Background
Hezmalhalch was born to English parents in Paterson, New Jersey. His father operated a munitions foundry and young Heznalhalch made shells for use by the Union soldiers during the American Civil War.
Hezmalhalch was born to English parents in Paterson, New Jersey. His father operated a munitions foundry and young Heznalhalch made shells for use by the Union soldiers during the American Civil War.
He was influenced by the healing ministry of John Alexander Dowie. After the Civil War he spent time in Leeds, England, where he ministered as a preacher of the Wesleyan Methodist Church. The Hezmalhalch"s returned to California in 1884.
Hezmalhalch purchased a property in Verdugo, now part of Glendale.
He became the secretary to the local land improvement association. He recounted the experience that one night while riding on a horse he experienced the presence of God and began speaking in an unknown tongue.
This group of several hundred worshippers had been deserted by Parham, and Hezmalhalch"s authority was soon established. After Parham"s arrest for pedophilia, the group descended into a bizarre orgy of insanity.
Eventually, three members died gruesome deaths during botched exorcisms.
Due to the massive outrage caused by these manslaughters, the Parhamites were forced to flee from Zion. Hezmalhalch, Lake, and Bosworth decamped to Indianapolis, where they assumed a leadership role amongst the local Pentecostals in late 1907. Once in Indianapolis, Hezmalhalch and Lake created several new narratives about their pasts in order to cover up their involvement in recent events.
One of these narratives involved being called to go start a ministry in Africa.
William Seymour gave his assent to this mission, and helped Hezmalhalch and Lake stage a fund-raising event in January/February 1908 in Indianapolis. The group raised the necessary funds, and the mission left in April.
Lake and Hezmalhalch started their ministry at a rental hall in Doornfontein, a Johannesburg suburb, on 25 May 1908. The services consisted of a mixed racial group and many who attended the first services were Zionists.
These services formed the start of the Apostolic Faith Mission denomination (AFM) in South Africa.
Most of the initial members were former Zionists who had been part of John Alexander Dowie"s Zionist church. At the first meeting of the executive council of the new denomination on 27 May 1909, Hezmalhalch was elected chairman of the AFM. Lake was the real power in the AFM, and replaced him following a falling out in late 1909. Hezmalhalch, along with some other Pentecostals, accused Lake of a number of misdoings.
Because Lake controlled the AFM executive, he quashed the charges, and Hezmalhalch was demoted to the provinces.
After a couple of desultory years following his demotion, he returned to the United States in 1912.
John G Lake and Fred Bosworth were prominent members of the "Parhamites", with the former rising to a position of co-leadership by mid-1907.