Lathyrus3
I’d like a rational explanation of why a building where people meet to share a belief (a religious building) is held to be outside the law. A sacred space.
Does it matter whether the violence is planned for immediate action or for next week?
It's my understanding that religious buildings - across different faiths - are held to be "sacred spaces". A place that is supposed to transcend more "earthly" type considerations and we can remember who we really are so to say.
From memory I believe Anglican churches, for instance, are supposed to be "safe spaces" - though I guess we've all read our history about soldiers breaking into one to murder someone some centuries back at a king's behest.
I would hazard a guess that it's pretty much communally accepted that there needs to be "somewhere" people can go free of earthly considerations and undertake some quiet contemplation (or, in this case, a meeting) and it's a useful reminder that "Earthly society with all its conflicts" isn't all-there-is. My own personal take is that there is always/always fighting going on on Earth - whether physically, mentally or whatever. Countries fight and argue, people fight and argue and that's basically what life on earth so often consists of.
I don't think it's unreasonable to have a widespread recognition that there are "sacred spaces" we can go in and there not be all this "fighting, grabbing and arguing" that typifies a life on this warlike planet we call Earth.