The Power of an Invitation

The earthly ministry of Jesus Christ began with an invitation. The John the Baptist burst onto the scene, gathered a crowd, and introduced Jesus. One of the first people that paid attention to Jesus was a guy named Andrew. Originally a fisherman, Andrew is mostly remembered for being Peter’s brother. In John 1:41-42, we read that Peter came to Christ at the invitation of his brother, Andrew. The verses tell us that he found his brother, Peter, and “brought him to Jesus.” It should not be overlooked, that the most notable of the 12 disciples started following Jesus at the invitation of his brother.

Matthew’s Gospel builds on the same theme by describing the formal formation of Christ’s band of believers. This time, the invitation comes from Jesus, himself: “Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men” (4:19). The following verse tells us that they immediately left their fishing nets and set out to pursue a new life.

We often overlook the power of a personal invitation. Sometimes our failure comes because we fear our invitation might be rejected. We also assume that it’s someone else’s job to make the invitation, not us.

In today’s world, it can be easy to discount the power of a personal invitation in favor of some slick advertising campaign. Social media has become a powerful tool; so powerful in fact, that we think that it will solve all of our problems. But technology will never erase the warmth, attractiveness, and authenticity of a simple invitation.

Thom Rainer wrote a book several years ago titled The Unchurched Next Door. In it, Rainer made the claim that eight out of ten (8 out of 10) of all unchurched people said they would come to church if invited by a Christian. Even if that ratio has gone down some since the early 2000s, it deserves to be tested since 640,000 of our 800,000 of our city’s residents are not in church on any given weekend.

In our church, we’ve made some invitation cards recently to help our congregation invite others to church. The cards are intentionally simple so they can be used to point people towards our worship services and Bible study groups on Sunday mornings. They are business card-sized so they can be carried around easily. The backside of the card features two different verses to be inserted in conversations with your friends and family.

Please don’t feel limited, if you would like to invite others to your church in different ways. You can mention your church’s website and share the invitation with your neighbor over your back fence. You can give a recent bulletin to a longtime friend who has been out of church for a while. You can share a gospel tract with an acquaintance you meet in passing.

However you do it, don’t overlook the power of an invitation.

Author: jeremycouture

I am a husband, father, student, and pastor in Indianapolis, IN.

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