Hierophany


A hierophany is a manifestation of the sacred. The word is a formation of the Greek adjective hieros and the verb phainein.

In Mircea Eliade's writings

The word hierophany recurs frequently in the works of the religious historian Mircea Eliade, which he preferred to the more constrictive word theophany.
Eliade argues that religion is based on a sharp distinction between the sacred and the profane. According to Eliade, for traditional man, myths describe "breakthroughs of the sacred into the World"—that is, hierophanies.
In the hierophanies recorded in myth, the sacred appears in the form of ideal models. By manifesting itself as an ideal model, the sacred gives the world value, direction, and purpose: "The manifestation of the sacred, ontologically founds the world". According to this view, all things need to imitate or conform to the sacred models established by hierophanies, in order to have true reality: things "acquire their reality, their identity, only to the extent of their participation in a transcendent reality".