No, I'm wanting the opposite of the all inclusive list.
Is it possible for a person to not believe that God exists and be saved? No! Therefore, it is on the list.
Is it possible for a person to be saved without admitting guilt of sin and acknowledging the need to be saved? No! Therefore, it is on the list.
The list of doctrines that I've compiled are, I believe, those things which a person MUST believe. They aren't even close to being the whole gospel. There's a whole lot more that a person ought to believe and they will be in for a great deal of needless effort, frustration, guilt, loss, etc if they fail to learn it but they will still be saved. I'm looking to strip all that sort of thing back and see the CORE of the gospel. The doctrines without any one of which a person is lost.
That's the right track!
That's points one and two!
It's not only that God exists but that He is the Creator and is majestic beyond description, He is righteous and just, etc. all of which is evident and knowable by natural law.
That sounds like anything but a waste of time. Such analytical thinking through of what otherwise might be considered elementary principles is one of the best ways one can spend their free time. It's like getting a deeper understanding of a house by studying its foundation or trying to gain insight into biology by trying to define what qualifies something as being alive. Definitely not a waste of time!
Just to make it easy to reference, I'll repost the list here....
- God exists.
- He is the Creator of all things and He is holy, perfect and just.
- We have, by doing evil things, rebelled against God.
- We, having rebelled against the God who gave us life, deserve death.
- God, being unwilling that all should perish, provided for Himself a propitiation (an atoning sacrifice) by becoming a man whom we call Jesus Christ and who is God Himself become flesh.
- Jesus, being Himself innocent of any sin, willingly bore the sins of the world and died on our behalf.
- Jesus rose from the dead.
- If you confess with you mouth, the Lord Jesus Christ (i.e. acknowledge your need of a savior and that He is that Savior) and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, YOU WILL BE SAVED.
The last point is quite redundant as the previous points are mostly just a fleshing out of what it means to confess the Lord Jesus Christ.
And just to emphasize, this isn't the whole gospel but only the barest necessities of getting saved.
Incidentally, I also understand that someone can state and perhaps even actually believe that they affirm all of these points but, as you say, it really does depend on what in someone's mind because a person might say that they believe God is just but they've got a twisted understanding of what justice is and so out of one side of their mouths they acknowledge God's justice while out of the other side they proclaim that God arranged the fall of man. Such people are double minded and deceive themselves. Thus, it should be kept in mind that words mean things and that ideas have consequences and so when I say that one must believe that God is perfect and just, I do not mean that in the Aristotelian sense but in the actual sense, the real sense, the rational sense - the NORMAL sense of those words and if someone believes those words to mean something weird like the Calvinists (and other Augustinians) often do, then they may well not qualify as believers.
Clete