Fear and Trembling
Site: | Saylor Academy |
Course: | PHIL304: Existentialism |
Book: | Fear and Trembling |
Printed by: | Guest user |
Date: | Tuesday, 8 April 2025, 10:26 PM |
Description
This excerpt from Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling discusses the Knight of Faith. What are the differences between the knight of faith and the knight of infinite resignation?
Introduction
Not only in the world of commerce but also in the world of ideas our age has arranged a regular clearance-sale. Everything may be had at such absurdly low prices that very soon the question will arise whether any one cares to bid. Every waiter with a speculative turn who carefully marks the significant progress of modern philosophy, every lecturer in philosophy, every tutor, student, every sticker-and-quitter of philosophy – they are not content with doubting everything, but "go right on." It might, possibly, be ill-timed and inopportune to ask them whither they are bound; but it is no doubt polite and modest to take it for granted that they have doubted everything – else it were a curious statement for them to make, that they were proceeding onward. So they have, all of them, completed that preliminary operation and, it would seem, with such ease that they do not think it necessary to waste a word about how they did it. The fact is, not even he who looked anxiously and with a troubled spirit for some little point of information, ever found one, nor any instruction, nor even any little dietetic prescription, as to how one is to accomplish this enormous task. "But did not Descartes proceed in this fashion?" Descartes, indeed! that venerable, humble, honest thinker whose writings surely no one can read without deep emotion – Descartes did what he said, and said what he did. Alas, alas! that is a mighty rare thing in our times! But Descartes, as he says frequently enough, never uttered doubts concerning his faith....
In our times, as was remarked, no one is content with faith, but "goes right on." The question as to whither they are proceeding may be a silly question; whereas it is a sign of urbanity and culture to assume that every one has faith, to begin with, for else it were a curious statement for them to make, that they are proceeding further. In the olden days it was different. Then, faith was a task for a whole life-time because it was held that proficiency in faith was not to be won within a few days or weeks. Hence, when the tried patriarch felt his end approaching, after having fought his battles and preserved his faith, he was still young enough at heart not to have forgotten the fear and trembling which disciplined his youth and which the mature man has under control, but which no one entirely outgrows – except insofar as he succeeds in "going on" as early as possible. The goal which those venerable men reached at last – at that spot every one starts, in our times, in order to "proceed further"....
Source: Søren Kierkegaard, https://www.gutenberg.org/files/60333/60333-h/60333-h.htm#FEAR_AND_TREMBLING This work is in the Public Domain.
Preparation
There lived a man who, when a child, had heard the beautiful Bible story
of how God tempted Abraham and how he stood the test, how he maintained
his faith and, against his expectations, received his son back again.
As this man grew older he read this same story with ever greater
admiration; for now life had separated what had been united in the
reverent simplicity of the child. And the older he grew, the more
frequently his thoughts reverted to that story. His enthusiasm waxed
stronger and stronger, and yet the story grew less and less clear to
him. Finally he forgot everything else in thinking about it, and his
soul contained but one wish, which was, to behold Abraham: and but one
longing, which was, to have been witness to that event. His desire was,
not to see the beautiful lands of the Orient, and not the splendor of
the Promised Land, and not the reverent couple whose old age the Lord
had blessed with children, and not the venerable figure of the aged
patriarch, and not the god-given vigorous youth of Isaac – it would
have been the same to him if the event had come to pass on some barren
heath. But his wish was, to have been with Abraham on the three days'
journey, when he rode with sorrow before him and with Isaac at his side.
His wish was, to have been present at the moment when Abraham lifted up
his eyes and saw Mount Moriah afar off; to have been present at the
moment when he left his asses behind and wended his way up to the
mountain alone with Isaac. For the mind of this man was busy, not with
the delicate conceits of the imagination, but rather with his shuddering
thought.
The man we speak of was no thinker, he felt no desire
to go beyond his faith: it seemed to him the most glorious fate to be
remembered as the Father of Faith, and a most enviable lot to be
possessed of that faith, even if no one knew it.
The man we speak
of was no learned exegetist, he did not even understand Hebrew – who
knows but a knowledge of Hebrew might have helped him to understand
readily both the story and Abraham.
I
And God tempted Abraham and said unto him: take Isaac, thine only son,
whom thou lovest and go to the land Moriah and sacrifice him there on a
mountain which I shall show thee.
It was in the early morning,
Abraham arose betimes and had his asses saddled. He departed from his
tent, and Isaac with him; but Sarah looked out of the window after them
until they were out of sight. Silently they rode for three days; but on
the fourth morning Abraham said not a word but lifted up his eyes and
beheld Mount Moriah in the distance. He left his servants behind and,
leading Isaac by the hand, he approached the mountain. But Abraham said
to himself: "I shall surely conceal from Isaac whither he is going." He
stood still, he laid his hand on Isaac's head to bless him, and Isaac
bowed down to receive his blessing. And Abraham's aspect was fatherly,
his glance was mild, his speech admonishing. But Isaac understood him
not, his soul would not rise to him; he embraced Abraham's knees, he
besought him at his feet, he begged for his young life, for his
beautiful hopes, he recalled the joy in Abraham's house when he was
born, he reminded him of the sorrow and the loneliness that would be
after him. Then did Abraham raise up the youth and lead him by his hand,
and his words were full of consolation and admonishment. But Isaac
understood him not. He ascended Mount Moriah, but Isaac understood him
not. Then Abraham averted his face for a moment; but when Isaac looked
again, his father's countenance was changed, his glance wild, his aspect
terrible, he seized Isaac and threw him to the ground and said: "Thou
foolish lad, believest thou I am thy father? An idol-worshipper am I.
Believest thou it is God's command? Nay, but my pleasure." Then Isaac
trembled and cried out in his fear: "God in heaven, have pity on me, God
of Abraham, show mercy to me, I have no father on earth, be thou then
my father!" But Abraham said softly to himself: "Father in heaven, I
thank thee. Better is it that he believes me inhuman than that he should
lose his faith in thee."
When the child is to be weaned, his
mother blackens her breast; for it were a pity if her breast should look
sweet to him when he is not to have it. Then the child believes that
her breast has changed; but his mother is ever the same, her glance is
full of love and as tender as ever. Happy he who needed not worse means
to wean his child!
II
It was in the early morning. Abraham arose betimes and embraced Sarah,
the bride of his old age. And Sarah kissed Isaac who had taken the shame
from her – Isaac, her pride, her hope for all coming generations. Then
the twain rode silently along their way, and Abraham's glance was
fastened on the ground before him; until on the fourth day, when he
lifted up his eyes and beheld Mount Moriah in the distance; but then his
eyes again sought the ground. Without a word he put the fagots in order
and bound Isaac, and without a word he unsheathed his knife. Then he
beheld the ram God had chosen, and sacrificed him, and wended his way
home.... From that day on Abraham, grew old. He could not forget that
God had required this of him. Isaac flourished as before; but Abraham's
eye was darkened, he saw happiness no more.
When the child has
grown and is to be weaned, his mother will in maidenly fashion conceal
her breast. Then the child has a mother no longer. Happy the child who
lost not his mother in any other sense!
III
It was in the early morning. Abraham arose betimes; he kissed Sarah, the
young mother, and Sarah kissed Isaac, her joy, her delight for all
times. And Abraham rode on his way, lost in thought – he was thinking
of Hagar and her son whom he had driven out into the wilderness. He
ascended Mount Moriah and he drew the knife.
It was a calm
evening when Abraham rode out alone, and he rode to Mount Moriah. There
he cast himself down on his face and prayed to God to forgive him his
sin in that he had been about to sacrifice his son Isaac, and in that
the father had forgotten his duty toward his son. And yet oftener he
rode on his lonely way, but he found no rest. He could not grasp that it
was a sin that he had wanted to sacrifice to God his most precious
possession, him for whom he would most gladly have died many times. But,
if it was a sin, if he had not loved Isaac thus, then could he not
grasp the possibility that he could be forgiven: for what sin more
terrible?
When the child is to be weaned, the mother is not
without sorrow that she and her child are to be separated more and more,
that the child who had first lain under her heart, and afterwards at
any rate rested at her breast, is to be so near to her no more. So they
sorrow together for that brief while. Happy he who kept his child so
near to him and needed not to sorrow more!
IV
It was in the early morning. All was ready for the journey in the house
of Abraham. He bade farewell to Sarah; and Eliezer, his faithful
servant, accompanied him along the way for a little while. They rode
together in peace, Abraham and Isaac, until they came to Mount Moriah.
And Abraham prepared everything for the sacrifice, calmly and mildly;
but when his father turned aside in order to unsheathe his knife, Isaac
saw that Abraham's left hand was knit in despair and that a trembling
shook his frame – but Abraham drew forth the knife.
Then they
returned home again, and Sarah hastened to meet them; but Isaac had lost
his faith. No one in all the world ever said a word about this, nor did
Isaac speak to any man concerning what he had seen, and Abraham
suspected not that any one had seen it.
When the child is to be
weaned, his mother has the stronger food ready lest the child perish.
Happy he who has in readiness this stronger food!
Thus, and in
many similar ways, thought the man whom I have mentioned about this
event. And every time he returned, after a pilgrimage to Mount Moriah,
he sank down in weariness, folding his hands and saying: "No one, in
truth, was great as was Abraham, and who can understand him?"
A Panegyric on Abraham
If a consciousness of the eternal were not implanted in man; if the
basis of all that exists were but a confusedly fermenting element which,
convulsed by obscure passions, produced all, both the great and the
insignificant; if under everything there lay a bottomless void never to
be filled – what else were life but despair? If it were thus, and if
there were no sacred bonds between man and man; if one generation arose
after another, as in the forest the leaves of one season succeed the
leaves of another, or like the songs of birds which are taken up one
after another; if the generations of man passed through the world like a
ship passing through the sea and the wind over the desert – a
fruitless and a vain thing; if eternal oblivion were ever greedily
watching for its prey and there existed no power strong enough to wrest
it from its clutches – how empty were life then, and how dismal! And
therefore it is not thus; but, just as God created man and woman, he
likewise called into being the hero and the poet or orator. The latter
cannot perform the deeds of the hero – he can only admire and love him
and rejoice in him. And yet he also is happy and not less so; for the
hero is, as it were, his better self with which he has fallen in love,
and he is glad he is not himself the hero, so that his love can express
itself in admiration.
The poet is the genius of memory, and does
nothing but recall what has been done, can do nothing but admire what
has been done. He adds nothing of his own, but he is jealous of what has
been entrusted to him. He obeys the choice of his own heart; but once
he has found what he has been seeking, he visits every man's door with
his song and with his speech, so that all may admire the hero as he
does, and be proud of the hero as he is. This is his achievement, his
humble work, this is his faithful service in the house of the hero. If
thus, faithful to his love, he battles day and night against the guile
of oblivion which wishes to lure the hero from him, then has he
accomplished his task, then is he gathered to his hero who loves him as
faithfully; for the poet is at it were the hero's better self,
unsubstantial, to be sure, like a mere memory, but also transfigured as
is a memory. Therefore shall no one be forgotten who has done great
deeds; and even if there be delay, even if the cloud of misunderstanding
obscure the hero from our vision, still his lover will come some time;
and the more time has passed, the more faithfully will he cleave to him.
No,
no one shall be forgotten who was great in this world. But each hero
was great in his own way, and each one was eminent in proportion to the
great things he loved. For he who loved himself became great through
himself, and he who loved others became great through his devotion, but
he who loved God became greater than all of these. Everyone of them
shall be remembered, but each one became great in proportion to his
trust. One became great by hoping for the possible; another, by hoping
for the eternal; but he who hoped for the impossible, he became greater
than all of these. Every one shall be remembered; but each one was great
in proportion to the power with which he strove. For he who strove with
the world became great by overcoming himself; but he who strove with
God, he became the greatest of them all. Thus there have been struggles
in the world, man against man, one against a thousand; but he who
struggled with God, he became greatest of them all. Thus there was
fighting on this earth, and there was he who conquered everything by his
strength, and there was he who conquered God by his weakness. There was
he who, trusting in himself, gained all; and there was he who, trusting
in his strength sacrificed everything; but he who believed in God was
greater than all of these. There was he who was great through his
strength, and he who was great through his wisdom, and he who was great
through his hopes, and he who was great through his love; but Abraham
was greater than all of these – great through the strength whose power
is weakness, great through the wisdom whose secret is folly, great
through the hope whose expression is madness, great through the love
which is hatred of one's self.
Through the urging of his faith
Abraham left the land of his forefathers and became a stranger in the
land of promise. Ke left one thing behind and took one thing along: he
left his worldly wisdom behind and took with him faith. For else he
would not have left the land of his fathers, but would have thought it
an unreasonable demand. Through his faith he came to be a stranger in
the land of promise, where there was nothing to remind him of all that
had been dear to him, but where everything by its newness tempted his
soul to longing. And yet was he God's chosen, he in whom the Lord was
well pleased! Indeed, had he been one cast off, one thrust out of God's
mercy, then might he have comprehended it; but now it seemed like a
mockery of him and of his faith. There have been others who lived in
exile from the fatherland which they loved. They are not forgotten, nor
is the song of lament forgotten in which they mournfully sought and
found what they had lost. Of Abraham there exists no song of
lamentation. It is human to complain, it is human to weep with the
weeping; but it is greater to believe, and more blessed to consider him
who has faith.
Through his faith Abraham received the promise
that in his seed were to be blessed all races of mankind. Time passed,
there was still the possibility of it, and Abraham had faith. Another
man there was who also lived in hopes. Time passed, the evening of his
life was approaching; neither was he paltry enough to have forgotten his
hopes: neither shall he be forgotten by us! Then he sorrowed, and his
sorrow did not deceive him, as life had done, but gave him all it could;
for in the sweetness of sorrow he became possessed of his disappointed
hopes. It is human to sorrow, it is human to sorrow with the sorrowing;
but it is greater to have faith, and more blessed to consider him who
has faith.
No song of lamentation has come down to us from
Abraham. He did not sadly count the days as time passed; he did not look
at Sarah with suspicious eyes, whether she was becoming old; he did not
stop the sun's course lest Sarah should grow old and his hope with her;
he did not lull her with his songs of lamentation. Abraham grew old,
and Sarah became a laughing-stock to the people; and yet was he God's
chosen, and heir to the promise that in his seed were to be blessed all
races of mankind. Were it, then, not better if he had not been God's
chosen? For what is it to be God's chosen? Is it to have denied to one
in one's youth all the wishes of youth in order to have them fulfilled
after great labor in old age?
But Abraham had faith and
steadfastly lived in hope. Had Abraham been less firm in his trust, then
would he have given up that hope. He would have said to God: "So it is,
perchance, not Thy will, after all, that this shall come to pass. I
shall surrender my hope. It was my only one, it was my bliss. I am
sincere, I conceal no secret grudge for that Thou didst deny it to me." He would not have remained forgotten, his example would have saved many a
one; but he would not have become the Father of Faith. For it is great
to surrender one's hope, but greater still to abide by it steadfastly
after having surrendered it; for it is great to seize hold of the
eternal hope, but greater still to abide steadfastly by one's worldly
hopes after having surrendered them.
Then came the fulness of
time. If Abraham had not had faith, then Sarah would probably have died
of sorrow, and Abraham, dulled by his grief, would not have understood
the fulfillment, but would have smiled about it as a dream of his youth.
But Abraham had faith, and therefore he remained young; for he who
always hopes for the best, him life will deceive, and he will grow old;
and he who is always prepared for the worst, he will soon age; but he
who has faith, he will preserve eternal youth. Praise, therefore, be to
this story! For Sarah, though advanced in age, was young enough to wish
for the pleasures of a mother, and Abraham, though grey of hair, was
young enough to wish to become a father. In a superficial sense it may
be considered miraculous that what they wished for came to pass, but in a
deeper sense the miracle of faith is to be seen in Abraham's and
Sarah's being young enough to wish, and their faith having preserved
their wish and therewith their youth. The promise he had received was
fulfilled, and he accepted it in faith, and it came to pass according to
the promise and his faith; whereas Moses smote the rock with his staff
but believed not.
There was joy in Abraham's house when Sarah celebrated the day of her Golden Wedding.
But
it was not to remain thus; for once more was Abraham to be tempted. He
had struggled with that cunning power to which nothing is impossible,
with that ever watchful enemy who never sleeps, with that old man who
outlives all – he had struggled with Time and had preserved his faith.
And now all the terror of that fight was concentrated in one moment.
"And God tempted Abraham, saying to him: take now thine only son Isaac,
whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him
there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell
thee off."
All was lost, then, and more terribly than if a son
had never been given him! The Lord had only mocked Abraham, then!
Miraculously he had realized the unreasonable hopes of Abraham; and now
he wished to take away what he had given. A foolish hope it had been,
but Abraham had not laughed when the promise had been made him. Now all
was lost – the trusting hope of seventy years, the brief joy at the
fulfillment of his hopes. Who, then, is he that snatches away the old
man's staff, who that demands that he himself shall break it in two? Who
is he that renders disconsolate the grey hair of old age, who is he
that demands that he himself shall do it? Is there no pity for the
venerable old man, and none for the innocent child? And yet was Abraham
God's chosen one, and yet was it the Lord that tempted him. And now all
was to be lost! The glorious remembrance of him by a whole race, the
promise of Abraham's seed – all that was but a whim, a passing fancy of
the Lord, which Abraham was now to destroy forever! That glorious
treasure, as old as the faith in Abraham's heart, and many, many years
older than Isaac, the fruit of Abraham's life, sanctified by prayers,
matured in struggles – the blessing on the lips of Abraham: this fruit
was now to be plucked before the appointed time, and to remain without
significance; for of what significance were it if Isaac was to be
sacrificed? That sad and yet blessed hour when Abraham was to take leave
from all that was dear to him, the hour when he would once more lift up
his venerable head, when his face would shine like the countenance of
the Lord, the hour when he would collect his whole soul for a blessing
strong enough to render Isaac blessed all the days of his life – that
hour was not to come! He was to say farewell to Isaac, to be sure, but
in such wise that he himself was to remain behind; death was to part
them, but in such wise that Isaac was to die. The old man was not in
happiness to lay his hand on Isaac's head when the hour of death came,
but, tired of life, to lay violent hands on Isaac. And it was God who
tempted him. Woe, woe to the messenger who would have come before
Abraham with such a command! Who would have dared to be the messenger of
such dread tidings? But it was God that tempted Abraham.
But
Abraham had faith, and had faith for this life. Indeed, had his faith
been but concerning the life to come, then might he more easily have
cast away all, in order to hasten out of this world which was not
his....
But Abraham had faith and doubted not, but trusted that
the improbable would come to pass. If Abraham had doubted, then would he
have undertaken something else, something great and noble; for what
could Abraham have undertaken but was great and noble! He would have
proceeded to Mount Moriah, he would have cloven the wood, and fired it,
and unsheathed his knife – he would have cried out to God: "Despise not
this sacrifice; it is not, indeed, the best I have; for what is an old
man against a child foretold of God; but it is the best I can give thee.
Let Isaac never know that he must find consolation in his youth." He
would have plunged the steel in his own breast. And he would have been
admired throughout the world, and his name would not have been
forgotten; but it is one thing to be admired and another, to be a
lode-star which guides one troubled in mind.
But Abraham had
faith. He prayed not for mercy and that he might prevail upon the Lord:
it was only when just retribution was to be visited upon Sodom and
Gomorrha that Abraham ventured to beseech Him for mercy.
We read
in Scripture: "And God did tempt Abraham, and said unto him, Abraham:
and he said, Behold here I am." You, whom I am now addressing did you do
likewise? When you saw the dire dispensations of Providence approach
threateningly, did you not then say to the mountains, Fall on me; and to
the hills, Cover me? Or, if you were stronger in faith, did not your
step linger along the way, longing for the old accustomed paths, as it
were? And when the voice called you, did you answer, then, or not at
all, and if you did, perchance in a low voice, or whispering? Not thus
Abraham, but gladly and cheerfully and trustingly, and with a resonant
voice he made answer: "Here am I." And we read further: "And Abraham
rose up early in the morning." He made haste as though for some joyous
occasion, and early in the morning he was in the appointed place, on
Mount Moriah. He said nothing to Sarah, nothing to Eliezer, his steward;
for who would have understood him? Did not his temptation by its very
nature demand of him the vow of silence? "He laid the wood in order, and
bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar upon the wood. And
Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son." My listener! Many a father there has been who thought that with his
child he lost the dearest of all there was in the world for him; yet
assuredly no child ever was in that sense a pledge of God as was Isaac
to Abraham. Many a father there has been who lost his child; but then it
was God, the unchangeable and inscrutable will of the Almighty and His
hand which took it. Not thus with Abraham. For him was reserved a more
severe trial, and Isaac's fate was put into Abraham's hand together with
the knife. And there he stood, the old man, with his only hope! Yet did
he not doubt, nor look anxiously to the left or right, nor challenge
Heaven with his prayers. He knew it was God the Almighty who now put him
to the test; he knew it was the greatest sacrifice which could be
demanded of him; but he knew also that no sacrifice was too great which
God demanded – and he drew forth his knife.
Who strengthened
Abraham's arm, who supported his right arm that it drooped not
powerless? For he who contemplates this scene is unnerved. Who
strengthened Abraham's soul so that his eyes grew not too dim to see
either Isaac or the ram? For he who contemplates this scene will be
struck with blindness. And yet, it is rare enough that one is unnerved
or is struck with blindness, and still more rare that one narrates
worthily what there did take place between father and son. To be sure,
we know well enough – it was but a trial!
If Abraham had
doubted, when standing on Mount Moriah; if he had looked about him in
perplexity; if he had accidentally discovered the ram before drawing his
knife; if God had permitted him to sacrifice it instead of Isaac –
then would he have returned home, and all would have been as before, he
would have had Sarah and would have kept Isaac; and yet how different
all would have been! For then had his return been a flight, his
salvation an accident, his reward disgrace; his future, perchance,
perdition. Then would he have borne witness neither to his faith nor to
God's mercy, but would have witnessed only to the terror of going to
Mount Moriah. Then Abraham would not have been forgotten, nor either
Mount Moriah. It would be mentioned, then, not as is Mount Ararat on
which the Ark landed, but as a sign of terror, because it was there
Abraham doubted.
Venerable patriarch Abraham! When you returned
home from Mount Moriah you required no encomiums to console you for what
you had lost; for, indeed, you did win all and still kept Isaac, as we
all know. And the Lord did no more take him from your side, but you sate
gladly at table with him in your tent as in the life to come you will,
for all times. Venerable patriarch Abraham! Thousands of years have
passed since those times, but still you need no late-born lover to
snatch your memory from the power of oblivion, for every language
remembers you – and yet do you reward your lover more gloriously than
any one, rendering him blessed in your bosom, and taking heart and eyes
captive by the marvel of your deed. Venerable patriarch Abraham! Second
father of the race! You who first perceived and bore witness to that
unbounded passion which has but scorn for the terrible fight with the
raging elements and the strength of brute creation, in order to struggle
with God; you who first felt that sublimest of all passions, you who
found the holy, pure, humble expression for the divine madness which was
a marvel to the heathen – forgive him who would speak in your praise,
in case he did it not fittingly. He spoke humbly, as if it concerned the
desire of his heart; he spoke briefly, as is seemly; but he will never
forget that you required a hundred years to obtain a son of your old
age, against all expectations; that you had to draw the knife before being
permitted to keep Isaac; he will never forget that in a hundred and
thirty years you never got farther than to faith.
Preliminary Expectoration
An old saying, derived from the world of experience, has it that "he who
will not work shall not eat." But, strange to say, this does not hold
true in the world where it is thought applicable; for in the world of
matter the law of imperfection prevails, and we see, again and again,
that he also who will not work has bread to eat – indeed, that he who
sleeps has a greater abundance of it than he who works. In the world of
matter everything belongs to whosoever happens to possess it; it is
thrall to the law of indifference, and he who happens to possess the
Ring also has the Spirit of the Ring at his beck and call, whether now
he be Noureddin or Aladdin, and he who controls the treasures of this
world, controls them, howsoever he managed to do so. It is different in
the world of spirit. There, an eternal and divine order obtains, there
the rain does not fall on the just and the unjust alike, nor does the
sun shine on the good and the evil alike; but there the saying does hold
true that he who will not work shall not eat, and only he who was
troubled shall find rest, and only he who descends into the nether world
shall rescue his beloved, and only he who unsheathes his knife shall be
given Isaac again. There, he who will not work shall not eat, but shall
be deceived, as the gods deceived Orpheus with an immaterial figure
instead of his beloved Euridice, deceived him because he was love-sick
and not courageous, deceived him because he was a player on the cithara
rather than a man. There, it avails not to have an Abraham for one's
father, or to have seventeen ancestors. But in that world the saying
about Israel's maidens will hold true of him who will not work: he shall
bring forth wind; but he who will work shall give birth to his own
father.
There is a kind of learning which would presumptuously
introduce into the world of spirit the same law of indifference under
which the world of matter groans. It is thought that to know about great
men and great deeds is quite sufficient, and that other exertion is not
necessary. And therefore this learning shall not eat, but shall perish
of hunger while seeing all things transformed into gold by its touch.
And what, forsooth, does this learning really know? There were many
thousands of contemporaries, and countless men in after times, who knew
all about the triumphs of Miltiades; but there was only one whom they
rendered sleepless. There have existed countless generations that knew
by heart, word for word, the story of Abraham; but how many has it
rendered sleepless?
Now the story of Abraham has the remarkable
property of always being glorious, in however limited a sense it is
understood; still, here also the point is whether one means to labor and
exert one's half. Now people do not care to labor and exert themselves,
but wish nevertheless to understand the story. They extol Abraham, but
how? By expressing the matter in the most general terms and saying: "the
great thing about him was that he loved God so ardently that he was
willing to sacrifice to Him his most precious possession." That is very
true; but "the most precious possession" is an indefinite expression. As
one's thoughts, and one's mouth, run on one assumes, in a very easy
fashion, the identity of Isaac and "the most precious possession" – and
meanwhile he who is meditating may smoke his pipe, and his audience
comfortably stretch out their legs. If the rich youth whom Christ met on
his way had sold all his possessions and given all to the poor, we
would extol him as we extol all which is great – aye, would not
understand even him without labor; and yet would he never have become an
Abraham, notwithstanding his sacrificing the most precious possessions
he had. That which people generally forget in the story of Abraham is
his fear and anxiety; for as regards money, one is not ethically
responsible for it, whereas for his son a father has the highest and
most sacred responsibility. However, fear is a dreadful thing for
timorous spirits, so they omit it. And yet they wish to speak of
Abraham.
So they keep on speaking, and in the course of their
speech the two terms Isaac and "the most precious thing" are used
alternately, and everything is in the best order. But now suppose that
among the audience there was a man who suffered with sleeplessness –
and then the most terrible and profound, the most tragic, and at the
same time the most comic, misunderstanding is within the range of
possibility. That is, suppose this man goes home and wishes to do as did
Abraham; for his son is his most precious possession. If a certain
preacher learned of this he would, perhaps, go to him, he would gather
up all his spiritual dignity and exclaim: "Thou abominable creature,
thou scum of humanity, what devil possessed thee to wish to murder thy
son?" And this preacher, who had not felt any particular warmth, nor
perspired while speaking about Abraham, this preacher would be
astonished himself at the earnest wrath with which he poured forth his
thunders against that poor wretch; indeed, he would rejoice over
himself, for never had he spoken with such power and unction, and he
would have said to his wife: "I am an orator, the only thing I have
lacked so far was the occasion. Last Sunday, when speaking about
Abraham, I did not feel thrilled in the least."
Now, if this same
orator had just a bit of sense to spare, I believe he would lose it if
the sinner would reply, in a quiet and dignified manner: "Why, it was on
this very same matter you preached, last Sunday!" But however could the
preacher have entertained such thoughts? Still, such was the case, and
the preacher's mistake was merely not knowing what he was talking about.
Ah, would that some poet might see his way clear to prefer such a
situation to the stuff and nonsense of which novels and comedies are
full! For the comic and the tragic here run parallel to infinity. The
sermon probably was ridiculous enough in itself, but it became
infinitely ridiculous through the very natural consequence it had. Or,
suppose now the sinner was converted by this lecture without daring to
raise any objection, and this zealous divine now went home elated, glad
in the consciousness of being effective, not only in the pulpit, but
chiefly, and with irresistible power, as a spiritual guide, inspiring
his congregation on Sunday, whilst on Monday he would place himself like
a cherub with flaming sword before the man who by his actions tried to
give the lie to the old saying that "the course of the world follows not
the priest's word."
If, on the other hand, the sinner were not
convinced of his error his position would become tragic. He would
probably be executed, or else sent to the lunatic asylum – at any rate,
he would become a sufferer in this world; but in another sense I should
think that Abraham rendered him happy; for he who labors, he shall not
perish.
Now how shall we explain the contradiction contained in
that sermon? Is it due to Abraham's having the reputation of being a
great man – so that whatever he does is great, but if another should
undertake to do the same it is a sin, a heinous sin? If this be the case
I prefer not to participate in such thoughtless laudations. If faith
cannot make it a sacred thing to wish to sacrifice one's son, then let
the same judgment be visited on Abraham as on any other man. And if we
perchance lack the courage to drive our thoughts to the logical
conclusion and to say that Abraham was a murderer, then it were better
to acquire that courage, rather than to waste one's time on undeserved
encomiums. The fact is, the ethical expression for what Abraham did is
that he wanted to murder Isaac; the religious, that he wanted to
sacrifice him. But precisely in this contradiction is contained the fear
which may well rob one of one's sleep. And yet Abraham were not Abraham
without this fear. Or, again, supposing Abraham did not do what is
attributed to him, if his action was an entirely different one, based on
conditions of those times, then let us forget him; for what is the use
of calling to mind that past which can no longer become a present
reality? – Or, the speaker had perhaps forgotten the essential fact
that Isaac was the son. For if faith is eliminated, having been reduced
to a mere nothing, then only the brutal fact remains that Abraham wanted
to murder Isaac – which is easy for everybody to imitate who has not
the faith – the faith, that is, which renders it most difficult for
him....
Love has its priests in the poets, and one hears at times
a poet's voice which worthily extols it. But not a word does one hear
of faith. Who is there to speak in honor of that passion? Philosophy
"goes right on." Theology sits at the window with a painted visage and
sues for philosophy's favor, offering it her charms. It is said to be
difficult to understand the philosophy of Hegel; but to understand
Abraham, why, that is an easy matter! To proceed further than Hegel is a
wonderful feat, but to proceed further than Abraham, why, nothing is
easier! Personally, I have devoted a considerable amount of time to a
study of Hegelian philosophy and believe I understand it fairly well; in
fact, I am rash enough to say that when, notwithstanding an effort, I
am not able to understand him in some passages, it is because he is not
entirely clear about the matter himself. All this intellectual effort I
perform easily and naturally, and it does not cause my head to ache. On
the other hand, whenever I attempt to think about Abraham I am, as it
were, overwhelmed. At every moment I am aware of the enormous paradox
which forms the content of Abraham's life, at every moment I am
repulsed, and my thought, notwithstanding its passionate attempts,
cannot penetrate into it, cannot forge on the breadth of a hair. I
strain every muscle in order to envisage the problem – and become a
paralytic in the same moment.
I am by no means unacquainted with
what has been admired as great and noble, my soul feels kinship with it,
being satisfied, in all humility, that it was also my cause the hero
espoused; and when contemplating his deed I say to myself: "jam tua
causa agitur." I am able to identify myself with the hero; but I cannot
do so with Abraham, for whenever I have reached his height I fall down
again, since he confronts me as the paradox. It is by no means my
intention to maintain that faith is something inferior, but, on the
contrary, that it is the highest of all things; also that it is
dishonest in philosophy to offer something else instead, and to pour
scorn on faith; but it ought to understand its own nature in order to
know what it can offer. It should take away nothing; least of all, fool
people out of something as if it were of no value. I am not unacquainted
with the sufferings and dangers of life, but I do not fear them, and
cheerfully go forth to meet them.... But my courage is not, for all
that, the courage of faith, and is as nothing compared with it. I cannot
carry out the movement of faith: I cannot close my eyes and confidently
plunge into the absurd – it is impossible for me; but neither do I
boast of it....
Now I wonder if every one of my contemporaries is
really able to perform the movements of faith. Unless I am much
mistaken they are, rather, inclined to be proud of making what they
perhaps think me unable to do, viz., the imperfect movement. It is
repugnant to my soul to do what is so often done, to speak inhumanly
about great deeds, as if a few thousands of years were an immense space
of time. I prefer to speak about them in a human way and as though they
had been done but yesterday, to let the great deed itself be the
distance which either inspires or condemns me. Now if I, in the capacity
of tragic hero – for a higher flight I am unable to take – if I had
been summoned to such an extraordinary royal progress as was the one to
Mount Moriah, I know very well what I would have done. I would not have
been craven enough to remain at home; neither would I have dawdled on
the way; nor would I have forgot my knife – just to draw out the end a
bit. But I am rather sure that I would have been promptly on the spot,
with every thing in order – in fact, would probably have been there
before the appointed time, so as to have the business soon over with.
But I know also what I would have done besides. In the moment I mounted
my horse I would have said to myself: "Now all is lost, God demands
Isaac, I shall sacrifice him, and with him all my joy – but for all
that, God is love and will remain so for me; for in this world God and I
cannot speak together, we have no language in common."
Possibly,
one or the other of my contemporaries will be stupid enough, and
jealous enough of great deeds, to wish to persuade himself and me that
if I had acted thus I should have done something even greater than what
Abraham did; for my sublime resignation was (he thinks) by far more
ideal and poetic than Abraham's literal-minded action. And yet this is
absolutely not so, for my sublime resignation was only a substitute for
faith. I could not have made more than the infinite movement (of
resignation) to find myself and again repose in myself. Nor would I have
loved Isaac as Abraham loved him. The fact that I was resolute enough
to resign is sufficient to prove my courage in a human sense, and the
fact that I loved him with my whole heart is the very presupposition
without which my action would be a crime; but still I did not love as
did Abraham, for else I would have hesitated even in the last minute,
without, for that matter, arriving too late on Mount Moriah. Also, I
would have spoiled the whole business by my behavior; for if I had had
Isaac restored to me I would have been embarrassed. That which was an
easy matter for Abraham would have been difficult for me, I mean, to
rejoice again in Isaac; for he who with all the energy of his soul
proprio motu et propriis auspiciis has made the infinite movement of
resignation and can do no more, he will retain possession of Isaac only
in his sorrow.
But what did Abraham? He arrived neither too early
nor too late. He mounted his ass and rode slowly on his way. And all
the while he had faith, believing that God would not demand Isaac of
him, though ready all the while to sacrifice him, should it be demanded
of him. He believed this on the strength of the absurd; for there was no
question of human calculation any longer. And the absurdity consisted
in God's, who yet made this demand of him, recalling his demand the very
next moment. Abraham ascended the mountain and whilst the knife already
gleamed in his hand he believed – that God would not demand Isaac of
him. He was, to be sure, surprised at the outcome; but by a double
movement he had returned at his first state of mind and therefore
received Isaac back more gladly than the first time....
On this
height, then, stands Abraham. The last stage he loses sight of is that
of infinite resignation. He does really proceed further, he arrives at
faith. For all these caricatures of faith, wretched lukewarm sloth,
which thinks: "Oh, there is no hurry, it is not necessary to worry
before the time comes"; and miserable hopefulness, which says: "One
cannot know what will happen, there might perhaps – ," all these
caricatures belong to the sordid view of life and have already fallen
under the infinite scorn of infinite resignation.
Abraham, I am
not able to understand; and in a certain sense I can learn nothing from
him without being struck with wonder. They who flatter themselves that
by merely considering the outcome of Abraham's story they will
necessarily arrive at faith, only deceive themselves and wish to cheat
God out of the first movement of faith – it were tantamount to deriving
worldly wisdom from the paradox. But who knows, one or the other of
them may succeed in doing this; for our times are not satisfied with
faith, and not even with the miracle of changing water into wine – they
"go right on" changing wine into water.
Is it not preferable to
remain satisfied with faith, and is it not outrageous that every one
wishes to "go right on"? If people in our times decline to be satisfied
with love, as is proclaimed from various sides, where will we finally
land? In worldly shrewdness, in mean calculation, in paltriness and
baseness, in all that which renders man's divine origin doubtful. Were
it not better to stand fast in the faith, and better that he that
standeth take heed lest he fall; for the movement of faith must ever be
made by virtue of the absurd, but, note well, in such wise that one does
not lose the things of this world but wholly and entirely regains them.
As
far as I am concerned, I am able to describe most excellently the
movements of faith; but I cannot make them myself. When a person wishes
to learn how to swim he has himself suspended in a swimming-belt and
then goes through the motions; but that does not mean that he can swim.
In the same fashion I too can go through the motions of faith; but when I
am thrown into the water I swim; to be sure (for I am not a wader in
the shallows), but I go through a different set of movements, to-wit,
those of infinity; whereas faith does the opposite, to-wit, makes the
movements to regain the finite after having made those of infinite
resignation. Blessed is he who can make these movements, for he performs
a marvelous feat, and I shall never weary of admiring him, whether now
it be Abraham himself or the slave in Abraham's house, whether it be a
professor of philosophy or a poor servant-girl: it is all the same to
me, for I have regard only to the movements. But these movements I watch
closely, and I will not be deceived, whether by myself or by any one
else. The knights of infinite resignation are easily recognized, for
their gait is dancing and bold. But they who possess the jewel of faith
frequently deceive one because their bearing is curiously like that of a
class of people heartily despised by infinite resignation as well as by
faith – the philistines.
Let me admit frankly that I have not
in my experience encountered any certain specimen of this type; but I do
not refuse to admit that as far as I know, every other person may be
such a specimen. At the same time I will say that I have searched vainly
for years. It is the custom of scientists to travel around the globe to
see rivers and mountains, new stars, gay-colored birds, misshapen fish,
ridiculous races of men. They abandon themselves to a bovine stupor
which gapes at existence and believe they have seen something worth
while. All this does not interest me; but if I knew where there lived
such a knight of faith I would journey to him on foot, for that marvel
occupies my thoughts exclusively. Not a moment would I leave him out of
sight, but would watch how he makes the movements, and I would consider
myself provided for life, and would divide my time between watching him
and myself practicing the movements, and would thus use all my time in
admiring him.
As I said, I have not met with such a one; but I
can easily imagine him. Here he is. I make his acquaintance and am
introduced to him. The first moment I lay my eyes on him I push him
back, leaping back myself, I hold up my hands in amazement and say to
myself: "Good Lord! that person? Is it really he – why, he looks like a
parish-beadle!" But it is really he. I become more closely acquainted
with him, watching his every movement to see whether some trifling
incongruous movement of his has escaped me, some trace, perchance, of a
signaling from the infinite, a glance, a look, a gesture, a melancholy
air, or a smile, which might betray the presence of infinite resignation
contrasting with the finite.
But no! I examine his figure from
top to toe to discover whether there be anywhere a chink through which
the infinite might be seen to peer forth. But no! he is of a piece, all
through. And how about his footing? Vigorous, altogether that of
finiteness, no citizen dressed in his very best, prepared to spend his
Sunday afternoon in the park, treads the ground more firmly. He belongs
altogether to this world, no philistine more so. There is no trace of
the somewhat exclusive and haughty demeanor which marks off the knight
of infinite resignation. He takes pleasure in all things, is interested
in everything, and perseveres in whatever he does with the zest
characteristic of persons wholly given to worldly things. He attends to
his business, and when one sees him one might think he was a clerk who
had lost his soul in doing double bookkeeping, he is so exact. He takes a
day off on Sundays. He goes to church. But no hint of anything
supernatural or any other sign of the incommensurable betrays him, and
if one did not know him it would be impossible to distinguish him in the
congregation, for his brisk and manly singing proves only that he has a
pair of good lungs.
In the afternoon he walks out to the forest.
He takes delight in all he sees, in the crowds of men and women, the
new omnibuses, the Sound – if one met him on the promenade one might
think he was some shopkeeper who was having a good time, so simple is
his joy; for he is not a poet, and in vain have I tried to lure him into
betraying some sign of the poet's detachment. Toward evening he walks
home again, with a gait as steady as that of a mail-carrier. On his way
he happens to wonder whether his wife will have some little special warm
dish ready for him, when he comes home – as she surely has – as, for
instance, a roasted lamb's head garnished with greens. And if he met one
minded like him he is very likely to continue talking about this dish
with him till they reach the East Gate, and to talk about it with a zest
befitting a chef. As it happens, he has not four shillings to spare,
and yet he firmly believes that his wife surely has that dish ready for
him. If she has, it would be an enviable sight for distinguished people,
and an inspiring one for common folks, to see him eat, for he has an
appetite greater than Esau's. His wife has not prepared it – strange,
he remains altogether the same.
Again, on his way he passes a
building lot and there meets another man. They fall to talking, and in a
trice he erects a building, freely disposing of everything necessary.
And the stranger will leave him with the impression that he has been
talking with a capitalist – the fact being that the knight of my
admiration is busy with the thought that if it really came to the point
he would unquestionably have the means wherewithal at his disposal.
Now
he is lying on his elbows in the window and looking over the square on
which he lives. All that happens there, if it be only a rat creeping
into a gutter-hole, or children playing together – everything engages
his attention, and yet his mind is at rest as though it were the mind of
a girl of sixteen. He smokes his pipe in the evening, and to look at
him you would swear it was the green-grocer from across the street who
is lounging at the window in the evening twilight. Thus he shows as much
unconcern as any worthless happy-go-lucky fellow; and yet, every moment
he lives he purchases his leisure at the highest price, for he makes
not the least movement except by virtue of the absurd; and yet, yet –
indeed, I might become furious with anger, if for no other reason than
that of envy – and yet, this man has performed, and is performing every
moment, the movement of infinity... He has resigned everything
absolutely, and then again seized hold of it all on the strength of the
absurd...
But this miracle may so easily deceive one that it will
be best if I describe the movements in a given case which may
illustrate their aspect in contact with reality; and that is the
important point. Suppose, then, a young swain falls in love with a
princess, and all his life is bound up in this love. But circumstances
are such that it is out of the question to think of marrying her, an
impossibility to translate his dreams into reality. The slaves of
paltriness, the frogs in the sloughs of life, they will shout, of
course: "Such a love is folly, the rich brewer's widow is quite as good
and solid a match." Let them but croak. The knight of infinite
resignation does not follow their advice, he does not surrender his
love, not for all the riches in the world. He is no fool, he first makes
sure that this love really is the contents of his life, for his soul is
too sound and too proud to waste itself on a mere intoxication. He is
no coward, he is not afraid to let his love insinuate itself into his
most secret and most remote thoughts, to let it wind itself in
innumerable coils about every fiber of his consciousness – if he is
disappointed in his love he will never be able to extricate himself
again. He feels a delicious pleasure in letting love thrill his every
nerve, and yet his soul is solemn as is that of him who has drained a
cup of poison and who now feels the virus mingle with every drop of his
blood, poised in that moment between life and death.
Having thus
imbibed love, and being wholly absorbed in it, he does not lack the
courage to try and dare all. He surveys the whole situation, he calls
together his swift thoughts which like tame pigeons obey his every beck,
he gives the signal, and they dart in all directions. But when they
return, every one bearing a message of sorrow, and explain to him that
it is impossible, then he becomes silent, he dismisses them, he remains
alone; and then he makes the movement. Now if what I say here is to have
any significance, it is of prime importance that the movement be made
in a normal fashion. The knight of resignation is supposed to have
sufficient energy to concentrate the entire contents of his life and the
realization of existing conditions into one single wish. But if one
lacks this concentration, this devotion to a single thought; if his soul
from the very beginning is scattered on a number of objects, he will
never be able to make the movement – he will be as worldly-wise in the
conduct of his life as the financier who invests his capital in a number
of securities to win on the one if he should lose on the other; that
is, he is no knight. Furthermore, the knight is supposed to possess
sufficient energy to concentrate all his thought into a single act of
consciousness. If he lacks this concentration he will only run errands
in life and will never be able to assume the attitude of infinite
resignation; for the very minute he approaches it he will suddenly
discover that he forgot something so that he must remain behind. The
next minute, thinks he, it will be attainable again, and so it is; but
such inhibitions will never allow him to make the movement but will,
rather, tend to let him sink ever deeper into the mire.
Our
knight, then, performs the movement – which movement? Is he intent on
forgetting the whole affair, which, too, would presuppose much
concentration? No, for the knight does not contradict himself, and it is
a contradiction to forget the main contents of one's life and still
remain the same person. And he has no desire to become another person;
neither does he consider such a desire to smack of greatness. Only lower
natures forget themselves and become something different. Thus the
butterfly has forgotten that it once was a caterpillar – who knows but
it may forget altogether that it once was a butterfly, and turn into a
fish! Deeper natures never forget themselves and never change their
essential qualities. So the knight remembers all; but precisely this
remembrance is painful. Nevertheless, in his infinite resignation he has
become reconciled with existence. His love for the princess has become
for him the expression of an eternal love, has assumed a religious
character, has been transfigured into a love for the eternal being
which, to be sure, denied him the fulfillment of his love, yet
reconciled him again by presenting him with the abiding consciousness of
his love's being preserved in an everlasting form of which no reality
can rob him....
Now, he is no longer interested in what the
princess may do, and precisely this proves that he has made the movement
of infinite resignation correctly. In fact, this is a good criterion
for detecting whether a person's movement is sincere or just
make-believe. Take a person who believes that he too has resigned, but
lo! time passed, the princess did something on her part, for example,
married a prince, and then his soul lost the elasticity of its
resignation. This ought to show him that he did not make the movement
correctly, for he who has resigned absolutely is sufficient unto
himself. The knight does not cancel his resignation, but preserves his
love as fresh and young as it was at the first moment, he never lets go
of it just because his resignation is absolute. Whatever the princess
does, cannot disturb him, for it is only the lower natures who have the
law for their actions in some other person, i.e. have the premises of
their actions outside of themselves....
Infinite resignation is
the last stage which goes before faith, so that every one who has not
made the movement of infinite resignation cannot have faith; for only
through absolute resignation do I become conscious of my eternal worth,
and only then can there arise the problem of again grasping hold of this
world by virtue of faith.
We will now suppose the knight of
faith in the same case. He does precisely as the other knight, he
absolutely resigns the love which is the contents of his life, he is
reconciled to the pain; but then the miraculous happens, he makes one
more movement, strange beyond comparison, saying: "And still I believe
that I shall marry her – marry her by virtue of the absurd, by virtue
of the act that to God nothing is impossible." Now the absurd is not one
of the categories which belong to the understanding proper. It is not
identical with the improbable, the unforeseen, the unexpected. The very
moment our knight resigned himself he made sure of the absolute
impossibility, in any human sense, of his love. This was the result
reached by his reflections, and he had sufficient energy to make them.
In a transcendent sense, however, by his very resignation, the
attainment of his end is not impossible; but this very act of again
taking possession of his love is at the same time a relinquishment of
it. Nevertheless this kind of possession is by no means an absurdity to
the intellect; for the intellect all the while continues to be right, as
it is aware that in the world of finalities, in which reason rules, his
love was and is, an impossibility. The knight of faith realizes this
fully as well. Hence the only thing which can save him is recourse to
the absurd, and this recourse he has through his faith. That is, he
clearly recognizes the impossibility, and in the same moment he believes
the absurd; for if he imagined he had faith, without at the same time
recognizing, with all the passion his soul is capable of, that his love
is impossible, he would be merely deceiving himself, and his testimony
would be of no value, since he had not arrived even at the stage of
absolute resignation....
This last movement, the paradoxical
movement of faith, I cannot make, whether or no it be my duty, although I
desire nothing more ardently than to be able to make it. It must be
left to a person's discretion whether he cares to make this confession;
and at any rate, it is a matter between him and the Eternal Being, who
is the object of his faith, whether an amicable adjustment can be
affected. But what every person can do is to make the movement of
absolute resignation, and I for my part would not hesitate to declare
him a coward who imagines he cannot perform it. It is a different matter
with faith. But what no person has a right to, is to delude others into
the belief that faith is something of no great significance, or that it
is an easy matter, whereas it is the greatest and most difficult of all
things.
But the story of Abraham is generally interpreted in a
different way. God's mercy is praised which restored Isaac to him – it
was but a trial! A trial. This word may mean much or little, and yet the
whole of it passes off as quickly as the story is told: one mounts a
winged horse, in the same instant one arrives on Mount Moriah, and
presto one sees the ram. It is not remembered that Abraham only rode on
an ass which travels but slowly, that it was a three days' journey for
him, and that he required some additional time to collect the firewood,
to bind Isaac, and to whet his knife.
And yet one extols Abraham.
He who is to preach the sermon may sleep comfortably until a quarter of
an hour before he is to preach it, and the listener may comfortably
sleep during the sermon, for everything is made easy enough, without
much exertion either to preacher or listener. But now suppose a man was
present who suffered with sleeplessness and who went home and sat in a
corner and reflected as follows: "The whole lasted but a minute, you
need only wait a little while, and then the ram will be shown and the
trial will be over." Now if the preacher should find him in this frame
of mind, I believe he would confront him in all his dignity and say to
him: "Wretch that thou art, to let thy soul lapse into such folly;
miracles do not happen, all life is a trial." And as he proceeded he
would grow more and more passionate, and would become ever more
satisfied with himself; and whereas he had not noticed any congestion in
his head whilst preaching about Abraham, he now feels the veins on his
forehead swell. Yet who knows but he would stand aghast if the sinner
should answer him in a quiet and dignified manner that it was precisely
this about which he preached the Sunday before.
Let us then
either waive the whole story of Abraham, or else learn to stand in awe
of the enormous paradox which constitutes his significance for us, so
that we may learn to understand that our age, like every age, may
rejoice if it has faith. If the story of Abraham is not a mere nothing,
an illusion, or if it is just used for show and as a pastime, the
mistake cannot by any means be in the sinner's wishing to do likewise;
but it is necessary to find out how great was the deed which Abraham
performed, in order that the man may judge for himself whether he has
the courage and the mission to do likewise. The comical contradiction in
the procedure of the preacher was his reduction of the story of Abraham
to insignificance whereas he rebuked the other man for doing the very
same thing.
But should we then cease to speak about Abraham? I
certainly think not. But if I were to speak about him I would first of
all describe the terrors of his trial. To that end leech-like I would
suck all the suffering and distress out of the anguish of a father, in
order to be able to describe what Abraham suffered whilst yet preserving
his faith. I would remind the hearer that the journey lasted three days
and a goodly part of the fourth – in fact, these three and a half days
ought to become infinitely longer than the few thousand years which
separate me from Abraham. I would remind him, as I think right, that
every person is still permitted to turn about-before trying his strength
on this formidable task; in fact, that he may return every instant in
repentance. Provided this is done, I fear for nothing. Nor do I fear to
awaken great desire among people to attempt to emulate Abraham. But to
get out a cheap edition of Abraham and yet forbid every one to do as he
did, that I call ridiculous.