{
  "schema_version": "simple_bible_commentary_page_v1",
  "generated_at": "2026-05-19T11:47:05.863653+00:00",
  "custom_id": "MAT_028",
  "testament": "NT",
  "book": "Matthew",
  "passage_ref": "Matthew 17:1-27",
  "title": "The Transfiguration and Teaching on Elijah",
  "canonical_url": "/commentary/new-testament-simple/matthew/mat_028/",
  "json_path": "/data/commentary/new-testament-simple/matthew/MAT_028.json",
  "simple_summary": "Jesus is revealed in glory on the mountain, but the Father tells the disciples to listen to him. Then Jesus teaches about Elijah, heals a demonized boy, predicts his death and resurrection again, and shows his freedom as the Son even while paying the temple tax.",
  "simple_explanation": "Matthew 17 ties Jesus’ glory to his coming suffering. Six days after Jesus spoke about the cross and kingdom glory, he took Peter, James, and John up a high mountain. There he was transfigured. His face shone like the sun, and his clothes became white as light. Moses and Elijah appeared with him, but the Father’s voice gave the main message: this is his beloved Son, and the disciples must listen to him. The mountain scene was not meant to end in amazement. It pointed to Jesus’ unique authority.\n\nPeter wanted to build shelters for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah, but God interrupted him. A bright cloud covered them, and the disciples fell down in fear. Jesus touched them and told them not to be afraid. When they looked up, they saw Jesus alone. This shows that the vision was not about giving equal honor to Moses, Elijah, and Jesus. It was about revealing Jesus as the one Son who stands above them.\n\nJesus then told the disciples not to speak about the vision until after the Son of Man had been raised from the dead. His glory had to be understood through the cross and resurrection, not apart from them.\n\nComing down the mountain, Jesus answered the disciples’ question about Elijah. He said Elijah does come first, and that Elijah has already come. Matthew makes clear that Jesus was speaking about John the Baptist. John fulfilled the Elijah-like role of the promised forerunner, but people did not recognize him and treated him badly. In the same way, the Son of Man would suffer at their hands. So the rejection of John pointed ahead to the rejection of Jesus.\n\nAt the foot of the mountain, a father begged Jesus to heal his son, who was suffering terribly because of a demon. The disciples had not been able to heal him. Jesus rebuked the unbelieving and twisted generation, then rebuked the demon. The boy was healed at once. When the disciples asked why they could not cast it out, Jesus said it was because of their little faith. He then spoke of mustard-seed faith and mountain-moving power. The point is not that believers can command any result they want. Rather, real faith in God can meet great obstacles in kingdom work.\n\nJesus then gave another prediction of his death and resurrection. He said he would be betrayed, killed, and raised on the third day. The disciples were deeply grieved. They still did not fully understand the path of the Messiah.\n\nThe chapter ends with the temple tax. The collectors asked Peter if Jesus paid it. Jesus used the example of earthly kings to show that sons are free. As the Son, he had no need to pay in the same way others did. Yet he chose to pay so as not to offend them. He also provided the coin in a fish’s mouth, showing his authority and care. Jesus was free, but he willingly set aside that freedom for the sake of peace.\n\nMatthew 17 therefore shows Jesus as the Father’s beloved Son in glory, authority, and freedom. But that glory must be understood together with suffering, death, and resurrection. The disciples are called to listen to him, trust him in weakness, and follow the path God has appointed.",
  "important_truths": [
    "Jesus is the Father’s beloved Son, and the disciples must listen to him above all others.",
    "The transfiguration gives a real glimpse of Jesus’ glory, but that glory must be understood through the cross and resurrection.",
    "John the Baptist fulfilled the Elijah-like role of the promised forerunner in this context, and his rejection foreshadowed Jesus’ suffering.",
    "The disciples’ failure with the demonized boy came from little faith, not from missing a technique.",
    "“Nothing will be impossible for you” speaks of trust in God for kingdom-assigned ministry, not unlimited power to get any desired result.",
    "Jesus is free as the Son in relation to the temple, yet he willingly pays the tax to avoid unnecessary offense."
  ],
  "warnings_promises_commands": [
    "Do not separate the transfiguration from the earlier teaching about the cross, discipleship, and the promise that some would see kingdom glory.",
    "Do not treat Moses, Elijah, and Jesus as equal authorities in this passage; the Father’s voice centers everything on the Son.",
    "Do not flatten Jesus’ Elijah teaching into either a denial of prophecy or a simplistic one-to-one identity; in this context John is the Elijah-like forerunner who came and was rejected.",
    "Do not turn the mustard-seed saying into a promise that strong enough faith guarantees any outcome a person wants.",
    "Do not treat the temple-tax payment as proof that Jesus had no unique sonship; he pays by choice to avoid needless offense, not because he lacks special status.",
    "Listen to him.",
    "Trust him in weakness.",
    "Follow the path of suffering before glory.",
    "Do not be afraid."
  ],
  "gods_plan_connection": "The chapter shows God’s plan in a clear pattern: the beloved Son is revealed in glory, but that glory points toward the cross, resurrection, and final vindication. John’s coming as the Elijah-like forerunner, the failed exorcism, the second passion prediction, and the temple-tax miracle all fit this same plan. Jesus moves forward in obedience, and even his freedom as Son is used in humble service.",
  "simple_application": "When Jesus’ teaching challenges your expectations, listen to him rather than to your assumptions. Do not expect spiritual privilege to remove weakness. If ministry fails, ask whether faith has become small. Trust God for the work he has given you. And when you have real freedom, use it with wisdom and love, not to create needless offense.",
  "net_bible_attribution": "Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible®, copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved.",
  "source_status": {
    "stage3_status": "polished",
    "stage3_final_release_status": "approved",
    "operator_review_status": ""
  }
}