9. Doesn't the word lusts properly  apply only to bodily appetites: the pleasures and comforts of sex, food, drink,  rest, exercise, health?
 People follow the desires of body and  mind (see Eph. 2:3). Bodily appetites--the organism's hedonistic instinct  to feel good--are certainly powerful masters unto sin. But desires of the  mind--for power, human approval, success, preeminence, wealth,  self-righteousness, and so forth--are also potent masters. The desires of the  mind often present the most subtle and deceitful lusts because the outworkings  are not always obvious. They don't reside in the body, but the Bible still views  them as "lusts."
 
