The Rolling Stones
Communion → Return
Dream 6434 — October 29, 2025
During a night dream on October 29, 2025, I saw a song title appear clearly on my phone. There was no surrounding imagery or narrative—only the title itself, presented as something available to be activated.
The lyric was received as a symbolic phrase rather than a commentary on music. Interpretation followed waking discernment.
"It's only rock and roll, but I like it."
— It's Only Rock and Roll
(Lyrics © Mick Jagger & Keith Richards — brief excerpt used under fair use for commentary)
The Spirit framed the lyric as an affectionate invitation rather than a critique.
"Rock and roll" was not received as entertainment, but as movement and sound offered relationally—prayer, worship, and simple communion. The phrase "but I like it" carried approval, not evaluation.
The message was not about performance or refinement. It was about presence.
The encounter communicated longing rather than correction. What was being invited was a return to rhythm—unforced, relational, and sincere.
When God speaks through a lyric, the lyric is never the doctrine.
God may use a lyric or phrase to capture attention, but He alone defines the meaning. The fragment is a signpost, not a source.
"Let Me hear your voice, for your voice is sweet to Me."
— Song of Songs 2:14
Scripture clarifies the tone of the encounter: God delights in simple, genuine communion.
Resume prayer without pressure. Return to sound, silence, or song as relationship rather than discipline. When communion feels distant, remember it is always one response away.
Fair Use Notice: The brief lyric excerpt is used for commentary, interpretation, and theological reflection under fair use (17 U.S.C. § 107). No endorsement by or affiliation with the original artist or rights holder is claimed or implied.