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Klaus Hemmerle (April 3, 1929 in Freiburg im Breisgau – January 23, 1994 in Aachen) was a Roman Catholic bishop in Aachen, Germany.[1] He was ordained as a priest in 1952 and became bishop of the Diocese of Aachen in 1975.[1] He was inspired by Chiara Lubich, who said she was also inspired by him and considered him one of the co-founders of the Focolare Movement due to his teachings on theology and philosophy, and particularly his views on plural thinking and unity.[2][3][4][5]References1. ^1 Bishop Klaus Hemmerle at Catholic-hierarchy.org. 2. ^Klaus Hemmerle: for Church and for Society, Focolare.org, May 13, 2013. 3. ^Bishops, Focolare.org. 4. ^Trinitarian Ontology amid philosophy and theology: Tracing the footsteps of Klaus Hemmerle, a breakthrough philosopher, Sophia.org, December 2014. 5. ^Hemmerle, Klaus, A Decalogue for Priests, St. Clare Sisters Retreat Ministry.
Additional sources- {{DNB-Portal|119174871}}
- {{BBKL|h/Hemmerle|band=14|spalten=1084-1086|autor=Ekkart Sauser|artikel=Hemmerle, Klaus}}
- Wilfried Hagemann: Verliebt in Gottes Wort. Leben, Denken und Wirken von Klaus Hemmerle, Bischof von Aachen. Würzburg, Echter, 2008. {{ISBN|978-3-429-03052-0}}
- Thorsten Obst: Das Heilige und das Denken. Untersuchungen zur Phänomenologie des Heiligen bei Klaus Hammerle. Würzburg, Echter, 2010. {{ISBN|978-3-429-03316-3}}
- {{citation|surname1=Klaus Meyer-Schwickerath|title=Wegbereiter des Lichts : Prof. Klaus Hemmerle, Bischof von Aachen 1975–1994 und Prof. Gerd Meyer-Schwickerath, Direktor der Augenklinik Essen 1959–1985|publisher=Mainz|publication-place=Aachen|isbn=978-3-8107-0094-0|date= 2010|language=German}}
External links- {{official website|http://www.klaus-hemmerle.de/}}
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Hemmerle, Klaus}}{{Germany-RC-bishop-stub}}{{RC-bio-stub}} 5 : Roman Catholic bishops of Aachen|Roman Catholic bishops in Germany|1929 births|1994 deaths|20th-century Roman Catholic bishops |