I just try and be Biblical honestly.
Lots of us try to do that.
I call myself non-denom because I do not stick to one tradition. I "borrow" from different traditions based on what I think the Bible says. For example, I think that the MJ are right that Jesus was Jewish and all that comes with that and we need to remember that. I believe that EO and Catholics are right when it comes to theosis or deification. I believe that Protestants are right that we are justified by faith alone. etc.
That might sound all well and good but the syncretism risks putting mutually incompatible things together by accepting conclusions while possibly rejecting the bases of those conclusions and/or accepting conclusions while possibly rejecting things those conclusions lead to. Such picking and choosing can be very problematic.
It also means you are the picker and chooser, putting you in a position of infallibility as the arbitrator of not only the Bible but also of Tradition and traditions. I don't know enough to sort through traditions like that, picking one thing from one and two things from another. I can like some traditions and not like others but to actually construct my theology from what I choose to borrow ... I'm not that infallible.
Let's say I like theosis, and properly understood I do. How do I 'like' theosis but then 'dislike' the LDS version of it? How does theosis interact with soteriology (It does.). How do I do both theosis and sola fide? Can I really do that? I am not sure that works without radically redefining one or the other. And then, with regard to Protestant 'faith alone' tradition, WHICH Protestant 'faith alone' tradition? There are so many. One that coencides with the Lutheran/Catholic Dialogue understanding of it or one that totally rejects that understanding?
I think you are trying, and that's good. But by picking and choosing from several traditions you really are creating a very complex tradition with potentially numerous incompatibilities. I have stuck myself within Catholic Tradition. I guess one Tradition is enough for me. But even there we have within one Tradition a bunch of sub-traditions, spiritualities, practices, and numerous cultural expressions. Those things can all come and go. For example my spirituality is Jesuit, and yet I respect the Dominican and Benedictine and Franciscan and Maronite spiritualities as fitting and valid and legitimate. My liturgical tradition is Latin Rite as opposed to Eastern Rites, and I prefer to practice that Rite in the Anglican Usage at an Ordinariate liturgy when I can even if I usually practice that Rite at a more plain vanilla Catholic parish. I managed, by just the way my ancestors lived, to have escaped a cultural Catholicism. Not that doing so is good or bad but I pretty much missed out on that. Lots of converts also missed out on that. Point being I know about picking and choosing, but I do it within a Tradition that maintains an overall coherency.
I became an intentional disciple within Catholicism because I could see a continuity with the past, something in every generation. From Jesus to the Apostles such as John and Paul and Peter to the early Church Fathers like Polycarp (a disciple of John) and Irenaeus of Lyon (a disciple of Polycarp), the later Fathers like John Chrysostom of Constantinople and Gregory of Nyssa and Ambrose of Milan and Augustine of Hippo, the medieval scholars like Scotus and Bonaventure and Thomas, men and women who would die for their faith like bishop John Fischer of Rochester and Thomas More and Margaret Clitherow, and contemporaries like Mother Teresa of Calcutta and John Paul II. There is something I can recognize in all of the generations. It's not like this was all invented 2000 years after the fact. It flows. It's the acorn planted by Jesus that is now an oak tree. As C. S. Lewis said of it: "Spread through all time and space and rooted in eternity, terrible as an army with banners". Lewis never became Catholic. undoubtedly because of his Ulster Protestant upbringing making it impossible for him to overcome the prejudices ingested with his mother's milk.
To wrap up, most of us are trying to be honest to the Bible. I see the best way of doing that as belonging to a well chosen Tradition, learning from the Tradition as it shows itself over the ages. I can learn from, and even stand on the shoulders of folks like St. Thresa of Lisieux, St. Robert Bellarmine, St. Peter Damian, St. Athanasius, St. Jerome, St. John of the Cross, and the like. I am not their judge so much as their student as we are all disciples of Jesus.
I know you follow a simpler path. I consider it a too simple path, that for me would be prone to just picking and choosing based on my own whim. My path is a web of disciples with the newer ones judged by the older ones, expanding bit by bit the wisdom of the older ones. Take for example the formation of the Nicene Creed. Arius was a deacon in Alexandria around 300 AD. He knew his Scripture pretty well and followed a primitive version of Sola Scriptura. To him, Jesus was not God incarnate but instead the greatest of creation. He wheedled his way into ecclesial power in Alexandria and replaced traditional presbyters with those who agreed with him that Jesus was a created being. He got Athanasius deposed. But the people would not go to those churches in Alexandria, instead preferring to walk out into the desert to hear the original faith from the hermits They said their grandmothers never taught them such drivel and that of course Jesus was God just as the Father was God. THAT was the Tradition. Arius could sling Bible verses all he wanted but he was WRONG. They knew it because that was contrary to the faith they had received. Athanasius was the key player in the council of Nicea that addressed the Arian problem. The council affirmed that Jesus was not a created being but 'of the same stuff' as God the Father. They had to go outside of Biblical language to affirm that. Arius was clever enough to spin the Bible any which way but the way those old grandmothers had learned it and taught it to their children. I get to stand on the shoulders of the Fathers of the council of Nicea, and they stood on the shoulders of their grandmothers who stood on the shoulders of their forebearers all the way back to Jesus. The guy with the Bible in his hand was Arius, but he was wrong.