Apple
apple
The fruit, Malus communis, Pyrus malus, or Malus malus, the native home of which is said to be Asia Minor . In the Bible (Genesis 3) it is identified as the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge eaten by Adam and Eve. The tree, in Hebrew thap-puakk, is referred to in Canticle of Canticles, 2 and 8, whence such place-names as Tappuah or Taphua (Joshua 12 and 15) or Beth-tappuah (Joshua 15).
In religious symbolism and ecclesiastical art, the apple is used as a decoration on a church; the Infant Christ is represented holding an apple, the fruit of Paradise that became the cause of Adam’s fall; it is also (rare) the apple of obedience and of life; Sodom’s apple symbolizes sin, or sinful lust.
Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary
Apple
Apple. A tree that grows about 9 meters (30 feet) high and has rough bark and pink blossoms. Many authorities believe the apple of Scripture actually is the apricot, a native of Armenia. Other authorities suggest the quince, peach, citron, orange, or some other fruit; some believe it was the apple.
The apple was described as sweet and fragrant ( Son 7:8); (apricot, NEB), golden ( Pro 25:11), and suitable for shade ( Son 2:3). This fruit was used figuratively to show how precious we are to God, and how extremely sensitive He is to our needs ( Deu 32:10; Psa 17:8; Lam 2:18; Zec 2:8).
Fuente: Plants Animals Of Bible
Apple
is the translation in the Auth. Vers. of the Heb. (tappu’ach, so called from its fragrance), which is mentioned chiefly in the Son 2:3, as the apple-tree among the trees of the wood; Son 2:5, Comfort me with apples, for I am sick of love; Son 2:8, The smell of thy nose like apples;” so in Son 8:5. Again, in Pro 25:11, A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in baskets of silver. In Joe 1:12, it is enumerated with the vine, the fig-tree, the palm, and pomegranate, as among the most valuable trees of Palestine. Tappuah (q.v.) also occurs as the name of two places (Jos 12:13; Jos 15:34; Jos 16:8), probably from the abundance of the fruit in the vicinity.
It is a difficult matter to say with any degree of certainty what is the specific tree denoted by the Hebrew word tappuach. The Sept. and Vulg. afford no clew, as the terms , malum, have a wide signification, being used by the Greeks and Romans to represent almost any kind of tree-fruit; at any rate, the use of the word is certainly generic. Many interpreters (after Celsus, Hierobot. 1, 255) have supposed the citron (citrus medica), some the ordinary orange-tree (Credner, Joel, p. 136), to be meant, as each of these were celebrated favorites among the ancients, and have many qualities agreeing with the Scriptural notices. The citron was the Median apple of the ancients, the citromela of the Romans (Theophr. Hist. 4), and was cultivated even in Europe (Bauhin, Pinax). That it was well known to the Hebrews appears from the fact mentioned by Josephus, that at the Festival of Tabernacles Alexander Jannaeus was pelted with citrons, which the Jews had in their hands; for, as he says, the law required that at that feast every one should have branches of the palm-tree and citron-tree (Ant. 13, 13, 5). It is still found in Palestine (Kitto, Phys. Hist. p. 213). As, however, the Sept. and Vulg. both seem to understand the apple (, malum), and the Arabs still call this fruit by the same name (teffach), which, according to the Talmud (Mishna, Kel. 1:4; Maaser. 1:4) and Josephus (Ant. 17, 7), was anciently cultivated in Palestine, as it still is to some extent (Robinson, 1:355; 2:356, 716; 3, 295), and was celebrated in antiquity for its agreeable smell (Ovid, Met. 8, 675), it seems more likely to be the tree designated rather than the citron, which is a small, comparatively rare tree, with a hard, inedible fruit (Thomson, Land and Book, 2, 328, 329). SEE CITRON.
On the other hand, Celsius (Hierob. 1:255) asserts that the quince-tree (Pyrus cydonia) was very often called by the Greek and Roman writers malus, as being, from the esteem in which it was held (primaria malorum species), the malus, or . Some, therefore (Rosenmller, Alterth. IV, 1:308; Ray, Hist. of Plants, II, 3, 1453), have endeavored to show that the tappuach denotes the quince; and certainly this opinion has some plausible arguments in its favor. The fragrance of the quince was held in high esteem by the ancients; and the fruit was placed on the heads of those images in the sleeping apartments which were reckoned among the household gods (Rosenmller, Botany of Bible, in the Bibl. Cab. p. 314; Voss, On Virgil, Eclog. 2, 51). The Arabians make especial allusion to the restorative properties of this fruit; and Celsius (p. 261) quotes Abu’l Fadli in illustration of Son 2:5. Its scent, says the Arabic author, cheers my soul, renews my strength, and restores my breath. Phylarchus (Histor. lib. 6), Rabbi Salomon (in Son 2:3), Pliny (H. N. 15, 11), who uses the words odoris praestantissimi, bear similar testimony to the delicious fragrance of the quince. It is well known that among the ancients the quince was sacred to the goddess of love, whence statues of Venus sometimes represent her with the fruit of this tree in her hand, the quince being the ill-fated apple of discord which Paris appropriately enough presented to that defty. Hence the act expressed by the term ‘ (Schol. ad Aristoph. Nub. p. 180; Theocr. Id. 3, 10, 5, 88, etc.; Virg. Eel. 3, 64) was a token of love. For numerous testimonies, see Celsius, Hierob. 1, 265. See BOTANY.
Although it is so usual to speak of the forbidden fruit of paradise as an apple, we need hardly say that there is nothing in Scripture to indicate what kind of tree was the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. But in the fabled apples of discord, and in the golden apple which Paris gave to the goddess of love, thereby kindling the Trojan war, it is possible that the primeval tradition reappears of SEE TREE.
The fruit
Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
Brought death into the world, and all our woe.
The Heb. for the “apple” of the eye is (ishon’, mannikin, pupil, Deu 32:10; Pro 7:2), otherwise (babah’, hole, gate, Zec 2:12), or (bath, daughter, i.e. by an idiomatic use, the pupil, Psa 17:8). The same figure occurs. in the Apocrypha (, Sir 17:22 [17]). It is curious to observe how common the image ( pupil of the eye) is in the languages of different nations. Gesenius (Thes. p. 86) quotes from the Arabic, the Syriac, the Ethiopic, the Coptic, the Persian, in all of which tongues an expression similar to the English pupil of the eye is found. SEE EYE.
APPLES OF SODOM is a phrase associated with the Dead Sea, as the name of a species of fruit extremely beautiful to the eye, but bitter to the taste and full of dust. Tacitus (Hist. 5, 7) alludes to this singular fact, but in language so brief and ambiguous that no light can be derived from his description: Black and empty, they vanish as it were in ashes. Josephus also, speaking of the conflagration of the plain, and the yet remaining tokens of the divine fire, remarks, There are still to be seen ashes reproduced in the fruits, which indeed resemble edible fruits in color, but on being plucked with the hands are dissolved into smoke and ashes (War, 4, 8,4). The supposed fruit has furnished many moralists with allusions; and also Milton, in whose infernal regions
A grove sprung up laden with fair fruit greedily they plucked
The fruitage, fair to sight, like that which grew
Near that bituminous lake where Sodom flamed.
This, more delusive, not the touch, but taste
Deceived. They, fondly thinking to allay
Their appetite with gust, instead of fruit
Chewed bitter ashes, which the offended taste
With spattering noise rejected.
Some travelers, unable to discover this singular production, have considered it merely as a figure of speech, depicting the deceitful nature of all vicious enjoyments; but Kitto (Phys. Hist. of Palest. p. 290 sq.) adduces the definite testimony of many modern travelers to show that these allusions are based upon truth, especially the statements of Seetzen (in Zach’s Monatl. Corresp. 18, 442) and Burckhardt (Syria, p. 392), whose accounts of the fruit of the Osheir (prob. Asclepias gigantea) remarkably coincide with the ancient descriptions. This plant is figured and described by Prosper Alpinus under the name Beid elOssar (Hist. Nat. iEgypte, Lugd. Bat. 1735, pt. 1:43). See also Irby and Mangles (Travels, ch. viii). Hasselquist, however, finds the apples of Sodom in the Solanum Sodomeum, which he identifies with the Solanum melongena, or mad- apple, growing in great abundance in the plain of the Jordan (Riese, p. 151). But Dr. Robinson thinks the other the most probable plant. His description of it is as follows: We saw here [on the shore of the Dead Sea] several trees of the kind, the trunks of which were 6 or 8 inches in diameter, and the whole height from 10 to 15 feet. It has a grayish, cork- like bark, with long oval leaves, and in its general appearance and character it might be taken for a gigantic perennial species of the milk-weed or silkweed found in the northern parts of the American states. Its leaves and flowers are very similar to those of the latter plant, and when broken off it in like manner discharges copiously a milky fluid. The fruit greatly resembles externally a large smooth apple or orange, hanging in clusters of three or four together, and when ripe is of a yellow color. It was now fair and delicious to the eye, and soft to the touch; but on being pressed or struck it explodes with a puff, like, a bladder or puff-ball, leaving in the hand only the shreds of the thin rind and a few fibres. It is, indeed, filled chiefly with air like a bladder, which gives it the round form; while in the center a small slender pod runs through it from the stem, and is connected by thin filaments with the rind. The pod contains a small quantity of fine silk with seeds, precisely like the pod of the silk-weed, though very much smaller, being indeed scarcely the tenth part as large.
The Arabs collect the silk and twist it into matches for their guns, preferring it to the common match, because it requires no sulphur to render it combustible. In the accounts of Tacitus and Josephus, after a due allowance for the marvelous in all popular reports, I find nothing which does not apply almost literally to the fruit of the Osher, as we saw it. It must be plucked and handled with great care in order to preserve it from bursting. We attempted to carry some of the boughs and fruit with us to Jerusalem, but without success. Hasselquist’s apples of Sodom (the fruit of the Solanum melongena) are much smaller than those of the Osher, and when ripe are full of small black grains. There is here, however, nothing like explosion, nothing like smoke and ashes,’ except occasionally, as the same naturalist remarks, when the fruit is punctured by an insect (Tenthredo), which converts the whole of the inside into dust, leaving nothing but the rind entire, without any loss of color.’ We saw the Solanum and the Osher growing side by side; the former presenting nothing remarkable in its appearance, and being found in other parts of the country, while the latter immediately arrested our attention by its singular accordance with the ancient story, and is, moreover, peculiar in Palestine to the shores of the Dead Sea (Bib. Researches, 2, 236 sq.; comp. Wilson, Bible Lands, 1, 8 sq.). SEE SODOM.
It should be observed that the Bible speaks only of the VINE of Sodom, and that metaphorically (Deu 32:32), as a synonym of a poisonous berry. SEE HEMLOCK.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Apple
(Heb. tappuah, meaning “fragrance”). Probably the apricot or quince is intended by the word, as Palestine was too hot for the growth of apples proper. It is enumerated among the most valuable trees of Palestine (Joel 1:12), and frequently referred to in Canticles, and noted for its beauty (2:3, 5; 8:5). There is nothing to show that it was the “tree of the knowledge of good and evil.” Dr. Tristram has suggested that the apricot has better claims than any other fruit-tree to be the apple of Scripture. It grows to a height of 30 feet, has a roundish mass of glossy leaves, and bears an orange coloured fruit that gives out a delicious perfume. The “apple of the eye” is the Heb. _ishon_, meaning manikin, i.e., the pupil of the eye (Prov. 7:2). (Comp. the promise, Zech. 2:8; the prayer, Ps. 17:8; and its fulfilment, Deut. 32:10.)
The so-called “apple of Sodom” some have supposed to be the Solanum sanctum (Heb. hedek), rendered “brier” (q.v.) in Micah 7:4, a thorny plant bearing fruit like the potato-apple. This shrub abounds in the Jordan valley. (See ENGEDI)
Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary
Apple
Hebrew; tappuach. (Son 2:3; Son 2:5; Son 7:8; Son 8:5; Pro 25:11.) The color was golden, the odor fragrant, the tree green and shady. Probably the citron tree, of which the foliage is perennial, and the blossoms and golden fruit most fragrant. It abounds in W. Asia. In Son 2:5, “Comfort me with apples,” the Hebrew is “Straw me,” etc., i.e., let my couch be strewed with citrons, to refresh me with their scent, or with citron leaves. Pro 25:11; “A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver “; i.e., like citrons, antifebrile medicinally, attractive to the eye, pleasing the sense of smell and the palate; served up in elaborately figured silver vessels. Oriental ladies make the citron their vinaigrette.
Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary
Apple
APPLE.That the apple (tappuah) of the OT is the fruit known by that name to-day is extremely doubtful. It is true that the tree in size and foliage would answer to the reference in Son 8:5, Joe 1:12; the fruit too in its sweetness (Son 2:3) and its smell (Son 7:8) is very appropriate. It is also suggestive that Heb. tappuah closely resembles the Arabic for apple, tuffah. On the other hand, it is a substantial difficulty that the apple does not grow well in Palestine proper, as distinguished from the Lebanon. The native fruit is small and wanting in sweetness; almost all eatable apples are imported from the North. In consequence of this, several fruits which to-day are found in Palestine have been suggested. The citron, a favourite with the Jews on account of its smell and golden colour, is certainly a more recent introduction. The apricot, suggested by Tristiam, which flourishes in parts of Palestine in greater profusion than any other fruit, would seem to answer to the references well. It is deliciously sweet, with a pleasant smell, and, when ripe, of a brilliant golden colour. The tree is one of the most beautiful in the land, and when loaded with its golden fruit might well suggest the expression apples of gold in pictures of silver (Pro 25:11). Unfortunately there is considerable doubt whether this tree, a native of China, was known in Palestine much before the Christian era. A fourth fruit has been suggested, namely, the quince. This is certainly a native of the land, and is common all over Palestine. The fruit, when ripe, though smelling pleasantly, is not sweet according to our ideas, but even to-day is much appreciated. It is a great favourite when cooked, and is extensively used for making a delicious confection. The quince, along with the true apple, was sacred to Aphrodite, the goddess of love.
E. W. G. Masterman.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Apple
The word Tappuach is thus rendered in the Authorized Version. Most authors on Biblical Botany admit that apple is not the correct translation, for that fruit is indifferent in Palestine, being produced of good quality only on Mount Lebanon, and in Damascus. Many contend that ‘quince’ is the correct translation of Tappuach. Though somewhat more suitable than the apple, we think that neither the quince tree nor fruit is so superior to others as to be selected for notice in the passages of Scripture where tappuach occurs. The citron, we think, has the best claim to be considered the Tappuachof Scripture, as it was esteemed by the ancients, and known to the Hebrews, and conspicuously different, both as a fruit and a tree, from the ordinary vegetation of Syria, and the only one of the orange tribe which was known to the ancients. The orange, lemon, and lime, were introduced to the knowledge of Europeans at a much later period, probably by the Arabs from India. That the citron was well known to the Hebrews we have the assurance in the fact mentioned by Josephus, that at the Feast of Tabernacles king Alexander Jannaeus was pelted with citrons, which the Jews had in their hands; for, as he says, ‘the law required that at that feast everyone should have branches of the palm-tree and citron-tree. There is nothing improbable in the Hebrews having made use of boughs of the citron, as it was a native of Media, and well known to the Greeks at a very early period; and indeed on some old coins of Samaria, the citron may be seen, as well as the palm-tree; and it is not an unimportant confirmation that the Jews still continue to make offerings of citrons at the Feast of Tabernacles. Citrons, accordingly, are imported in considerable quantities for this purpose, and are afterwards sold, being more highly esteemed after having been so offered.
The tappuach, or citron-tree, is mentioned chiefly in Son 2:3, ‘as the citron tree among the trees of the wood;’ Son 2:5, ‘Comfort me with citrons, for I am sick of love;’ Son 7:8, ‘The smell of thy nose like citrons;’ so in Son 8:5. Again, in Pro 25:11, ‘A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold (or rather golden citrons) in baskets of silver.’ In Joe 1:12, it is enumerated with the vine, the fig-tree, the palm, and pomegranate, as among the most valuable trees of Palestine. The rich color, fragrant odor, and handsome appearance of the tree, whether in flower or in fruit, are particularly suited to all the above passages of Scripture.
Fuente: Popular Cyclopedia Biblical Literature
Apple
A fruit.
Pro 25:11; Son 2:3; Son 2:5; Son 7:8; Son 8:5; Joe 1:12
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Apple
Apple Tree, Apple (Heb. tappach). Apple tree is named in the English Versions in Son 2:3; Son 8:5, and Joe 1:12, The fruit of this tree is alluded to in Pro 25:11 and Son 2:5; Son 7:8. It is difficult to say what tree is intended by the Hebrew word tappach. The apple proper is rare in Syria, and its fruit poor. Some writers say the Hebrew word means either the quince or the citron; others speak of the apricot, which is abundant and deliciously perfumed. On the other hand. Dr. Boyle says, “The rich color, fragrant odor and handsome appearance of the citron, whether in flower or in fruit, are particularly suited to the passages of Scripture mentioned above.” Neither the quince nor the citron nor the apple appears fully to answer all the scriptural allusions. The orange would answer all the requirements of the scriptural passages, and orange trees are found in Palestine; but it is not certain that this tree was known in the earlier times to the inhabitants of Palestine. The question of identification, therefore, must still be counted unsettled.
Fuente: People’s Dictionary of the Bible
Apple
Apple. See Apple Tree.
Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary
Apple
Deu 32:10 (a) The apple of the eye is the eyeball. It is very sensitive, is easily injured, and is very valuable to its owner. The expression is used as a type of the nation of Israel, which was, and is, so precious to GOD.
Psa 17:8 (a) Here the Psalmist himself takes the place of being the apple of GOD’s eye. He felt that he was so easily hurt by his enemies, and yet was so valuable to GOD that he dared to use that type to illustrate his own position before GOD.
Pro 7:2 (a) The Law of GOD is here presented as being just as precious as the apple of the eye, and should therefore be guarded and preserved most carefully.
Lam 2:18 (a) Probably the expression here represents a call from GOD to esteem their position as children of GOD, and the nation of GOD more highly than they were doing. Surely if Israel remembered that they were as the apple of GOD’s eye, they would not cease weeping until they were again obeying and worshiping Him.
Zec 2:8 (a) GOD is evidently notifying the world that the nation of Israel is unusually dear and precious to Him, and that He will protect that nation from every enemy. Those who touch Israel in any way to hurt them will in fact put their finger into the eye of GOD.