The Tarot of Eli 2: The Connolly Tarot-Key 5-The Hierophant & Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot- Key 5-The Hierophant

Western Hermetic Qabalah, Tantric, Alchemical, Astrological, and Numerical Traditional Tarot Card Comparisons

· RWS and Connolly

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The Connolly Tarot- Key 5-The Hierophant

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Radiant: Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot- Key 5-The Hierophant

The Rider-Waite-Smith Hierophant and its black and silver copy known as "The Prophet Tarot", is depicted as the Pope, this is understandable since originally, when the cards appeared, metaphysics was merely a way of looking at the ruling faith. Once Religious Theogony stopped ruling, metaphysics became more science and less faithful. However, to the 15th century meta-physician, the Pope spoke from the throne, infallibly, and thus had to be listened to as he spoke "The Word".

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Waite took his meaning from the Sepher Yetzirah (THE BOOK OF FORMATION by Rabbi Akiba Ben Joseph) and applies the meaning of hearing to the letter Vau (Vav), and to The Hierophant, by illustrating two priests kneeling and listening to their Pontiff. The Connolly Tarot- Key 5-The Hierophant shows 2 scholars. These two priests/scholars represent the cooperation of the 2 opposites within the human condition, intuition, and reason, conscious and subconscious, etc. Both united, being an integral and inseparable process of enlightenment.

Both Hierophants, with hand raised, blesses both from his position enthroned between the two columns of the Mysteries. The golden key at the feet of the RWS Hierophant and on the upper left stain glass of the Connolly Hierophant, represents the Key to Heaven (Gold is the Sun) and though both keys are gold, one is supposed to be the silver key to Hell (Silver is the Moon, this is not a aspersion, as the Moon Goddess, Hel, rules the underworld.) and is the "window to the No-Thing". In the Pope's hand is the "Triple cross of the Western Peoples", often called the Papal Cross.

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The Connolly Tarot- Key 5- The Hierophant

In the Connolly Tarot, we have all the assigned images, but in a medieval stain glass motif. Hence, the colors of red, gold, and purple Papal robe colors. The 3-tiered tiara of the Pope and triple cross staff is the papal cross is a Christian cross, which serves as an emblem for the office of the Pope in ecclesiastical heraldry. It is depicted as a staff with three horizontal bars near the top, in diminishing order of length as the top is approached. Above on the right facing side of the card, is a dove in stained glass, this is known as a symbol of peace and of the Holy Spirit. The entire meaning of the card is that of the Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot, and easily read by the Tarot diviner who is familiar with RWS and/or traditional tarot.

. This card represents an authority, -- employer, teacher, mentor, or some other person in control.

As previously stated, in Traditional Tarot- the key 4-The Emperor, represented the father as "Law Maker". The Hierophant is the father as Lawgiver, a distinction that is important. The Hierophant is an administrator. Therefore, the Emperor works for himself as a creative free agent, while the Hierophant works for a large organization, whose rules he upholds, although he is paradoxically unaware this is the case.

The personality of the Hierophant can be encountered as an earthly person, who may be variously benevolent and just, thoughtful and kind, or it may be high-handed, egocentric, and even sadistic. One must deal with the Hierophant in whatever garb of temperament he may appear. By doing so we work out our own relationship with authority. Here we examine how we feel about control in our lives. Do we resent those who attempt to impose structure on us, feeling that it restricts our creative freedom? Or do we need the psychological support of external regulation? The idea behind "enlightenment" is self-mastery and/or "Inner Authority", whereby, the Greater Self and Lesser Self have become "As above, so below" and thereby, listen to the Greater Authority of Self. In such a one, the Hierophant is not an outside authority as one realizes that "everyone I see is another way to be me" and stands by the Golden rule of do unto another as you would have done unto yourself, as their inner authority's primary voice.

Therefore, all is not "sweetness and light" in the HIEROPHANT, and most authorities on tarot agree that there are some unpleasant aspects to this Key 5. I would recommend that the serious student read the book by Richard Cavendish: THE TAROT, where the implications of this State of Energy Consciousness are very cleverly related to Gnosticism (Those who know). He points out that the Demiurge, the Lesser Creator which rules over manifestation, was also known by the Gnostics as the "Great Deceiver", and that initiates of the Valentinian Gnostics were taught to ignore the authority of this one who is a type of "Librarian of measurement" and only has authority over its library and as one knows, not all books are truth. The Truth is that there is only one authority over us, and that is our own "Will to be" and/or Freedom to Choose and we get to experience freely, the consequences thereof; some call this fate.

Besides, only slaves need masters and saviors. If we listen intently to our "Holy Guardian Angel" and/or Greater Self, whose voice resides in our "heart". We will find that we are indeed on the Hero's journey towards truth.

When the HIEROPHANT card is thrown during a reading, the querent is:

  • Experiencing the Principle of learning and teaching which is a desire for making things tangible.
  • The querent may be seeking guidance from a counselor who has knowledge and authority or wishes to.
  • There is a choice here, of aligning oneself to a philosophy, religion and/or set of beliefs to which one feels a sense of loyalty.
  • Being free to disentangle oneself from any belief system, the querent still chooses to be involved.
  • Life is the teacher here, as the querent experiences growth through a meditative process like philosophy that views every experience as a lesson-learning opportunity.

When reversed-Rider-Waite-Smith or surrounded with negative cards Connolly Tarot, it implies:

  •  There is an espousing of moral, ethical, and spiritual values which may attribute to oppressing others, especially when espousing orthodoxy.
  • There can be an inner sense of obedience to authority, imagined or otherwise, contributing to gullibility.

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