Julius Hare belonged to what has been called the "
Broad Church party," though some of his opinions approach those of the Evangelical
Arminian school, while others seem vague and undecided. He was one of the first Britons to recognize and be influenced by German thought and speculation, and, amidst an exaggerated alarm of German heresy, helped vindicate the authority of the sounder German critics. His writings, which are chiefly theological and controversial, consist mainly of sermons on different topics; though valuable and full of thought, they lose some of their force by the cumbersome German structure of the sentences. In 1827
Guesses at Truth by Two Brothers was published with his brother. The work, initially published anonymously, consisted of essays, aphorisms, and literary studies. A revised edition appeared in 1838 dedicated to
William Wordsworth, who began to read it "with great pleasure and profit." Hare assisted
Connop Thirlwall, afterwards Bishop of St David's, in translating the first and second volumes of
Niebuhr's
History of Rome (1828 and 1832), and published a ''Vindication of Niebuhr's History
in 1829. He wrote many similar works, among which is a Vindication of
Luther against his recent English Assailants
(1854). In 1848 he edited the Remains of
John Sterling'', who had formerly been his curate.
Thomas Carlyle's
Life of John Sterling (1851) was written out of dissatisfaction at the overemphasis on doctrinal questions in the biography of Sterling that Hare wrote for his 1848 volume, and, especially, at the obsession with theological matters by contemporary "Religious Newspapers, and Periodical Heresy-hunters" that discussed Hare's book.
Memorials of a Quiet Life, published in 1872 by
Augustus Hare, contain accounts of the Hare family. Hare also translated a number of tales by
Ludwig Tieck. ==References==