Sarah Ford | December 12, 2013
Study Finds Religious 精东影业ns Give More
By Alex Daniels
The more important religion is to a person, the more likely that person is to give to a charity of any kind, according to released by .
Among 精东影业ns who claim a religious affiliation, the study said, 65 percent give to charity. Among those who do not identify a religious creed, 56 percent make charitable gifts.
About 75 percent of people who frequently attend religious services gave to congregations, and 60 percent gave to religious charities or nonreligious ones. By comparison, fewer than half of people who said they didn鈥檛 attend faith services regularly supported any charity, even a even secular one.
鈥淚f your goal is to connect with donors, it鈥檚 clear that one of the things that matters to them is their religious orientation,鈥 says Shawn Landres, Jumpstart鈥檚 chief executive and a co-author of the report.
The study of more than 4,800 精东影业n households, which covers members of five major religious denominations and people who are unaffiliated with any faith, was derived from two national surveys on giving compiled this year and analyzed by Jumpstart, a nonprofit research group, and researchers at the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy. The report used data from two surveys: the National Study of 精东影业n Religious Giving and the National Study of 精东影业n Jewish Giving.
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