There's a reputation cap to prevent certain users from gaining privileges too quickly.
Imagine for a moment that there's no cap and a new user posts his first answer on Stack Overflow. It's a very good answer because the person has been a software developer for decades, and he's proud of it, so he posts something about it on various social media channels: because of its exposure, thousands of people are viewing it each day.
It garners ~500 upvotes and, suddenly, that new user has 5000+ reputation and access to quite a few moderation privileges without actually knowing how to use the site. Said user has access to the review queues and can cast close votes: that's a lot of power to give to someone who has only been using Stack Overflow for a couple of days, and it's a major reason that this cap is in place.
Stack Overflow was built to emphasize questions and answers of lasting value. One viral answer shouldn't give you thousands of reputation: you should build up a library of questions and answers that people regularly come across in search results and perhaps vote upon, giving you a steady flow of reputation.
It's also to keep the site fair. Those who have reputation in the hundreds of thousands are very good at what they do, and they continue to show that by posting questions and answers, actively contributing to the site. Their posts are often of very high quality and thus attract many upvotes in a short period of time. Their reputation would rise so fast that no user who joined today would be able to catch them.
It's a subject of heated debate (take a look at daily-reputation-limit), but it's there for a reason.