| SEXTON | One looks after a church and churchyard (6) |
| KEEPER | One looks after something, museum or game perhaps (6) |
| SMIRCH | First spacecraft "MIR" landed on a church and will make a dirty mark (6) |
| TENDER | One who looks after a business offer (6) |
| PURSER | Officer who looks after a ship's accounts (6) |
| GOATHERD | One looks after kids - and their parents! |
| ARA | Constellation named after a church table; or, a genus of macaws (3) |
| BABYSITTER | A person who looks after a young child at home in the absence of a parent or guardian (4,6) |
| FOLD | A pen for a flock of sheep of the same name; or, by extension, a church and its congregation (4) |
| GAZPACHO | Name, linked to "treasure-chest in a church" and "remnants", for a cold Spanish soup comprising a wealth of salad vegetables/fruits (8) |
| SWINEHERD | One looks after pigs when Reid's off (9) |
| INTENDS | Means to be at home as one looks after the garden (7) |
| EXTENDS | Spreads, once one looks after it (7) |
| STAIDAN | He established a church and monastery on Lindisfarne and became its bishop in 635 (2,5) |
| CARER | One who looks after a sick or infirm person |
| CURATOR | He looks after a dog on a hill |
| DACHA | Lawyer acquires a church and country house (5) |
| OUTREACH | Disclosed religious education by a church - and community involvement (8) |
| YEW | Used for topiary, hedging, longbows and woodworking, a native evergreen tree with red arils found in beech woodlands and churchyards (3) |
| RECEIVER | I await service as one who looks after a bankrupt's affairs (8) |