Growing up in the “Petition Factory” was an experience very few United Methodist preachers’ kids have ever lived through.
From
1964 to 1984, three of us kids, along with my mom and dad, touched
every petition sent to the General Conference of the United Methodist
Church. My father, the Rev. Newell P. Knudson, had the honor (?) and
privilege (?) of serving the Methodist and then United Methodist Church
as “memorials” and then “petitions” secretary for the General
Conference. Every four years — and for a while, every two — our living
room and dining room were turned into the Petition Factory.
My
mother, Katharine “Kay” Reeves Knudson, was the office manager. My
brother, David, and sister, Poppy, helped with opening mail, sorting,
typing and deciphering signatures on the thousands of pieces of mail
that came from United Methodists around the world to be considered at
General Conference.
As
the youngest member of the family, my first paid job was to sort the
petitions after a cover sheet or “jacket” was typed (in triplicate,
using carbon paper) for the various legislative committees. I was old
enough in 1968 to match the committee name on the jacket to the
committee name on the cubbyholes set up for sorting. Most of the
petitions were for the “Missions” and “Christian Social Concerns”
legislative sections. I “cleaned up” during that General Conference,
earning 25 cents an hour! Big wages for a 6-year-old!
When
people ask, “Does someone really read every petition?” I know that the
answer is a resounding “yes”! My dad carefully read each petition, made
sure the sender followed protocols for submission, titled the petition,
indicated the Disciplinary paragraphs and assigned it to a legislative
committee. From there, the petitions were sent to one of many typists,
who created a jacket for each one. Then we assigned tracking numbers to
the petitions and finally sorted them into the right boxes for shipping
to the site of the General Conference.
Not
every petition was easy to categorize. I remember one petition that
arrived suggesting that if the United States were ever to be visited by
aliens from outer space, the United Methodist Church would consider them
“friendly.” I remember the dilemma that caused! Which committee should
handle the petition? Global Ministries? Church and Society? It was all
part of the process dealt with ever so graciously by my father. That,
and a proposed requirement that United Methodists should sit in church
“in the order of (their) creation” were two of his all-time favorites.
(The petitions, I believe, were sent to the Christian Social Concerns
and Worship committees, respectively.)
For
the most part, my General Conference experiences came before UPS, Fed
Ex or Airborne were popular. In fact, the petitions to the 1970 General
Conference in St. Louis were sent via Greyhound Package Express just
prior to a transit strike breaking out. I remember vividly the family
trip to the Greyhound Station the night before General Conference
opened. I was sent behind the counter to climb the piles of parcels and
identify the missing boxes of petitions that were scheduled to be
discussed in the following days.
Things
have changed in the way petitions have been processed over the years.
We have gone from using carbon paper and manual typewriters to NCR forms
and the snappy electric typewriters, to the computer-assisted PETS
system and now CALMS, the new and improved petition-tracking software.
Petitions no longer have to be sent by mail in triplicate; they can be
faxed, e-mailed and file-transferred.
Yet,
for all the changes, many things have remained the same. Committed and
caring United Methodists are still sending their recommendations and
resolutions to be considered by faithful delegates. Each one is
carefully reviewed and taken before God, discussed, debated and finally
voted on.
Thank God, some things never change.
*Harris is director of communication services and resources for the United Methodist Church’s Iowa Annual Conference.
News media can contact Tim Tanton at (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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