“To our country—” All: “AND TO THE PEACE AND PROSPERITY IT DESERVES!”
The story goes that during the first Lions convention in Dallas, 1918, a charter member from Canada stood up. The world was still bleeding from the Great War. Empires had fallen. Trust was fractured. And this Lion said: “Before we toast our own success, we must first toast something larger than ourselves. We must toast the nation that shelters us, the flag that unites us, and the peace we are sworn to defend.”
Part Three: The Closing – Why Both Matter (The speaker lowers their glass, smiles, and addresses the room warmly.) Lions Club Invocation And Loyal Toast
Tonight, I ask you to stand. Raise your glass—water, wine, or soda—it does not matter. What matters is the chain.
Let us bow our heads in a moment of quiet reflection. “To our country—” All: “AND TO THE PEACE
In every Lions Club across the globe—whether in Delhi or Detroit, Nairobi or Nottingham—the Loyal Toast is not a political act. It is a promise . It says: our service does not exist in a vacuum. We serve because we belong. We belong because we are loyal—to our country, to our community, and to each other.
We raise this cup to the land that gives us freedom. To the flag that waves for all. To the leaders who govern with integrity. And to the millions of Lions before us who stood exactly where we stand now, raised their glasses, and said: Trust was fractured
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.”