Six days pass from Jesus' previous teaching, and then Jesus takes
Peter and the brothers
James and
John up an unnamed high mountain, which many came to believe was
Mount Tabor. Suddenly, Jesus' clothes become dazzingly white, "... whiter than anyone in the world could
bleach them", and
Elijah and
Moses appear. The disciples are stunned: for the first time, Mark uses the term
Rabbi, and they ask what they should do and offer to put up shelters or 'tabernacles' for the assembled trio. A
cloud overshadows them and a voice comes from the cloud saying "This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!" (7) which is what Jesus heard the "voice from heaven" say when he was
baptised by John the Baptist in
Mark 1 () but now Mark has Peter, James, and John as witnesses to this. Elijah and Moses disappear and they head down the mountain. On the way down the mountain, Jesus tells them to keep what had happened to themselves until the
Son of Man has risen from the dead. They do not ask him to clarify this but they question among themselves what this "rising from the dead" might mean. For Tuckett, the disciples' discussion "seems to imply that they do not understand what resurrection in general means. This seems incredible in historical terms:
resurrection was a well-known idea in [the]
Judaism of the period". He suggests that verse 10 may be either "a highly artificial note by Mark to bolster his motif of the disciples' lack of understanding", or a reference "specifically to the resurrection of the Son of Man" distinct from the general resurrection. In possibly a separate discussion, Moses can be seen as a representative of the
law and Elijah a representative of the
prophets. This whole passage has echoes of
Exodus 24, where clouds covered
Mount Sinai for six days before Moses went up to receive the
Ten Commandments. The original
Greek uses the word
metamorphothe which was translated into
Latin as
Trans Figura, the changing of appearance or of the body itself. ==The Possessed Boy== They arrive back and find the rest of the
disciples arguing with several
teachers of the law surrounded by a crowd. As Jesus returns, the crowd are "amazed" at him: the
New Revised Standard Version translates as "they were ... overcome with
awe", suggesting that his appearance "still retained traces of His transfiguration-glory". Jesus asks the crowd "What are you arguing about?" (verse 16) and a man says he brought his possessed boy for Jesus to heal. The boy has a mute spirit and "foams at the mouth, gnashes his teeth and becomes rigid" – symptoms of
epilepsy, which Matthew states to be the case. The man says the boy has been made to fall both into water and fire by the demon. Jesus' disciples could not heal him. Jesus says "You faithless generation" (v 19). He commands the boy be brought to him. The father begs Jesus to help the boy
if he can, to which Jesus replies
"Everything is possible for him who believes", and the man says "I believe. Help my unbelief!" (verse 24, only in Mark's account). Jesus heals the boy: when asked by the disciples privately why they could not cast it out, he replies "This kind can come out only through
prayer and
fasting" (verse 29). Some early manuscripts and modern versions omit the reference to fasting. ==Predictions about the crucifixion==