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Home WORLD NEWS

Texans on Mission share Jesus in wake of Oklahoma wildfires

Sphere Word by Sphere Word
April 6, 2025
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Texans on Mission share Jesus in wake of Oklahoma wildfires
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By Taryn Johnson and Russ Dilday, Texans on Mission Sunday, April 06, 2025
Volunteers with Texans on Mission clean up debris after a wildfire devestated homes in Stillwater, Oklahoma, in March 2025.
Volunteers with Texans on Mission clean up debris after a wildfire devestated homes in Stillwater, Oklahoma, in March 2025. | Texans on Mission/Taryn Johnson

STILLWATER, Okla. — Wednesday marked the final full day of Texans on Mission’s two-week-long response to the wildfires that tore through Stillwater in mid-March, affecting about 200 homes in the area, including 96 in Stillwater and 74 campers at nearby Lake Carl Blackwell.

While TXM teams battled high winds and blowing ash as they helped survivors sift through the ashes for valuables, the final day was markedly different. A series of stormfronts dumped rain on the crews, turning the ash into a fine mud that caked onto their protective suits as they worked.

Ernest McNabb was unit leader for the TXM Disaster Relief team, working primarily with members of Paramount Baptist Church in Amarillo. He said his team is responding to a fire scene that is “really kind of crazy.”

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“The fires that came through here in Oklahoma, in this area, they acted like a ball of fire that was just bouncing around from house to house,” he explained. “And it [the fire] would just land on a house and burn it down, and then it would move on to another house.”

McNabb said responding TXM teams have “been cleaning up the ash and getting the metal and stuff out of it. It’s just really a mess. These people, they lost everything.”

“The volunteers … work in the mud and in the ash and in the rain … just trying to salvage a little memento or two,” he said. The volunteers find some treasured items, “but most of it just burned up.”

In addition to cleaning homesites, the team has also been clearing burned trees. “In the week or so we’ve been here, we’ve probably cut down 120, 130 trees that have burned up,” McNabb said. “So it’s a lot of cleaning up, getting them ready to rebuild, and a lot of tree trimming.

“And it’s really, really sad,” McNabb said.

When asked about the impact on survivors of the fires, Amarillo team member David Pinales, a retired firefighter, became emotional.

“Well, I heard about the fires, but I had no idea that it was to this extent,” he said. “This is my first full year of deployment … and this has been a real eye-opening.”

He paused, choked with emotion, before continuing: “It’s a real eye-opener. I can’t imagine what these people think, and I can’t imagine what the people living next door to all this devastation must feel. You know, all their neighbors and friends that quite possibly may not even move back.

“Lives have definitely been changed for a long time,” Pinales said, “and I’m just really happy that maybe through the little bit of work that we do that we can give them a little bit of hope. I’m really thankful that the Lord is able to use us to do that.

“And we may never say one word to them, but when they come and they see what we have done, we’re hoping that they see the love of Jesus through that work.”

For volunteers Rhetta and R.J. Rogers of Lubbock, the experience has also been “amazing,” with a twist. The couple is on their first-ever TXM deployment.

“I was retiring, and I needed to find something to do,” R.J. said.

A friend at church, Brad, who operates a TXM skid steer, recommended R.J. consider volunteering for disaster relief, and he signed up. Then Rhetta retired the day before they departed for Oklahoma.

Rhetta had been a hairstylist for 48 years and didn’t plan to retire. “I thought I would do it until I was 100 because I loved it,” she said. “And so then he found this and I thought, ‘Oh, I could do that.’

“I retired on Thursday, and we deployed out on Friday, and I think it’s so cool to be deployed.”

She called the fire’s impact “amazing how fires just jump around different houses. [Someone] was telling me a while ago that the family in this house said it was like a giant fireball, that it was just a ball that bounced from house to house.

“I feel so sorry for them and glad that we can be here to at least share our faith and spirit,” she said. “And my spirit’s been so blessed.”

McNabb called the volunteer response “our calling to help people in need, and it doesn’t make any difference where they are, what the situation is, we’re willing to be the hands and feet of Christ and come up and serve.

“As one of our chaplains told us the other day,” McNabb quoted, “‘We’re also the voice of Christ, so we get to talk to homeowners and witness to them and tell them that, you know, Christ still loves them and that things will be better.’”

Texans on Mission empowers Christians to take on the biggest challenges around the globe. Since 1967, volunteers have delivered help, hope and healing to millions of hurting people and raising up the next generation to do likewise. The organization has helped start and train disaster relief groups in all 50 states, giving birth to the third-largest disaster relief network in the nation.

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By Taryn Johnson and Russ Dilday, Texans on Mission Sunday, April 06, 2025
Volunteers with Texans on Mission clean up debris after a wildfire devestated homes in Stillwater, Oklahoma, in March 2025.
Volunteers with Texans on Mission clean up debris after a wildfire devestated homes in Stillwater, Oklahoma, in March 2025. | Texans on Mission/Taryn Johnson

STILLWATER, Okla. — Wednesday marked the final full day of Texans on Mission’s two-week-long response to the wildfires that tore through Stillwater in mid-March, affecting about 200 homes in the area, including 96 in Stillwater and 74 campers at nearby Lake Carl Blackwell.

While TXM teams battled high winds and blowing ash as they helped survivors sift through the ashes for valuables, the final day was markedly different. A series of stormfronts dumped rain on the crews, turning the ash into a fine mud that caked onto their protective suits as they worked.

Ernest McNabb was unit leader for the TXM Disaster Relief team, working primarily with members of Paramount Baptist Church in Amarillo. He said his team is responding to a fire scene that is “really kind of crazy.”

Get Our Latest News for FREE

Subscribe to get daily/weekly email with the top stories (plus special offers!) from The Christian Post. Be the first to know.

“The fires that came through here in Oklahoma, in this area, they acted like a ball of fire that was just bouncing around from house to house,” he explained. “And it [the fire] would just land on a house and burn it down, and then it would move on to another house.”

McNabb said responding TXM teams have “been cleaning up the ash and getting the metal and stuff out of it. It’s just really a mess. These people, they lost everything.”

“The volunteers … work in the mud and in the ash and in the rain … just trying to salvage a little memento or two,” he said. The volunteers find some treasured items, “but most of it just burned up.”

In addition to cleaning homesites, the team has also been clearing burned trees. “In the week or so we’ve been here, we’ve probably cut down 120, 130 trees that have burned up,” McNabb said. “So it’s a lot of cleaning up, getting them ready to rebuild, and a lot of tree trimming.

“And it’s really, really sad,” McNabb said.

When asked about the impact on survivors of the fires, Amarillo team member David Pinales, a retired firefighter, became emotional.

“Well, I heard about the fires, but I had no idea that it was to this extent,” he said. “This is my first full year of deployment … and this has been a real eye-opening.”

He paused, choked with emotion, before continuing: “It’s a real eye-opener. I can’t imagine what these people think, and I can’t imagine what the people living next door to all this devastation must feel. You know, all their neighbors and friends that quite possibly may not even move back.

“Lives have definitely been changed for a long time,” Pinales said, “and I’m just really happy that maybe through the little bit of work that we do that we can give them a little bit of hope. I’m really thankful that the Lord is able to use us to do that.

“And we may never say one word to them, but when they come and they see what we have done, we’re hoping that they see the love of Jesus through that work.”

For volunteers Rhetta and R.J. Rogers of Lubbock, the experience has also been “amazing,” with a twist. The couple is on their first-ever TXM deployment.

“I was retiring, and I needed to find something to do,” R.J. said.

A friend at church, Brad, who operates a TXM skid steer, recommended R.J. consider volunteering for disaster relief, and he signed up. Then Rhetta retired the day before they departed for Oklahoma.

Rhetta had been a hairstylist for 48 years and didn’t plan to retire. “I thought I would do it until I was 100 because I loved it,” she said. “And so then he found this and I thought, ‘Oh, I could do that.’

“I retired on Thursday, and we deployed out on Friday, and I think it’s so cool to be deployed.”

She called the fire’s impact “amazing how fires just jump around different houses. [Someone] was telling me a while ago that the family in this house said it was like a giant fireball, that it was just a ball that bounced from house to house.

“I feel so sorry for them and glad that we can be here to at least share our faith and spirit,” she said. “And my spirit’s been so blessed.”

McNabb called the volunteer response “our calling to help people in need, and it doesn’t make any difference where they are, what the situation is, we’re willing to be the hands and feet of Christ and come up and serve.

“As one of our chaplains told us the other day,” McNabb quoted, “‘We’re also the voice of Christ, so we get to talk to homeowners and witness to them and tell them that, you know, Christ still loves them and that things will be better.’”

Texans on Mission empowers Christians to take on the biggest challenges around the globe. Since 1967, volunteers have delivered help, hope and healing to millions of hurting people and raising up the next generation to do likewise. The organization has helped start and train disaster relief groups in all 50 states, giving birth to the third-largest disaster relief network in the nation.

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