Southern Baptist Disaster Relief volunteer Jason Yarbrough kicked off his first year as state disaster relief director for the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma by attending the annual SBDR roundtable Jan. 24–26 at North Jacksonville Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Florida.
Yarbrough was one of 38 state SBDR directors, out of 42 state Baptist conventions, who gathered to review the past year’s work and to discuss plans for the future. The directors joined with about 200 leaders and volunteers who took part in committee meetings and a variety of training and information sessions.
The former pastor of 11 years and member of Glenpool First Baptist of Glenpool, Oklahoma, Yarbrough just began serving as his state’s SBDR director Jan. 1. He attended the new state directors’ orientation breakout group at his very first roundtable.
Yarbrough is looking forward to serving and to future opportunities with SBDR.
“I will key in on building relationships with our pastors, directors of missions and associations and share with our local churches to come and be a part of us,” he said.
Sharing in enthusiasm
Many shared in the spirit of Yarbrough’s enthusiasm, such as fellow state director Scottie Stice, SBDR director for the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention and outgoing chair of the SBDR’s steering committee.
Stice is excited about the strengthening of relationships between the state leaders and national leaders such as Send Relief, the joint compassion ministry arm of the North American Mission Board and the International Mission Board. Send Relief comes alongside SBDR efforts and provides recovery resources and food to support its ministries to disaster survivors.
“We’ve got the best relationships now since I’ve been in DR,” said Stice, who began serving in disaster relief in 1984 with Texas Baptist Men.
“Our main goal is for continued growth of the partnerships we already have,” said Stice who has served for the past three years on SBDR’s steering committee. He has served as state director of disaster relief for SBTC since 2014.
Those partnerships were exemplified in the SBDR’s response after Hurricane Ian hit Florida, he said.
“All resources from our state are available for Florida, and I’m looking for Florida to have a win,” Stice added.
Send Relief’s crisis response director, Coy Webb, agreed and said the roundtable meeting was very positive. He looks forward to growing current partnerships and to building on SBDR’s rich legacy.
“The future is bright. We are in a great time. Our unity is as strong as it’s ever been,” Webb said.
“We’re growing in our understanding in how we work best together, and God is doing some really good things.”
Webb joined the feeding committee meeting which was attended by about 50 roundtable participants who came from all six SBDR regions with representatives from several states.
Karen Smith, SBDR feeding committee national chair, led the group and said she felt a sense of excitement during the meeting.
“This is the biggest committee meeting we’ve had since I’ve come to a roundtable,” said Smith, who has attended about 16 roundtables. Smith of Pleasant View Baptist in Waynesburg, Kentucky, is also feeding coordinator of Kentucky Baptist SBDR and has been a volunteer for 28 years.
The feeding committee is working on a more precise plan to use all the equipment such as forklifts, freezer trailers, kitchens and dry storage that God has provided to our state conventions, she said.
“I came away from our committee meeting, workshops and our roundtable itself with a sense of unity to do God’s work together,” Smith said.
“We are ready to go when He calls,” she said.
Working in faith
The Rapid/Quick strike response to disaster session also had a high attendance with all six SDBR regions represented by several states from North Carolina, Alaska and Vermont to Hawaii.
Dwain Carter, director of Mobilization and Disaster Relief of Georgia SBDR, led the group of about 50 who listened to presentations from region leaders.
The group discussed all types of responses to mass floodings, tornadoes and hurricanes to earthquakes.
“Mass flooding will be an event that every state sooner or later will experience,” Carter noted.
But state director Dennis Belz of Colorado Baptist Disaster Relief reminded volunteers to be ready to respond to all types of situations, unexpected and out of the box ones.
For example, he said his SBDR group in Denver is now considered as “the experts” at graffiti removal after helping with cleanup after the civil unrest in 2020 in the city.
“(The cleanup) gave us an opportunity to get in the community and share the gospel,” said Belz of Reclamation Church in East Boulder.
Tommy Green, executive director-treasurer of the Florida Baptist Convention expressed his appreciation to the group for SBDR’s response to Hurricane Ian when it devastated southwest Florida in September.
SBDR volunteers gave 248,000 hours and served 735,000 meals, he shared.
“You came, and you came big, and you helped us,” said Green. “You brought the love and compassion of Christ, and we thank you.”
See related story on Southern Baptist compassion ministry efforts.
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Laura Sikes and originally published by North American Mission Board.