Another day, another study demonstrating the societal and cultural benefits of Christianity.
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A new survey released this month by Barna titled “Why Giving Is Good” found “Christians are exceptional givers” and recognize “giving is elemental to God’s very nature and the story of the Christian faith.”
These proclamations aren’t earth-shattering in light of what Scripture calls believers to do, yet the statistics help explain some of the differences between practicing Christians and members of the general public — and give a lens into what these sentiments look like when lived out.
Barna found 65% of practicing Christians have directly experienced “someone else’s extraordinary generosity.” Tragically, just 46% of American adults more broadly said the same, with 43% stating they had not experienced such extraordinary generosity.
Conversely, only 29% of practicing Christians said they had not experienced extraordinary generosity.
In Why Giving Is Good, a report we created with @GenGiving and Gloo, Christians express what they feel is the most important reason they are supposed to be generous. Check out the full report here: https://t.co/RUdqA2hd18 pic.twitter.com/MoeqDziiHe
— Barna Group (@BarnaGroup) September 22, 2022
Again, these statistics about the church aren’t entirely surprising, as believers are called to give and serve others. As Barna noted, “Because practicing Christians are more likely to be around other practicing Christians in a church environment, there is a great chance for someone to be both a participant in and recipient of generous community.”
But these beliefs and experiences are important in a world increasingly dominated by an obsession with the self. Personally experiencing generosity helps others in their own quests to be charitable, thus personal experience with benevolence yields benefits across the board.
It should be noted that Christians are also more aware of generosity due to its focus within the faith. This awareness creates intentional focus and, one would imagine, related action.
In the survey, practicing Christians were also more likely to report being taught generosity (79%) than were members of the general population (65%), and the sources from which this learning takes place are intriguing.
“Half of all U.S. adults (49%) say their mother was the best example of generosity in their life, and 35% say the same of their father,” Barna reported. “For practicing Christians, Jesus is the most-cited example of generosity (61%).”
The survey was conducted from November 12–19, 2021, among 2,016 adults and has a margin of error of +/- 2 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level.
As Faithwire has extensively reported, countless surveys and studies show the benefits of faith.
Recent research has found Christians fare better in relationships, church attendees are happier and more content, and churchgoers have better mental health. Read more about these findings.
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