Primary sources
Cooper, James. 1915. Our twofold need in the present war: a sermon, preached in S. Andrew’s Parish Church, Glasgow, on Sunday, 3rd January, 1915, being the day appointed by authority for humble prayer and intercession […]: together with the form and order of divine service prepared by direction of the commission of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, and issued by the committee on aids to devotion, by the Reverend James Cooper, DD, DCL, Litt. D., Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History in the University of Glasgow. Glasgow: James MacLehose & Sons.
Cooper, James. 1915. The Soldiers of the Bible. London: A. & C. Black.
MacLean, Norman. 1915. Service of Prayer in Time of War. Glasgow: James MacLehose & Sons.
Order of service and address given by the Right Rev. Professor James Cooper … at the unveiling and dedication in Hillhead Parish Church, on 29th December, 1917, of a stained glass window in memory of Second Lieutenant William George Teacher, 15th (Service) Battalion, Highland Light Infantry. Also, sermon “Triumph through sacrifice” by the Rev. Walter R. Lacey, M.A., Hillhead Parish Church, 30th December, 1917. Glasgow: James MacLehose & Sons 1918.
Secondary literature
Brown, Stewart J. 1994. “‘A Solemn Purification by Fire’: Responses to the Great War in the Scottish Presbyterian Churches, 1914–19.” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 45: 82–104.
Brown, Stewart J. 2014. “The Scottish and Irish Reformed Churches and the First World War.” In Der Erste Weltkrieg und die reformierte Welt, edited by Hans-Georg Ulrichs, Marco Hofheinz, Georg Plasger and Michael Weinrich, 254–271. Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Theologie.
Goldie, David. 2017. “Shades of Bruce: Independence and Union in First World War Scottish literature.” In Scotland and the First World War: Myth, Memory and the Legacy of Bannockburn, edited by Gill Plain, 205–226. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press.
Hardwick, Joseph, and Philip Williamson. Forthcoming 2018. “Special Worship in the British Empire: From the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Centuries.” In The Church and Empire (Studies in Church History 54), edited by S. J. Brown, Charlotte Methuen and Andrew Spicer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hoover, A. J. 1989. God, Germany and Britain in the Great War: A Study in Clerical Nationalism. New York: Praeger.
Jeffrey, Keith. 2000. Ireland and the Great War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
MacLeod, James L. 2002. “‘Greater Love Hath no Man than This’: Scotland’s Conflicting Religious Responses to Death in the Great War.” Scottish Historical Review 81: 70–96.
Marrin, Albert. 1974. The Last Crusade: The Church of England in the First World War. Durham NC: Duke University Press.
Matheson, Peter. 1972. “Scottish War Sermons.” Records of the Scottish Church History Society 17: 203–213.
McCracken-Flesher, Caroline. 2017. “‘Not My Land’s Hills’: War and the Problem of Scottish Homecoming.” In Scotland and the First World War: Myth, Memory and the Legacy of Bannockburn, edited by Gill Plain, 65–82. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press.
Mears, Natalie, Alasdair Raffe, Stephen Taylor, and Philip Williamson, eds. 2013. National Prayers: Special worship since the Reformation. Church of England Record Society; 3 vols. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press.
Methuen, Charlotte. 2017. “‘The Very Nerve of Faith is Touched’: British preaching during the Great War.” In La Prédication durant la Grande Guerre, edited by Matthieu Arnold and Irene Dingel, 63–73. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
Methuen, Charlotte, Annika Firn, Alicia Henneberry, and Jennifer Novotny. Forthcoming 2018. “The University of Glasgow’s Faculty of Divinity in the First World War.” Records of the Scottish Church History Society.
Spiers, Edward M. University Officers’ Training Corps and the First World War (Council of Military Education Committees of the United Kingdom, Occasional Paper 4), http://www.comec.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/occasional_paper_no_4_no_crop.pdf).
Wotherspoon, H. J. 1926. James Cooper: A Memoir. London: Longmans.