It is important and necessary to distinguish the NCCS International
Committee from the ICCS (International Catholic Conference on Scouting)
and explain their relationship.
ICCS. The ICCS is to WOSM (World Organization of the Scout Movement),
as the NCCS is to BSA. Just as BSA belongs to and is represented at
the meetings of WOSM, so NCCS belongs to and is represented at the meetings
of the ICCS.
The ICCS was founded in 1938, and is organized under the Vaticans
Secretariat of the Laity as a universal conference of affiliated national
Catholic associations and committees, with a World Chaplain appointed
by Vatican and an internationally elected General Secretary.
The mission of the ICCS is to bring together national Catholic Scouting
associations and committees to make the Catholic Churchs contribution
toward unity, offering to the worldwide Scouting movement those values
which characterize our common way of living as baptized Catholic Christians.
A NCCS presence at ICCS meetings is also symbolic. In the eyes of the
rest of the world, and as a matter of fact, the USA is one of the most
powerful, highly developed, and wealthiest of all nations on the globe.
The rest of the world charges Americans, in general, with the special
responsibility of supporting and contributing to the efforts of those
in smaller and less developed nations to better themselves and their
societies.
In particular, the special responsibility of the NCCS is seen as supporting
and contributing to the efforts of those national Catholic Scouting
associations in smaller or developing nations with their efforts to
develop and implement proven Catholic Scouting programs. The gospel
reminds us that "much is expected of those to whom much has been
given." The rest of the ICCS membership throughout the region and
the world expects the NCCS (USA) to be interested in and actively engaged
in its meetings and activities.
Therefore, our presence at ICCS meetings is symbolic of our appreciation
of and acceptance of our leadership and stewardship responsibilities
to assist evangelization efforts through Catholic Scouting in the rest
of the world. In most of the countries comprising the ICCS Americas
Region, Catholic Scouting efforts face challenges that are literally
foreign to most Catholic Scouts and Scouters in the United States and
Canada, which are the only two countries in the region which culturally
have a "middle class."
The national Catholic Scouting associations in all the other countries
are therefore, particularly concerned that their Scouting programs are
available to poor and underprivileged children and youth. They see the
evangelical virtues and values instilled in youth through the Scouting
movement as instrumental for educating and transforming their respective
societies.