Acts 19 | |
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Acts 18:27-19:6 on recto side in Papyrus 38, written about AD 250.
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Book | Acts of the Apostles |
Bible part | New Testament |
Order in the Bible part | 5 |
Category | Church history |
Acts 19 is the nineteenth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It records part of the third missionary journey of Paul. The author of the book containing this chapter is anonymous but early Christian tradition uniformly affirmed that Luke composed this book as well as the Gospel of Luke.
The original text is written in Koine Greek and is divided into 41 verses. Some most ancient manuscripts containing this chapter are:
This chapter mentions the following places (in order of appearance):
This part of the third missionary journey of Paul took place in ca. AD 53-55.
In the New King James Version, this chapter is sub-divided as:
Sceva (Greek: Σκευᾶς Skeuas) was a Jew called a "chief priest" (Greek: ιουδαιου αρχιερεως). Some scholars note that it was not uncommon for some members of the Zadokite clan to take on an unofficial high-priestly role, which may explain this moniker. However, it is more likely that he was an itinerant exorcist based on the use of the Greek term (Greek: περιερχομένων perierchomenōn) "going from place to place" in Acts 19:13.
In this verse, it is recorded that 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. Sorcery and exorcism are mentioned several times in Acts: Simon Magus and Elymas Bar-Jesus, and divination is illustrated by the girl at Philippi. "She was regarded as spirit-possessed, and it was the spirit who was addressed and expelled by Paul in Acts 16:16-18".