Roku / Religion & Spirituality / REDEEMING GRACE TV
REVIEW
Redeeming Grace TV is a stewardship-minded faith channel that asks the viewer to bring their own context.
A free Roku channel from Profitable Stewardship Inc., live since late 2025. The catalogue is faith-oriented; the store listing leaves almost everything else to the install.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Redeeming Grace TV
PROFITABLE STEWARDSHIP INC
OUR SCORE
6.7
ROKU
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Faith channels on Roku divide into a few clear camps. The national broadcasters — TBN, Daystar, the larger denominational networks — show up with marquee art and a full description. The single-ministry channels carry one congregation’s broadcast and assume the viewer already knows the name. And then there is a third tier: small faith-adjacent operations that file a channel into the Roku store, fund it from donations rather than advertising, and let the catalogue speak for itself.
Redeeming Grace TV, from a developer styled Profitable Stewardship Inc., sits in that third camp. The channel went live in November 2025, was last updated in March 2026, and is free to install with no advertising and no in-app purchases. The developer name does most of the editorial work the listing does not — the framing is faith filtered through a stewardship lens, which is a recognisable register inside the Christian media tradition without being tied to any one congregation.
A faith channel that takes the no-ads, no-subscription path is making a statement about how it expects to be funded, before a single sermon plays. That is the most informative thing about Redeeming Grace TV from the outside, and it is worth saying out loud before anyone treats the empty description field as the whole story.
A faith channel that takes the no-ads, no-subscription path is making a statement about how it expects to be funded, before a single sermon plays.
FEATURES
Redeeming Grace TV sits in the faith category on the Roku Channel Store, published by Profitable Stewardship Inc. It went live on 6 November 2025 and was last updated on 25 March 2026 — a four-month maintenance window that puts it inside the active half of the small-ministry channel cohort. The channel is free to install with no in-app purchases and no platform-flagged advertising.
Two phone-aspect screenshots are visible on the Roku listing. There is no tablet capture, no marquee featured image, and no published long-form description or short description. The viewer scrolling the Faith category on a 65-inch TV is essentially being asked to take the install on the developer's name and the category badge alone.
Playback runs through Roku's standard video pipeline, which means resume, pause, and the platform's 10-second skip behave the way they do across the rest of the catalogue. There is no sign-in, no account, and no profile carried between sessions — the channel is install-and-watch, the way faith channels of this scale almost always are.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The funding posture is the clearest statement the channel makes. A faith channel that ships free, with no advertising flag and no in-app purchase, is choosing donor support over the commercial path most non-denominational streamers take. For viewers who object to mid-sermon ad breaks — and that is a real constituency inside the faith audience on Roku — the absence is worth something.
The maintenance cadence is the second quiet win. A March 2026 update on a channel launched in November 2025 is the right rhythm for a small operation: long enough to ship considered changes, short enough that the channel is clearly still on someone's desk. Many faith channels on Roku ship once and then drift; this one has not.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The store listing is the obvious weakness. With no description text and no marquee image, a cold visitor in the Faith category has nothing to anchor the install decision to. Two screenshots and a developer name are doing work the listing should be doing in prose. A two-sentence description, a one-line mission statement, and a featured image would change the discovery story without changing the channel itself.
The five-star average rating sits inside a Roku data caveat that is worth naming directly. Review counts on the platform are sparse, and an unblemished score on a young channel almost always reflects a small handful of early supporters rather than a verdict at scale. Treat it as encouragement, not as evidence — and watch what the rating does once a wider audience finds the channel.
CONCLUSION
Redeeming Grace TV is the kind of channel that lives or dies by what plays once the viewer presses install. The funding model is honest, the maintenance is real, and the developer name suggests a stewardship-and-faith framing rather than a single-pastor broadcast. If you arrived from a referral inside that community, the price and the cadence are both in your favour. If you are browsing the Faith aisle cold, give the listing another season to fill out before you commit a tile on the home screen.