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A LITTLE SEASON (Country Ballad) This song is a plainspoken walk through a phrase a lot of people read right past in Revelation 20: “a little season.” It’s the part of the prophecy that comes after the thousand years are “fulfilled,” when the adversary is loosed for a little season and the text says he goes back to doing what he does best: deceiving the nations. “A Little Season” isn’t written to sell dates, push charts, or start arguments. It’s written to do something simpler: to slow down and read the passage the way it’s actually written—bound, shut up, sealed… no deceiving… then loosed… then deception returns… then Gog and Magog gather… then the camp of the saints is surrounded… and then fire comes down from heaven. The chorus is built around that sequence on purpose, because the order matters. The heart of the song is this question: If the Bible says there’s a “little season,” then somebody has to be living in it when it happens. And if deception is the defining feature, it makes sense that it would look like layer on layer—not just one lie, but stories stacked on stories until people stop trusting what’s plain and start trusting what feels “safe.” A little season would have to be long enough for things to feel normal again, long enough for memory to fade, long enough for people to be talkable into things that don’t even sound reasonable—like marching against the camp of the saints as if that could end well. The song also gently pushes back on the habit of shoving everything into “someday” with no end in sight. Yahshua spoke to real people in His day about things they would live to see. And the level of worldwide deception described in Revelation 20—deceiving nations, gathering multitudes, surrounding the saints—doesn’t read like a fairy tale. It reads like a warning: that there would be a stretch of time where confusion is the point, where people are trained to explain away what’s written, and where the world gets comfortable calling plain truth “myth,” “poetry,” or “symbol.” This is ultimately a song about trust. Not trust in fear. Not trust in headlines. Trust that Yahweh’s Word says what it means, and that even in a “little season” full of deception, Yahweh still holds the last word.