A profound unease, a dizzying sensation, grips the soul when it stands at the precipice of its own boundless freedom. This is not fear, for fear has a definite object – a lurking beast, a towering wave – but this deeper disquiet, this "anxiety," arises from nothing determinate, from the sheer possibility of possibility itself. It is the very mark of humanity, for a beast, bound by instinct, knows no such dread, nor does an angel, dwelling in pure spirit. But man, a synthesis of the finite and the infinite, of body and soul, of the temporal and the eternal, finds himself suspended in this tension, facing the abyss of his own choices.
Consider the state of innocence before the Fall, before the knowledge of good and evil had dawned. Adam, in his primordial state, was ignorant of sin, yet he was not without anxiety. When commanded not to eat from the tree, the very prohibition introduced a realm of possibility, a "nothing" that beckoned with an alluring terror. This was the anxiety of freedom, the silent shudder before the open expanse of choice. It was not sin itself, but the fertile ground from which sin could spring, a sympathetic antipathy towards that which was both desired and forbidden.
The fall into sin, then, was not an inevitable consequence of creation or a mere inherited flaw. It was, for Adam, and indeed for every individual soul, a "qualitative leap." It was a sudden, decisive act of choosing against the innocent unity with the divine, a plunge into the self-awareness of guilt. Each person, in their own existence, re-enacts this fall, not by inheriting Adam's specific transgression, but by confronting the same yawning chasm of freedom and making their own inaugural choice, thereby positing sinfulness within themselves.
This initial anxiety, born of freedom, then gives way to a more complex form once sin has entered the world. There is the anxiety that manifests as a consequence of sinfulness, a compounding dread that can ensnare the individual in a cycle of despair. One may become paralyzed by the fear of past missteps, ruminating on transgressions to the point of inaction, unable to look forward to redemptive acts. In this state, the very anxiety about sin can become a sin in itself, a refusal to move forward in faith and embrace the radical freedom to choose rightly in each new moment.
Yet, anxiety is not solely a harbinger of potential downfall. It holds a paradoxical, even salvific, potential. This profound unease, this constant reminder of one's freedom and responsibility, serves as a tutor, an educator unto faith. It forces the individual to confront their own existence, to acknowledge their unique self, and to recognize their dependence on something beyond themselves. It is through wrestling with this ambiguity, this tension between infinite possibilities and the weight of choice, that one can embark on a path of self-discovery and transformation.
For it is in the face of this ever-present anxiety - the dizziness before the boundless possibilities of becoming - that true greatness and creativity can emerge. To embrace this existential trembling is to acknowledge the profound, spiritual nature of human existence, to move beyond a state of un-self-conscious immediacy toward reflective awareness. The journey through anxiety, therefore, is an adventure every soul must undertake, not to succumb to its paralyzing grip, but to learn from it, to be shaped by it, and ultimately, to make a leap of faith back towards an authentic relationship with the divine.