Abstract
Abstract This paper considers the importance of the Bible in shaping the attitude of Highland people to social change in the nineteenth‐century Highlands. It looks particularly at the manner in which Biblical comparisons, derived principally from the Mosaic Law of the Old Testament, were utilised by crofters’ leaders to encourage action by the crofting population in the 1880s, when the Highland land agitation was at its peak. The roles of John Murdoch and the Rev. Donald MacCallum are examined. Their influence on clergy and laity is discussed. Modern parallels, especially Liberation Theology, are highlighted.
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