Perfect. Fucking perfect. Kierkegaard wrote under the pseudonym “Johannnes De Silentio,” who, (all planned by the clever Soren), set out to decipher the biblical story of Abraham. After having become terribly confused(again, part of the plan, of course) and failing every attempt to understand, he begins to suspect his own intellectual capacity because he also sees everyone else claims to understand the story perfectly well(Kierkegaardian irony once again).
The most horrifying part was that the people held Abraham to be an exalted hero, while Johannnes denouned him viciously:
“How did Abraham know it was really God? How did he know it wasn’t a nightmare? How did he know it wasn’t his unconscious mind? How did he know he got the message(order from God) right?”
Forever this plagued Kierkegaard secretly. Soren obsessed about this story and was perplexed.
He called it a “teleological suspension of the ethical,” a place where the human condition is revealed naked and penetrated. For what was Abraham to do? What would you do?
Johannnes was filled with dread. To suspect that an order from God to kill one’s son could be heard, and that if one were certain of such an order, that one must obey, is Abrahams ethical leap into absurdity and resignation to God( a “Knight of Infinite Resignation”).
Renouncing everything that Abraham would ever believe, his ethical values, his son, his wife, etc., for God, was a dreadful test.
“Dread is a sympathetic antipathy and an antipathetic sympathy”- Kierkegaard
That is, knowing that one can do something, but also that they can choose not to, fearing this ability of choice, and loathing in it.
Its a great story. Kierkegaard shows a side of it that’s all to often forgotten.