I think those are good suggestions. I might add many of the early 'Church Fathers' supported Inclusivism; Justin Martyr was definitiely one in his approach. So was Polycarp who has a supportable historical connection to John so Justin Martyr's inclusivism would be connected to Biblical writers. So was Clement of Alexandria although different in approach. Some other church fathers combined Inclusivism with what is called Logos Christology such as Clement of Rome and Irenaeus. During the Reformation, Calvin certainly wasn't but Zwingli one of the big three was an Inclusivist. John Milton and Mathew Henry were. John Wesley has strong leanings towards inclusivism. As MsJack pointed out recent inclusivists have included C.S. Lewis so was the Baptist theologian, Augustus Strong and F.F. Bruce. writers such as Bernard Ramm, Charles Kraft, Dale Moody, Neil Punt, John Sanders, Clark Pinnock and John R.W. Stott. Most recently Alister McGrath and even Billy Graham.
This is clearly applicable to such statements Buffalo made such as:
Christian interpretation is just a matter of redefining the text to conform to the dogma of the believers. It is not an honest attempt to get at the meaning of the scriptures, but rather an attempt to subvert their meaning until they can bring it into harmony with their own conflicting beliefs.
I think that is clearly false since inclusivism isn't some johnny come lately to the party redefinition.
my best, mikwut