The Expectations Of The Millennial
Freemason,
An Interview With Brother Justin
Jones
By Wor. Bro. Frederic L. Milliken
Freemasonry, in many cases, is
now in the hands of Millennial Masons and Millennial Masons are not settling
for “this is the way we have always done it.”
Last month (February 2108) we
featured the interview of Brother Rhit Moore –
HERE. Brother Moore, barely 40
years old, told us that Millennials in Freemasonry seek value and that they
are seeking something MORE. In their pursuit of something more with a
value the worst thing you can do is waste their time, he says. Brother
Moore also gave us what his Lodge has done to become vibrant, successful and
growing.
Phoenixmasonry Live Interviews Brother Justin Jones
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhYOc6YXh-Y
This month we feature another Millennial Mason,
34-year-old Brother Justin Jones. Brother Jones tells us it doesn’t have to be
this way. He tells us that he entered Freemasonry with high expectations into
a Lodge where both his Grandfather and Father still belong. But after
completing his Master’s work he left Freemasonry in disillusionment. Only by
the constant urging of his father did he return.
Brother Justin Jones
You might remember if you
followed Brother Moore’s story, that he too left Freemasonry only to return at
the urging of his father. In Brother Moore’s case, he returned to be inspired
by the work, and in Brother Jone’s case he returned to be inspired by the
writings of many like-minded Masons who had traveled his journey, especially
the publication Laudable
Pursuit. He became a sponge for the writings of those who
showed the way to Masonic improvement.
Both these Millennial Masons
talk about the disconnect with the way Lodges were run by Masons their
grandfather’s age. Youth, by nature, has vigor and drive to set the world on
fire and Age tends to say – been there done that and let’s not rock the boat
but keep doing things the way we have always done them. This is a natural
clash. The older generation is resistant to change. However, change is life,
and he who desires to freeze the world in its present state forever will soon
find himself alone and cut off from the rest of the world.
This Masonic withdrawal from the
world and its change are what is primarily responsible for the dwindling
number of Masons in the USA. It leads to Lodges that Jones tells us really
don’t do anything. They don’t want to do anything. They gather for boring
business meetings and the fellowship of coffee and stale donuts after which
they leave as fast as they can. Or they turn themselves into a Service Club
financed by fundraisers to keep dues low. Instead of concentrating on how to
make good men better they become the servant of the profane.
Jones tells us this about Masons
from years gone by:
“When we volunteered our time
we didn’t do it in our aprons. We didn’t wear our jewels to the city council
meeting, and we didn’t pass out petitions at the church potluck. Still,
people knew these men were Freemasons, and it was witnessing these community
leaders embody the noble tenants of our fraternity that often compelled many
to turn in their petitions.”
Into that milieu stormed Brother
Justin Jones.
Once his eyes were opened to the
possibilities of what a Masonic Lodge could be, he has not stopped in his
quest to inform any and all who will listen that it doesn’t have to be this
way.
Jones started with a
Masonic Blog, followed
by a Facebook Page
and finally a
YouTube channel. They are all titled “Masonic Improvement.”
In his Blog post
“The Lesson Of The Garden Club” and his video
“Why I left Freemasonry” we can see
the frustrations of the Millennial Mason and why many leave as fast as they
are initiated. In his three-part Blog series on Lodge Culture,
he lays out how to change the deadly spiral Freemasonry finds itself in. He
talks about Lodge Mission Statements, vision, and goals. He explains the
difference between a Lodge’s Climate and a Lodge’s Culture and recounts the
experience in his first Lodge where as Master he changed the Climate but not
the Culture. Jones is a firm believer in continuous improvement that a Lodge
must continually reassess where it is going and what it is accomplishing.
He tells us,
“Continuous improvement
requires buy-in from the majority of stakeholders, a goal to strive for, and
a way to measure progress. In our organization we often see leaders making
important decisions with no buy-in from the membership and goals are often
general or non-existent”
Some of the titles from Jones’
other Blog posts will give you an idea of where his thoughts are:
-
The Chamber of Refraction
-
Dues That Still Don’t
-
Beginning With The End In Mind
-
Masonic Improvement: Creating
A Vision and Goals
-
The Progressive Line, How It
Can Improve Your Masonic Lodge (Or Not)
And Videos:
-
Millenial Apprentices: The
Next Revolution In Freemasonry by Samuel Friedman
-
Simple Concepts That Will
Improve Your Masonic Lodge
-
2 Thoughts On Continuous
Masonic Improvement
-
The Importance Of Having A
“Why” For Freemasons and Masonic Lodges
-
A Look At The Past: The Lost
Art of Masonic Retention
Jones is not just influenced by
Masonic writers. Stephen Covey inspires him. And he recently posted these
thoughts on his Facebook page:
I’m currently rereading
“Laudable Pursuit” (read it here http://www.phoenixmasonry.org/Laudible%20Pursuit.pdf)
and this quote really resonated with me:
“The harder we have to struggle
for something, the more precious it becomes.
Somehow, in sacrificing, we
prove to ourselves that what we’re
seeking is valuable. This holds true when we’re pursuing membership.
Sacrifice locks commitment. As
people strive to make it through rigorous selection standards and work to
prove their worthiness, they persuade themselves that being a part of the
group matters.
Initiation rites – like high
walls and narrow gates of entry – build
commitment to the group through making acceptance hard to come by.
Being allowed to join becomes
something special. An achievement. A privilege. And it creates a sense of
exclusiveness.
Belonging doesn’t count much if
almost anybody can drift in or drift out of your group at will. If it’s easy
to join up, then leave and return, only to leave again, commitment can be hard
to find. Initiation rites also create a common bond of experience that
unites all who make it through the ordeal. A strong sense of “we-ness” comes
from having gone through a common struggle. This identification with the group
feeds commitment.
Finally, stiff criteria for
admission cause the weak-hearted to de-select themselves. They opt out after
weighing the costs. For them, the rights of membership aren’t worth going
through the rites of Initiation.
The benefit?
People with low commitment never
get inside.
The greater the personal
investment in getting accepted, the more one builds a stake in the
organization. This means you should make membership a big deal. Let people pay
a price to join.
That guarantees commitment at
the outset, and also makes it easier to build commitment later on.
Make membership hard to come by,
and commitment comes naturally.”
— Price Pritchett
Firing Up Commitment For
Organizational Change
(Pritchett & Hull Associates, 1994)
www.phoenixmasonry.org
Brother Justin Jones in the
embodiment of what Millennial Masons are expecting from the Craft. Take due
notice and govern yourselves accordingly.