I'm at work, so I only have time for some annoying, quick drive-by sniping.Jrecee wrote: People say "our church collects donations and runs a soup kitchen". I say atheists are just as capable as collecting donations for charitable causes and running a soup kitchen. And we don't need any book to tell us to do it.
I agree that religion is not necessary to do good, though the nature of "good" is probably another fun discussion for another time.
All that said, I do think it's worth pointing out that, at least in the United States, religious conservatives give more to charity than secular progressives. And it's not just giving to stuff like "the fancy new church steeple fund" or religious causes or anything.
Here's a quick copypasta from the first place I could find that referenced the article in question. It's actually from a movie box office website, but should be enough to find the actual relevant work:
"* Religious People Are Much More Generous
Category
Religious People
Non-Religious People
Give money to any cause
91%
66%
Give money to a non-religious cause
71%
61%
- Source: NonProfit Times. Kluth.org.
A study by philanthropy expert Arthur C. Brooks, former Syracuse University professor and president of the American Enterprise Institute, says that conservatives, especially religious conservatives, give far more money and volunteer time to charity than liberals and non-religious people.
The study shows that conservatives give 30% more money to charity than liberals, even though liberals earn 6% more money. Brooks also found that liberals who are religious give more money to charity than liberals who are not religious.
In fact, religious conservatives give 100 times more money to charity than secular liberals or “progressives.” They also volunteer more.
Brooks, author of WHO REALLY CARES? and THE BATTLE, also found that people in wealthier, more liberal states like California and New York are below average in charitable giving compared to people in poor states like Mississippi and Alabama.
In fact, the working poor in the United States give a larger percentage of their incomes to charity than any other income group, including the middle class and the rich!
Finally, the study shows that Americans are far more charitable than Europeans – 14 as much as the Italians, seven times as much as the Germans, and three and one-half times more charity than the French."
Source:
http://www.movieguide.org/news/3/861/-r ... to-charity
I'm not saying, "Oh, religious people are better" or anything. I just think it's relevant to this point.
But now I'd better get back to work. I'm sure this will start a great flame-war. I'm pretty sure the study was pretty controversial at the time. The author was Arthur C. Brooks.
