I don't read the entirety of a person's post if they are talking gibberish or none sense (That can't be backed up by God's Word).
Well, lucky I don't treat you the same way, then.
I will only read a person's post if they are using Scripture to back up what they are saying. You are not doing that. Show me where you believe God's Word is perfect. Am I wrong? I don't think you believe that. But the Bible does say it is perfect, though.
You're conflating places where the Bible talks about the Word of God with the written tradition of the Scriptures. For instance, your reference to 1 Thess is totally off base, because Paul was PREACHING, not from a written gospel proclamation (such a thing did not yet exist - 1 Thess is almost certainly the first written document of the NT), but with his lips, in his authority as an apostle, from what he had learned from the eyewitnesses (1 Cor 15). There is not a hint of anything being said about a written document ANYWHERE here, it's simply not relevant. This is yet another example of your exegetical carelessness (which I already referred to in my previous post, and which you didn't reply to).
You have yet to give a single scriptural evidence for your highly specific position "God has guaranteed an exact and inerrant copy of the Old and New Testaments will remain extant and accessible to all people at all times." You ask "Show me where you believe God's Word is perfect". I say - go and actually read my posts, and stop asking questions that have been answered. If you want to ask questions of clarification, that's different.
And your accusation that I somehow believe the words of men rather than the word's of God is just insulting. The whole point of this exercise, Jason, the whole REASON we are having this discussion is because I am interested in getting rid of the words men have added or taken away, and discerning the words God gave to the apostles. As I have already established, it appears you value certainty, even if it is only theoretical and has no other basis, over truth. That's fine, but others here value God's truth over an imagined epistemic certainty.