Engenas Lekganyane thus had a diverse Protestant background, with Lutheran, Anglican, and Presbyterian experiences. He is also said to have been close with his grandfather and uncle on his mother's side, both of whom were pagans and renowned traditional doctors. Around 1911, though, Lekganyane split from Protestantism with the arrival of the
Apostolic Faith Mission in his home area. At this time the AFM reported that some of its members traveled on foot from
Louis Trichardt to Pietersburg, during which “the most remarkable manifestations of healing” occurred. The blind, deaf, and crippled were healed, and in
Pietersburg “the natives came in vast numbers to be prayed for.” According to ZCC lore, Lekganyane began to suffer from a serious eye ailment at this time and nearly went blind. He then had a vision and was instructed to travel to the
Lesotho, where he was told that he would be cured by "triple immersion". Lekganyane claims to have followed this vision, and went to
Lesotho and met two Zionist preachers in 1912. They then baptized him using the Zionist method of "triple immersion", and curing his eyesight ailment in the process. From 1912 until 1920 Lekganyane was a member of the Mahlangu's organization, the Zion Apostolic Church (which itself was a part of the Apostolic Faith Mission). Around 1916 he returned home to Thabakgone where he was the deputy of the ZAC congregation. In 1918 he became the official leader of this congregation, although he fell out with Mahlangus quickly over issues that are not clear. Not long afterwards, Lekganyane seceded with his congregation and went with his new bride, Salfina Rabodiba, to Basutoland in 1920 to join Edward Lion's utopian community under the auspices of the newly formed new
Zion Apostolic Faith Mission (ZAFM). Lekganyane and his wife stayed in Basutoland for a short time before he was appointed ZAFM's Transvaal leader. By 1924 Lekganyane had a sizable membership in the Transvaal with some seventeen congregations. Tensions between the two arose and came to a head over the name on the ZAFM's Transvaal membership card. After a tension-filled trip to Basutoland, Lekganyane returned home, and soon had a vision on the top of Mt. Thabakgone that instructed him to form his own church. He then split with ZAFM to form the ZCC in 1924, taking most of the Transvaal ZAFM members with him. == Lekganyane and the ZCC, 1924–48 ==