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Even in churches without official tithes, there's a collection plate passed. Operations must be funded, employees need to be fed, housed, clothed.


I guess growing up people would toss a few bucks in the collection plate. It wasn’t until I was an adult that I learned that my Dad would write a significant check to the church every month in addition to the few dollars we passed in the plate (we were a blue collar family, but my parents prioritized tithing, which helped to subsidize the school that was affiliated with the church). My understanding is that the plate is not a significant portion of the church’s revenue, but maybe other churches put larger checks into the collection plate.


> Dad would write a significant check to the church every month

That's also tithing (and is completely normal for regular church goers... bible says 10% to the church and a lot of folks follow that prescription)


Yes, of course. But I'd be surprised if the majority of churchgoers tithe 10%. My guess is that there's some Pareto principle wherein 20% of the congregation ("members" in some churches) seriously tithe and the other 80% might toss a little into the collection plate but aren't giving anywhere near 10%. Of course, I expect this varies tremendously from church to church and even from denomination to denomination.


Average is 3-5% last I heard. https://www.philanthropyroundtable.org/almanac/statistics/wh...

Reality is, most non-profits' (church & non-church like NPR) budgets are funded by a small handful of very wealthy/generous donors. Not even 80%/20% rule, more like 80% of donations/sponsorships are from ~5% of the people giving money, the other 95% people giving's total is a small % of budget.

That's why in all non-profits, the leadership has to 'report' to a small number or rich donors. Piss off a couple of the rich, your non-profit will fold.


Our family put the checks in the collection plate. They certainly do get donations from other places, and of course they don't pay taxes.




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