| TABERNACLES | Receptacles for sacred bread and wine in Catholicism |
| HAW | From Old English for "hedge", word for any one of the miniature red apple-like pomes of the purportedly sacred "bread-and-cheese"-bearing fairy tee, mayflower or quickthorn; or, an utterance marking h |
| CIST | Receptacle for sacred utensils |
| ADYTUM | Break of day has receiver of bread and wine in sanctuary |
| SACRAMENT | Outcast having noodles, bread and wine in church (9) |
| CLIFFRICHARD | British singer who had Christmas UK No 1s with Mistletoe And Wine in 1988 and Saviour's Day in 1990 (5,7) |
| FAREAST | Food and wine in short supply in distant lands |
| CHOWDER | Chinese dog and wine in return for stew (7) |
| NOSEBAG | You'll get this from good wine and wine in box - the type you could give to an Arabian (7) |
| ECCLESIASTIC | Sort of cake and wine in middle of nice church (12) |
| BEWILDERED | Social worker consumes nuts and wine, in a daze (10) |
| SHARED | Back from hols - bit of a laugh and wine in Split (6) |
| MALMSEY | Donations for working in bread and wine (7) |
| NOCTURN | In Catholicism, any of the three traditional divisions of the night office of matins, each containing a set number of psalms and lessons (7) |
| FLASKS | Thermoses for keeping drinks hot or cold; wickerwork-encased bottles for oil or wine; or, flat receptacles for carrying spirits in hip pockets (6) |
| MORTALSIN | Serious transgression, in Catholicism |
| ROMANTICISM | Art style gets involuntary response in Catholicism (11) |
| OURLADY | The Virgin Mary, in Catholicism (3,4) |
| PIETY | One of the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, in Catholicism |
| TENET | Transubstantiation, say, in Catholicism |