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deuterium2h
Guest
Hello Tomdstone,I don’t think so. Many Greek Orthodox were sincere devout Christians who wanted to live in peace with all. But the Crusaders of the Fourth Crusade invaded the city of Constantinople, murdering many civilians, raping many nuns, drove horses with their falling excrement into their Greek churches, they committed sacrilege against the Holy Eucharist, they placed prostitutes at the altar of a Greek Church, they looted the precious icons and golden artifacts, many of which ended up in Roman Catholic churches in the west.
My apologies…I didn’t mean to imply that all Crusaders (or even most) would be exemplars of martyrs who died in battle. I should have been more clear and specific. I wouldn’t consider anyone involved in war-time crimes and atrocities as deserving of being considered a martyr…especially if they were unrepentant of their crimes. Nevertheless, my original question remains…is someone automatically disqualified of martyrdom if they offered even token physical resistance to their persecutors and attempted to defend themselves??