United Church of Canada. AOTS

Identity area

Type of entity

Corporate body

Authorized form of name

United Church of Canada. AOTS

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

  • A.O.T.S. (As One That Serves)

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

ca.1923–

History

AOTS (As One That Serves) is a men’s organization, drawing its membership from the United Church while maintaining an independent organizational and financial structure. It began within Methodist congregations of Vancouver in 1923, and remained a fully independent operation as it spread across the country, finally adopting a Nation Association of AOTS Clubs in 1947. As the organization grew within United Church congregations there arose a confusion concerning its relationship to the church and the United Church Men. In 1954 AOTS became a department of the newly-constituted Board of Men. In September 1959 the first National Association AOTS Men’s Clubs was constituted.

In 1963, the Conference United Church Men’s Council (a new structure at Conference and Presbytery levels), with all men’s club work being the responsibility of a Men’s Club Committee of the Council. The AOTS National Council become the Men’s Club Committee if the Board of Men. With the 1971 creation of the Division of Mission in Canada, the Board of Men was dissolved and AOTS was on its own, although it retained a connection with the new Division. A new constitution in 1975 reverted to the name ‘National Council of the United Church AOTS Men’s Clubs’ (dropping the title ‘Men’s Club Committee’), while at the regional level the Conference and Presbytery Men’s Club Committees returned to Conference and District Councils of United Church AOTS Men’s Clubs.

(Text based on UCC Archives catalog entry, as of 2023-March.)

Places

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

The role of AOTS is to lead men to an understanding and commitment to the work of the Church, promoting Christian fellowship through service, to give leadership within the church and community, to foster good citizenship, protect civil liberties and to work among youth. The National Association holds biennial conventions to which local clubs as well as District and Conference Council send representatives. The Council operates as an administrative body, coordinating the work of the local, district and conference clubs, and holds annual meetings from which it reports to the Division of Mission in Canada on the year’s work.

(Text based on UCC Archives catalog entry, as of 2023-March.)

Mandates/sources of authority

Internal structures/genealogy

General context

Relationships area

Related entity

Grandview United Church A.O.T.S. Club

Identifier of related entity

Category of relationship

hierarchical

Dates of relationship

Description of relationship

Related entity

United Church of Canada. Board of Men (1954–1972)

Identifier of related entity

SCAA-UCCS-0224

Category of relationship

associative

Dates of relationship

1954–1972

Description of relationship

Related entity

United Church of Canada (1925-)

Identifier of related entity

SCAA-UCCS-0220

Category of relationship

associative

Dates of relationship

Description of relationship

Membership from the United Church but independent organizational and financial structure

Access points area

Place access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

SCAA-UCCS-0230

Institution identifier

SCNUCSC

Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Level of detail

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

2018: drafted.
2022-2023: revised in MemorySask, with content from description in UCC Archives (Toronto) catalog.

Language(s)

  • English

Script(s)

Sources

National Association of United Church AOTS Men's Clubs, in UCC Archives catalog (https://catalogue.unitedchurcharchives.ca/national-association-of-united-church-aots-mens-clubs); National AOTS Men's Clubs website (www.aots.ca); UCC Sask. Conference Records of Proceedings; UCC Year Books.

Maintenance notes