Okay, one last effort.
I was raised in Michigan. Here is the official website of the Grand Lodge of Michigan.
http://www.grandlodgemi.org/
To the question: Are the V.S.L. (Volume of Sacred Law) and the Book of the Law the same as the Bible?
is the reply: In Christian lands the holy book of the prevailing faith is the Great Light. In American and English lodges that book is the Holy Bible. A Masonic lodge cannot exist without the V.S.L., the Book of the Law. But in lands where there are other religions, the sacred book of those religions becomes their Great Light. What is important is that some volume containing divine revelation be a part of the furniture of the lodge. Inasmuch as Freemasonry is not concerned with doctrine or dogma or sect or denomination, but only with "that natural religion in which all men agree" (Old Charges), it is only necessary that the V.S.L. be sacred to the members of the lodge. The Bible on American Altars is not to be considered only as a Christian or a Jewish sacred book; it is a symbol of the revealed will and teachings of the Great Architect of the Universe-a name under which any Freemason can worship that Deity in Whom he puts his faith and trust.
Now, if this doesn't convince you, I don't know what will. I would take instruction on Masonic matters from the Grand Lodge of my state over an individual, much as you would take instruction on Catholicism from the Vatican over myself.
From your source:
". . . . American and English lodges that book is the Holy Bible."
Your own source proved that the only book used in America and England is the Holy Bible.