Faith, Reason, Charisma: Rudolf Sohm, Max Weber, and the Theology of Grace
Author(s)
Smith, David Norman
Abstract
Charismatic authority has been central to twentieth-century politics and theory, yet confusion about charisma is rife. Max Weber’s classic texts on this subject have been a major source of insight, yet key features of his analysis remain obscure – so much so that many scholars who call themselves Weber’s disciples defend views opposed to his. For Weber, charisma is a social status; for many “Weberians,” charisma is a personal quality. For Weber, charisma is a quicksilver, unstable form of authority; for his errant followers, it is an existential limit to democracy. One reason for this contradiction is that, influenced by the theologian Rudolf Sohm, Weber used the vocabulary of the theology of grace. Many readers, unfamiliar with the nature of Weber’s debt to theology, have thought that Weber, like Rudolf Sohm, viewed charisma as a divinely given personal quality. In fact, however, Max Weber’s sociology of charisma is radically opposed to Sohm’s theology.