Untrue as there were plenty of Christian Crusaders who got martyered.
A “new model;” a convenient redefinition of the term “martyrdom”.
”Extract
The First Crusade was an important episode in the history of martyrdom. While some of the crusaders were martyrs in the old style, giving up their lives rather than renounce Christ, the expedition established in the consciousness of Western Europeans the idea of a new route to the status of martyr, which could be earned by those who fell in battle against the unbeliever, righting for Christ and for his people. From this time onwards crusading preachers regularly offered the stole of martyrdom to those who served in Palestine, Spain, and elsewhere, in the war against the Muslims. It is not surprising that recent historians, in particular Jonathan Riley-Smith, John Cowdrey, and Jean Flori, have given close attention to the establishment of this new model of martyr in the closing years of the eleventh century. It may seem that there is little more to add on the subject, but the development is so significant in the context of our present conference that it may be worth while to return to this well-trodden battlefield. What I want to do in this paper is to examine the foundation of this new style of martyrdom in the thinking of earlier centuries, and then to look once more at its impact upon the early stages of the Crusade itself.”
(Colin Morris, “Martyrs on the Field of Battle and during the First Crusade”)
Martyrs on the Field of Battle before and during the First Crusade | Studies in Church History | Cambridge Core
Martyrs on the Field of Battle before and during the First Crusade - Volume 30
You’re following the lead of the Pope.
What I’ve been urging upon my readers is to instead follow the lead of Jesus and the apostles, which is what Christians did in regard to this matter in the first three centuries of Church history.
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