Mad, sur la charité chrétienne, à quel pourcentage des donations des croyants vont directement à leurs églises ?
D'après moi c'est un gros pourcentage.
Énorme (mais pour les non religieux dans un pays comme les états-unis ce sera a une charité attaché a une église bien souvent), même si tu enlèves en temps et en argent ce qui attaché a la religion, ils donne autant que les noms religieux dans le monde séculaire selon certaines étude.
Mais aussi donné a une église dans certain marché ne veut pas dire gardé de peine et de misère une église en fonctionnement, c'est beaucoup du surplus qui sert a faire des maisons dans des pays pauvre ou nourrir les sans abris locaux, dans un pays comme les États-Unis c'est comme 75% de la charité qui passe par quelque de près ou de loin religieux.
Canada, apparement (C'est peut-être un plus gros signal de quelque chose quand tu es très religieux dans un endroit comme le Canada):
One might think that religious people give just to their own religious charities, and thus the benefit of their giving and volunteering is not a public benefit beyond the religious community. However, this is not the case. Canadian social surveys reveal that the Very Committed give more to secular charities than do the non-religious. The median donation to a secular charity by the Very Committed is almost double that of the non-religious. And the same trend holds true for volunteering as well. The Very Committed give almost double the volunteer hours per year than the hours given by the non-religious, and a greater percentage of the Very Committed volunteer for secular charities than do the non-religious (Bowen, 2004, p. 180)
What does religion have to do about giving? Apparently a lot!
A 2011 online survey of 4,200 Canadian donors conducted by Cygnus found that those under 35 who were actively religious gave on average five times more than donors in their age group who were not.
A Dr. Berger conducted this survey and also tracked how religion affects giving to “secular” causes. The pattern she found has been mirrored in European research. Using data from the National Survey of Giving in 2000, she found that:
Jewish Canadians did 72% of their giving outside their synagogue
Roman Catholic Canadians gave 59% of their giving outside their church
Protestant Canadians, the biggest givers overall, gave 25% of their giving outside their church
This last group doubled the secular giving of Canadians with no religious affiliation.
According to Stats Canada in 2010, 93% of religiously active people had given money to one or more charitable or non-profit organizations. Their annual average donation was $1,004. In comparison, 83% of donors who attended religious services less often, or not at all, had donated in 2010. Their average annual donation was $313. In other words, Canada loses when church attendance declines.
Si on corrige par age ca diminue la différence j'imagine, mais c'est des tendances lourdes et j'imagine que ça peut avoir très très peu avoir avec le foi mais surtout avoir avec le groupe et l'institution elle même, être entouré de donneur, être entouré d'occasion de participé par les entreprises charitable organisé par l'église et ainsi de suite.