Sceva in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
se'-va (Skeua): A Jew, a chief priest, resident in Ephesus,
whose seven sons were exorcists (Acts 19:14 ff). Ewald
regards the name as being Hebrew shekhabhyah. He was not an
officiating priest, as there were only synagogues in Asia
Minor. He may have belonged to a high-priestly family, or
perhaps at one time he had been at the head of one of the 24
courses in the temple.
In the narrative the construction is loose. There were seven
sons (Acts 19:14), and it would appear (Acts 19:16) that in
this particular case all were present. But (Acts 19:16) the
demon-possessed man over-powered "both of them." Textus
Receptus of the New Testament gets over the difficulty by
omitting "both," but Codices Sinaiticus, Alexandrinus,
Vaticanus, Bezae, so Tischendorf, Westcott and Hort, von
Soden, and the best critics, retain the difficult reading.
The explanation is that Acts 19:14 states the custom: "who
did this" being hoi touto poiountes, "who used to do this."
Acts 19:15 and 16 state a particular case in which two took
part, but the incident is introduced in a careless manner.
Ewald would translate amphoteron as "in both sides," but
this is impossible. Baur understood "disciples" for "sons."
Codex Bezae and Syriac have an interesting expansion which
Blass considers original (Acts 19:14): "Among whom also the
sons (Syriac `seven') of a certain Sceva, a priest, wished
to do the same, (who) were in the custom of exorcising such.
And entering into the demon-possessed man they began to call
upon the Name, saying, `We charge you by Jesus whom Paul
preaches to come out.' "
S. F. Hunter
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