Then when lust hath conceived
A proposal of pleasure or profit being made, agreeable to lust,
or the principle of corrupt nature, sinful man is pleased with
it; and instead of resisting and rejecting the motion made, he
admits of it, and receives it, and cherishes it in his mind; he
dallies and plays with it; he dwells upon it in his thoughts, and
hides it under his tongue, and in his heart, as a sweet morsel,
and forsakes it not, but contrives ways and means how to bring it
about; and this is lust's conceiving. The figure is used in (
Psalms 7:14 )
on which Kimchi, a Jewish commentator, has this note;
``he (the psalmist) compares the thoughts of the heart (Nwyrhl) , "to a conception", and when they go out in word, this is "travail", and in work or act, this is "bringing forth".''And so it follows here,
it bringeth forth sin;
into act, not only by consenting to it, but by performing it:
and sin, when it is finished:
being solicited, is agreed to, and actually committed:
bringeth forth death;
as the first sin of man brought death into the world, brought a
spiritual death, or moral death upon man, subjected him to a
corporeal death, and made him liable to an eternal one; so every
sin is deserving of death, death is the just wages of it; yea,
even the motions of sin work in men to bring forth fruit unto
death. Something like these several gradual steps, in which sin
proceeds, is observed by the Jews, and expressed in much the like
language, in allegorizing the case of Lot, and his two daughters
F9;
``the concupiscent soul (or "lust") stirs up the evil figment, and imagines by it, and it cleaves to every evil imagination, (trbetmv) , "until it conceives a little", and produces in the heart of man the evil thought, and cleaves to it; and as yet it is in his heart, and is not "finished" to do it, until this desire or lust stirs up the strength of the body, first to cleave to the evil figment, and then (herh Mwlvt) , "sin is finished"; as it is said, ( Genesis 19:36 ) .''
F9 Midrash Haneelam in Zohar in Gen. fol. 67. 4.