Oshoffa was working in the
ebony trade in 1947 when he claimed that he was instructed by an angel to found a new church. He said that he became lost and had to live off the land for three months before finding his way back to his timber camp, and claimed to have been endowed with the gifts of
divine healing and prophecy. in Benin in 2009—100 years after the birth of Oshoffa An early
miracle which his followers attribute to Oshoffa was the
resurrection of his nephew. As a result, his sister Elizabeth became the first convert. The nephew became the first prophet of the new church. Oshoffa's followers believe he performed more resurrections. Oshoffa's first wife Felicia Yaman was involved in the launch of the new church. Followers considered her a
prophet. The church expanded in Benin between 1947 and 1951. In 1976, Oshoffa moved his operations due to a conflict with the government of Benin and a looming arrest. In Nigeria, his followers credited him with curing a "
mad" woman. Oshoffa held a public meeting in
Yaba, Lagos where he proclaimed his prophecy. In the same year he again claimed a resurrection. In Nigeria, Oshoffa was sold a large piece of land after the owner was assisted by a "holy man's" intervention in a dream with a legal dispute. The new church faced initial opposition from the Nigerian authorities, but was officially recognised in 1958. He took on two partners for the church,
Alexander Abiodun Adebayo Bada and Samuel Ajanlekoko. ==Death, succession, and legacy==