Another factor that works against congregational giving is the
“Responsibility Bias.” Due to this bias, we overestimate our contributions to a
project or group relative to the contributions of other members. We have more
information about our contributions than we do about those of others. We have
more information about our own motives and problems. So we can generate far
more detailed and gracious explanations for our own successes and failures. The
Responsibility Bias is a sub-category of the “Positivity Bias.” We tend to
present ourselves in the most positive light possible, especially when
comparing ourselves to others.
In addition, the Responsibility
Bias depends on what Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky labeled the “Availability
Heuristic.” A “heuristic” is what we lay people would call a rule of thumb or a
mental shortcut. It’s a way of thinking about things that requires less mental
effort and energy to get to a satisfying solution. Tversky and Kahneman defined
the Availability Heuristic “as the process of judging frequency by ‘the ease
with which instances come to mind’.”[1]
In other words, we estimate how often something happens by how easily we can
access memories of that event. Our estimates will not be based on any real
world statistics.
Every parent has to deal with the
repercussions of the Availability Heuristic. I ask my teenager to do the dishes
and clean up his room. The whining can be heard in a several-block radius. “But
I do everything around here! Tell my
sister to do it this time.” This may be pure adolescent sloth. It is more
likely, however, that the Availability Heuristic is at work. We are far more
aware of our own actions than we are the actions of others. It is easy to call
to mind the many times I have made my bed (well, at least that one time), the
times I have done the dishes (there was, after all, that one time last year
when I did them), or vacuumed the living room (I have that one marked on the
calendar on my phone). I can’t remember the last time my sister did anything
like that!
And that’s the point. The
Availability Heuristic has nothing to do with investigating the number of times
I actually cleaned—or the number of times my sister did it in my place. This
bias is rooted in what I can most easily call to memory. It makes a difference
that I can also most easily remember that which best serves my interests and
puts me in the best light in comparison to anyone else. Most important of all,
since the heuristic is rooted in my memories and experiences, I really believe that what I’m saying is The
Truth. And don’t try to tell me otherwise.
“The availability heuristic,”
Kahneman writes, “substitutes one question for another: you wish to estimate
the size of a category or the frequency of an event but you report an
impression of the ease with which instances come to mind.”[2]
If we were to poll congregation members about the percentage of their own
contribution to the church budget and then to add up all those self-reports,
the total would far exceed one hundred percent.
How do I know this? Psychologists have studied, for
example, the perceptions of relative contributions by spouses in a marriage. When
the spouses were asked what percentage of the housework they did and the
reports were totaled, the final outcome was enough perceived work for nearly
two houses. We can expect that congregation members would demonstrate the same
inflated sense of personal contribution.
Indeed every congregation has
members who are sure they give more than anyone else. We know only about our
own contributions, so it is natural that those contributions come most easily
to mind. Every congregation has even more members who are sure they volunteer more
than anyone else (and usually these folks do not hesitate to remind others of
that fact). Again, this is not surprising since our actions are the ones that
come most readily to our awareness. And even if they know better about their
financial giving, they are convinced that their contributions in terms of time
and influence are more important than the total contributions of others.
The Responsibility Bias becomes
pernicious when it leads to controlling or even bullying behavior on the part
of one or a few members of a group. Many congregations are managed and
manipulated to some degree by members who are sure that they contribute more
and are thus more important than anyone else. By the same token, many
parishioners are sure that they do less than anyone else, even when this is
clearly not the case. That power imbalances introduced by the Responsibility
Bias make it difficult for congregations to focus on anything but themselves.
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