Most artists spend their success building mansions.
Brandon Lake is building something else — a refuge.
In a quiet corner of South Carolina, surrounded by open fields and unpolished fences, sits a project unlike anything the Christian music world has seen before.
It’s called Field of Grace, and it’s not a concert venue, not a retreat center — but a home for healing.
Funded entirely by Brandon himself, Field of Grace will serve as a sanctuary for recovering addicts, ex-inmates, and kids who feel forgotten by the world.
It’s his boldest project yet — not a stage, but a second chance.

From Pain to Purpose
For Brandon, this isn’t charity — it’s testimony.
He’s been open about his own battles with burnout, anxiety, and the pressures of fame.
“I don’t think people realize how close I came to walking away from music,” he said in a recent interview.
“But God reminded me — your platform isn’t the purpose. The people are.”
Those words became the seed of Field of Grace.
A place where therapy meets worship, silence meets truth, and shame is met with grace.
“I wanted to build something that wouldn’t glorify me,” Brandon said.
“I wanted to build something that could outlive me.”

The Land That Almost Broke Him
The story began with a piece of farmland that Brandon had purchased years ago — at the time, he saw it as an investment, maybe a family property.
But over time, the land became something more symbolic.
“When I hit my lowest point,” he shared, “I’d go out there, sit under the trees, and just talk to God. I realized this wasn’t supposed to be a home for me — it was meant to be a home for others.”
That shift changed everything.
The farm that once represented success now represents redemption.
A New Kind of Worship
What’s different about Field of Grace is its heart.
It’s not just a shelter — it’s a spiritual ecosystem.
Each resident will have access to counseling, recovery programs, and, most uniquely, music therapy — guided by worship sessions, songwriting workshops, and quiet reflection.
Brandon hopes to host small acoustic gatherings on-site — not ticketed shows, but intimate circles of worship.
“The goal isn’t applause,” he said.
“It’s healing.”
A Legacy That Outlasts Fame
Fans have already begun calling Field of Grace his real legacy.
Because while awards gather dust and records fade, this — this will continue to change lives.
One supporter wrote online:
“Brandon isn’t just singing about grace anymore. He’s building it.”
For an artist whose songs have filled arenas and healed countless hearts, it seems fitting that his next chapter wouldn’t be louder — just deeper.
“I think God’s dream for us isn’t bigger stages,” Brandon said.
“It’s bigger hearts.”
And maybe that’s what Field of Grace really is —
not a place, but a prayer turned into earth and timber.
A house he didn’t build for himself — but for everyone who needs to remember they’re still loved.