MARRIAGE AND MONEY
CLERICAL ESTIMATES Tho Bishop of Exeter, Lord William Cecil, has said that a vicar is entitled to say he cannot afford to get married on a stipend of £7 a week and a vicarage. The question arises: “Can it he done? ” And one answer is that thousands of clergy are doing it. “ It all depends upon the man,” an official of the Poor Clergy Relief Corporation said to an ‘ Evening News ’ correspondent. “.To some men,” he said, “£7 a week is a gold mine. To others it represents the poverty line. It just depends upon how he and his wife manage it. Clergy are like the rest of men. Some are provident, some extravagant, some careless, and some just incapable of managing their money at all.” In every diocese in England now vicars are paid at least £3OO a year, and curgtos £250. Upon marriage the curate’s stipend is increased to £3OO. Of course, there are many richer livings, but £3OO a year has now been established as the minimum stipend for incumbents. At Guilford _ recently the minimum stipend was raised to £4OO, and at the time the Bishop said: “ It needs great care, skilled housekeeping, and good health to make both ends meet on £4OO a year.” With this view London vicars are in hearty agreement. A North London vicar says: “ £7 a week in a country vicarage is a fairly comfortable living. In London for a married man with only one or two children it is poverty indeed. “ Look at my own balance-sheet. My rates are £35 a year, income tax £2O, heating and lighting in this huge house about £4O a year. After paying insurance and wages for casual help 1 am left with about £IBO for food, doctor’s bills, clothes and pocket money.” This is what the Rev. H. M. Sanders, of St. Stephen’s, Twickenham, vicar of a typical London suburb, says; “I entirely agree with the Bishop of Exeter. If you are prepared to live Jike a working man (and there is something to be said for this) you can do it. But so long as the Church of England expects what it does of us it is impossible. I should never dream of marrying on £7 a week. A priest has always got his hand in his pocket. Everybody brings their troubles to him.”
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19330121.2.108
Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 21316, 21 January 1933, Page 17
Word Count
393MARRIAGE AND MONEY Evening Star, Issue 21316, 21 January 1933, Page 17
Using This Item
Allied Press Ltd is the copyright owner for the Evening Star. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons New Zealand BY-NC-SA licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Allied Press Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.