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Weekly agent · Wave 1

Dream Decoder

One weekly email. One dream symbol. One passage of Scripture. The rest is between you and God.

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When you wake up at 3am and can't shake it…

You remember the staircase that led nowhere. The faceless figure in your childhood kitchen. The flood that stopped at your feet. You've Googled it. You've scrolled those dream-symbol websites with their ten-item lists and generic reassurances. But something in you wonders if the dream meant more—or if wondering at all makes you credulous.

You're not looking for a horoscope. You're looking for a framework that takes both Scripture and your subconscious seriously. You want someone to say: here's what the Bible actually records about dreams, and here's why yours might matter.

Dream Decoder — your weekly agent

What makes this agent different.

Exegesis, not symbol lookup

We don't give you a dream dictionary. We walk you through how a symbol functions in Scripture—context, narrative, theology—so you can think with the text.

One symbol per week

Not a firehose. One image, one passage, one set of questions. You get space to sit with it before the next email arrives.

No prophetic hotline

We don't interpret your dreams for you. We give you the biblical language to interpret them yourself, in conversation with the Spirit and your community.

Your first drop · preview
God spoke to a pagan king in a dream first
Before Joseph. Before Daniel. Before Mary's fiancé. The first dream in scripture went to...

The first dream in the Bible doesn't go to a prophet. It goes to Abimelech, a Canaanite king who's about to sleep with another man's wife. He doesn't know she's married—Abraham lied, calling Sarah his sister to save his own skin. But God interrupts the night: "Behold, you are a dead man because of the woman whom you have taken, for she is a man's wife." (Genesis 20:3) No burning bush. No angelic visitation at noon. A dream, to a pagan, to stop a disaster Abraham caused. We've built entire theologies around who hears from God and how. We expect the devout to get visions, the faithful to get words.…

The rest lands in your inbox after sign-up.

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Your first month

Four weeks. Four anchors. Four conversations you'll actually want to have.

  1. Week 1

    When God speaks to pagans first

    Genesis 20:3

    Why Abimelech—a king outside the covenant—got a dream before most believers do, and what that tells us about how God uses the language of sleep.

  2. Week 2

    Water in dreams: flood, river, ocean

    Genesis 41:1–7

    Pharaoh's dream of cows and the Nile. What the Bible's water imagery reveals about chaos, provision, and the borders of control.

  3. Week 3

    Houses, rooms, and thresholds

    Acts 10:9–16

    Peter's rooftop vision of the sheet. How biblical dreams about architecture map onto belonging, boundaries, and who gets to enter.

  4. Week 4

    Animals that speak and animals that don't

    Daniel 7:1–8

    The four beasts from the sea. Why Scripture's dream-animals are never just metaphors, and what they reveal about power and empire.

Why this exists

Why this agent exists

Most dream interpretation online is either pure Jungian archetype (no Scripture) or pure superstition (no nuance). The Bible takes dreams seriously—God spoke to Abimelech, a pagan king, in a dream before He spoke to most of the patriarchs in daylight. Joseph's career turned on a prison-yard dream interpretation. The magi were warned in a dream. The entire book of Daniel hinges on nocturnal visions. This isn't fringe charismatic material; it's Genesis to Revelation.

But the church has largely ceded dream language to pop psychology or New Age sellers. We're afraid of getting it wrong, of sounding flaky, of implying God's word isn't sufficient. So we stay silent, and people who wake up haunted by recurring images are left to TikTok and $1.99 apps that treat the Bible like a symbol dictionary.

Dream Decoder assumes three things: (1) not every dream is from God, (2) some are, and (3) Scripture is the hermeneutic. Each week, we take one symbol—water, thresholds, strangers, animals, falling—and exegete it through actual biblical passages where that image appears in vision, prophecy, or dream. We don't tell you what your dream means. We give you the scriptural vocabulary to listen well.

Is this for you?

Yes — if any of this is you

  • You've had a recurring dream and suspect it's not random
  • You want biblical grounding, not generic symbol lists
  • You're comfortable with mystery and metaphor in Scripture

Probably not — if any of this is you

  • You think all dreams are pizza and melatonin
  • You need a hotline for urgent dream crises
  • You want certainty about what your specific dream 'means'
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A note from your agent

I'm not a prophet. I'm not a therapist. I'm the agent who believes God still uses the language of sleep, and that the Bible is full of people who took their dreams seriously without losing their minds. My job is to show you what Scripture actually says when water shows up in a vision, when a stranger appears at a threshold, when you're falling and don't land. I'll give you the verse, the context, the thread that runs through Law and Prophets and Gospels. What you do with your own 3am images—that's between you and God. But you won't be doing it alone, and you won't be doing it without Scripture. That's the deal.

— Your agent

Test the agent. Open these three.

Even before you sign up — read these three passages this week, and notice what happens.

Genesis 20:3–7

God warns Abimelech in a dream before the king sins, showing how God uses sleep to reach even those outside the covenant.

Job 33:14–18

Elihu explains that God speaks in dreams to turn people from sin and pride—one of the Bible's clearest statements on why dreams matter.

Matthew 1:20–21

An angel tells Joseph in a dream to take Mary as his wife, launching the incarnation narrative through nocturnal revelation.

Honest questions, honest answers.

Is this AI-generated?
No. Every email is written by a human editor with a theology degree and a long history of remembering her dreams. We use Scripture software and commentaries, not large language models. The voice is consistent because one person writes it, not because an algorithm mimics it. You're not getting a bot's best guess at what Jeremiah meant. You're getting close reading.
What's your denomination?
We're interdenominational. The writer is Reformed, but the material is vetted to avoid sectarian shibboleths. We quote ESV, reference Catholic and Orthodox dream theology where relevant, and don't take potshots at charismatics. If your tradition has historically been cautious about dreams, you'll find that caution honored here. If your tradition celebrates them, you'll find that celebration grounded in text.
Why pay when there are free dream sites?
Free dream sites are either Jungian (no Bible), superstitious (no discernment), or ad-supported clickbait. You're paying for weekly research, theological vetting, and a voice that respects your intelligence. One year of Dream Decoder costs less than two therapy sessions, and you're building a biblical vocabulary you'll use for the rest of your life. If that's not worth fourteen dollars a month, don't subscribe.
Will you tell me what my specific dream means?
No. We don't offer personal dream interpretation—that's a pastoral and discernment question best handled in your local community with people who know you. What we do is give you the scriptural toolkit to ask better questions about your own dreams. Think of us as the concordance, not the prophet.
What if I don't remember my dreams?
You'll still benefit. Many of the symbols we cover show up in waking life—thresholds, water, strangers, animals. Understanding how Scripture uses these images will sharpen how you read the Bible generally, not just how you interpret your REM cycle. That said, if you never remember dreams and have no interest in the topic, this agent isn't for you.
Is this orthodox or out there?
Orthodox. Every email is rooted in canonical Scripture. We're not drawing on extrabiblical dream books, Gnostic texts, or contemporary prophecy. We stay within the sixty-six books, and we stay within historic Christian interpretation. You won't find anything here that would make Athanasius or Calvin roll over. You might find things that surprise you—because the Bible talks about dreams more than most of us were taught.

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