Matthew 17:9
And as they came down from the mountain, Jesus charged them, saying, Tell the vision to no man, until the Son of man be risen again from the dead.
Cross-references
Matthew 17:23 also predicts Jesus' resurrection, but in a later context after the healing — both refer to the same future event.
Matthew 16:21 is the first explicit resurrection prediction earlier in the same gospel, providing the basis for the command to silence until that event.
In Matthew 9:30, Jesus warns healed blind men not to spread the news, another instance of the same silence command.
In Matthew 12:16, Jesus orders those he healed not to make him known, continuing the 'tell no one' pattern.
Matthew 28:6 announces the resurrection that the main verse awaited; the silence command is now fulfilled and lifted.
In Matthew 8:4, Jesus similarly commands a healed leper not to tell anyone, reinforcing the pattern of secrecy before the resurrection.
Matthew 16:20 similarly commands silence about Jesus being the Christ — reinforcing the pattern of secrecy before the resurrection.
Luke 24:46 is the post-resurrection confirmation that Christ must suffer and rise, fulfilling the event Jesus commanded silence until.
Luke 18:34 explains the disciples did not understand the resurrection prediction — the reason they were told to keep silent until after it happened.
Luke 9:22 gives the prediction of suffering and resurrection that follows the silence command, explaining what 'raised from the dead' means.
Luke 9:21 records the same command to silence after the transfiguration, parallel account of the same event.
Mark 9:10 shows the disciples keeping the vision secret while puzzling over the resurrection — adding their confusion.
Mark 9:9 is the identical command from the same event — telling no one until the resurrection.
Luke 9:36 records the same transfiguration event; the disciples kept quiet as commanded, confirming the outcome.
In Mark 5:43, Jesus orders silence after raising Jairus’s daughter, another parallel to the transfiguration secrecy.
Luke 18:33 is another prediction of Jesus' death and resurrection, echoing the same future event referenced in the silence command.
Mark 8:30 records the same charge to silence about Jesus's identity — echoing the messianic secrecy theme.