Then read the exegetical parts of my posting. In particular, that in virtually every case the Bible talks about the Word of God, it is talking about his precepts, his commands, his Word as an expression of his will. Very few are talking about the written Word/the Scriptures, and even then it is never making a statement to the effect your argument requires,
vis 'God has guaranteed a copy of the original inspired writings that is accessible and 100% accurate for all time'.
Even if he did, you still need to respond to this question that I added in one of my posts, which I will post again here:
First, I have no interest in debating manuscripts. It is a childish excercise in my opinion because you could be arguing over manuscripts that could have been corrupted. Unless of course you can prove they are divine. For all real debates should use Scripture to back up their position (like I have done).
But you ARE debating manuscripts. You're just debating a single one (the English KJV 1611 version). I'm interested in the other 1600 odd years of the NT.
And it is not a question of IF the manuscripts have been corrupted. They ALL have - no two manuscripts of the NT are 100% identical. Now, most of the differences are non translatable, but that still doesn't meet your criteria. This is precisely why the TR (and for that matter, every critical text) exists - otherwise they would have just found the one inerrant manuscript and copied that verbatim.
Second, changing the details in God's instruction manual makes it a completely different instruction manual or written agreement between God and His people. How would you like it if someone kept changing the details on your mortage or rental agreement for the worse and not for the better?
It is not a matter of changing God's word. It is discerning what the correct instruction manual is. If I gave you two manuals (or, for that matter, over 5000), you would want to know which one was from the original manufacturer, correct? The problem is not changing the manual, it is changing what your IDEA of the correct manual is.
For that matter, I personally think your analogy would work better if it also added that most of the different manuals are only different in whether they punctuate correctly, and the most distinctive changes are about whether you should call the international or local line for warranty inquiries. You still have the exact same bookshelf at the end of it all.
Third, you have no nailed down Word of God. It is like this floating whatever you want it to be type of Word of God. It is fuzzy. Confusing. No final word of authority but what you make it out to be with a choose your own definition in the Hebrew and the Greek within a Lexicon type Bible. That's the problem. No real nailed down agreement that is obvious to everyone. It's muddy. A mess. All over the place. Not sure. Not solid. Not perfect. Not divine in it's creation. Not all Scripture is under inspiration in this case.
It's only confusing for people like you, who dissemble at the mere thought that the KJV is not the verbatim and only standard for the Scriptures. Most people don't have a problem, and doctrinally, the most 'bewildering' part is based on whether or not we're allowed to handle snakes or not (which is exegetically wrong anyway, but I digress). For that matter, can I just say now - looking up a lexicon as the sole way to understand Greek is just as bad as only using a dictionary to understand an encyclopedia. We can agree on that. The context of the language is important. At this point, you're simply arguing a straw man.
But, finally, if your standard really is a SINGLE, and VERBATIM, and 100% for all time NAILED DOWN version of the Scriptures, I can't understand why you are anti-textual criticism. The whole point of the exercise is to find the correct authoritative text, from the earliest possible time. Your approach essentially argues that it's better to give SOMETHING, ANYTHING a 100% exclusive and authoritative status than to actually discern the original text. Theoretical certainty is better than actual truth, is what you're arguing, and so anything else is inferior because it is less certain (on whatever minuscule grounds), not because it is less true. I couldn't disagree more.