The Light and How to Swing It: Synergizing with priests

Holy paladins can't do it all. While we might be the best-dressed spec in the game, we occasionally need for other healers to give us a hand. The developers have done a great job giving each healer a niche for them to fill. A holy paladin must know the strengths and weaknesses of the other healing classes in order to be able to work alongside them.
While all healers are somewhat normalized by Cataclysm's introduction of the three heal model, it's each class's unique spells that give them flavor. We all start with the same base, and then our signature heals and cooldowns allow us to differentiate ourselves. Holy paladins can adjust their healing style and strategy to complement their partner healers instead of competing with them.
Discipline Priests: Protecting their targets
Discipline priests, our first study, are the masters of preventive healing. While our own Illuminated Healing mastery allows us to put absorption bubbles on our healing targets, we are actually stealing the mechanic from discipline's Divine Aegis. Divine Aegis' potency far outshines our own Illuminated Healing, allowing discipline priests to raise the survivability of their targets significantly. The downside to absorption bubbles is that they're wasted if they go unused, which makes discipline priests great for handling burst damage but poor for handling DOTs and protracted damage.
Due to their absorption-based healing and their powerful Penance spell, discipline priests make great tank healers. Disc priests also have access to Pain Suppression, one of the best damage reduction cooldowns in the game. Between Hand of Sacrifice and Pain Suppression, a disc priest/holy paladin can cut a tank's incoming damage for 20 seconds. Our combination of powerful single-target healing and damage-reducing cooldowns can keep a tank alive through just about anything.
A disc priest's biggest weakness is AOE healing. Disc's Power Word: Barrier allows them to prevent a lot of incoming AOE damage, but it doesn't actually heal anyone, which means we'll need to use Holy Radiance to assist with raid healing. While I've seen disc priests negate a huge chunk of an AOE attack's damage via Power Word: Shield spam, it's going to fall to us to top everyone off. Beacon of Light allows holy paladins to be excellent spot healers, and so we'll be healing the raid while the disc priest keeps the tank stable.
If there's going to be lots of AOE damage, discipline priests will have us stacking up underneath their Power Word: Barrier. If they're using the Glyph of Power Word: Barrier, then we should to try to dole out as much healing as possible during the Barrier's duration to maximize our healing done. A PW:B and Holy Radiance combination is incredibly effective at handling any sort of AOE burst. We can clean up any remaining wounded players with our cheap heals like Holy Shock and Word of Glory, as disc priests aren't specialized spot healers.
Holy Priests: AOE machines
Holy priests are the antonyms of their discipline brethren. The holy tree specializes in AOE healing and HOTs, with almost no preventive healing or tank healing capacity to speak of. All of holy's signature spells revolve around raid healing. Holy Word: Sanctuary and Renew allow a holy priest to apply powerful HOTs to their targets, while Circle of Healing and Prayer of Healing are amazing at quickly getting a raid group back to full life. Lightwell is an amazing raid heal when used properly, as it only costs the priest a single cast yet can heal over a dozen targets. Prayer of Mending is a smart heal that hops from target to target, healing with each bounce. Even a holy priest's regular heals apply a HOT effect via their mastery bonus.
With their powerful AOE healing and HOTs, holy priests are a great ally to the holy paladin. Our Holy Radiance is quite potent, but it's only effective if our group can stack up, and we can only have it active 50% of the time. When paired with a holy priest, you'll typically be focusing on the tank while they'll be handling most of the raid healing. We can always sneak in some spot healing via Holy Light or one of our instant-cast heals to help out, but it will fall on us to keep the tanks alive.
Holy priests themselves aren't great tank healers, but they can save a tank's life with Guardian Spirit. While Guardian Spirit is active, the tank will receive 40% more healing, which is a huge bonus for our large heals. In addition, if the tank receives a blow that would've killed him during Guardian Spirit, he instantly regains 50% of his maximum life and doesn't die. Guardian Spirit is an incredibly potent tank cooldown, so you'll want to coordinate with the holy priests in your raid to time them properly.
Prayer of Healing is a rather unique heal, as it will only heal players in the party of the targeted player. In a 10-man raid, for example, Prayer of Healing will only heal group 1 or group 2, depending on who the target of the spell is. You can work with the priests in your raid to assign groups for AOE healing, as this allows the priest to focus their Prayer of Healing onto one party while you use your direct heals to top off the other group. Prayer of Healing is the only spell that I know of that has a party-based restriction, but a bit of communication ahead of time will have everyone prepared.
A tale of two hymns
Holy and discipline priests have access to two powerful hymn spells, Hymn of Hope and Divine Hymn. Both hymns are channeled spells that require the priest to stand still for the duration, so be sure to adjust your healing strategy while they're incapacitated by the hymn. Hymn of Hope is a mana restoration hymn, and it also increases our maximum mana while active. You can use Divine Plea during the Hymn of Hope for some bonus mana, since DP is based on your maximum mana. Be careful though, as you'll only be healing at 50% capacity while your priest won't be healing at all, so save this technique for only the safest moments in an encounter.
Divine Hymn
Filed under: Paladin, (Paladin) The Light and How to Swing It






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
roy.taggueg Sep 11th 2011 8:13PM
Great article! I hope you continue it with a version for druids and shamans as well :D
Minstrel Sep 11th 2011 8:19PM
Discipline priests have actually become really strong AoE healers. Currently, a discipline priest's best burst HPS comes from Prayer of Healing spam. While it doesn't do as much raw healing as a holy priest's Prayer of Healing, that's largely made up for by the automatic Divine Aegis procs on every person PoH heals plus the usual critical strike Divine Aegis procs when PoH crits.
Discipline priests excel in stack-up phases when dropping Power Word: Barrier and spamming Prayer of Healing (and keeping Prayer of Mending out on cooldown, of course).
Luke Sep 11th 2011 8:35PM
I was just about to say the same thing Minstrel, I'd include also that our Glyph for Prayer of Healing applies a small but no doubt useful HoT.
"The downside to absorption bubbles is that they're wasted if they go unused, which makes discipline priests great for handling burst damage but poor for handling DOTs and protracted damage."
In addition to Glyph of Prayer of Mending, a Discipline Priest can also choose talents that boost healing for Renew. Not to mention the fact that our shields DO absorb damage over time effects. As for protracted damage, if we're speaking of Atonement healing then that's the name of the game. Smite and Holy Fire are an Atonement Priest's mana efficient heals.
I'd also like to point out that there are two ways a Discipline Priest can specialize. One very much includes Atonement. The other is centered around direct healing, shield spam and those HoT mentioned above.
Sage Sep 11th 2011 8:39PM
We already knew that DIsc was the flavor of choice when it came tank healing, but if people are starting to say that DIsc can out AoE a Holy priest; then, I have a lot to be depressed about as a Holy priest.
Minstrel Sep 11th 2011 8:45PM
Sage, I would say that holy might need a little upgrading. Holy is extremely viable, but it doesn't really out-heal discipline in burst AoE situations, which Firelands is full of (Beth'tilac phase 2, Rhyolith phase 2, Majordomo scorpion phases, etc).
Holy still maintains the edge on discipline in sustained, long-term raid healing.
I think a nice change for holy would be to upgrade Divine Hymn (only for holy, via a talent or just a passive part of spec'ing into the tree) and lowering the cooldown. Of course, that treads a bit too close to "giving holy priests Tranquility," so a more class-unique tweak might be better.
Luke Sep 11th 2011 8:49PM
@Sage
I wouldn't go that far but Discipline is hardly gimping along when it comes to AoE healing.
Chase Christian Sep 11th 2011 11:21PM
Disc priests definitely aren't bad at AOE healing, but I've seen holy priests put up significant AOE healing numbers with their PoH. It does depend on the type of incoming damage, as pulsing blasts like Beth'tilac's are perfect for discipline while I find that holy priests are more effective at healing a one-blast AOE attack like Ragnaros'. There's definitely pros and cons to both discipline and holy's AOE potential, but I find that a holy priest can easily toss out a Circle of Healing without a care in the world while a PoH cast for a disc priest has to be a conscious mana decision.
Minstrel Sep 12th 2011 12:34AM
I think your mention of Circle of Healing, Chase, properly gets at the point I made earlier, that holy priests have the advantage on discipline priests in terms of sustainable raid healing.
Raid healing has two axes, really: burst and sustainable. Resto druids and holy priests are the best at sustainable AoE, but discipline priests might be the best at burst AoE (though shamans might be, also). What makes disc priests good at burst AoE healing is having a spammable AoE option that interacts well with Divine Aegis (which double dips into both crit and mastery) for added value...but they certainly can't spam it for too long, certainly not for the length of an encounter.
I did enjoy your article, though. I enjoy thinking about healer composition and how they interact.
Jem Sep 12th 2011 5:07AM
As someone who runs both priest healing specs, but principally disc, aid healing can and is done well by disc priests but it can be a massive mana drain and there are some circumstances where holy just works better. Because Disc relies on PoH and that spell has the group restriction, if you are dealing with random target damage, I find holy works much better. Usually I play around with both when I'm raid healing to find which one suits the fight more. The two dragons in BOT I ususally heal holy.
I raid heal Shannox disc, DA just works better for me on that fight. Our holy priest does the exact same job just as well though :)
And I will second the comment further down. Holy can tank heal. Without a doubt, they can tank heal.
5p00b4r Sep 12th 2011 7:28AM
"It does depend on the type of incoming damage, as pulsing blasts like Beth'tilac's are perfect for discipline while I find that holy priests are more effective at healing a one-blast AOE attack like Ragnaros'."
I agree it depends but not for those reasons, or those situations. As well as burst vs sustained, damage is also random or predictable. Discipline deals best at healing predictable damage, because it has awesome tools for planning ahead, where Holy is almost purely a reactive spec. It doesn't matter if it's burst damage or not because if you know it's coming, you can pre-shield, stack Divine Aegis and Barrier it all the same. Right now Holy unfortunately is better only in a very small niche of random spiky raid damage like the AOE during Rag's transitions, which is tough to spot heal as Disc without having to resort to flash heal or just stacking DA with PoH in a pretty inefficient way, where Holy has a beautiful smart heal and a viable hot to work with. There are other issues with Holy v Disc and Holy isn't massively broken, but this probably isn't the column for it.
shieryma Sep 11th 2011 8:57PM
I HATE wearing a dress. The End.
Kuro Sep 12th 2011 2:21PM
Twice now I've logged-in to WOW standing next to a healer who's wearing a very similar brown-and-white robe and thought, "oh, look another holy paladin.. lemme check out his gear..."
"...oh wait, that's a priest..."
Dadanox Sep 11th 2011 9:29PM
Actually, Prayer of Healing can be alternated between group one and group two by a disc priest. This covers all 10 party members with alternating heals. It also generates Divine Aegis bubbles and with Glyph of PoH, a heal over time component.
Under certain circumstances, this is very effective, and produces a lot of healing throughput.
reynard.fox Sep 11th 2011 10:42PM
I dunno, as a duel healing specced raiding priest, my own opinions of the class differ quite a bit from the ones presented in the article.
Penance is not significantly more powerful than Greater Heal, the Disc priest's bread & butter heal. On my priest, it comes at about 24k healing total - about 3k short of GHeal, but at a bit better healing per second. Penance is a useful part of a Disc priest's repetoire because of two things. It hits three times, building up a full stack of Grace (perfect for tank swaps) and it's very mana efficient, coming in at somewhat over half the cost of a GHeal. A spell to use on cooldown, certainly, but not super powerful.
Disc priests are just as good as Holy at AoE healing, if not better. The Divine Aegis talent procs automatically on Prayer of Healing whether it crits or not, producing a bubble worth 30% of the healing done - which is increased by Disc's mastery as well (Holy's mastery acts on direct heals only). So while my Holy spec's PoH might be 500-1000 (depending on chakra state) more direct healing per target, my Disc PoH's always proc a bubble worth 3k damage per target - and more than double that if PoH crits. Maybe not helpful /after/ the damage is done, but if even one or two bubbles are consumed it's as much effective healing as Holy's, with several bubbles to spare.
Circle of Healing is Holy's counterpart to Penance. It's less healing total than PoH (even hitting 6 targets), costs less mana, but is quicker to cast (instant!) and has a cooldown.
Both specs can go into a sort of "mana be damned" overdrive mode by using the Borrowed Time or Serendipity mechanics. Disc alternates between PW:S and the desired spell, Holy either uses Flash Heal or Binding Heal to get two stacks of Serendipity. I'd say Holy has the edge here, because Disc can't do this for pure tank damage thanks to Weakened Soul preventing PW:S on the tank every other spell.
Prayer of Mending is a spell both specs should be using in every opportunity.
Divine Hymn is nice but it's no Tranquility.
I guess, in summary: Disc's raid healing as actually very strong against regularly pulsing raid damage (final phases of Beth'tilac, Rhyolith, Shannox all come to mind), and I'd take it over Holy for that. I've put too much typing and thought into this already, hah. >.>
derevka Sep 11th 2011 11:30PM
"Divine Hymn is the priest's ultimate AOE healing weapon. While channeling DH, they'll be hitting the raid with a massive amount of healing."
I understand "massive" is subjective, however, DH by a Disc Priest is a net loss of output vs POH spam. Holy is only marginally better. Dh is really only all that useful if you want to buff the output of other healers, while sacrificing some of your own personal output. yes, it is a smart heal... however in situations where youd use it, everyone needs healing and POH is better for that.
Chase Christian Sep 11th 2011 11:23PM
Interesting information, thanks! I've always viewed DH as an incredibly powerful heal, but maybe it's the +healing effect that's actually causing those bars to move!
derevka Sep 11th 2011 11:33PM
yeah, back in Naxx2.0/Ulduar it was "massive". then it was nerfed.
TOC/ICC it was still strong, even post nerf. However after POH changes, and other healing changes in Cata it really was only good for buffing Tranq. :-(
derevka Sep 12th 2011 6:42AM
To be clear... great article. Just wanted to clear up some stuff that me with my big mouth had to comment on. :-D
Doug Sep 12th 2011 4:17PM
Always wished Divine Hymn was a bit more divine.. My raid leader seems to think it is comparable to Tranquility, so I use it when I am asked to, but i always felt PoH was more effective.
btw.. REALLY miss your Blog Derevka.. especially the Power Auras section
BB Crisp Sep 12th 2011 8:25PM
Not that big of a deal, but Prayer of Mending isn't a smart heal, i.e. it jumps randomly. Our hymns and Circle of Healing are the only "smart" spells that Holy Priests get.