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 

Ukraine relief: Taking steps into peace

WARSAW — Tetyana had a job. A home. Friends. A life. And a grown daughter who was just starting hers. Then the explosions started near Kyiv, Ukraine.

“For 48 hours, me and my daughter were lying on the floor waiting for death,” she said. “In the last moment, we decided to pack quickly, our most needed things, and just flee Kyiv. The war started on Feb. 24 and on the 26th at 1:00 p.m., we left Kyiv.”

They drove until they encountered a 31-mile long line of cars waiting to get into Poland. There, they abandoned their car and boarded a bus. “At 2:00 a.m., on Feb. 27, we finally crossed the border.”

Poles welcomed them as they have hundreds of thousands of others. By God’s direction through Polish Baptist volunteers, Tetyana and her daughter ended up at the Baptist seminary in Warsaw.

Marek Glodek, president of the Baptist Union of Poland, and Mateuz Wichary, vice president of the union, work at the seminary and have been crucial in leading the efforts of welcoming people from Ukraine to the seminary and Polish Baptist churches.

“God has placed Ukrainians in our churches over the past 10 years, and they are instrumental in this effort,” Wichary said. “When the fleeing Ukrainians arrive in our churches and can talk with, relate to and begin to process what happened with people who know their language, culture and customs, it helps them switch from fear toward comfort.”

After a long pause, Tetyana added, “I’m thankful to God because I’m Orthodox. I pray every day. And yesterday we had Baptist church service here, and I cried all the time when we prayed and worshipped God. People are so good to us. I’m thankful to God that He provided a place for us here, because me and my daughter thought that we would sleep on the streets when we arrived in Warsaw.”

In many ways, Baptists in the region like the Polish are the face of the faith in the crisis as Christians connected to the Baptist World Alliance around the globe line up behind them to support ministry to those impacted by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

TBM is one of the groups that is responding to this crisis. Through significant funding, it is supporting four shelters in churches in Poland and Ukraine. A TBM team is currently on the field meeting specialized needs and providing logistical support to the Poles.

“The eyes of the world are on Ukraine,” said Mickey Lenamon, TBM executive director/CEO. “In the middle of everything that’s going on, Baptists from around the globe have come together to meet needs and share the love of Christ to people during their most difficult days.

“We are honored to be part of that. The Polish are incredible. Their faith is inspiring. They serve around the clock and never seem to tire. God is truly working through Polish Baptist churches.”

Ukrainian Baptists have cared for more than 45,000 people through shelters and aid stations. Hungarian  Baptist Aidalso is serving in the region. Polish Baptists have served thousands more.

Many of the refugees, like Tetyana and her daughter, aren’t sure where they will go next. Through a texting group of their friends, they understand their old neighborhood is filled with landmines. Returning is becoming less likely as the Russian onslaught continues. 

But at least they have a safe place to stay with people who care about them. And a God who has a plan for their lives.

“We have been here for three days now,” Tetyana said. “Now, we are trying to calm down and think about the future.”