Plenty of people die for causes. Soldiers die for causes. Muslims die for causes. Imagine the resolve it takes to be a suicide bomber. Not bragging on them, it's deplorable. But you still have to be amazed at the convicton. The Bible says, if I boast let me boast in the Lord. Paul had this down. He had such a transformed perspective that he truly considered his own life worth nothing, compared with his task of preaching the gospel.
The history remembers the martyrs. It doesn't remember those who under persecution fled or hid themselves. And we know that many did.What you are proposing is a shifting borderline between hypocrisy and true faith. The history of Church shows how believers were tortured and murdered because of their faith in Christ and because they chose to hold to it. Even Christ said that because of his name people will persecute his followers.
I'm a hypocrite. I'm a hypocrite every time I knowingly sin. Every time I sin in just the tiniest degree, I am denying who I am in Christ. And thus since I act contrary to what I know and believe, I am a hypocrite. It doesn't take a gun being pointed at my head to make me a hypocrite, nor any other believer who is honest at the heart level. If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us (1 John 1:8) I pray that each day I am being conformed to the image of Christ, but I certainly know when I am not. And that happens every day. How about you?My point is, if you love Christ more than everything, then you be honest about it. If you do not love Christ more than everything, again, just be honest about it. But You can't say I love Christ with all my heart and soul and then back out of your faith too. Doesn't add up. That's the hypocrisy. I'm not putting a legal stamp over what you said, but I in all honesty I see this scenario as more of a shifting goal post.