Sceva in Wikipedia
Sceva, or Scevas, apparently related to the Greek word skeuos
meaning a vessel or implement, a Jew called a "chief priest"
(archiereus in Greek) in Acts 19:14 . There was no high priest
in Jerusalem by this name--some speculate that he was the head
of one of the twenty-four courses of the house of Levi. He had
seven sons, who in Ephesus "took upon them to call over them
which had evil spirits the name of the Lord Jesus," in
imitation of Paul. They tried their method of exorcism on a
fierce demon, and failed. His answer to them was "Jesus I
know, and Paul I know; but who are ye?" (Acts 19:15 ) This has
been interpreted as, "The Jesus whom you invoke is One whose
authority I acknowledge; and the Paul whom you name I
recognize to be a servant or messenger of God; but what sort
of men are ye who have been empowered to act as you do by
neither?" (Thomas Lindsay on the Acts of the Apostles.)
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