>Would it really be _so_ bad if you had one big fancy palace which switched from hosting Muslims on Friday, Jews on Saturday, Christians on Sunday and could be a museum / community space / charity space Mon-Thurs?
1. Muslims, Christians, and Jews view each other as disbelievers.
2. Mosques, and I assume churches and synagogues (I'm less familiar) do act as community and charity spaces.
3. Making a museum out of a place built for the worship and glorification of God is extremely offensive.
4. Mosques, and I assume churches and synagogues are not only used on Friday/Saturday/Sunday.
5. Your cariciature only makes sense if you view faith as a hobby to be set aside once you leave the mosque/church/synagogue gates, an ardently secular worldview at odds with faith.
1. Muslims, Christians, and Jews view each other as disbelievers.
2. Mosques, and I assume churches and synagogues (I'm less familiar) do act as community and charity spaces.
3. Making a museum out of a place built for the worship and glorification of God is extremely offensive.
4. Mosques, and I assume churches and synagogues are not only used on Friday/Saturday/Sunday.
5. Your cariciature only makes sense if you view faith as a hobby to be set aside once you leave the mosque/church/synagogue gates, an ardently secular worldview at odds with faith.