Religions operate as engines of order, cooperation, and meaning. They bind strangers by offering a shared moral map and a story large enough to explain life.
Different religions organize reality differently: spirits tied to local places, many gods with divided powers, or one sovereign deity claiming total authority. These structures shape politics and law because they define what is sacred, what is permitted, and who may command.
A universal religion is powerful because it claims the same truth everywhere. That claim can justify conversion, conquest, and moral policing across continents. It can also insist on compassion, charity, and limits on cruelty.
The mechanism stays consistent: an imagined order becomes enforceable when it is welded to the cosmos. When rules are sacred, breaking them becomes more than a mistake. It becomes sin, and sin can organize an entire society.