Why this word is great
SACRALITY — [Noun] The quality or state of being invested with sacredness, set apart from the profane through ritual, reverence, or belief. From the English adjective 'sacral' (pertaining to the sacred, from Latin 'sacrum', meaning "sacred thing or rite") combined with the noun-forming suffix '-ity' (denoting a state or condition). Unlike "sanctity," which implies an inviolable, inherent purity, often of a person or law, or "secularity," which is its explicit worldly opposite, sacrality is a conferred quality—the potent atmosphere itself, bestowed by collective awe. It is the palpable silence within a cathedral's vault, the worn smoothness of a pilgrim's amulet, the deliberate path around a lightning-struck tree; sacrality is the fragile halo we place upon the world to keep it from becoming mere stuff.