Hamann, inability of, and his coadjutors to resist Rationalism in
Germany, 196.
Hare, Julius Charles, disciple of Coleridge, 462.
His life full of incident, 463.
View of Sacrifice, 463.
Other opinions, 464, 465.
Harless, an opponent of Strauss, 271.
Harms, opposition of Claus, to union of German Churches, 232.
His 95 Theses, 232-235.
The excitement occasioned by the publication of that work, 235, 236.
Harms, Louis, small beginning of his missionary enterprise, 328, 329.
Final success, 329, 330.
Hegel, his relation to philosophy, 164.
His philosophy reducible to a system of nature, 164.
His system, 165.
Fulfilment of his theory of antagonisms, 257.
The three branches of his school, 257, 258.
Hengstenberg, his Evangelical Church Gazette established to oppose the
prevalent Rationalism, 270, 271.
He takes highest rank in the Evangelical School as a controversialist,
and expositor of the Old Testament, 305.
Opposition to Pantheism, 306.
Contributors to his journal, 306.
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