Luke 7:21
And in that same hour he cured many of their infirmities and plagues, and of evil spirits; and unto many that were blind he gave sight.
Cross-references
Luke 7:22 reports the very same healings to John's disciples — this verse describes the acts that verse 22 then declares.
Luke 4:40 shows Jesus healing many with various diseases at sunset — another summary of his healing ministry like this verse.
Mark 3:10 similarly describes Jesus healing many, with people pressing to touch Him — directly parallel to the healing ministry summarized here.
Matthew 9:27 shows two blind men crying out to Jesus — a specific instance of the blind receiving sight mentioned here.
Matthew 11:5 lists the same miracles (blind see, lame walk) that Jesus performs here — the deeds that prove his identity to John's disciples.
Matthew 15:30 describes a similar scene — large crowds bringing the lame, blind, and mute to Jesus, and he heals them all.
Matthew 20:30 features two blind men calling for mercy — a specific healing that matches the general giving of sight here.
In John 14:11, Jesus says to believe because of the works — the healings here are exactly those works that testify to his identity.
Acts 1:1 refers back to Luke's gospel as 'all that Jesus began to do' — this healing account is part of that record.
Acts 10:38 summarizes Jesus' healing ministry, affirming his divine anointing which underlies the specific healings in Luke 7:21.
Mark 5:29 records the instant healing of a woman's bleeding — a specific instance of the kind of cures summarized here.
James 5:14 gives instructions for the church to pray for the sick — a practical application of the healing ministry Jesus modeled here.
James 5:15 promises healing through faithful prayer and links it to forgiveness — echoing the healing power Jesus demonstrated here.
Mark 5:34 shows Jesus attributing healing to the woman's faith — a dimension not mentioned in the summary but consistent with His works.