This dimension examines how religion structures collective life. Religions do not only concern gods or myths—they regulate morality, law, kingship, and community order. The sacred provides legitimacy to rules that shape how people live together.


Social Function & Law Template

1. Political Legitimacy

2. Legal Codes and Ethics

3. Social Order

4. Community Cohesion

5. Discipline and Punishment

6. Charity and Welfare

7. Conflict and Law Enforcement

8. Reform and Adaptation


Example: Islam

  1. Political Legitimacy: Early caliphs seen as successors to Prophet Muhammad, combining religious and political rule.
  2. Legal Codes: Sharia derived from Qur’an, Hadith, jurisprudence (fiqh). Covers worship, family law, commerce, crime.
  3. Social Order: Gender roles, inheritance rules, zakat obligations; dietary law (halal/haram).
  4. Community Cohesion: Friday prayer, Ramadan fasting, Eid festivals create communal solidarity.
  5. Discipline/Punishment: Hudud penalties (theft, adultery); excommunication rare but accusations of unbelief (takfir) exist.
  6. Charity/Welfare: Zakat (almsgiving) one of Five Pillars; waqf foundations support education, hospitals.
  7. Conflict/Law Enforcement: Jihad doctrine ranging from personal struggle to armed defense; treaties regulated by oath to God.
  8. Reform: Modern debates on democracy, gender, human rights, reinterpretation of sharia in contemporary contexts.

This variable shows how religion is not just belief but a framework for living together, enforcing order, and legitimating power.