Is there an official consensus on that?
My impression was, I thought Newman wasn’t so much arguing against his definition of Anglicanism, and that’s why he wrote the Essay, but was arguing against how Anglicanism defined themselves.
By 1845, Anglo-Catholics were still a minority within Anglicanism. Indeed, they never ceased to be a minority, but they “leavened” how Anglicans as a whole saw themselves. In Newman’s Anglican days, they were basically a small group of passionately committed people claiming that “Anglicanism” was something that most Anglicans never dreamed it was.
Chillingworth, whom Newman takes as his example of “Protestantism,” was an Anglican, but he was not an adherent of what Newman meant by Anglicanism.
Personally, I find that phrase a powerful one. It says so much with so few words.
Of course you like it. That’s why you should refrain from repeating it smugly as so many Catholics do. It’s become nothing more than a schoolyard taunt.
In context, Newman meant something quite specific and quite powerfully true by it.
When you run into Protestants who openly despise church history and say that only the Bible matters, then you can use it with a good conscience.
What you can’t do with a good conscience is use it to dismiss the many excellent Protestant church historians of the past century or two as dishonest or ignorant or self-deluded. Protestantism has changed a lot since Newman’s day, partly because of Newman and the others in the Oxford Movement.
I’m thinking he made up his mind long before he finished the Essay.
No doubt. My point is that the Essay as a whole is the argument against “Anglicanism” and specifically for Catholicism.
Ya have to admit, It’s one heck of a statement. It could easily be a summary statement to an argument…
But in context, it clearly isn’t.
Edwin