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How we are different from a basic homeless shelter.

The Prophetic Foundation Inc. leverages the resources of the home-building community and with the support of our corporate partners and donors purchase distress and forclosure properties to conduct major renovations to homes and mobile used containers to provide safe, stable, and new living arrangements for previously homeless individuals and families living  in temporary shelters.

 

The Prophetic Foundation Inc. dba the Ptophetic Ministries based in Northern Virginia seeks to build new lives for homeless families and individuals through housing and community outreach.

 

The Prophetic Foundation Inc.’s partners and resources help to significantly reduce the over load of homeless shelters and the costs to shelter organizations.  The shelters can redirect those efforts in helping other victims of homelessness into programs and services for their homeless outreach.

 

Homelessness “It's not limited to one sector of society. " and the type homes to house approved families are not limited by size, style or model. Everyone is equal and deserve equal treatment.

- Micklewhite & Associates

The Prophetic Ministries is a tax exempt non-profit 501c3 organization, based in Virginia, USA
With outreach projects design to help homeless and domestic abused victims with permanent housing and resources.

 

Get help!

 

Our ministry provides service to those most at risk with the help of Grants, non-profit foundations, donors, business contributors and businesses who support charities for helping homeless and domestic abused victims.  

Homeless assistance

TPM help people in several state and countries with home sharing properties they acquire.

 

  • If you are living in a temporary shelter

  • If you are homeless because of domestic voilence/abuse against you

  • If you are homeless and you have no relatives or family.

 

There are several resources and we would like to help you.

How do People Become Homeless?

It’s hard to imagine how someone can go from having a home one day to being out on the street the next. Many homeless people start out with jobs and stable residences, but then social and economic factors intervene, causing a rapid change in their living situation.

 

The two biggest factors driving homelessness are poverty and the lack of affordable housing. In 2004, 37 million people, or 12.7 percent of the American population was living in poverty, according to the National Coalition for the Homeless.

 

Many of these people live from paycheck to paycheck with nothing saved in the bank. The loss of a job, an illness, or another catastrophic event can quickly lead to missed rent or mortgage payments and ultimately, to eviction or foreclosure.

 

Losing a job happens much more readily today than it did a few decades ago, when most people worked for the same company until retirement. The decline in manufacturing jobs, outsourcing of jobs to other countries, and an increase in temporary and part-time employment has nicked away at the foundations of what was once a more stable job market.

Homelessness Awareness
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