Deliver help, hope and healing in the name of Christ to those suffering after a disaster. 

Texans on Mission has responded to every natural disaster in Texas since 1967 and many beyond it, including the Southeast Asia tsunami, Hurricane Katrina and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Through a diverse array of ministries, Texans on Mission has provided the calm after the storm for millions.


Go on Mission

You can deliver help, hope and healing after a disaster by becoming a member of a Texans on Mission Disaster Relief team. Through Texans on Mission Disaster Relief teams, you can:

  • Provide practical help during tragedies by serving hot, nutritious meals and providing access to shower and laundry services.
  • Be part of a chainsaw team that moves debris and fallen and damaged trees.
  • Clean out and repair homes damaged by floods and fire.
  • Pray with and encourage survivors, offering hope for better days after the storm.

Volunteer Now

 

Be the calm in the storm

As a disaster relief volunteer, you can: 

  • Assess damage
  • Distribute boxes and packing supplies
  • Chainsaw fallen trees
  • Install temporary roofs
  • Manage large-scale relief efforts
  • Minister as a chaplain
  • Mud out damaged homes
  • Offer free shower and laundry services
  • Provide child care
  • Serve warm, nutritious meals

 

Share your faith and meet human need through international relief with Texans on Mission

 

Texans on Mission is uniquely experienced and equipped to respond to physical and spiritual needs around the wrold because of our decades of work closer to home.

 

We stepped up when:

  • An earthquake rocked Turkey and Syria.
  • War came to Uikraine.
  • A train derailed in India. 
  • War came to Israel.

Texans on Mission experience and expertise providing disaster relief in the United States translates well into helping others in may countries. When we respod to international need, we carry out Jesus' callig to reach the ends of the earth in His name. 

 

Explore your calling to international relief

 

 

Read more about Texans on Mission Disaster Relief teams 

God ‘breathes fresh air’ into churches after winter storm, TBM help

Surrounded by homes with burst pipes after the February winter storms, St. John’s College Heights Baptist Church in Austin did what it’s called to do: minister to its community in the name of Christ. The congregation helped people get the assistance they needed in the midst of the crisis.

 

Little did members realize water was filling up their own facilities. For a few days, water from broken pipes flooded the church’s sanctuary as well as education space.

 

“The ceiling, all that stuff, came out,” Pastor Michael Harvey said. “We had water all over the place.”

 

Looking for help, Harvey reached out to TBM as the congregation dried out the buildings. Shortly thereafter, a TBM rebuild team from Central Texas arrived with a load of sheetrock and went to work. Soon, the walls were sealed again and TBM is looking for other ways to assist the church.

 

Harvey described the assistance as gift from God.

 

“It means a whole lot,” he said. “It comes in the time of a pandemic. We had a pipe burst. People aren’t coming to church. Giving is down. This is an incredible blessing.”

 

Charles Baker, a member of Crestview Baptist Church in Georgetown who led the TBM team, is thankful for the opportunity to strengthen a church committed to its community.

 

“This church is a lighthouse in its neighborhood,” he said. “It stands out. The buildings stand out. They need to be able to stand out.”

 

St. John’s is one of nine homeowners and churches across the state where TBM is helping people that are still recovering from the winter storm. Combining the efforts of rebuild teams, supplies of sheetrock and expertise, TBM leaders are strengthening homes and congregations in difficult days.

 

“Both homeowners and churches didn’t have the right coverage or got denied on the claim,” said Rupert Robbins, associate director of TBM Disaster Relief. “On some of these, we’re running behind people with a net. After a disaster, it’s not as simple as turn the power back on and let’s go.”

 

The ministry goes far beyond the rebuild efforts.

 

“We provide help, hope and healing,” Robbins said. “I’ve had the opportunity to pray with these pastors and homeowners. We’ve helped them navigate the systems to get done what needs to happen.”

 

Robbins has been refreshed in visiting with the pastors of the churches. God is using the winter storm damage as an opportunity for churches to see new ways to serve.

 

“It’s amazing how many guys I’ve talked to that God is breathing fresh life into their church,” he said. “It’s amazing how that happens.”

 

Pastor Joseph Cartwright of North Star Fellowship in Irving has seen that in many ways. A TBM team installed sheetrock where the church is meeting in an apartment complex.

 

“This was a big leg up for us to get the building back together so we can move toward some ministry goals we have. It was just such a blessing,” he said.

 

“We are experiencing a moving into position for how to effectively make Jesus famous in the days in which we’re living.”