Passage
The blinde receiue sight, and the halt doe walke: the lepers are clensed, and the deafe heare, the dead are raised vp, and the poore receiue the Gospel.
The blinde receiue sight, and the halt doe walke: the lepers are clensed, and the deafe heare, the dead are raised vp, and the poore receiue the Gospel.
Matthew 11:3 Art thou he that shoulde come, or shall we looke for another?
Matthew 11:4 And Iesus answering, said vnto them, Goe, and shewe Iohn, what things ye heare, and see.
Matthew 11:5 The blinde receiue sight, and the halt doe walke: the lepers are clensed, and the deafe heare, the dead are raised vp, and the poore receiue the Gospel.
Matthew 11:6 And blessed is he that shall not be offeded in me.
Matthew 11:7 And as they departed, Iesus beganne to speake vnto the multitude, of Iohn, What went ye out into the wildernes to see? A reede shaken with the winde?
The verse centers on "blinde", "receiue", "sight", "halt", "walke", "lepers", "clensed", and "deafe". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "blinde" and "receiue", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 4's "And Iesus answering said vnto them Goe..." into verse 6's "And blessed is he that shall not...", so "blinde" and "receiue" belong inside that flow. In Matthew context, the local focus is Christ, faith, and discipleship.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "blinde" and "receiue" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.