There’s a tendency in our world — and even within the church — to soften or spiritualize what God calls sin. We wrap it in excuses, justify it with nice-sounding words, or hide it behind phrases like, “They’re just broken,” “They had a rough childhood,” or “Nobody’s perfect.” But abuse, in any form — emotional, physical, spiritual, or sexual — is not just brokenness. It’s not just trauma. It’s not just a misunderstanding. Abuse is sin.
It is a willful act that violates the heart of God. It’s rooted in pride, control, deception, and a thirst for power — the things Scripture warns against. And when we refuse to call it what it is, when we minimize it or cover it with religious language, we not only protect the abuser but we also keep the victim bound. You cannot heal from something you won’t name. You cannot find freedom in what you continue to justify. And you cannot move forward while pretending something sinful was merely “a mistake.”
Jesus never avoided naming sin. He didn’t do it to shame, but to liberate. He confronted sin because only truth can lead to redemption. “Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:32). That verse isn’t about superficial honesty — it’s about deep, soul-level truth. The kind that shines light on the darkest corners and brings healing to places that have long been hidden.
Healing doesn’t happen in denial. You can’t heal a wound you refuse to expose to light. You can journal, pray, and read Scripture every day, but if you keep calling abuse something less than what it was, you will never fully heal. God cannot heal what you continue to hide. Naming it — calling it what it is — is the beginning of your freedom. It’s not bitterness; it’s truth. It’s not vengeance; it’s alignment with God’s heart for justice and righteousness.
Truth and grace are not opposites; they coexist perfectly in the person of Jesus Christ. He is full of grace and truth. Grace does not mean pretending sin didn’t happen. Grace means facing, grieving, and allowing God to redeem it without letting it define you. Calling abuse sin doesn’t make you judgmental — it makes you honest. And honesty is where healing begins.
Many victims have been told to forgive and forget, to turn the other cheek, to “be the bigger person.” But forgiveness was never meant to be a free pass for unrepentant sin. God’s forgiveness always follows repentance — a true turning away from wrongdoing. When abuse is justified or hidden, it creates a false peace, not the peace of Christ. There is nothing godly about silence that protects sin. There is nothing holy about pretending.
When we name abuse for what it is and stand in truth rather than confusion, we begin to strip away the power it once held. The enemy works in secrecy. He thrives in the shadows of silence and shame. But when truth enters the room, darkness trembles. What was hidden loses its hold. What once controlled you no longer can.
If you have survived abuse, please hear this: You did not cause it. You did not deserve it. And it was not your fault. The sin belongs to the one who committed it, not the one who endured it. God grieves with you. He saw every tear, every moment of fear, every time you questioned your worth. And He is not calling you to cover it up — He is calling you to truth, because truth leads to freedom.
It’s okay to say, “This was wrong.” It’s okay to say, “That was sin.” You are not dishonouring anyone by being honest about what happened. You are honouring God by standing in His light. The truth doesn’t destroy you — it restores you. Because only what is brought into the light can be healed.
So, call it what it is. Don’t water it down. Don’t excuse it. Don’t carry the weight that doesn’t belong to you. Abuse is sin, and sin must be brought into the light. And when it is, God will meet you there — not with condemnation, but with compassion, and freedom.
The truth sets you free.
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