July 13, 2026

How to Handle Being Falsely Accused

How to Handle Being Falsely Accused
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Key Takeaways

  • A false accusation often causes unique pain because you cannot control whether others believe the truth, whereas guilt at least offers a place to put your feelings.
  • Psalm 7 provides a biblical template for handling accusations by running to God as both your ultimate refuge and your righteous judge.
  • While it is sometimes necessary to defend yourself, there is a point where self-defense becomes a prideful act that only fuels the fire of the accusation.
  • By handing the situation to God, you release the exhausting burden of trying to control what everyone else thinks about you.
  • Andrew Brunson's story illustrates that even when you are trapped by lies, choosing to forgive allows you to keep your soul intact and avoid bitterness.

Few things burn like being accused of something you didn't do, and sometimes no defense makes it stick less. This episode looks at Psalm 7 and how to hand a false accusation to God as both your refuge and your judge, the way Andrew Brunson did from a prison cell in Turkey.

Being falsely accused burns in a way few things do. When you are guilty of something, at least the guilt gives you somewhere to put the pain. A false accusation is different. You know the truth, and you cannot make anyone else see it. Everything in you wants to fix it, to lay out the proof until the room agrees. Sometimes you can. And sometimes, no matter what you say, the accusation sticks, and you are left holding a truth nobody will receive.

Andrew Brunson lived the extreme version. After 23 years pastoring a small church in Turkey, he was arrested in the crackdown after a failed coup and charged with terrorism and espionage, with no evidence and a possible 35-year sentence. He spent two years in an overcrowded cell, lost 50 pounds, and admitted later that he did not handle it well, at times wondering whether God was even there. At a hearing, people he had known stood up and repeated accusations they could not back up. When the judge asked if he had anything to say to them, Andrew said his faith taught him to forgive, so he forgave them. He used his one chance to speak to forgive instead of to fight, and handed the whole thing to God.

Psalm 7 shows where that strength comes from. David wrote it while being hunted over a lie that could get him killed, and he does two things. First, he runs to God as his refuge: "I come to you for protection, O Lord my God." Second, he asks God to be his judge, and he means it both ways, even opening himself to God's verdict: "if I have done wrong... then let my enemies capture me." That is a man so willing to let God judge the matter that he will accept the ruling even against himself.

That second move is what protects your soul. When you say, God, you be the judge of this, and of me, you stop having to control what everyone thinks, a weight you were never strong enough to hold. The accusation may still stick with people, but your vindication was never theirs to give. It belongs to God.

There is a place for defending yourself. If a word of truth can clear things up, say it. But there is a point where defending yourself stops being about the truth and becomes about your pride, and past that point you only feed the fire. In this episode, Bart draws on years of praying with people who were falsely accused, and the wisdom that a defense sometimes helps and often makes things worse. When you cannot clear your name, you can still hand it to God, your refuge and your judge, and even forgive, and that is what keeps the accusation from turning you bitter.

BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL DISCOVER:

  • Why a false accusation cuts deeper than being guilty of something
  • What Psalm 7 shows about making God both your refuge and your judge
  • When to defend yourself and when defending only feeds the fire

When you can't clear your name, you can still hand the whole thing to God, your refuge and your judge. Your vindication was never the crowd's to give.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do you handle being falsely accused?

You can handle it by running to God as your refuge and asking Him to be your judge, which involves being open to His verdict and letting go of the need to control others' opinions.

Is it ever okay to defend yourself against false accusations?

Yes, there is a place for defending yourself if a word of truth can clear up the situation, but you should stop if it transitions from seeking truth to satisfying your pride.

How do you forgive someone who falsely accused you?

Forgiveness is a choice you make, often before the other person admits they are wrong, to protect your own heart from turning bitter and to place the situation entirely in God's hands.

What does the Bible say about being falsely accused?

Psalm 7 offers a model of bringing the accusation to God, asking Him for protection, and trusting Him to act as the final judge regarding your character.

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Andrew Brunson had spent 23 years quietly pastoring

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a small church in Turkey when the police came for him. He and

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his wife Noreen had built a life there, a little congregation

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near the Aegean Sea and years of helping refugees who'd fled the

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war in Syria. Then, in the crackdown that followed a failed

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coup, Andrew was arrested and charged with terrorism and

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espionage. The government said was tied to armed groups and

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working against the country. There was no evidence for any of

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it, not one email or recording, but the charges carried a

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possible sentence of 35 years, which for a man in his fifties

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meant the rest of his life. He was put in a cell built for

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eight men that held more than 20. He lost 50 pounds. And here's

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what he owned up to later. He didn't handle it well. He'd

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assumed his faith would hold him steady and instead, he fell

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apart. He couldn't sleep and he started to wonder whether God

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was even there. For a while, he felt abandoned by the God he'd

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given his life to serve. Two years went by like Then came a

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hearing that could decide everything. One by one, people

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Andrew had known. Some people from his own church stood up and

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testified against him, repeating accusations they couldn't back

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up. Andrew sat there and listened to it. And when they

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finished, the judge turned to him and asked if he anything he

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wanted to say to the people who had just lied about him. Bill

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has said, but But

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first, welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm

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Bart Leger. If you've been accused of something you didn't

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do, and you're chomping at the bit to set the record straight,

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I want to show you a better way through it. I've prayed with

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people who were falsely accused of something serious, and I've

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watched them wrestle with the same question every time,

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whether to fight it or let it go. Here's what I've learned from

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them. Sometimes it's wise to defend yourself, and you should.

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But often, defending yourself doesn't help and can pour fuel

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on the fire, making you look guiltier to people who've

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already made up their Here's why this one hurts so much. When

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you're accused of something you did do, at least the guilt gives

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you somewhere to put the pain. But a false accusation is

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different. You know the truth, and you can't make anyone else

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see it. Your whole body wants to fix it. To lay out the proof

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until everyone sees what happened. Sometimes you can, and

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sometimes the accusation sticks, no matter what you say. The

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story takes on a life of its own, and you're left holding a truth

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no one will accept. David knew that place. He wrote Psalm 7

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while being hunted by someone spreading a lie that could get

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him killed. Listen to Psalm 7, verses 1-5. I come to you for

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protection, O Lord my God. Save me from my persecutors. Rescue

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me. If you don't, they will maul me like a lion, tearing me to

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pieces with no one to rescue me. O Lord my God, if I have done

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wrong or am guilty of injustice, if I have betrayed a friend or

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plundered my enemy without cause, then let my enemies capture me.

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Let them trample me into the ground and drag my honor in the

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dust. Look at the two things David does. Because together,

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they're the way through. First, he runs to God as his refuge.

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Save me. Protect me, he prays, instead of grabbing a sword and

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clearing his own name by force. Second, he asks God to be his

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judge. And I believe he means it both ways. He opens himself to

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God. God, if I did do the thing they're saying, then let them

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have me. He's so willing to have God as judge that he'll accept

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the verdict even against himself. When you say, God, you be the

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judge of this and of me. You stop having to control what

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everyone thinks, and you come clean before the only judge

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whose ruling finally matters. The accusation may still stick

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with people, but your vindication was never theirs to

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give. It's God's. Here's the balance. Sometimes, you should

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defend yourself. If a word of truth can clear things up, then

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speak it. But be careful. Because there's a point where it

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stops being about the truth and starts being about your pride.

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And past that point, you're just feeding the fire. Andrew Brunson

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reached that point in a courtroom. Andrew looked at the

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people who had testified against him and said that his faith had

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taught him to forgive. So he forgave them. He had one chance

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to speak, and he used it to forgive rather than fight. Then

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he handed the whole thing to God. Months later, at his final

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hearing, Andrew packed two bags. One in case they let him go home,

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and one in case they sent him back to prison. The court found

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him guilty, and in the same breath, released him for time

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served. He flew home to the United States a free man. The

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wounds hurt him deeply, and yet he chose forgiveness anyway.

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Here's today's challenge. Bring the accusation to God the way

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David did. Allow it if you can. Tell him the truth, and then

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hand him the verdict. God, you be the judge of this, and you be

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the judge of me. Ask him to search you. And if there's

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anything to own, then own it. Then let go of the outcome you

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can't control. And if you can get there, forgive the people

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who accused you the way Brunson did, whether or not they admit

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they were wrong, to keep the accusation from turning you

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bitter. Father, you know the ones listening who are living

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under an accusation that isn't true, unable to make anyone

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believe them. Thank you that you are both their refuge and their

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judge, that they can run to you and trust your verdict. Free

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them from the exhausting job of controlling what everyone thinks.

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Give them wisdom to know when to speak and when to say nothing,

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and the grace to forgive the ones who lied about them. Be

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their vindication in your time and your way. In Jesus' name,

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amen. If Daily Devotions for Busy Lives has been an

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encouragement to you, would you take a minute and leave a rating

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and review? It helps more people find these devotions, and it

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only takes a moment. I'd be so grateful. Thanks for joining me

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on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. Remember, when you can't

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clear your name, you can still hand the whole thing to God.

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your refuge and your judge, and let Him keep your soul intact.

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Come back next time for more encouragement to help you live

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grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and have a great

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day.