Quote from: Hopeful cutie on March 19, 2014, 10:27:12 AM
I really don't consider myself religious, but my parents are very much so and it influences my life, I certainly cannot simply not think about it. The question is, if hell is real am I not going there for being transgendered? The bible does say a man or woman wearing the other genders clothes is an abomination. I'm so worried about this. 
The Bible also says that eating shrimp is an abomination. And pork. And wearing clothes made from multiple fabrics. And lust, and jealousy, and divorce, and not having a parapet on your roof, and a hundred other things.
But I don't see people going around and crusading for these things to be declared sinful and shunned and that those who do them are going to hell.
Humans are the ones who decided that homosexuality and ->-bleeped-<- were sins worthy of damning someone to hell while the others weren't, not God. God declares that even if you keep the entire Law and yet stumble at one point, you're guilty of breaking all of the Law. (James 2:8-13). So if you're going to hell, so are they.
In my Christian studies, I've come to understand that the important thing is to love our neighbors as ourselves. For when we clothe the poor, feed the hungry, give shelter to the homeless, and visit the sick and the imprisoned, we do it for God. (Matthew 25:34-45) And also, the important thing, important above all else, is to forgive others, and to not judge them. For when we forgive others, we too will be forgiven. And when we do not judge others, neither will we be judged.
Again... humans are the ones who are judging you specifically for your sin. But according to Christian law, they're just as guilty as you are. They just don't want to admit it, and want to pretend that they're somehow better by putting themselves up on a pedestal of righteousness. But they're not better, and they're not more righteous. Nobody is.
We can not judge. All we can do is forgive others for their inevitable shortcomings because we recognize that we have them too, and therefore likewise hope to be forgiven ourselves.
That's my life mantra, and what I've come to see my faith as being all about.