DARE TO BE DIFFERENT
(Thoughts on increasing Lodge
Attendance)
byJordan S. Levitan, P.M.
.Norfolk Lodge No. 1
Wor. Bro. Levitan was asked by
M.S.A. to develop an update of the October 1928
Short Talk Bulletin "Increasing Lodge Attendance."
This paper reflects the thinking which made
his year as Worshipful Master one of the most
successful years in the history of Norfolk Lodge
No. 1. We thank him for his cooperation in sharing
these challenging words of inspiration.
At a gathering of Worshipful Masters,
inevitably one will ask, "How's your attendance
holding up?" It is, for the most part a
rhetorical question.
The intent of this paper is to
show that substantial increases in attendance
are possible provided the Master dares to be
different. This does not imply the need to experiment
with so called "up-to-date" methodology.
On the contrary, it requires stimulating those
members we already have as well as those who
will be voluntarily attracted into our midst
with pure and unimpaired Freemasonry. The sooner
we stop blaming poor attendance on the failure
of the Craft to modernize, the better.
The last substantial influx of
new members into Freemasonry occurred over forty
years ago. Since then, many reasons have been
suggest for the decrease in attendance.
Members have moved away from the
metropolitan area lodges. Once in suburbia their
become accustomed to more leisure time, more
holidays, and longer vacations. Some turn to
service clubs, where the results of their participation
may be more apparent. Others find that civic
responsibilities take up their evening hours.
Family ties now take precedence
over fraternal ties. For some, longer work hours
and the pressure of doing business at night
are contributing factors.
The majority, however, do not
attend simply because they choose not to attend.
They are bored to tears with business meetings.
Those who are not ritualists find little inspiration
sitting on the sidelines listening to the same
brethren perform the degree work and give the
lectures time after time. Their contentions
are real and cannot be brushed aside.
We live in an achievement oriented
society that views ambiguous programs with skepticism.
Mediocrity no longer suffices. It's time Masonic
leaders stopped saying "something should
be done" and begin saying "I'm going
to do something about it."
The call to the Master is the
same today as it was when candidates petitioned
in droves: to create an atmosphere for intellectual
and spiritual growth so that the members know
from experience they are missing something by
not attending lodge.
Merely to suggest programs that
others find helpful is only part of the answer.
What may work for one lodge may not necessarily
work for another. Symbolic Lodge Masonry cries
out for an enlightened membership responsive
to the Master who carefully lays his designs
upon the trestleboard. The approach, therefore,
includes preparing the members as well as the
Master. There are no shortcuts.
THE CANDIDATE
The Lodge Investigating Committee
The Masonic life of the prospective
candidate begins with the Lodge Investigating
Committee. A committee that consists of one
Past Master, one line officer, and one member
at large represents a cross section of the lodge.
The Master who dispatches the
committee to the candidate's home with clearly
defined directives takes the first step in laying
a solid and dependable foundation.
In its visit with the petitioner
and his family, the committee should emphasize
what Freemasonry is and what it is not. Their
discussion should include the following:
1. The purpose of our Ancient
Order is to build temples in the hearts of men;
2. The pursuit of excellence is one of Freemasonry's
noblest aims; 3. Freemasonry is religious in
nature, but it has no Creed or theology and
it is not incompatible with one's religious
beliefs; 4. Freemasonry has an obligation to
the community, hut it s not a service club;
5. Freemasonry stands for citizenship of the
highest caliber, hut it does not engage in political
activity; 6. Freemasonry emphasizes one's obligations
to assist the needy, but it is not a welfare
organization; 7. Freemasonry is not a benevolent
society providing insurance benefits; a Mason
must make proper provisions for the protection
of his family in the event of illness of death.
These and many other points are
proper for the Lodge Investigating Committee
to discuss with the petitioner and his family.
This approach enables the petitioner to gain
a better understanding of our principles and
purpose, and the lodge can better judge his
motives for seeking membership.
Degree Work
Few candidates arrive totally
prepared for the ordeal of initiation. Even
fewer receive a kindly briefing in the preparation
room. Whatever fears the candidate might have
should be put to rest at the outset.
Initiation requires a sense of
reverence. It should be impressed upon the candidate
that he is about to enter a solemn and dignified
ceremony. Degrees must then be performed with
a like measure of dignity. Anything less raises
doubts in the candidate's mind about the worth
of the experience.
The best way of' assuming that
new members return is to not only confer the
degrees, but to also make Masons.
Through its appropriate committee,
every Grand Lodge determines the procedure for
conferring degrees. The symbolic Lodge, however,
makes Masons at its own pace. There is a distinction.
And we should always remember that a Master
Mason cannot be made in three easy lessons.
It takes time.
To the average candidate, the
philosophical depth of the ritual is overwhelming.
He hears a set of references that he has never
heard before and phraseology he does not use
in daily conversation. We then compound matters
by delivering the lectures immediately upon
conferring the degrees.
Clearly we have no reason to congratulate
ourselves when a candidate rapidly memorizes
the catechism and receives his dues card four
weeks after initiation. So, why not slow down
the process. Dare to be different.
The Masonic Service Association
is an invaluable source for information to complement
the degrees. An index of current publications
is available for the asking. The candidate who
receives good and wholesome instruction at a
leisurely, informal pace away from the lodge
room is likely to become an enthusiastic member
who returns frequently.
There is an old Chinese proverb
that if you are planning for one year, plant
grain. lf you are planning for ten years, plant
trees. If you are planning for a hundred years,
plant men.
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER
Knowledge Beyond Ritual Grand
Lodges appoint instructors at all levels to
teach Masonic ritual. Few Masters, however,
receive training in how to conduct lodge meetings.
Little is done to assure that the incoming Master
has a grasp of the history, philosophy and symbolism
of the Craft. The fundamentals of' lodge management
and good programming are rarely talked about
in detail. For these, lodge officers are left
to educate themselves. Many never do. Others
start too late.
Prior to setting his designs on
the trestleboard, the future Master would do
well to spend at least two years becoming a
knowledgeable Freemason. This is not to suggest
that he must become a Masonic scholar, only
that he become familiar with the writings of
learned brethren--Joseph Fort Newton, Thomas
Sherrod Roy, H. L. Haywood, Albert Mackey, Robert
Gould, Roscoe Pound, Dwight Smith, Alphonse
Cerza, Harry Carr, Conrad Hahn, and Carl Claudy
among others.
The Grand Lodge library is an
excellent source for material, as is the Masonic
Service Association. There are, in addition,
outstanding Masonic publications in the United
States. One is The Indiana Freemason, which
features articles on contemporary Masonic thought
as well as essays by distinguished Masonic writers
of the past. Membership in the Correspondence
Circle of Quatuor Coronati Lodge No. 2076, London,
England, the premier Masonic research lodge
in the world, is recommended.
The Master who acquires a background
in the history, philosophy, and symbolism of
the Craft understands the mission of Freemasonry.
Lodge attendance will reflect the extent of
his preparation.
Setting the Craft to Work
Setting the Craft to work implies
more than initiating, passing, and raising candidates.
It implies that the lodge is a dynamic rather
than a static entity. The Master should encourage
each member to take part in the activity suited
to his character or abilities and to make sure
there is an activity in which lie can participate.
In one particular lodge, a member
rarely set foot in the lodge room for almost
twenty years. A Past Master remembered that
the brother spent his leisure hours interviewing
applicants for admission to a major University.
The lodge wanted to start a scholarship program
for needy, and deserving students, so the Past
Master asked the brother for assistance. The
rest is history. The scholarship program has
been a major commitment of the lodge for fifteen
years and the brother later served the lodge
as Master.
Brethren involved in something
they like to do value their membership and return
frequently. For those who like to putter around
the kitchen, help is always needed on the Refreshment
Committee. For those handy with axe, hammer
, arid saw, there is wood to be chopped or a
fence that needs mending at the home of an infirm
brother or Masonic widow. The lodge publication
requires the assistance of brethren with writing
skills. For brethren with experience in fund
raising, help is needed on the lodge Charity
Fund or Masonic Home appeal.
We cannot expect brethren to return
to lodge week after week, month after month,
if not given a specific responsibility. With
nothing to do, sooner or later they tire of
sitting on the brow of the hill and before we
know it, stop attending altogether.
Programs
The. composition and character
of the lodge are determining factors in the
selection of' programs. Masonry teaches that
men of every sect and opinion meet on the level.
We aim for common objectives among men with
dissimilar backgrounds. The Master who combines
programs of' Masonic interest with fellowship
and establishes a continued line of communication
with his lodge will sustain interest and induce
attendance.
Most Worshipful Dwight L. Smith,
Past Grand Master of Masons in Indiana, in his
widely acclaimed essays "Whither Are We
Traveling?", suggests that Masonry should
be a social, cultural, and intellectual experience.
A balance of all three elements is the Master's
objective in setting his designs in the trestleboard.
Programs for a typical year might
include patriotic observances, Ladies' Night,
Past Master's Night, Founder's Day Observance,
Youth Night, Father and Son Banquet, lodge picnic,
Mother's Day Breakfast, and Masonic plays.
By the time he becomes a Senior
Warden, a line officer should have assembled
sufficient material to begin looking around
for brethren to present papers on selected topics.
Masonic book reviews should also be considered.
The distinguished Masonic scholar,
Most Worshipful Conrad Hahn, observed ".
. . the lack of educational work in the average
lodge is the principal reason for the lack of
interest and the consequent poor attendance
in Masonry over which spokesmen have been ringing
their hands for at least a Century. "
The educational meeting is for
enlightenment and fellowship. Lodge business
is not discussed. Ample time should be allowed
for those present to ask questions and make
comments. Meetings .of' this type usually last
one hour and often the discussion continues
in the dining room at refreshment. A well balanced
program of' Masonic education includes films,
video tapes, arid slide presentations, some
of which are available through MSA or the Grand
Lodge.
The Meeting
Ask those who at one time regularly
attended why they stopped and the most frequent
reply is, "The meetings are boring and
much too long. If the Master doesn't put me
to sleep, the Secretary does."
Not all Masters are comfortable
in the role of presiding officer. However, there
are steps the Master can take which minimize
the anxiety of sitting in the East.
One is to smile from within. A
lodge senses devotion and understanding from
the Master.
Another is to control the meeting.
The Master who looks to the sidelines for a
Past Master to tell him every move to make does
not have control.
Nor should the meeting come unraveled
at the Secretary's desk. Most correspondence
read word for word can be Summarized, including
communications from the Grand Lodge. Usually,
whispering good counsel in the Secretary's ear
gets the point across without creating an adverse
relationship.
Interminable introductions are
the downfall of many meetings, particularly
when Masonic dignitaries are present. By the
time for the man event, the members are worn
out from jumping up and down to salute each
group the Master paraded to the East.
One innovative Master said, "Enough!"
Laying aside the manual of ceremonies, he announced,
"Brethren, tonight we are honored to have
as our guest speaker a distinguished Freemason.
In addition, we have with us two Past Grand
Masters and several Grand Lodge officers. In
order that you will have an opportunity to meet
our visitors, we will dispense with the usual
procedure for presentations and salute you in
a manner we trust is worthy of your high office.
"
Instead of appointing committees
to present four separate groups of dignitaries
in the East with accompanying salutes and responses,
the Master introduced them at their seats Past
Grand Masters, Grand Lodge officers, District
Deputy Grand Masters, and Worshipful Masters.
Other groups were recognized at their seats
without individual introductions. A forty minute
procedure was reduced to ten minutes, and the
lodge enjoyed the extra time at refreshment
following the meeting. It came as no surprise
when the Master received an overwhelming endorsement
for the way he handled the introduction.
The festive board is an ideal
way to divide a long meeting. When there is
an unusual amount of business to come before
the lodge in addition to the program, the Master
would be well advised to start the meeting one
hour early, take care of lodge business, call
off for dinner, and return for the program.
Those who want to come for the business portion
will be present, and no one complains about
having to sit through an overly long meeting.
Some lodges guard against lengthy
meetings by convening two stated meetings by
each month-the first to conduct lodge business
and the second for a program.
CONCLUSION
Good attendance is the natural result of stimulated
interest. Stimulated interest is the natural
result of preparation, planning and execution.
First, the Candidate must be prepared
to receive the benefits of Freemasonry.
Second, the Master must be prepared
to execute a year by planning intelligently,
communicating effectively, and conducting meetings
with dispatch, dignity, and diligence.
Continuity among line officers
is required to sustain an increase in attendance.
Nothing kills momentum quicker than the failure
to follow an up-tempo year with another up-tempo
year. Regenerated enthusiasm becomes contagious.
Word spreads about the enjoyment of returning
to lodge. increased attendance feeds on itself.
And Freemasonry's light burns brighter because
the Master dared to be different.
Wor. Bro. Levitin resides at:
1321 Noble St., Norfolk, VA 23518