I am unaware of any cases where the tradition of the Early Church, unanimously shared by the magisterial Reformers (Luther, Calvin, Cranmer, and Saints Jan Hus and Jerome of Prague, who are also venerated as martyrs by the Czech and Slovak Orthodox), the Roman Catholics, the Eastern Orthodox, and the more recent Protestant theologians ranging from very traditional men like John Wesley and CS Lewis, to those who relegated it to much more secondary roles, or did not care about it much at all, such as Stone and Campbell, Jonathan Edwards, Karl Barth, and Charles Spurgeon, and indeed even John Nelson Darby agree could remotely be described as “extremely wrong.” Indeed I myself accept the consensus patrum and reject the idea the early Church was in error; we do not see evidence of any lasting error until lasting schisms erupted in the fifth and eleventh centuries, first between the Chalcedonians and Oriental Orthodox, and later between the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholics, and in these cases, at least in the first case, I am of the belief the schism itself, manipulated by crypto-Nestorians, was the error.
But setting that aside, where everyone for or since basically agrees, like in demonology, this is a case where the entire Church to an exceptional degree agrees on the issue of demons, including the Ethiopian Orthodox and Eritrean Orthodox churches, who are the only ones who include 1 Enoch as canon.
And its not just tradition, for the experience of the Church attests to it (see the Sayings of the Desert Fathers, or the Philokalia, or any book dealing with demons written since, I suppose, the year 1,000 BC).
And my position that I am claiming the support of these churches for does not even require the rejection of 1 Enoch; all I am saying is, the demons are messengers of the devil regardless of what sort of entities they are. Matthew 25:41 would further suggest they are at least substantially if not entirely fallen angels. And this further assumes the demonology in 1 Enoch should be read using Antiochene literal-historical exegesis; however, in general, Alexandrian typological-peophetic-parabolic exegesis is extremely important in the hermeneutics of the Old Testament, and this would be particularly the case in works like 1 Enoch which are highly pertinent to mystical theology.