In a world obsessed with luxury, headlines, and self-promotion, there’s something profoundly different about Johnny Joey Jones.

While many public figures are pouring millions into marble mansions, private jets, and tropical estates, the U.S. Marine veteran and beloved Fox News contributor is quietly investing his wealth and heart into something far greater — a sanctuary for the forgotten.
He calls it FIELD OF GRACE, a sprawling 200-acre refuge in rural Georgia that will serve as a lifeline for people society often overlooks — addicts fighting to stay clean, ex-inmates struggling to rebuild their lives, and kids who’ve grown up believing the world has no place for them.
And here’s the part that’s melting hearts nationwide: he’s funding the entire project himself. No corporate sponsors, no tax breaks, no flashy fundraisers. Just conviction, compassion, and a deep sense of purpose.
“The land used to mean success,” Jones said softly during a recent interview. “I bought it years ago thinking it would be where I built my dream home. But after everything I’ve seen — the pain, the loss, the second chances — I realized it was never meant for me. It was meant for others. It was meant for redemption.”
A PLACE WHERE PAIN MEETS PURPOSE

Johnny Joey Jones has never shied away from his scars — both physical and emotional. After losing both legs in Afghanistan, he transformed his pain into advocacy, becoming a voice for wounded veterans and a beacon of resilience for millions.
But Field of Grace marks a new chapter — one that’s less about inspiration and more about transformation.
The idea, he said, was born from the countless people he’s met who are “just trying to start over” — men and women who served time, battled addiction, or simply got lost in the noise of life.
“We live in a country that loves to cheer for comebacks but doesn’t always make room for them,” Jones reflected. “I wanted to build a place where broken people can breathe again — where therapy meets faith, and silence meets truth.”
At its core, Field of Grace will combine counseling, vocational training, and spiritual healing. Former addicts will work alongside veterans and volunteers to restore the land — planting crops, tending gardens, and building homes that will house future residents.
A chapel will sit at the center — not lavish, but humble, built with reclaimed wood from barns across Georgia. There will be a pond for fishing, trails for reflection, and quiet cabins where residents can meditate, pray, or simply be still.
“This isn’t rehab,” Jones clarified. “It’s resurrection.”
FROM THE BATTLEFIELD TO THE FIELDS OF GRACE

Those who know Jones personally say this project isn’t just another good deed — it’s the culmination of everything he’s lived through.
As a Marine bomb technician in Afghanistan, Jones faced death daily. When an IED took his legs, it also took the life he once knew. But instead of bitterness, he chose purpose. He became a motivational speaker, a Fox News analyst, and an advocate for veterans and their families.
He’s raised awareness for wounded warriors, spoken before Congress, and inspired countless Americans to see their struggles not as endings but as beginnings.
Now, with Field of Grace, he’s channeling that same resilience into a legacy that goes beyond headlines or hero worship.
“The medals will fade, the shows will end, but this — this will live on,” said longtime friend and fellow veteran Travis Mills. “Joey’s turning his pain into a place where others can heal. That’s the truest form of service.”
A REFUGE BUILT FROM THE HEART
Construction quietly began earlier this year. Bulldozers carved winding paths through pine and oak, clearing the way for small cabins and communal spaces.
Jones personally visits the site several times a week, often helping workers with the physical labor — despite his prosthetic legs. Witnesses have described seeing him in the Georgia heat, dirt on his hands, sweat on his brow, giving quiet instructions and sharing laughs with the crew.
“He doesn’t just write checks,” said site manager Carl Benton. “He works. He listens. He prays with us. He’s building this place from the ground up — literally.”
When asked why he didn’t announce the project sooner, Jones chuckled.
“Because I wasn’t doing it for attention. I was doing it for peace.”
But word spread fast. Photos of the half-finished sanctuary started circulating online, and soon hashtags like #FieldOfGrace and #RealLegacy began trending. Messages poured in from veterans, pastors, and parents thanking him for “building hope, not walls.”
“A PLACE WHERE EVERY SOUL GETS A SECOND CHANCE”
Jones envisions Field of Grace as more than a shelter — it’s a restart button for the human spirit.
Each resident will undergo a 12-month program that blends faith-based counseling with hands-on responsibility. Participants will cultivate gardens, tend animals, and take part in group therapy sessions focused on forgiveness, accountability, and rebuilding trust.
“Grace isn’t something you talk about — it’s something you live,” he said. “These folks don’t need pity. They need a purpose.”
Local churches have already pledged volunteers, and several construction companies have donated materials anonymously. There’s even talk of musicians — including some of Jones’s country music friends — holding small acoustic benefits to help expand the facilities.
But Jones insists he doesn’t want Field of Grace to become a charity brand.
“The moment it becomes about fame, it loses its soul,” he said firmly.
A LEGACY MONEY CAN’T BUY
In an era when philanthropy often doubles as publicity, Johnny Joey Jones’s humility stands out. He doesn’t flaunt his generosity; he lives it.
Fans online have described his efforts as “the purest form of redemption,” calling Field of Grace “a masterpiece of the human spirit.”
“He’s teaching us that the real American Dream isn’t about what you own,” one follower wrote on social media. “It’s about what you give back.”
And for Jones, that’s the point.
“When I look at these fields, I don’t see land,” he said. “I see the faces of people who just need someone to believe in them. I see my brothers who didn’t make it home. I see kids who never got a fair shot. This is their place now. Their home.”
WHEN REDEMPTION TAKES ROOT
If all goes according to plan, Field of Grace will open its doors in late 2026. The first residents will include recovering addicts, recently released inmates, and young adults aging out of foster care — all referred through faith-based and veteran organizations.
Counselors, clergy, and volunteers will live on-site to guide the community toward stability and renewal. There will be no clocks in the rooms — only sunlight, open fields, and the constant reminder that healing takes time.
“Grace doesn’t run on a schedule,” Jones smiled. “Neither should redemption.”
As the sun sets over the Georgia hills, the golden fields of Field of Grace already seem to whisper their message: that pain, when surrendered, can become purpose — and that purpose, when shared, can become healing.
BEYOND HEROISM
Johnny Joey Jones has been called a hero many times before — on the battlefield, in recovery, and on television. But for those who know the story behind Field of Grace, this act might define him most.
It’s not about medals or microphones. It’s about building a home for the hearts that the world forgot.
In a time when headlines often glorify the loudest voices and the richest pockets, Jones’s quiet mission stands as a reminder: the truest legacies are built not from stone or steel — but from compassion, faith, and the courage to rebuild what others have given up on.
“This isn’t about me,” Jones said as he looked out over the land. “It’s about all of us — proving that grace is still alive.”
And maybe, just maybe, that’s the kind of story America needs right now — one man trading luxury for love, fame for faith, and pain for purpose.
FIELD OF GRACE.
Where redemption finds a home.
Where silence meets truth.
Where broken souls rise again.