Discovering the two faces of religious charismatic action – traditional and modern: a model

Authors

  • Jane Williams-Hogan Bryn Athyn College of the New Church

Keywords:

Charisma, Religious movements, Popular, Religious change, Secularization (Sociology), Science, Sects, Cults, Revivals, Sociology and religion, Prophecy -- Study, Social control, Leadership, Religious

Abstract

In this paper, the author examines the issue of charisma and prophecy in secularized societies. In traditional society the charismatic personality or the prophet brought a universalizing and rationalizing message which simultaneously expanded and penetrated the sphere of external order in the world, giving people the ability to manipulate and control the natural world. The disenchanted world is the end product of this process, when no more mysterious forces come into play, and when one can in principle master all things through rational calculation. The gift of rationality almost randomly bestowed in the ancient world becomes, for Weber, the rightful inheritance of the modern individual. Clarity brought by charisma in a dark and foreboding world loses its brilliance and its ability to beckon when the world is filled with light. In investigating charisma in only traditional societies, Weber saw charisma as one dimensional, solely as the force of rationality. So envisioned, charisma dissipates in the very act of realizing itself through the transformation of the world. Given Weber's analysis, therefore, one would not expect to find genuinely new religions emerging within our transformed and rational modern society. In the examination of the founding something that is best identified by the sociological term charisma, though obviously in modern guise, is clearly evident. This points to the possibility that charisma is not static but has the dynamic capacity to be responsive to the structural characteristics of the society in which it operates.
Section
Articles

Published

1999-01-01

How to Cite

Williams-Hogan, J. (1999). Discovering the two faces of religious charismatic action – traditional and modern: a model. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 17(1), 273–304. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67259