John Henry Newman: I am but showing how Romanists reconcile their abstract reverence for Antiquity with their Romanism,with their creed, and their notion of the Churchs infallibility in declaring it; how small their success is, and how great their unfairness, is another question. Whatever judgment we form either of their conduct or its issue, such is the fact, that they extol the Fathers as a whole, and disparage them individually; they call them one by one Doctors of the Church, yet they explain away one by one their arguments, judgments, and testimony. They refuse to combine their separate and coincident statements; they take each by himself, and settle with the first before they go to the next. And thus their boasted reliance on the Fathers comes, at length, to this,to identify Catholicity with the decrees of Councils, and to admit those Councils only which the Pope has confirmed. John Henry Newman, Lectures on the Prophetical Office of the Church: Viewed Relatively to Romanism and Popular Protestantism, 2nd ed. (London: Gilbert & Rivington, 1838), pp. 70-71.
Cardinal Newman said, “To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant.”
In 1838, Newman was not yet deep in history. He was a Protestant. He learned. Even when a Protestant, however, he knew redemption was different from salvation. Clearly education standards have slipped in some circles in the last 170 years.