Le son qui ouvre le ciel | Joel Osteen en français

In this powerful sermon entitled “The Sound That Opens Heaven,” Joel Osteen teaches that certain divine responses are activated only through a particular sound coming from our hearts: a sound of praise, faith, and gratitude, even in the midst of difficulties. He explains that it is not our complaints that attract God’s favor, but the voice that says, “Lord, I trust You even though I see nothing yet.” Joel uses powerful biblical examples: Joshua and the people shouting in triumph before the walls fell, Paul and Silas singing in the heart of the prison, and King Jehoshaphat placing singers before the army. In each case, heaven opened after a sound of faith, even before the situation visibly changed. The central message is clear: When you raise praise in the midst of the storm, you trigger something in the spiritual realm. You send out a sound that God immediately recognizes—however faint, however broken it may seem—and that sound opens the floodgates of heaven. Joel encourages everyone to replace murmuring with praise, sighing with gratitude, and fear with proclamation. He affirms that you don't need a perfect sound, just an authentic one, a sound that says, "I know God is for me." This sermon is an invitation to rediscover your voice of faith and let it rise to heaven… because that sound opens doors that no one can close. ⚠️ WARNING – NO IMPERSONATION The BONHEUR HONNEUR channel does not seek to impersonate any other channel, ministry, organization, or public figure. All published content is intended exclusively for edification, translation, and sharing of Christian messages for French-speaking audiences. Our goal is to share inspiring sermons, with full respect for the authors, ministries, and the rights associated with their works. Names, logos, images, or excerpts used are solely for presentation, teaching, and highlighting purposes related to the original message. BONHEUR HONNEUR is committed to acting with transparency, respect, and integrity. Any resemblance to other channels is neither intentional nor meant to create confusion.