Courtroom gavel, Author onaeg news agency, (CC BY-SA 4.0 International)
“There are two kinds of guilt. One is true guilt, that is, it stems from sin against God; we are responsible for it and we have to deal with it. The second is false guilt, which Satan places on us; this occurs when the devil accuses us of not living up to God’s standards.
Many people live countless years under such deceptive guilt. They never feel as if they can quite get God’s acceptance; they think they never quite measure up and never quite please God; they believe they will never be all that God wants them to be.”
–Charles Stanley in How to Listen to God
Abuse victims are all too familiar with guilt.
Told from childhood that we did not measure up, that everything wrong in the family was our fault, we grew up virtually enveloped in guilt. This is compounded by the fact we are likely to believe we brought the abuse on ourselves (an outright lie, but one of which Satan is particularly fond).
All this is false guilt.
If confronted, we would have difficulty reciting our supposed “sins”. This is because they do not exist. Which is not to say that we do not commit real sins. We are as fallible as the rest of mankind, in that regard.
But the guilt that is unrelenting – the guilt punishing, even crippling us – is false guilt. We were not responsible for the abuse inflicted on us – whether it was emotional, physical, sexual or took the form of neglect. We did not engender it. We did not deserve it.
What we needed and deserved, but were deprived of, were love and care.
Unfortunately, what false guilt does is convince us we are still undeserving. We labor under the weight of this lie, sometimes turning it into a self-fulfilling prophecy. Continue reading

