The Ignatian - December 2016 Vol 26 July Edition Vol 27 | Page 7

From the Council Commitment and Governance When I left Riverview a little over 40 years ago, it was serendipitous to believe that I would ever Chair the College Council, particularly during times of great change in the national education agenda. As a boarder from Walgett who arrived at Riverview in Year 6, my aim was to complete school and honour the sacrifice my parents made in sending me to Riverview. University, a career in accounting and the Chair of two school Councils were light years from consideration at the time. Over the seven years of my schooling at Riverview, the bulk of my formation as an adolescent and a young man was acquired through the Jesuits, and for that I am extremely grateful. I am now able to commit my time and experience to the school which gave me so much on my way to adulthood. In my secondary years, a truly prophetic Jesuit was elected to the position of Superior General – Fr Pedro Arrupe SJ. He added his own vernacular to a revivalist period in the Jesuit history – words that have become commonplace in the lexicon of our young men: competence, conscience and compassion. They are expressed in myriad ways but particularly through works of service rendered to the marginalised and the disaffected. Over more recent years, a fourth ‘C’ has been added: commitment. Peter Hans Kolvenbach, Superior General at the turn of the 21st Century, believed that the virtue of his predecessor’s work needed to be an enduring one, based upon a sustained and principled commitment to making a difference in the world. Members of the College Council aim to ensure that despite significant changes to the landscape of education in a rapidly moving world, we commit to the values that are synonymous with Jesuit endeavour. Indeed, we are part of a world wide institute of schools and ministries that have, and will continue to have, the message of the gospels as our compass and the four ‘C’s to guide our vision. In an age that can be obsessed with strategic plans, performance indices, benchmark metrics and the like, the need for values that anchor human behaviour and aspiration is greater than ever. And, as Peter Hans Kolvenbach would remind us, it is not selective nor ephemeral; it is a sustained commitment that is implicit to living an authentic life through embracing the Jesuit principles of education. And, this particular characteristic of Jesuit education will be the object of deliberation, prayer and reflection at the Province retreat, which will be held for all members of Jesuit School Councils at Sevenhill early next term. I thank the members of Council for their expertise, engagement and commitment to the works of the College and to the wider ministries in the Province. J O H N W I L C OX , CHAIR F R O M T H E C O U N C I L | I G N ATI A N | 7