Home » 47 Journal » Apple’s first computer

Apple’s first computer


Apple 1

Here’s something that stopped me in my tracks: On April 11, 1976—the very day I was born—Steve Jobs and Apple unveiled the Apple I, designed by Steve Wozniak. Its original price? Exactly $666.66.

That number alone echoes like a siren, unmistakably linked to Revelation 13:18—the infamous number of the beast. But it doesn’t end there. The logo? A bitten apple. Immediately, it calls to mind the story of Adam and Eve, the fall of man, and the forbidden fruit from the Tree of Knowledge.

Was it simply clever branding, or something more intentional? A prophetic statement about technology, temptation, and the double-edged sword of knowledge?

Here’s the twist: I’m reflecting on all of this right now… while typing on an Apple MacBook Pro.

Coincidence? Perhaps. But the alignment of these symbols, numbers, and events is hard to ignore. Sometimes, we’re shown things not by accident, but as a wake-up call—a divine nudge to see the spiritual patterns woven into our world. These moments remind us that time, symbols, and scripture are deeply connected, and that what seems like coincidence may, in truth, be revelation.