In a world of hurting people, every Christ follower is called to be on mission with God each day. 

In an hour, a day or few days, you can have a tangible impact by using your gifts and talents for God's purpose. Every person has a role in God's kingdom, and Texans on Mission wants to help you find it today. As a Texans on Mission volunteer, you can deliver help, hope and healing to people who desperately need it.


Serve after disasters

By volunteering for a day, you are directly delivering help, hope and healing to people after disasters. Whether you're clearing debris, cleaning out a house or praying with a homeowner, you will transform a life. Click here to learn more.

 


Provide First Step Kits for people in crisis

Every journey out of dark days starts with a first step. By putting together First Step Kits – hygiene kits for people in crisis – you can meet basic needs for people who don't know where to turn for help or hope. When Texans on Mission volunteers distribute First Step Kits, they provide a place for both. Click here to learn more.


Send Messages of Hope to people who have been through disasters

When a disaster strikes, people don't know where to turn for help. They don't know who to trust. When a Texans on Mission volunteer connects with them for the first time with a Message of Hope crafted by you, hope sprouts fresh. Find out how you can radically change a life with a simple piece of paper. Click here to learn more.

 

 


Create Gospel bracelets to help share the salvation message around the world.

In northern Uganda and beyond, Texans on Mission seeks to provide everyone with access to clean water and the gospel. You can make a Gold-to-Gold Gospel Bracelet to be worn to share the Gospel around the world. Perfect for your small group, Bible study or youth groups, each Gold-to-Gold Gospel Bracelet you create will share the redemption story of Jesus Christ with everyone who sees it. Click here to learn more.


Donate supplies for people to use after disasters.

When a disaster strikes, people have often lost everything, including items they'd typically have to begin cleaning up. You can jump start the recovery process for someone by providing these items through Texans on Mission Disaster Relief. Click here to learn more.


Read news and stories about Service Projects

Boys and girls in Carrollton use their wheels to raise money for TBM Disaster Relief

CARROLLTON – Almost 30 years ago, kids at First Baptist Church at The Fields began riding in circles once a year to raise money for Christian missions through TBM. A new generation is keeping the practice alive, recently raising $2,801 for TBM Disaster Relief in one evening.

The annual Wheel-a-Thon in Carrollton involves children getting pledges for how many laps they can make around a church parking lot. Eight laps equal one mile. Participants can ride anything with wheels – bicycles, in-line skates, scooters, etc. Or they can walk.

Thirty-five to 40 children participated this year, with one boy riding 62 laps on a bicycle in 50 minutes, said Mark Forester, church Royal Ambassadors director.

RAs is a mission discipleship organization for boys in grades 1-6. It promotes growth by developing biblical character in all aspects of life, according to materials produced by TBM, a ministry to meet physical and spiritual needs in Texas and around the world. RA leaders use activities to help boys learn about God’s mission and understand how they are part of it.

The Wheel-a-Thon was not just about raising money, Forester said. “It gets the kids thinking about something else outside of themselves, … about helping other people in Jesus’ name.”

Savion Lee, TBM state RA coordinator, said the Carrollton event is ”special because it connects the RAs with their local church body.” It helps church members learn about RAs and the group’s missions involvement.

Lee and Ryan Lenamon, TBM director of donor relations, spoke to the children the following week about TBM’s varied ministries to help people in need and to share the good news of hope through Christ.

“Discipleship events such as these are critical to our youth,” said Lenamon. “These are the future leaders of our country and our world. Discipleship matters. If discipleship doesn’t come from the church, it will come from somewhere else.”

Forester started the Wheel-a-Thon in 1993, and one of the RA leaders, the son-in-law of Bob Dixon (then TBM executive director) recommended the money raised be given to TBM Disaster Relief. After the event, Dixon attended a RA chapter meeting to receive a cardboard check celebrating the amount raised. The church has held the event every year since, except for 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Wheel-a-Thon used to be for the boys in RAs. Since moving to a new church location in 2019, the girls in GAs joined in and the younger boys and girls in Mission Friends joined in this year. One of the Mission Friends boys raised $500 for the cause, Forester said.

The RA and GA leaders also added some competition to the mix this year. Lainie Applegate, the GA director, got a pie in the face Nov. 9 because the boys out raised the girls by $100.

“I am so thankful that our boys and girls had the opportunity to learn about TBM and how to support their mission efforts,” Applegate said. “I love teaching children that hard work and serving others can be fun!”

As for the RAs, a team of several men lead the Carrollton group, Forester said. He noted that “things have changed with RAs” through the years. “You have to adapt.” The boys are “no longer into the book work because they do book work all day.” Instead, the RAs focus on activities such as campcraft and archery. “There is a spiritual application with anything we do, and that is what the boys remember” – application linked to activities.