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TruthBook Religious News Blog



Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Increased Spirituality and Social Awareness Top Effects of Ignatian Volunteer Corps, Says Recent Study

MEDIA ADVISORY, October 2 /Christian Newswire/ --

With Americans living longer, what was once deemed the "Golden Years" has evolved into just another stage in life. For many Americans this is their time when they get to choose how they spend their time. More and more of them are choosing to volunteer. In fact, the rate of volunteering among Americans 65+ is 64 percent higher today than it was in 1974.

That's a good thing for Ignatian Volunteer Corps (IVC), a national service organization for retired men and women that recently commissioned a study to look at how their program impacts volunteers. Headquartered in Baltimore with 12 regional offices, IVC wanted to examine how well they are meeting their mission and goals by measuring the effect that the program has on their volunteers.

"The Impact of Service on Spirituality: A Survey of the Ignatian Volunteer Corps," conducted by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) at Georgetown University, consisted of three surveys mailed to IVC volunteers, their spouses and IVC reflectors who offer one-on-one spiritual companionship to volunteers. According to the study, "each group affirms the value of the IVC program in helping participants feel as though they are spending retirement in a fulfilling way, deepening their spirituality, and increasing their social awareness."

Findings include:

• 93% feel they are spending their retirement in a fulfilling way;

• 89% feel that are making a difference in peoples' lives;

• 86% are using skills that they had before joining to help others;

• 85% are learning about problems of poverty and other social problems;

• 82% recognize social injustice;

• 79% have come to know individuals on a personal basis who are economically poor or needy.


The study comes at a time when IVC is growing and re-branding with a new modern logo to reflect its relevance in today's society. "Our new logo and tagline 'Experience. Service. Reflection.' describes who we are and what we do. The CARA study clearly shows that these program components ring true for our volunteers also," says Suzanne Geaney, IVC Executive Director.

IVC has regional offices in Baltimore, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Los Angeles, San Diego, New York, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C./Northern Virginia.

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Friday, June 22, 2007

Happy for the Work

By Arthur C. Brooks

Posted: Wednesday, June 20, 2007
ARTICLES Wall Street Journal

It is vacation season once again, giving occasion for the usual homilies about how Europeans are having a much better and healthier time of it than we are when it comes to work. You've heard it a thousand times: Americans "live to work," while Europeans "work to live."

By almost every measure, Europeans do work less and relax more than Americans. According to data from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Americans work 25% more hours each year than the Norwegians or the Dutch. The average retirement age for European men is 60.5, and it's even lower for European women. Our vacations are pathetically short by comparison: The average U.S. worker takes 16 days of vacation each year, less than half that typically taken by the Germans (35 days), the French (37 days) or the Italians (42 days).

Why these differences? There are two standard explanations, neither of which casts Americans in a particularly good light. First, we are emotionally stunted. According to Time magazine, "In the puritanical version of Christianity that has always appealed to Americans, religion comes packaged with the stern message that hard work is good for the soul. Modern Europe has avoided so melancholy a lesson."

Obviously, there is a point beyond which work is excessive and lowers life quality. But within reasonable bounds, if happiness is our goal, the American formula of hard work appears to function pretty well. Second, we are under the yoke of hard-bitten capitalism. London's Daily Telegraph reports that the heavy U.S. work effort does not result from a special affinity Americans have for work; rather, it is because we are "terrified of losing [our] jobs" in a labor environment in which workers have few of the protections Europeans enjoy.

The truth is that most Americans don't feel particularly shackled. To begin with, an amazingly high percentage of us like our jobs. Among adults who worked 10 hours a week or more in 2002, the General Social Survey (GSS) found that 89% said they were very satisfied or somewhat satisfied with their jobs. Only 11% said they were not too satisfied or not at all satisfied.

Of course, some would argue this statistic must be hiding big differences between people with "good" jobs and those with "bad" jobs. Presidential candidate John Edwards, in an argument fit for the French, tells us that we are two nations: "One America that does the work, another America that reaps the reward."

No doubt there is great job dissatisfaction among people with low incomes and little education--the folks working in factories and on farms; the people who sell you socks and serve you lunch--right? Wrong. There is no difference at all between those with above- and below-average incomes: nine in 10 are satisfied, as are people without college degrees. 87% of people who call themselves "working class" are satisfied.

But even if we are satisfied with our jobs, might we still be happier at the beach? Imagine asking people something like this: "If you were to get enough money to live as comfortably as you would like for the rest of your life, would you continue to work or would you stop working?"

Certainly a high percentage would answer in the affirmative? Wrong again: In 2002, the GSS found that number to be less than a third of all workers. And once again, there is no difference between those at different levels of income or education. 69% of working class folks say they would keep working even if they didn't have to.

For most Americans, work is a rock-solid source of life happiness. Happy people work more hours each week than unhappy people, and work more in their free time as well. Even more tellingly, people with more hours per day to relax outside their jobs are not any happier than those who have less non-work time. In short, the idea that our heavy workloads are lowering our happiness is twaddle.

Obviously, there is a point beyond which work is excessive and lowers life quality. But within reasonable bounds, if happiness is our goal, the American formula of hard work appears to function pretty well.

This may be one reason why Americans tend to score better than Europeans on most happiness surveys. For example, according to the 2002 International Social Survey Programme across 35 countries, 56% of Americans are "completely happy" or "very happy" with their lives, versus 44% of Danes (often cited in surveys as the happiest Europeans), 35% of the French and 31% of Germans. Those sweet five-week vacations and 35-hour workweeks don't seem to be stimulating all that much félicité. A good old-fashioned 50-hour week might be a better option.

Arthur C. Brooks is a visiting scholar at AEI. http://www.aei.org/publications/filter.all,pubID.26371/pub_detail.asp

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