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The Power Of An Invitation! Series
Contributed by Brian Williams on Jul 8, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: As a church on mission this summer we want to be going, growing, loving, and inviting. When I say, inviting, I’m talking about a church that welcomes others, just like Jesus had welcomed us into His family for the glory of God (Rom 15:7).
Think about the power of an invitation. While I was growing up my parents would, many times, invite some of the neighborhood kids over for lunch or dinner or to celebrate the holidays with us. My parents always made room at the table. I had no idea at the time but years later they told me that these kids they invited came from broken homes. These kids would come around our house because they knew they were always invited, always welcome in our home. Many of these kids went on to get married, and raise families of their own, and still keep in touch with the family.
We have received invitations to birthdays celebrations, family events, weddings, sports events, diplomatic functions, and yesterday for the first time in my life, I was invited to a baby shower. It’s a blessing to receive invitations as they are generally a positive experience because it signifies that someone values your presence and wants you to be part of something special. It’s an invitation to connect more intimately with others.
When I was thinking about the power of an invitation, I thought about the story of Steve Jobs. When he was 12 years old, he called Bill Hewlett, the co-founder of Hewlett Packard, and asked him for some spare computer parts. Hewlett not only gave this 12-year old the parts he wanted, but he invited him to work at HP learning to put together computers. Having someone invest in his life and invite him into something new became a catalyst for his life. And as we all know, Jobs grew up to start Apple and changed the way the world communicates. It all started with an invitation.
You never know what new possibilities and potentials are created by invitations. If you look back at your life and how you got to where you are today, there is probably a major intersection that started with an invitation. Because there is power in an invitation.
These are life-changing invitations, but the Bible gives us an invitation that impacts us both now and for all of eternity. Let’s read John 1:35-39:
35The following day John was again standing with two of his disciples. 36As Jesus walked by, John looked at him and declared, “Look! There is the Lamb of God!” 37When John’s two disciples heard this, they followed Jesus.
38Jesus looked around and saw them following. “What do you want?” he asked them.
They replied, “Rabbi” (which means “Teacher”), “where are you staying?”
39“Come and see,” he said. It was about four o’clock in the afternoon when they went with him to the place where he was staying, and they remained with him the rest of the day (John 1:35-39).
Jesus asked these men “what do you want - what are you looking for?” What were they looking for? For a Savior, a Redeemer? Maybe they were not sure exactly how to answer - or what to expect.
But their response, “Where are you staying?” expressed a desire to know more about who this Messiah was. How did Jesus answer? He didn’t launch into a lengthy discussion about who He was, why He was there, what He came to do. Jesus simply invited these two followers of John to come and see where He was staying, to come and see who He was. He didn’t use a lot of words to describe where He was staying, or complicate things with a series of steps and procedures when it came to following Him. He wanted them to actively come and ‘SEE’ for themselves.
Jesus was inviting them into His presence, into fellowship with the Living God. “See” speaks of perceiving… looking, learning about, discerning clearly - Jesus was saying - if you really want to know more about Me, then come and see. When Jesus invited John’s disciples to come and see, it says they came and stayed with Him. One of them who stayed with Jesus realized that He was the Messiah and He went and invited his brother Simon Peter and brought him to Jesus. Peter and Andrew became Jesus’ disciples and later the apostles. (who turned the world upside down)
Jesus invites us to come and not just meet Him but to get to know Him daily. Do we ever feel reluctant to accept His daily invitation because we think it will be boring, maybe take too much time out of our schedule, and then maybe we create such a difficult devotional regime that we just stop coming? Jesus just wants to invite us to experience life with Him, eternal life.
This is a reason why we have “Church in the Park” - so people can come and see Jesus for themselves. The most powerful invitation we could ever give another person is an invitation to meet the Creator of the universe. You are inviting that person to life-that-is-truly-life, to what it really means to live. It’s not an invitation to religion, moral standards, or to a life of restrictions, a life of “no fun.” You have the opportunity to completely change the trajectory of a person’s life through a single, or series of invitations.