Why is the apple associated as the forbidden fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil?
The Bible never calls it an apple. Genesis does not say Eve reached up and picked a shiny red apple. It says, “she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat” ~Genesis 3:6. That word simply means fruit. God did not tell us what kind it was.
Somewhere along the road, people started calling it an apple. Art helped that idea spread.
Tradition helped it stick. Even language may have played a part, because in Latin the word connected with “apple” sounded close to the word connected with “evil.” So over time, the apple became the picture people carried in their minds.
But the fruit was never the main issue. The issue was not apples, oranges, figs, or grapes.
The issue was whether man would trust God’s Word or reach for what God had forbidden.
God had already spoken: “But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it” ~Genesis 2:17. The command was clear. The boundary was clear. The warning was clear.
Satan’s attack was not really about fruit. It was about faith. “Yea, hath God said?” ~Genesis 3:1. That is always where rebellion starts.
The sin did not start when Eve took a bite. It started when she began to question whether God’s Word could be trusted.
So when people say “the apple,” they are repeating tradition, not Scripture. Scripture simply says “fruit.” And when Scripture is silent, we should be silent too.
The lesson is not, “Do not eat apples.”
The lesson is, do not distrust God, do not edit His Word, and do not reach for what He has forbidden.