Lions Club Invocation And Loyal Toast «Trending»
That lantern has been passed down, not as an object, but as an invocation. Tonight, we light it again.
There is an old tradition among Lions, whispered from club to club across a hundred years and two hundred nations. They say that when Melvin Jones founded our association in 1917, he carried a small brass lantern to his first meeting. Not to light the room—the gaslights were on—but to light the purpose . He placed it on the table and said: “We are not here to dine. We are here to serve. And before we serve, we must see clearly.”
“To our country—” All: “AND TO THE PEACE AND PROSPERITY IT DESERVES!” Lions Club Invocation And Loyal Toast
Because one is the lantern—the inward light of purpose, humility, and grace. The other is the cup—the outward reach of loyalty, unity, and action.
You cannot serve if you do not see clearly. That is the invocation. You cannot serve if you stand alone. That is the loyal toast. That lantern has been passed down, not as
Part Three: The Closing – Why Both Matter (The speaker lowers their glass, smiles, and addresses the room warmly.)
So now… let us eat. Let us laugh. Let us plan. They say that when Melvin Jones founded our
The Loyal Toast can be adapted as “To our host nation” or “To the nations we serve,” followed by a moment of silence for each member’s homeland.
Appendix: Quick Reference for the Speaker | Element | Purpose | Tone | Key Phrase | |---------|---------|------|-------------| | Invocation | Spiritual grounding, humility, focus on service | Warm, reflective, inclusive | “We Serve” | | Loyal Toast | Patriotic unity, civic duty, continuity | Formal, proud, collective | “To our country—and to the peace and prosperity it deserves” |
You may wonder: why an invocation and a toast? A prayer and a pledge?


