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According to the book of Acts of the Apostles, he had seven sons who attempted to exorcise a demon from a man in the town of Ephesus by using the name of Jesus as an invocation. This practice is similar to the Jewish practice, originating in the Testament of Solomon, of invoking Angels to cast out demons. Because of the emphasis on healing and spiritual authority in the ministry of Sceva, it may be accurate to think of him as a Shaman figure for the Jewish communities in which he worked. | According to the book of Acts of the Apostles, he had seven sons who attempted to exorcise a demon from a man in the town of Ephesus by using the name of Jesus as an invocation. This practice is similar to the Jewish practice, originating in the Testament of Solomon, of invoking Angels to cast out demons. Because of the emphasis on healing and spiritual authority in the ministry of Sceva, it may be accurate to think of him as a Shaman figure for the Jewish communities in which he worked. | ||
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Scévas est un grand prêtre juif du ier siècle mentionné dans les Actes des Apôtres. Il apparaît dans Ac 19:14-16 quand ses sept fils tentèrent de pratiquer à Éphèse un exorcisme aux résultats désastreux. | |wkfrtx=Scévas est un grand prêtre juif du ier siècle mentionné dans les Actes des Apôtres. Il apparaît dans Ac 19:14-16 quand ses sept fils tentèrent de pratiquer à Éphèse un exorcisme aux résultats désastreux. | ||
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|strgr=[[apparently]] of Latin [[origin]]; [[left-handed]]; [[Scevas]] (i.e. [[Scævus]]), an [[Israelite]]: [[Sceva]]. | |strgr=[[apparently]] of Latin [[origin]]; [[left-handed]]; [[Scevas]] (i.e. [[Scævus]]), an [[Israelite]]: [[Sceva]]. |