Animavore wrote:I think its absurd also that they claim religious people give more than non-religious.
I may not be at mass giving money to the church (as said, not charity) or to the numerous charities that hang outside (usually religious institutes that I would give money to anyway given their ulterior motive) but I'm giving money to the various people that come into the pubs looking for donations or on the streets of Dublin or even dropping change into the poor boxes in the shops and I'm (pretty) sure many other people do too.
Kudos to you Animavore. Just giving away money when a stranger asks for it on the street, with nobody seeing or knowing of it is true generosity.
I would agree that religious people probably "give away" a larger percentage of their income than the non-religious do, because their churches are reminding them to tithe X percent of their income. But, as Ayaan points out, all of the money goes to the church. The money that actually goes to charities or to serve the poor, and/or the community are often solicited separately. The churches that use collection money to do good work in the community like fund soup kitchens or shelters are probably more of an exception than the rule. I think it's fair to say that many churches use that part of the collection money that is dedicated to doing good work to to fund missions to convert people, under the guise of helping others.
While I have no statistics to prove non-religious people give as much as the religious, here's one that proves the non-religious HELP more than the religious, which in my opinion is a far superior way to lift people from poverty than to just giving stuff away.
http://www.kiva.org/community/viewTeam?team_id=94
We just hit the million mark for loans, and Kiva Christians are far behind us!

I invite all of you to join us!