A Genre. A Standard. A Flag.

Redeemed
Country

Music of complete surrender — where God is not a supporting character in a human story, but the subject, the focal point, and destination of the music.

Redeemed Country. I didn't set out to create a genre. I set out to make music that was honest about what I believe — that Christ is not a supporting character in your life story. He is the author of it.

But when I went looking for music that reflected that conviction, I kept finding one of two things: country music that tips its hat at God between the tailgate and the heartbreak, or Christian music that feels more like a motivational seminar than an encounter with the living God.

The gap was real. And it had a name waiting to be given to it.

There is a difference between acknowledging God and surrendering to God.

Redeemed Country is music of complete surrender — where God is not a supporting character in a human story, but the subject, the focal point, and destination of the music.

That's the standard. That's the flag.

— Thomas · Maverick at the Cross

There is country music that acknowledges God.
Redeemed Country surrenders to Him.
One tips the hat. One bends the knee.

Redeemed Country isn't a subgenre of country music with a Christian theme bolted on. It's a subgenre of Christian music where country is the sonic vehicle — Christian is the foundation, country is the tool.

What Makes a Song
Redeemed Country

This describes the heart of an artist's catalog, not a pass/fail test on every individual song. A song qualifies when it meets the criteria below. An artist qualifies when the majority of their catalog does — there's room for songs that don't carry this weight without pulling the artist out of the genre.

A Redeemed Country Song Must

  1. Center on God as the main character — Christ, Lord, God, His attributes, the Spirit, the Word, faith, or surrender driving the song, not decorating it. Words optional; intention unmistakable.
  2. Be rooted in Scripture — biblical truth, not inspirational sentiment.
  3. Use country as the sonic vehicle — authentically country in instrumentation and production.
  4. Hold a high view of God — sovereign, holy, worthy, not a cosmic helper.
  5. Speak to the daily walk — real life, real struggle, real faith.
  6. Refuse to excuse sin — country life is the setting, not the justification.
  7. Point the listener upward — closer to Christ than when it started.
  8. Have real meat — leaves the listener thinking deeper, walking closer, trusting more, or moved to act on the Word.
  9. Reflect genuine faith, not marketed faith.

A Redeemed Country Song Must Not

  • Excuse sin as "it's just the way we are" or "we're all just human."
  • Use Christ or faith as a secondary theme or decoration.
  • Prioritize country lifestyle over Christ.

Every song in this genre stands on Calvary, whether or not the Cross is named in the lyric — without the atonement, there is no redeemed anything. That's the theology underneath the standard, not a line every song has to recite.

Listen

Follow the Redeemed Country playlist on Spotify — songs that meet the standard. Then follow Maverick at the Cross for new music as it drops.

Christian First. Country Second. Follow on Spotify

Artists

Read the standard. If your music lives here, you're Redeemed Country. Connect with us — let's build something amazing for God.

Connect With Us

Maverick at the Cross is a founding Redeemed Country artist.

Hear the Music