This will be my last post on this line of discussion, because it's pretty pointless.
Yep. But the problem, in terms of this discussion, is not that we are arguing about whether or not that we should knowingly disobey God. The discussion we are having is about which Bibles count as God's Words that he wants us to have. So, while the discussion of Genesis 2 has I'm sure been edifying for us and for everyone else reading it, it's not directly relevant, because in Genesis 2, God's words are full known to all parties - Eve and then Adam simply choose to disobey.
To which I expect you will answer 'But it shows what tactics the devil uses'. Let's assume that that IS what's happening - that the Devil is trying to make us lose faith that what God has said is what God said. But why do you assume that only applies to what I've been saying, and not what you'e been saying? Why, when you read Genesis 2, you look at it is a proof for your position and against mine, rather than the other way around? I venture there is nothing inherent in your reading of the passage that should lead you to your conclusion, unless you import your own prejudices into the text and take what meaning you want out of it.
For instance, I have explicitly said to you on a number of occasions that the KJV is God's Word. I've already agreed with you on one translation where God's word can be found. If Scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting faults and training in righteousness, then heck yes the KJV is all that.
But what you are doing is pointing at other Bibles that people use (that, when accounting for shifts in the English language that make up the baulk of differences, agrees with your Bible in 95% percent of places, with most of the rest never affects how you should live and what you should believe) and then saying to people "Hath God said?".
Again, you say the man of God should detect the pattern of change - ergo, if you do not detect the pattern, if on comparison you do not see the problem, if you do not detect the 'inferiority' of modern translations, you are not a man of God.
It seems to me that if anyone is clouding the issue of what God said and where he said it, and causing people to doubt God's word where it can be found. it is you, not me.