Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The miracle apple: Co-creative lessons from the fall of the Red Delicious
The miracle apple: Co-creative lessons from the fall of the Red Delicious
Jan 11, 2025 7:05 PM

In the Age of Information, much of our work now takes place in the realm of the “intangible”—creating and trading products and services that can feel somewhat obscure or abstract. Even still, in our technological, data-driven world, we should remember that we are cooperating withnatureandco-creating with our Creator.

From the social-media giants to the sawmills, from the blockchain banks to the barbershops, we are using our God-given intellect and creativity to transform a mix of matter and information into something usable. Despite the many distractions that surround us in the modern world, we mustn’t be neglectful or forgetful of our role as cultivators of creation.

In a mini-documentary from NPR’sPlanet Money, we get a clear and refreshing reminder this role through the simple story of the modern apple.“This,” the narrator explains, “is the story of how one man and his ‘miracle apple’ changed the world of fruit forever.”

The film follows David Bedford, who, as a college student in the 1980s, was unsatisfied with the Red Delicious apples that dominated supermarkets.

“Apples were modity like screws or cheap socks—most stores only wanted the basic Red Delicious because it was big, it was red, and it had thick skin that made it easy to transport,” the narrator explains. “The public figured an apple is an apple, and there was no reason they should have to pay more for one versus another.”

After tasting a particular variety from Michigan, Bedford experienced an awakening of sorts, and was moved to e a professional apple breeder at the University of Minnesota. His goal: to cooperate with nature and change the status quo of modity apples” to better serve his neighbors.

After tasting 1,000s of apples, Bedford finally came to what is now known as the Honeycrisp. Yet even with its magic of deliciousness, the apple was hard to grow and grocery stores didn’t believe that consumers would care enough to pay the price. Eventually, after finding creative partners and innovating his way through new approaches to trademarks and patents, Bedford convinced the market that nature had more to offer.

“The world of different apple brands exploded around the Red Delicious,” The film explains. “…So when you’re in a store today, you’re not just looking at a bunch of apples. You’re looking at the legacy of the ‘miracle apple’—the freedom from modity world and the big business of a small fruit.”

Bedford’s story clearly illuminates the interplay between human ingenuity, innovative ideas, cooperation with nature, and service unto our neighbors (and thus to God). But although agriculture may help to simplify those lessons, this sort of transformation isn’t confined to actual seeds in the actual dirt.

When we look back to the Garden of Eden, we see God partnering with Adam and Eve as co-creators in nature—calling, empowering, and working alongside them to steward and transform it. That garden included plenty of actualfruit, but it also pointed us to the promise of much more.

As intangible and unwieldy as the modern economy may sometimes feel, it presents us with an abundance of new opportunities for planting and watering—for cooperating with our neighbors and transforming creation for God’s glory.

Image: walfred, CC0

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The economics of choosing the right career
Note: This is post #97 in a weekly video series on basic economics. Warning for young people: having a college degree no longer guarantees you’ll be able to find a good job, much less have a promising career. Four-year college graduates with entry-level jobs actually earned more in 2000 than they’re earning today. Choosing a good career requires planning beyond getting a college education, says Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution University. In this video he explains why you’ll want to...
How a Protestant pastor defended Brazil’s Catholics
It was in Brazil’s 2010 elections that the majority of the voters first learned about Silas Malafaia. It was also the election in which the left-wing president Lula da Silva reached the height of his political power. Lula was one of the most successful left-wing populist leaders of Latin America in the first two decades of the 21st century. He had all the pragmatism of a Tammany Hall boss. He could be applauded by a crowd of Communists one day...
How the populist moment can become the liberty moment
Since the War of Independence, the American self-image has set individual liberty against oligarchic power. Abraham Lincoln encapsulated this when he described the American experiment as a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” Perhaps it was inevitable that populism, in the form of the People’s Party, was born on U.S. soil – and that, as it experiences a modern-day resurgence, it begins in the United States. The original Populists described themselves as “the plain people” fighting...
Review: Bradley Birzer’s Russell Kirk biography invites us to reconsider conservatism
This is the fifth in a series celebrating the work of Russell Kirk in honor of his 100th birthday this October. Read more from the serieshere. During the twentieth century, one man in particular took it upon himself to make a project of defining and perhaps re-invigorating an American conservatism which the prominent cultural critic Lionel Trilling dismissed as “a series of irritable mental gestures.” I remember picking up a copy of Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mindmany years ago. As...
Sir Roger Scruton: How to preserve freedom in the West
One of the leading philosophers of our time says Western culture will have to be handed down outside the ivory towers and college lecture halls – and he has strong reason to believe that its promulgators will be successful. Sir Roger Scruton’s optimism is not unfounded; he found the dissident, underground munities munist-dominated Europe had a greater thirst for truth and Western culture than their contemporaries in the politically correct West. Scruton reminisced about his career as a pioneering thinker...
The reason young people embrace socialism revealed
Why do young people throughout the West have an increasingly positive view of socialism? The answer has been ferreted out between the lines of a survey recently conducted for the Charles Koch Institute. Young people’s infatuation with socialism remains one of the most lamented (or celebrated) facts of the cultural landscape – but both sides agree, it is an undeniable fact. Americans under the age of 30 hold a more favorable view of socialism than capitalism, according to a Gallup...
William Penn on the three fundamental rights of citizens
Yesterday was the birthday ofWilliam Penn, the influential English Quaker and founder of Pennsylvania. This year also marks the 300th anniversary of his death. Although Penn was an Englishman, he became, as Gary M. Galles says, the first great champion of American liberty. As Galles notes, When Charles II died, a large debt to Penn’s father was settled in 1681 by granting him what would e Pennsylvania. Penn implemented his authority over the colony in his 1682Frame of Government, Pennsylvania’s...
Radio Free Acton: Was Jesus a socialist? The importance of poetry
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Dan Hugger, Research Associate at Acton, speaks with Larry Reed, President of the Foundation for Economic Education, about the question that seems to be cropping up everywhere nowadays: Was Jesus a socialist? Then, Bruce Edward Walker talks to James Matthew Wilson about his new volume of poetry and on why poetry is important today. Check out these additional resources on this week’s podcast topics: Read “Jesus would have voted socialist, says Germany’s Left”...
The political manipulation of religion
The fact that something is political does not mean that it is not religious, says Paul Marshall. Instead of describing something as political, not religious, we might should describe it as the political manipulation of religion, or the insincere use of religion: This stress that events are not religion but politics can lead to misunderstanding the nature of both religion and politics. It can be akin to saying that a table is not round but red. But tables can be...
Understanding Bolsonaro
When Jair Messias Bolsonaro walked into TV Cultura’s studio in July, no one had any idea of ​​the political tsunami that would engulf Brazil 90 days later. The “Roda Viva” is the oldest talk show on Brazilian television; a group of eight journalists sit on a wheel-shaped bench and in the center lies the interviewee. That Monday, Bolsonaro spoke about how he would toughen criminal laws, turn back the sexual revolution, and restore Christian morality. He admitted to not understanding...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved