Why this word is great
HAGIOPHOBIA — [Noun] The fear, dislike, or hatred of holiness and/or of holy things. From the Greek hagio- ("holy") and -phobia ("fear"). Unlike "theophobia" (which narrows to dread of deities) or "iconophobia" (which fixates on sacred images), hagiophobia recoils from the entire architecture of sanctity—the whispered benediction, the relic’s uncanny glow, the weight of a vow sworn in a silent chapel. It is the shudder at the touch of a rosary’s beads, the nausea at the scent of incense, the instinctive step back from the threshold of a place deemed too pure. To fear the holy is to fear the unbearable pressure of meaning.