Dear Shermana,
I look forward to the publication. In the meantime, I hope you understand how difficult it is to discuss anything with you. Are we discussing the Bible? no. The letters of Paul? Definitely not! They're not "inspired", so they're taboo. The books of Luke? Yes, but we must selectively delete references to Paul. John's gospels, epistles and revelation? Who knows? Only you.
Can you see why I have less trouble talking with Franklin, the devil's advocate, than I do with you? For myself, I don't even care whether a book is inspired or not. I read the newspaper now and then (usually just the comics and puzzles, I'll admit); but when I discuss, say, a cartoon with my wife, neither of us has to consult a scholar first to see if the thing is "inspired".
I think I understand our problem here, and it has nothing to do with whether or not a particular passage is "accurate", "inspired" or anything else. Correct me if I'm wrong -- I think the problem is that you actually think these books (the ones you think are somehow "true") are God's one-and-only "emanation", for want of a better word, to us; and that they need to be blindly followed if found to be genuine. NOTHING in scripture is like that. All of God's holy ones blundered in these things, some incredibly. How about some examples, off the top of my head:
1. Abraham and Sarah -- served milsching along with fleisching to their guests, who turned out to be angels. Also perpetrated a lie to Pharaoh and repeated the exercise with Abimelech.
2. Judah. Consorted with a woman he thought was a prostitute, after having neglected his legal obligation to levirate marriage.
3. Moses. Almost got himself killed by an angel, for disregarding his son's circumcision; then neglected it among all the Israelites for 40 years. God finally called him on blowing his top at Meribah.
4. Samson. Marrying a Philistine prostitute, and eating and drinking with Philistines.
5. David. Committed murder and adultery. God found fault with him, because he numbered Israel. A failure as a family man, and a polygamist.
6. Jesus. The descendant of adulterers and harlots. He wrongly thought Zechariah the son of Berechiah was killed between the porch and the altar.
God used jealous, vindictive Joab, to restrain David from completing the census, since that flawed man had more spiritual sense at the time than the "man after God's own heart". Balaam's donkey forbade the madness of the prophet. Are we to seek out the collected works of the donkey? Are we to disregard Balaam's prophecies of good for Israel?
Please don't bring up this "scholars" and "canon" stuff with me. I have told you, I don't CARE whether something's canonical or not! I just want to know exactly what it is we're trying to discuss with each other at any given time.