
13 Country Stars Who Refuse to Hide Their Faith Even When It’s Not Popular
Country music has always worn its heart on its sleeve, and for many artists, that sleeve is stitched with scripture.
The genre may be famous for trucks, tailgates, and heartbreak anthems, but listen close and you’ll hear something deeper. Echoes of old church pews, hymns hummed by grandmothers, and prayers whispered backstage before the spotlight hits. From the Carter Family to Johnny Cash, country’s roots run straight through the Bible Belt, and a new generation of artists is proving that faith in God still belongs in the conversation, even when the world says keep it quiet.
These 13 country stars aren’t trying to fit into Hollywood molds or industry expectations. They’re believers, and they’re not afraid to say it. On stage, in interviews, and in the music that reaches millions.
1. Carrie Underwood
When Carrie Underwood sang “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” she wasn’t just cutting a hit. She was giving a testimony. In 2021, she dropped My Savior, a full-blown gospel album that paid tribute to the hymns she grew up singing. This wasn’t a career move. It was legacy work. “This is something I’ve wanted to do forever,” she said. And she meant it.
Offstage, she’s used her influence to weave faith into mainstream moments, including her rumored push for American Idol to host a “Songs of Faith” episode. Carrie doesn’t just sing about heaven. She walks like she’s headed there.
2. Reba McEntire
Reba has always been red-headed royalty in country music, but she keeps her crown at the feet of Jesus. Her 2017 double album Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope was a raw, honest look at the roots that kept her grounded. Songs like “Back to God” weren’t written for awards shows. They were written for healing.
After losing her mother in 2020, Reba leaned hard into her faith. Her 2024 single “Seven Minutes in Heaven” imagines a holy reunion, one more moment with the woman who raised her. In every era, Reba’s made it clear. The stage may be hers, but the glory goes higher.
3. Jelly Roll
Jelly Roll isn’t the polished preacher type, but don’t confuse his tattoos for rebellion. The man knows redemption better than most. After years of addiction and jail time, Jelly found God reading a Bible behind bars. In 2025, he teamed up with Brandon Lake on “Hard Fought Hallelujah,” a track that felt more like a Sunday altar call than a streaming release.
“I’m not just supposed to listen to this,” he said. “I’m supposed to live this.” That’s not marketing. That’s revival.
4. Thomas Rhett
Thomas Rhett may have grown up in the spotlight, but he’s not afraid to dim the lights and say a prayer. In 2019, he did just that at the CMT Artists of the Year ceremony, stopping mid-speech to pray for Kane Brown after the tragic loss of his drummer. It wasn’t scripted. It was soul.
He’s also collaborated with worship leaders like Chris Tomlin and Forrest Frank, proving that stadiums and sanctuaries aren’t that far apart when your heart’s in the right place.
5. Gabby Barrett
Gabby Barrett doesn’t just sing about love and loss. She sings about grace. Her sophomore album, Chapter & Verse, feels like a devotional disguised as a chart-climber. She’s got three kids under four and still finds time to stay in the Word. “It keeps me centered,” she told Taste of Country. In 2025, she joined Brandon Lake for “As for Me & My Home,” putting Joshua 24:15 into surround sound for a new generation.
6. Dolly Parton
If faith had a glittery blonde spokesperson, it’d be Dolly. Raised in the Smoky Mountains by a preacher grandfather, Dolly’s heart has always been soaked in scripture. From “Coat of Many Colors” to her gospel collabs with For King & Country and Zach Williams, she’s never been shy about who gets the credit.
Her 2023 track “Don’t Make Me Have to Come Down There” came straight from a dream, and she swears it was a message from God. When Dolly says she’s a vessel, believe her.
7. Scotty McCreery
Scotty McCreery keeps his boots planted firmly in the Word. In 2024, he dropped “Red Letter Blueprint,” a love letter to scripture that confesses he doesn’t open his Bible as often as he should, but knows where the truth lives. “My faith is everything,” he said. “It’s held me up during my lows and celebrated with me in the highs.” That kind of consistency isn’t flashy, but it’s real.
8. Bailey Zimmerman
Bailey Zimmerman stands up for his faith even when the crowd gets rowdy. At the 2025 Sand in My Boots Festival, he paused to share his testimony. “God loves you where you’re at,” he told the audience. Then he quoted scripture, not lyrics — Matthew 10:33, to be exact. The man wears his beliefs like a badge, even when the mics are hot and the drinks are flowing.
9. Luke Bryan
Luke Bryan has been through hell and clung to hope. The deaths of his brother and sister left wounds no amount of fame could heal. But it was faith that helped him walk through the grief. During a 2023 episode of American Idol, he performed “Jesus’ Bout My Kids,” a song that hits every parent in the chest. “I used to talk to my kids about Jesus,” he sings. “Now I talk to Jesus ’bout my kids.” That lyric says everything.
10. Blake Shelton
Blake Shelton doesn’t pretend to have all the answers, but since marrying Gwen Stefani, he’s been asking better questions. “I believe in God more now than I ever have,” he said. In 2025, he dropped “Let Him in Anyway,” a gut-wrenching prayer for a friend he’s not sure made it to heaven. It’s messy. It’s honest. And it sounds like the kind of wrestling most believers don’t talk about out loud.
11. Cody Johnson
Cody Johnson isn’t just singing to fill arenas. He’s preaching from the mic. During CMA Fest 2023, he paused his set to talk about dreams, grace, and Jesus. “I owe everything to my Lord and Savior,” he told the crowd. When he says music is his calling, he means it. And he’ll shout it from the stage whether the industry is comfortable with it or not.
12. Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban
They don’t often headline the faith conversation, but behind closed doors, Nicole and Keith are teaching their kids to pray. “That’s how we are raising our family,” Nicole told Vanity Fair. She was raised Catholic, and it still guides her. It’s not rigid, she says, but full of questioning and growth. Keith may be the performer, but their foundation starts with Sunday mornings.
13. Josh Turner
Josh Turner didn’t just stumble into gospel. He built his life around it. As a teen, he asked God for guidance before chasing a music career. He waited until adulthood to get baptized because he wanted to understand it first. His album I Serve a Savior isn’t just for show. It’s the soundtrack of his heart.
“My faith defines who I am,” he’s said. “And I want it to define my music too.”
Country music has always had room for the rough edges, but it’s also had space for grace. These 13 artists remind us that faith isn’t some forgotten relic of the genre’s past. It’s alive. It’s loud. And it’s unapologetic.
Because sometimes, the most outlaw thing you can do is praise God with the mic on.