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 worship services admission is free, specific fees are charged for
 
 services such as weddings and funerals.  Marketing at last one would
 
 think - supplying a measured amount of a commodity and asking a
 
 specific price therefore, but diocesan opinion was "we're not levying
 
 a charge, it's levied by Act of Parliament"
 (C7)" which is a bit like 
 suggesting that bus fares are charged not by the operating authority
 
 but by the Traffic Commissioners.  Again that feeling of unease at
 
 handling money.  Something not quite proper, not quite clean.  "Clergy
 
 feel that asking for money is going round with a begging bowl"
 (C7). 
 And yet the practice of paying pew rents was once widespread and may
 
 not yet have died out completely
 (C1).  Lurking down there somewhere 
 is still the possibility that the value of religion can be measured in
 
 monetary terms, but it will need a lot more spadework to dig it out.
 
 Surely it should be axiomatic that anyone who has accepted all the
 
 personal opportunity cost involved in becoming a clergyman should
 
 have a deep conviction of the benefit he has to offer to the community
 
 at large?  And if so that it should be perfectly normal - normal to
 
 the extent of being accepted rather than expected - that money or its
 
 equivalent should flow the other way?  (For practical purposes we can
 
 probably restrict ourselves to money, since that is our central
 
 problem, and giving in kind appears now to be very limited.)  Even
 
 the Archdeacon of Bradford happily conceded that people will pay "for
 
 something which they want"
 (C7)but when pressed to develop his own 
 logic, did not consider the corollary but opined that the "services
 
 of a parson are very lowly regarded by society
 (C7)" and "whether anybody's 
 thought of marketing I honestly don't know"
 (C7).  What services?  Why 
 lowly regarded?  And if diocesan management can answer those questions
 
 (and at least the first probably can be answered only from internal
 
 analysis) then do we not face fair and square a marketing problem,
 
 
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