Otto Hermann Pesch
Otto Hermann Pesch (8 October 1931 in Köln – 8 September 2014) was a German Roman Catholic theologian.
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Pesch became member of the Dominican order 1952 and was ordained priest 1958, but 1972 left the order and was married. From 1975 to 1998 he was a professor of systematic theology in the University of Hamburg, as a Roman Catholic in a Protestant department of theology. As an ecumenical theologian Pesch was a disciple of Heinrich Fries. He made his doctoral thesis 1965 about doctrine of justification comparing Martin Luther and Thomas Aquinas.
Pesch coupled with the kontroverstheologie (opposing theology), a mainly German theological movement born in the 18th century and characterized by an opposite point of view than that of the Council of Trent's theology.[1] From 1975 to 1997 Pesch taught Systematik und Kontroverstheologie (systematic theology and theology of the Controverse movement) at the Evangelical Department of Theology of the University of Hamburg.[2]
Works in English
- Twenty Years of Catholic Luther Research. LWF 1966
- The God Question in Thomas Aquinas and Luther. Fortress Press 1970
- Questions and Answers: A Shorter Catholic Catechism. Franciscan Herald Press 1976
- What Big Ears You Have! The Theologians' Red Riding Hood.
- The Ecumenical Potential of the Second Vatican Council. Marquette University Press 2006
- The Second Vatican Council: Prehistory – Event – Results – Posthistory. Marquette University Press, 2014
References
- Jean-Pierre Torrell, O.P. (2017). Amico della verità. Vita e opere di Tommaso d'Aquino (in Italian). Translated by Giorgio Maria Carbone. Bologna: Edizioni Studio Domenicano. p. 29. ISBN 9788870945942. OCLC 984707751.
- "Faculty page at the University of Hamburg". Archived from the original on February 3, 2015.