We Believe A World Without Poverty Is Possible.

Reverend Money is proud to be a social impact venture committed to cultivating economic belonging through and beyond our work. As a Founding Member of the Tithing Pledge, we commit at least 10% of our annual profit to community partners supported through the Wild Imagination Fund.

Explore Our Impact

Economic belonging is more than surviving.

We understand economic belonging as having access, agency and dignity within an economic system - where people not only survive financially, but are able to participate, contribute, and shape their financial lives in ways that align with their values and support their communities.

The Tithing Pledge

An experiment in corporate responsibility, the Tithing Pledge commits 10% of a company's profit or product to organizations working to increase economic access, stability, and opportunity.

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Wild Imagination Fund

The Wild Imagination Fund empowers faith-inspired organizations at the local, state, and national level to challenge poverty and cultivate economic belonging for all.

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Imagining Something Different Means Doing Something Different.

Our impact work is rooted in trust-based philanthropy and strategic bottom-up integration. This means that the money or product we donate come with no-strings attached to the nonprofits that receive them. We also prioritize a bottom-up integration of this work meaning that 5% is earmarked for our local nonprofit partner, 3 % for our state-wide partner, and 2% for our national partner.

Meet Our Partners

Local Partner

Based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the Shalom Project runs programs that challenge the cycle of poverty with a spirit of inclusion, compassion, and justice.

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State Partner

Based in Raleigh, North Carolina, the North Carolina Council of Churches educates, inspires, and mobilizes faith communities to advocate for justice

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National Partner

Based in Washington D.C., Invested Faith helps individuals and religious institutions use their assets to fund the work of faith-rooted social entrepreneurs.

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Frequently Asked Questions