| 








 
|
|
|
IHCPT
Vision Statement
We are a Christian community and
a pilgrim people journeying with Mary, the first disciple.
We are called to act with justice always,
to love tenderly those we meet, to serve one another in friendship and
to walk humbly with God.
We value and cherish all people
as they are, irrespective of race, sex, ability or social status.
We strive to establish this spirituality
of communion with the people with whom we work staff, volunteers
and pilgrims.
IHCPT Mission Statement
This is our vision, the vision
of IHCPT, and we will affirm it as Directors, Staff, Leaders and Volunteers
in the following ways.
We will welcome people to share our pilgrim
journey as volunteers, supporters and benefactors.
We will invite young people to be pilgrims
with IHCPT and so to travel on a spiritual journey with a loving family
of friends, where all individuals are valued and cherished as they are.
Whereas we cannot bring all young people on pilgrimage, we will give preference
to those who are disadvantaged, ill, disabled or marginalized.
We will work closely with our sister organisation
HCPT and we will support the international spread of the vision / organisation,
particularly to Romania, Slovakia and Croatia.
We will encourage other groups and organisations
to share our vision by welcoming them to Kilcuan, our home in Clarenbridge.
We will organise and welcome volunteers on
our biennial sponsored cycle to Lourdes.
We will be open to new ways to share our
vision with others. Our mission statement tries to give an expression
to the understanding of our mission, our raison detre. It is our
foundational statement within which all of our work, debate and activities
are grounded.
Background and Challenge
This statement evolved
from a series of reflections over the past number of years. It is the
fruit of discussion by the Board and various national meetings. It is
however an incomplete summary of our reflections and by nature is open
to further discernment, evolvement and redefinition. The challenge is
constantly for the organisation to reflect and explore the statement.
This further reflection and exploration will bring about more evolvement
and redefinition reflecting who we are and spurring us on to new horizons.
The challenge to an organisation such as IHCPT is to take some time in
the midst of a busy and already loaded schedule to do this work. There
is a danger with an organisation such as ours that we become task-oriented.
There is always something to be done: distribution of application forms,
supplementary forms to forward and trace, passports to be put in place
and be updated, Christmas cards to be sold and paid for, regional and
national meetings to attend. And then, like a cloud hanging over us there
is the constant challenge of fundraising. Man cannot live on bread alone
but funds are necessary to keep the wheels of IHCPT rolling. In the midst
of all this essential work the challenge is to set aside some time to
reflect on the original intention of the founders of the Trust, to know
these intentions and to interpret them in light of the world around us
and its ever changing needs. It is essential for every organisation to
have a vision, an ideal. This calls us beyond the present. It calls us
constantly to review. It charges us with the responsibility to be open
to the Spirit. It demands that we read the signs of the times (Paul VI,
Evangelii Nuantiandi) and just like the generation before us respond in
faith, adapt with vision and dream with imagination to respond to the
stirrings of the Spirit, Jesus' parting gift to his disciples who would
be 'fired' with fearless energy on the first Pentecost.
It is absolutely imperative that we have a vision and mission statement.
Not just because we should but because without it there is always the
danger that we just simply execute tasks. Without a vision we will never
have a passion. Passion is what stirs us to action. Passion is what makes
us stand and fund raise on a cold January evening. Passion is what prompts
us to bag pack at the local supermarket. Passion is what drives us from
the comfort of our space to the unknown of our neighbours world.
If we do not have a passion for what we do we can execute tasks well but
without heart. We are like the gong booming, the cymbal clashing that
St Paul speaks of in I Corinthians 13. Or as St Augustine puts it: the
one who is lost in his/her passion is less lost that the one has lost
his/her passion. To paraphrase St Paul (1 Corinthians 13: 1-4):
If we have all our forms in on time, pinks and blues
in correct sequence, passport pictures glued on the right way, if our
funds are raised and the trustees are happy, and we are without the ethos
of the Trust, well we are like a gong booming or a cymbal clashing. If
we attend meetings, sell all our Christmas cards, bring five friendship
weeks to Kilcuan and know how to lift a patient correctly, but do so without
the ethos of the Trust we are nothing at all. If we have the bus ordered,
carers ready, shopping in the bag, medals blessed, postcards sent, fares
in, application forms out, posters up, but do not know why it is we do
all this then we are nothing at all.
|