Alexeara Cansellarion is in his study when he gets the vision from his Goddess, which means he must have fucked up quite badly.
"Joining us here today on Freedom Radio is Temos Sevandivasen , seventh circle cleric of Abadar. He's on the other side of a screen from me, in the service of my efforts to be hard for curious wizards to track down, but he's agreed to sit down with us for an hour and answer all your questions about Abadar. Archbanker, thank you for joining us."
"Can you tell us a little about yourself? How did you come to the priesthood of Abadar? What do you do all day?"
"I was born and grew up in Kumura, a Vudrani kingdom that when I was a young man threw off Keleshite rule and had the opportunity for the first time to be governed independently. But the new state was badly in debt, and had many obligations that it was unclear if it could meet, and the people had been impoverished by centuries of exploitation and by the war that freed them. I turned to Abadar because I wanted to understand how to make a country rich, and His Manual of City-Building had a section on how a responsible governor could make a place rich through reliable rule. We arrived at agreements with our creditors - agreements to pay them in full, because a state like a man has only its word, and we wanted Kumura's word to be good. We set up a banking system. It took thirty years of hard work, but - Kumura prospered.
So much so that our neighbors grew jealous, and about six years ago they banded together to destroy Kumura and see it absorbed into a rival kingdom. The attack took us by surprise. We lost. I died there, but - I had insurance. I awoke in Absalom. I live and work there now."
"I don't know. Abadar opposes war. It is a terrible thing. Necessary, sometimes, but always destructive. Civilized people would be able to compare their strength and settle matters in a fashion both prefer to destroying one another. Of course, if you predictably won't fight back that invites people to try things - but it's one thing to defend yourself whatever your strength, and another entirely to spend a few decades in exile and then come back to revenge yourself on entirely different people descended from the ones who wronged you. I dream of returning, but - I would have to have good reason to think the people of Kumura would not thereby be wronged."
"Let's start with the basics about Abadar, since some members of our audience have probably been living under a rock for the last hundred years, or are in countries that lie to them about how the Church of Abadar works. Is Abadar Good? Evil? Lawful? Chaotic?"
"Abadar is the Lawful Neutral god of cities, wealth, and justice. His domain in Axis is called Aktun, and it is a more prosperous place than any on Golarion, full of wonders that are hard to describe. The buildings reach straight up into the sky, and carriages carry people through the air and underground to their destinations, and nearly all of the people are dressed as kings, and about only that work which purchases them things they are willing to work to have."
"Would it? I've seen an estimate there are a billion people on Golarion. Perhaps it's a billion years of work, to build Axis, but wouldn't that mean we could do it in one year, if everyone worked towards it?"
"Sure. I don't really expect we could be done in a year. I do think it could be the work of our lifetimes, and our grandchildren born into it."
"I imagine that Abadar looks upon you very favorably, young woman. There is betting, within the Church, on whether you are in our priesthood."
"Well, gambling refers to all kinds of different things, right. There are games played in Vyre designed so you will always lose money playing them, preying on foolishness, and one probably shouldn't advisedly do that. There are games of skill, played for all the reasons that might participate in any other contest of skill, and the Church has nothing to say about that. We don't preach against people spending their money however amuses them, really, if they rob no one else in so doing. And then there are games of - divination. Say that in a room of people, one of them knows the truth of your identity, and all in that room are called to place bets on the result. That one will bet correctly, and will probably be willing to bet a larger share of his purse than those of us beleaguered by ignorance. The betting, then, will tend to favor the knowledgeable over the ignorant. This works even if the person doesn't know the truth of your identity but is just a better guesser than most people."
"So by betting on whether I'm a priest of Abadar, the priests of Abadar try to tempt anyone who knows to show their hand and get rich?"
"By betting on whether you're a priest of Abadar, the priesthood of Abadar makes it the case that knowledge of whether or not you're a priest of Abadar is easy to make money off. And in general, by betting on many things, the Church rewards knowledge and punishes foolishness. Not ignorance - if you're ignorant and know it you can simply not bet - but foolishness will lose you money."
" - I am going to play a little game with you. I'm going to flip a fair coin, behind my screen, and if it comes up heads I will tell you truthfully whether or not I am a priest of Abadar, and if it comes up tails I will claim not to be one." There's the sound of a coin spinning. "Either I'm not a priest of Abadar, or the coin came up tails. Now what do you suppose are the odds on your market?"
Iomedae is a responsible radio host and spends most of the hour talking about things of more immediate relevance to her audience. But at the end - "I have one more question for you. There are several people in the Church who know for sure my identity. Why haven't they just bet in the markets, in the direction of the truth, with lots more money than anyone who doesn't know is willing to spend, and thereby clarify the matter?"
" - you asked for confidentiality. No one who has information related to a confidential transaction would ever bet in a relevant market." The man sounds genuinely appalled.