enough simply to go off on a Crusade? And if one went, would only those sins
committed up to the
point of departure be remitted, or would all sins be remitted
forever after? Did one actually have to die to achieve such remission? And after
Jerusalem had been rescued, would the priceless door for easy remission of sins
then close again?
These were troubling questions for crusader recruits,
perhaps analogous to
discussions today among some Muslim fundamentalists as to what constitutes
“dying as a martyr.” Properly speaking, of course, martyrdom refers strictly to
death in defense or propagation of the faith. But
if one undertakes a suicide
mission against the enemy—and the Qur’an forbids suicide—does such a death
via self-inflicted martyrdom constitute true martyrdom?