By definition, sacred beings are separated beings. That which characterizes them is that there is a break of continuity between them and the profane beings.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The idea of the sacred is quite simply one of the most conservative notions in any culture, because it seeks to turn other ideas - uncertainty, progress, change - into crimes.
Two of the many areas of conflict between Judeo-Christian values and leftism concern the separation between the holy and the profane and the separation between humans and animals.
If any thing is sacred, the human body is sacred.
Sacred spaces can be created in any environment.
Nothing is sacred, right?
The core of the person is what he or she loves, and that is bound up with what they worship - that insight recalibrates the radar for cultural analysis. The rituals and practices that form our loves spill out well beyond the sanctuary. Many secular liturgies are trying to get us to love some other kingdom and some other gods.
What is sacred among one people may be ridiculous in another; and what is despised or rejected by one cultural group, may in a different environment become the cornerstone for a great edifice of strange grandeur and beauty.
The word spiritual, not the word religious, is the key.
Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind.
The road to the sacred leads through the secular.