This research proposes, from Kierkegaardian studies, to analyze "Faith as a
presupposition to know God". God is something paradoxical to the understanding. He
reveals Himself from an existential communication provided in subjectivity. There is a
human will to know God, which means, to relate to Him. Kierkegaard affirms that God
is not a historical fact, that can be objectified by intellectual thought. God is a truth
given in the contradiction of existence, where each individual needs, excavating its
interiority, to relate to Him who is The Absolutely-Different. But it is living the paradox
of faith, in its religious stage, having overcome the aesthetic or ethical life condition,
that the individual can acquire its subjectivity. We shall introduce, based on the
proposed topic, how New Testament Christianity becomes a way for the statement of
subjectivity and for a relationship with The Absolutely-Different.