When disasters strike, the Church is on the front lines of response and relief efforts.
THE MISSION
Praying Pelican Missions exists to build up, encourage, and assist the local Church, and that includes doing so in a church’s greatest time of need. When disasters strike, the Church is on the front lines of response and relief efforts, working with local authorities and organizing grassroots efforts to meet the pressing needs of their communities. Praying Pelican Missions is committed to coming alongside these efforts, providing the necessary resources, support, and help to advance the work of our local partners.
Over the course of the past five years, Praying Pelican Missions has supported church partners through numerous natural disasters including hurricanes, flooding, and earthquakes. Through the generous donations of our network, we have been able to provide essential supplies like bottled water, food, tarps, sandbags, generators, chainsaws, and whatever else is needed. Throughout the recovery process, PPM also provides support through our volunteers that provide countless hours of debris cleanup, rebuilding, roof replacement, food distribution, prayer ministry, and more.
It is our goal to be ready to respond in the event of a natural disaster in order to best serve our partners quickly. To learn more about your church becoming a disaster response partner, please fill out the contact form to the right and one of our Mission Consultants will connect with you!
WAYS TO GET INVOLVED
JOIN THE READINESS TEAM
As soon as PPM is poised and ready to bring in assistance to an area, you can join our Readiness Team to serve alongside the local church and community leaders as soon as possible after a disaster strikes.
BE A PART OF LONG-TERM RESPONSE
At PPM, it is never our desire to drop into a community for a few weeks and then move on. We want to put down roots and stay in these communities for years, assisting in the long-term. You can bring a team to join us in any of our locations still completing long-term response, years after a natural disaster.