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?
Preparation
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?"