I am starting responding to this this morning, and I am finishing it now after work.
Hope you are doing well and that you slept well!
“Have you
abandoned our creator?”
No. I am
doing my best to follow the Will of our Creator, to the best of my
understanding. This is the purpose of my life and it will always be. Just
because I have reached a different conclusion about His Will, doesn’t mean that
I have abandoned our Creator.
“Taking away from Torah is prohibited just as adding to.”
According
to the redactors whom wrote that passage (and most of Deuteronomy), which
according to scholarship occurred much later than when these redactors claimed
to have written it. 
But how do
you know that this passage was inspired by the Creator? How do you know that
all that which was in Torah at that time (which according to scholarship was
compiled by different authors with different agendas) was the infallible
instruction manual of the Creator? How do you know that it wasn’t changed (e.g.
at king Josiahs time, it is claimed in the Hebrew Bible that he found the Torah
in the ‘temple’ (the scroll had been lost) and after that changed some of the practices of
the Israelites [it is very easy for the leadership to do redactions/additions
when a document is so rare] .
How do you know that the Creator commanded the Israelites to kill the people and innocent animals of Kan’aan and elsewhere in the Tana''ch [I don’t think He did.]?
How do you know that the Creator commanded the Israelites to kill the people and innocent animals of Kan’aan and elsewhere in the Tana''ch [I don’t think He did.]?
How
 do you know that the authors were honest and sought to do the Will of 
the Creator? How do you know that the authors understood the Will of our
 Creator correctly? What is wrong with using our the compassion and love
 that the Creator has given us and to show it to all His creations, 
including animals (including not to take their lives )? And to use all 
of the capabilities we have, our intellect, love and compassion and all 
facts that are available, and to based on make an as unbiased conclusion
 as possible about the Will of our Creator?
Why is it safer to assume the 
Torah to be right (in contradiction with the evidence), than to use the 
methodology described in the last sentence?
How
 can it every be righteous to take someones life (and than perhaps 
defending oneself against someone determined to kill oneself)? Who gave 
us the right to take any life of an individual, including the animals? 
How can you know that many of the ancient Israelites (some seem to have 
disagreed, see Genesis 1 and the vegetable-diet proposed) were right in 
claiming that the Creator gave them the right to kill certain kinds of 
His animals?
What way do you think the authors of the Torah used when they tried (if they tried) to understand the Will of our Creator? 
“What proof
do you have for such a change.”
Proof for
Torah not being the infallible instruction manual: I write some evidence in my
Facebook-page + including the links [which in themselves contain many good
resources to scholarship and archeology related to the Bible, e.g. the lectures
of Yale University]. Some exampels: Internal contradictions of Tana’’ch, contradictions with
archeology.
What do you think of this link: Link ?
 
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