, and this is not a provocative question, what do you prefer in Russia? I'm just curious. As a Belgian from far away of you both.
@@Pilmouze No answer so i will venture to answer for him. Probably because japanese society is hyper focused on fitting in and never sticking out. Conforming rigidly to the Japanese norm of behavior in any situation. No room for individuality also how young Japanese feel isolated (the case of people being recluse hermits) and how the work culture is destroying the natural life balance. Lastly Japan is an awesome culture for Japanese but you will always be treated as a non Japanese even if you spend your whole life in Japan.
I'm really surprised that I understand 90% of what they're saying!! First time watching without subs I guess watching TONS of ANIME with subs really helps 😍💯
I envy these kids, i had a terrible education and it was just a generally bad period of my life when i was a student. Japanese schools just look different, like the ideal ambient for children.
You're a little bit missing the fact that this is a catholic school. A public Japanese school won't have the homely loving care in the kitchen, it's more of a fraternizing environment, an extended family. You will not find that in a public school. I was raised catholic but was put in public school and it was not great, more rough and you would not feel the love at all.
@@ericastier1646 How can they lie so easily? All public high schools in Japan have cafeterias and they are often more luxurious than the ones shown here.
i've been to catholic school in hs and college and we have subjs related to the bible❤️and must admit,admins were very strict,fr beh to what u wear.i missed those days❤
Saya hendak melakukan ujian malam online. Saya merasa ngantuk sekali. Setelah melihat video kakak ini saya jadi merasa lebih segar & berenergy. Terima kasih
Back then i was studying at Hikarigaoka Girls Highschool, is a catholic and only girls school.. The uniform similiar to mine, it makes me flashback when i was 16 hahahaha. And the choir girl of my school is so great...
Вау, это прекрасно! Несмотря на то, что я уже давно отказался от мяса, приятно осознавать, что в этой школе есть такой рацион. Я вот учился в России, у нас на завтрак была маленькая творожная запеканка, на обед рыбный суп (вернее вода с небольшим кубиком рыбы), а также котлета не самого лучшего качества. Многие одноклассники вместо обеда бегали в магазин, покупали разные булочки, у меня денег не было, поэтому приходилось терпеть, либо сидеть голодным. Хуже всего была манная жидкая каша, более отвратительной пищи в жизни не пробовал. Думал, в институте будет иначе, но нет, нормальная еда ожидала исключительно дома. Единственная неплохая столовая оказалась в компании, куда я устроился на работу. Забавно, что это был институт, только не государственный, частный, однако, к тому моменту у меня уже выработалась привычка готовить и есть исключительно на дому. Всем сердцем люблю Японию, ее историю и культуру. Жаль, что вряд ли когда-нибудь побываю. Всем мира, счастья, добра. Бог в помощь!
Treating food and meal-times with respect, it is very civilizing. The quality of the food with respect to flavour and nutrition and presentation and social interaction all look like they are done with quality and care. I did not feel the same way about the catering companies dolling out food at the schools I worked at in my own nation, too often in contrast and feel that is a mistake. I think the meal times should all be high quality for students and times of the day where happiness levels rise to their highest.
We have been Catholic since 16 Century, we were converted by the Spanish, St Francis Xavier, later the Portuguese. My family from my fraternal side converted to Catholic Christianity in the mid of 19th Century, they were Okinawans who latter immigrated to Dutch East Indies because of persecutions (of that time) others to Philippines. God bless ✝️🌅
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Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
Anime
역시 일본이 부럽다. 한국에서는 영상에 이런 제목 달아놓으면 경찰에 잡혀가는데...
やっぱり日本がうらやましいです。 韓国では映像にこういうタイトルをつけると警察に捕まりますが…···
I'm so jealous of Japan. In South Korea, if you put a title like this on a video, you'll be arrested by the police...
The girl at the end had so much charisma! She must be popular.
Respect her. She's a kid.
@@victornunes6047 don't be weird
Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
@@victornunes6047they’re complimenting her? You’re the weirdo here
@@user-q018 You're acting hysterical.
高校生の笑顔は日本の宝☺️‼️
元気にすくすく育ってほしい!!
Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
✨ Yeshua - sama (Jesuschrist) is truly happy because their children from Japan ✨
Greetings from Spain 👋🏻🇪🇸
God bless Japan ! 🍀
Outstanding cafeteria food prepared with love and care in a well organized clean kitchen. I knew that any catholic establishment will have a homely warm vibe and will be well kept and organized.
This is not a Catholic School, as you can see in 0:05 they have female priests which are NOT allowed in clergy. I've had a look at their official website, nowhere was there any mention of connection to Rome or any Catholic symbols for that matter. After skimping over the Wikipedia page apparently it's a Protestant branch church that had it's roots in a female missionary named Cornelia Judson
@@DiavalloX Whether a Catholic or Protestant denomination branch does not change the point. It is the religious attachment of the school that is the source of its homely warm vibe. Its publicized principle of "living with warmth and great love for others."" is indistinguishable from catholic schools and actually quite divergent from protestant evangelism self righteousness. Caronelia Judson was the financial funder of the school, not a missionary. The church was funded by a missionary named Jackson. This church has existed in Japan for over a century without western protestants interference and it could be considered having found its own Japanese christian path which is neither protestant nor catholic.
I found out that there is a Christian school in Japan. I knew that there were very few Christians in Japan, so I never thought there would be a Christian school.
@@Gift-i539 There are 53 elementary schools, 99 junior high schools, 111 high schools, 1 vocational/technical college, 11 junior colleges, and 19 universities in Japan that are members of the “Catholic Schools Association. The majority of students in Christian schools in Japan are not Christians.
皆さんの食べっぷりとか、にこにこしてる空気とか凄くいいなぁ。
Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
Those kids are so blessed, I would gladly eat all of those yummy dishes!,
I'm glad you wrote yummy dishes at the end, I thought you were going somewhere else
@@tanthaman Bruh.
@@tanthaman double bruh
@@tanthaman triple bruh
@@tanthaman Quadruple bruh
ある程度歳重ねると、こうやって若い子がご飯食べてるところすら可愛く感じるよなあ。
このまま健やかに育ってほしいと思うわ
학교에서 사고만 안 저지르고 무사히 졸업했으면 좋겠어요😊❤
This is why Japan's school is the best! There no way any other school in the world that can beat this level of food/cafeteria services!
This is so comforting, I wanna come to Japan 🥹
No... you wanna 'go' to Japan, you can't 'come' to Japan as you're not already there. Maybe you should attend the school there and get some English education...
Japan has always this Special Spirit. I Love it.
Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
Oh! To live in Japan and to experience such a school life! When I was in high school it was like that arcade game called Whack-a-Mole. Crazy, undisciplined, and all over the place! I so admire the positive attitude and the work ethic.
Totally. This video looks like the 100% exact opposite of what my highschool experience was
Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
That is because Catholicism holds moral values high and is believes in doing good. That makes the whole difference with a secular (non religious) public school (or a protestant one).
In my highschool in germany they only sold super dry pastries and the guy selling it was an old dude who shouted at us when we didn't hurry up lol
@@lisamarieschnee Well Lisa, Germany is not known for its pastries. That would be France. I remember as a kid in high school in France, there was a student organization who would team up with a local pastry shop and bring every morning 3 crates of freshly backed croissant and rolls that they would sell for a small amount. They would sold out every single day. You should start a student organization that does the same. Local business owners would be more than happy to try it. Then the old dude can change job.
また学生時代に戻りた〜い!笑
楽しかったなぁ🏫
母の作るお弁当も美味しかったけど、食堂は特別だった!
あの頃の食堂のおばちゃん達、元気かな?
For The First Time to Watch a video About Catholic school here in Japan,So Glad to know About it, Because it is my Religion too ❤
What a funny way of typing.
この学校の生徒たちは本当に心が優しいようです!😄
이 학교 학생아이들은 정말 심성이 착한것 같아요! 😄
私はインドネシアからきました。にかげつぐらい日本ごをべんきょうしました。私は日
本のいろいろなたべものをたべます🤤
Very organized and great food.
Wow! Delish, fresh & healthy lunches! Students look so happy.
wow everything looks so delicious, what a great job they do!! ♥
All the food looks so good..! Fresh, good quality, and looking delicious..!!
Nice place they have. Even the kitchen looks great and the food looks delicious.
Comparing their lunches to what I ate in high school in the US I’m bummed. Makes my lunches look dystopian. Although taco Tuesdays were pretty boss but still I’m sure nothing compared to their lunches.
taco Tuesday and pizza Friday 😂
it's easy to make such comparisons. but the reality is that three Japanese have essentially stopped having children enough that entire towns' schools have closed due to having almost no children. that's why regions that still have a healthy population of children are being given such treatment.
@@sunny-sq6ci That's just being efficient with budget. Why keep schools open in areas where there aren't enough kids?
Do parents care about what their kids eat at school? They pay their kids' education and lunches with taxes, so they should demand schools to do better job.
We had good food in the 90s. Or else mom made lunch. High school was open lunch, so anywhere we wanted within 55min
I’m considering doing a teaching role in Japan after I finish my degree.
It seems like it would be a great place to live and work.
These young men and women seem very polite and nice.
They don't want more foreigners
サムネだけで溢れる青春感
God bless Japan!
Greetings from Spain 👋🏻🇪🇸🍀✨💌
やはり日本人が一番
外国人労働者反対
The food they prepared is soo delicious ,,
Owning Up to Sin
But I confess my sins; I am deeply sorry for what I have done.
-Psalm 38:18
The story is told of Frederick the Great, the king of Prussia, who was visiting a prison. As he spoke with the inmates, he heard endless tales of innocence, misunderstood motives, and exploitation.
Eventually, the king stopped at the cell of an inmate who remained silent. The king said, “Well, I suppose you are an innocent victim too.”
The man replied, “No sir, I’m not. I am guilty, and I deserve my punishment.”
Turning to the warden, the king said, “Quick, get this man out of here before he corrupts these other innocent people.” He couldn’t believe he had found someone who owned up to what he had done.
All too often, we play the blame game. Pastor and author Chuck Swindoll has described blame this way: “Blame never restores, it wounds. Blame never solves, it complicates.”
There will have to come a point in our lives when we say, “I’ve sinned. The problem is me.” And that is when things will change for us.
What does it mean to confess our sins? That is important for us to know because our forgiveness hinges on our understanding of the term. The Hebrew word for confess means “to acknowledge.” In the New Testament, it could be translated as “to agree with” or “to say the same thing as another.”
John used the same word when he wrote, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (1 John 1:9)
This is essentially saying that if we will agree with God about our sin, if we will acknowledge it for what it is, do not make excuses for it, see it as God sees it, and turn from it, then He will forgive us.
But here’s the problem. Some people think they’ve confessed their sin when they haven’t. They believe that confession is merely acknowledging. So, when they sin and get caught, they say, “Okay, I confess that sin. It was a bad thing, and I won’t do it again.”
But then they go out and do it again. That is not confession. It’s simply recognizing the obvious.
Confession means to see sin for what it is, be sorry for it, and turn from it. We must take that sin to the cross and recognize it is offensive to a holy God. Then we must turn from it, stop making excuses for it, and be sorry enough to change.
Are you willing to do that? If so, then God will forgive your sin, and He will cover it. Psalm 32:1 says, “Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight!”
Not only does God cleanse us of our sin, but He places His righteousness into our spiritual bank account, so to speak. And that balances the moral and spiritual budget for us.
So, we have a choice. We can try to cover our sins and live in the misery of them, or we can bring them to Jesus, confess them, and be free from them.
The lord has truly blessed these kids
But where is his ring?
@@overused6632 its like the same yk
They are a Asian worshipping a Asian, eating Asian food. What do you need more in life ! : )
@@overused6632 Catholics are actually worse
It's people, not any fantasy lord. People do all the amazing work and people educate the children. There is no god and never was. Gods are just man-made fairytales. 😘
愛情たっぷりの料理と愛嬌たっぷりのお姉さん。微笑ましい。
As a former school teacher in the United States I am in awe of the care that the Japanese have for their children's food. The school lunches in the US are arguable worse than when I was growing up in the 1980s. I've seen kids handed prepackaged salads that consisted of shredded iceberg lettuce with maybe 4-5 pieces of diced tomato and a bit of shredded carrot. I've seen "spaghetti" that was worse than you get from a can. And the pizza was the worst, far inferior to even a store-bought frozen pizza. It is garbage food.
Japan, please don't change. You are wonderful for doing this.
Hello 🤗🤗🤗👋👋👋
It is sad really. The American education system is failing not only in the food department too.
I can confirm.
@@Official-OpenAI Yes. I guess I know why some parents are opt for homeschooling or private school if they can afford it.
@@Official-OpenAI저는 미국 교육 시스템이 왜 실패하고 있는지 알고 싶습니다.
Looks so clean and delicious.
when us Catholics go to mass, we're always reminded how far spread we are and that the tithing and money we give goes to helping as many as possible.
I didn't know that Japan have Catholic school
It just sounds weird, like hearing about “an American Buddhist.”
😅
@@racoonracer7878😂😂
D4Dj lyrical lily
Yes they did, infact most christian school probably based on catholic ways
Correct my statement, there are more protestant school than catholic school in japan
You visit very good schools and the students seem to be in good spirits! Love Japan and I am currently in the Australian Army and I have visited JSDF officers in Yokohama! Maybe I will leave Army and work as sn English teacher in Japan sometime 😂❤
学食で映っていた女の子のコミュニケーションがうますぎる。世の中を渡り歩いた百戦錬磨のご婦人のようだ。
Gotta love Japan❤❤❤
Gotta love catholic schools
They are so super clean, I am in love with their foods 🥗🥘🍱🍛🍙 and also want to take admission in this jap Christian school ⛪✝️🛐
Love from India. So sad that our india is not so super hygiene and clean in matter of school foods, hotels and no words for street food👎😔 god save stomach of india people. A bitter truth of India. As an indian after watching this so well neat hygiene organised foods from Catholic school, I literally feeling shame. Also, we have to learn more from them.
you can have the same clean food and kitchen. those people in the kitchen clean it everyday i guess
India has an overpopulation and different economy such that the same dynamics and organization cannot be transposed to India. The world is still in denial about overpopulation but it will become the main issue of the 21st century in our lifetime.
@@ericastier1646 no. The issue with countries like India is that their social security is not as good as it is in other countries
Тогда не надо было Англичан выгонять!! 🤣
@@sleepmnan22sleepman50 Not sure what connection you are trying to make, the british Raj colonial time did not have an effect on population.
학생들이 유쾌하고 발랄함은 일본이나 한국이나 비슷하네요 참 보기가 좋음~~♡
この学校の作った食事を食べるためだけにこの学校に行きたいと思いました😁
everyone is cheerful and energetic from the students to the cooks. lol
Never heard of purchasing a ticket to get a meal in school. When I went to school you paid for your meal and it was buffet style but staff served the food to you. The food looked very tasty and filling. Was funny that the one girl didn’t have enough yen for a ticket and her friend helped her. Never seen a kid in Japan without a lot of yen. They always seemed to have more yen on them than me lol. When I was in catholic school for grade school nuns had rulers and they would smack the back of your hand with it if you made a mistake.
En esa cocina se puede hacer una operación quirúrgica. Impecable la limpieza y la organización.
Those kids eat so much better than I get to do as an adult in Australia. You live in a very lucky country. I am envious :)
백마디 위로보다, 더 큰 위로가 되는 영상이였습니다.
모든것에 뜨거운 고교생들의 하루 잘 봤습니다. :D
They are so cute. They are so polite and humble❤❤
6:56
"Udon then"
"No way"
"Ramen then"
"Nah"
"A la carte then"
"Nah"
Kawaii--ii
@@RaccoonGrrrl she got the udon - cheaper and more
its nice to see kids/adults alike show respect for each other, not a whole lot of that around me
일본인 크리스찬이 별로 없다고 알고 있는데 크리스찬 학교가 있네요 ~ 밝게 크는 학생들의 든든한 식사를 책임지는 종사자분들은 어느 나라나 부모님이나 다름 없네요 👍
They are really, really pure. You can never see them in Korea.
Not a country with a large Christian population, but this school is truly amazing.
일본 애들 너무 좋아!!😍 전 아주 잠깐이지만 일본회사에서 일 해 봤어요! 일본어를 더 열심히 해서 부산에서 배를타고 하카타에 가고 싶어요!
Even as an adult I usually can't afford food that good, haha. Well, I do live in a third world country... But, yeah, even back in the 90s I went to school with only $0.25 or $0.50 cents, mostly only good for a small snack.
How enviable as a person that never get along with my elementary and highschool friends how I wish I had a better school life!
Я Россиянин и жил в Японии 3 месяца, ездил на Кюсю и могу сказать лишь о высочайшем качестае кухни Японии, чести, совести и честности Японцев. Для меня Россиянина Япония это знак Качества любой продукции. Я Багодарен вам Соседи за вашу Совесть и Честь. Суперкачество во Всем ❤ Но жить все таки лучше в России 😊
If you don't mind me asking, and this is not a provocative question, what do you prefer in Russia? I'm just curious. As a Belgian from far away of you both.
Тоже солидарен с джентельменом сверху, интересно узнать, почему вы считаете Россию лучше Японии для проживания.
@@Pilmouze No answer so i will venture to answer for him. Probably because japanese society is hyper focused on fitting in and never sticking out. Conforming rigidly to the Japanese norm of behavior in any situation. No room for individuality also how young Japanese feel isolated (the case of people being recluse hermits) and how the work culture is destroying the natural life balance. Lastly Japan is an awesome culture for Japanese but you will always be treated as a non Japanese even if you spend your whole life in Japan.
7:16 30, 40대 정도 되어 보이는 식당의 젊은 직원분들에게 언니, 오빠라고 불러주는 여학생의 마음이 너무 고맙네요.
저렇게 말해주면 식당직원분들도 일할때 기분이 좋아요~ 저 여학생 '사회생활' 잘한다~ ^.^
One words yummy n starving thanks for the delicious oishi videos🙀👍🍛🍙🍜🧋🍵🥤🥗🍖🍚🍱🥚🍳🎉
웃으면서 사는 일본인. 하루 종일 찡그리고 사는 한국인.
God bless japan ❤🇵🇭
国語の先生可愛い❤️
i wish the schools were like this in the entire world
Oh my God, Japanese people amaze me so much, even in the simplest things.
学食なしコロナで1人で食べなきゃいけなかったから羨ましい。しっかり楽しんでほしい
kawaii I'm so proud featuring this our beloved catholic and food stuffs
Boy…. The food looks super delicious tasty…!!!👍👏🏻👏🏻😋😋😋
Watching this at 2 in the morning, makes me even more hungry😫
convert to catholicism and try a catholic cafeteria.
Hate?japanese
No corruption best management. Best country.
Fed very well! This is a luxury, compared to other coutries.
I'm really surprised that I understand 90% of what they're saying!!
First time watching without subs I guess watching TONS of ANIME with subs really helps 😍💯
P.s I didn't notice they have subs and I didn't turn them on. 🤣🤣
学校に食堂ってなんかいいな。僕の所は食堂や売店がなかったからなんか憧れる
I envy these kids, i had a terrible education and it was just a generally bad period of my life when i was a student. Japanese schools just look different, like the ideal ambient for children.
You're a little bit missing the fact that this is a catholic school. A public Japanese school won't have the homely loving care in the kitchen, it's more of a fraternizing environment, an extended family. You will not find that in a public school.
I was raised catholic but was put in public school and it was not great, more rough and you would not feel the love at all.
@@ericastier1646 How can they lie so easily? All public high schools in Japan have cafeterias and they are often more luxurious than the ones shown here.
In 2023, over 500 students committed suicide due to school stress in Japan. This is just one video, don't be fooled thinking its "ideal" or "Ambient"
@@eastbayflora in public schools, this is a private catholic school. Big difference.
@@ちゃーちゃー-l5u You seem to be confused. Nobody is lying here and this is a catholic school.
高校の時日本に留学してたけどこれ見たら懐かしくなる
That girl is funny, very charismatic.
저번에 일본에 갔을 때 느낀 건데 일본인들은 예의가 바르고 친절하신 것 같아요.
学食懐かしいな!
クラブしてたんで2時限位には家からのほぼ米の弁当食べて昼に、小遣いで70円のライスに130円のカレーうどん、皆からは貧乏定食って言われてたがそれを食べる毎日やったな😂
The tree in the center court is majestic
How I wished to study again in this kind of school and experience the life having good and delicious food like this.
Excellent
i've been to catholic school in hs and college and we have subjs related to the bible❤️and must admit,admins were very strict,fr beh to what u wear.i missed those days❤
Saya hendak melakukan ujian malam online. Saya merasa ngantuk sekali. Setelah melihat video kakak ini saya jadi merasa lebih segar & berenergy. Terima kasih
This is a Protestant school, not a Catholic school
ああああ、青春良いだね。僕にもそんな時期が有ったのにいつの間にかおじさんになってしまった!!!😭
高校生はいいなあ!いっぱい食べて高校生活を楽しんで!
Back then i was studying at Hikarigaoka Girls Highschool, is a catholic and only girls school.. The uniform similiar to mine, it makes me flashback when i was 16 hahahaha. And the choir girl of my school is so great...
Do you happen to know the name of this Catholic school? I guess it's in Tokyo.
オーストリア地域フォアアールベルク州からのご挨拶カトリック教会にいる美しい日本人女性、きっと夢を見ているに違いない
Вау, это прекрасно!
Несмотря на то, что я уже давно отказался от мяса, приятно осознавать, что в этой школе есть такой рацион.
Я вот учился в России, у нас на завтрак была маленькая творожная запеканка, на обед рыбный суп (вернее вода с небольшим кубиком рыбы), а также котлета не самого лучшего качества. Многие одноклассники вместо обеда бегали в магазин, покупали разные булочки, у меня денег не было, поэтому приходилось терпеть, либо сидеть голодным. Хуже всего была манная жидкая каша, более отвратительной пищи в жизни не пробовал. Думал, в институте будет иначе, но нет, нормальная еда ожидала исключительно дома.
Единственная неплохая столовая оказалась в компании, куда я устроился на работу. Забавно, что это был институт, только не государственный, частный, однако, к тому моменту у меня уже выработалась привычка готовить и есть исключительно на дому.
Всем сердцем люблю Японию, ее историю и культуру. Жаль, что вряд ли когда-нибудь побываю. Всем мира, счастья, добра. Бог в помощь!
They have such a nice Catholic school. Why wasn't my Catholic school like this? 😭
Treating food and meal-times with respect, it is very civilizing. The quality of the food with respect to flavour and nutrition and presentation and social interaction all look like they are done with quality and care.
I did not feel the same way about the catering companies dolling out food at the schools I worked at in my own nation, too often in contrast and feel that is a mistake. I think the meal times should all be high quality for students and times of the day where happiness levels rise to their highest.
Wow! Thanks for sharing this very interesting and entertaining video, yummiest food👍👍👍👍❤❤❤
Big like and support 👍👍👍❤❤❤
Take care and God bless!
めっちゃ豪華な学食やな。
羨ましい。
実際に日本ではこの学校のようにしっかりとした学生食堂があるのは事実ですよ。
MAY OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST BLESS YOU ALL ❤😊
일본에도 기독교학교가 있는게 너무나 기쁘네요
Wow amazing! I didn't know there are catholic schools in Japan!
there are a lot of christian schools in Japan, I'm not sure if this is particularly catholic
It's not catholic, it's protestant.
We have been Catholic since 16 Century, we were converted by the Spanish, St Francis Xavier, later the Portuguese. My family from my fraternal side converted to Catholic Christianity in the mid of 19th Century, they were Okinawans who latter immigrated to Dutch East Indies because of persecutions (of that time) others to Philippines. God bless ✝️🌅
video make me smile
Galatians 5:1
Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.
30 seconds into the video and I’m already jealous of the food, we would get crappy pizza in the US
There's Catholic school in Japan wow we learn something new everyday
0.34% of Japanese are Catholics
This school is not catholic. Protestant priest from US constructed.
And why not?
Hello 👋👋👋 please send me your number
Amazing!!! salutations from méxico
식당이 깨끗해서 너무 좋아요~
God bless japan ❤🇮🇳
ここ私立かな、学食が豪華で充実もしてる。会社でもこんなのが食べれたらな~
Very nice 🎉
Looks amazing!
赤ほっぺ癒やされる可愛い
😊😊
중국과 일본은 이런선별된 영상을 잘 만든다는거임 선택받은 아이들이 먹는거임~
外人多くね?
@@ty23mb48
いや、割とありふれた光景だぞこれ
@@んんあぁぁぁぁぁあぁぁ 출장요리사들임 대량 급식시설이아님 중국 일본은 이런영상들이 많다는것임~ 세상사람들을 바보로 만드는~ 영상만들고 아주만족하는 지원세력들~