• Chapter Overview
      • Project Activities
Understanding Sociology


Understanding Sociology

Social Studies HomeProduct InformationSite MapSearchContact Us

Chapter 14: Religion

Chapter fourteen embarks upon a study of religion. Sociological definitions of religion focus on three basic elements: beliefs, social practices, and the moral community. Religions help achieve functional integration in both the religious community and society at large; they link communities and help legitimize the established social order. The three major forms of religious institutions recognized by sociologists are churches, sects, and cults.

Religion both adapts to and is a powerful force of social change. Examples of this include the Protestant Reformation as well as religious innovation and religious revival in modern times. Two recent episodes of fundamentalist revival were Islamic fundamentalism in the Middle East and Hindu fundamentalism in India.

In the U.S. today, many Americans are nondenominational, preferring to think of religion as a subjective, personal experience. Religious affiliation, however, is a dynamic process, and therefore to understand religion in America it is important to examine the trends and events occurring in each of the country's major religions: Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism, and Christian Fundamentalism.