What you are saying is that you base your belief on a tradtion of man that is 500 years old that have no DC that you choose to call Apocrypha. Apocrypha just means hidden. They were removed because of the cost of printing…
Originally it was effectively against the law to print the Bible in America, because the Crown held the copyright on the King James Version (it still does in England) but did not license any printers in their American colonies. The American Revolution made the United States an independent country. Since there were no international copyright treaties at the time, it was possible to print an English Bible in the United States. Shortly after the Revolution, the First Great Awakening created a big demand for Bibles.
For the first time, it was both profitable and legal to print English-language Bibles in America.
American printers discovered that they could leave out the Apocrypha and sell the Bible for the same price, and no one would care because it wasn’t used much. So they left out the Apocrypha to increase their profits. Some of the homegrown religious groups naïvely assumed that whatever was not in their Bible was not in the canon. Later, when Catholics became a significant segment of the population, a non-Catholic would say, “That’s not in my Bible” to a Catholic, completely unaware that it was the printer who left it out. A Lutheran pastor told me that one of his parishioners was insistent that the Lutheran Church did not recognize the Apocrypha as Scripture. The parishioner was astonished when he saw the church by-law that says it is. The parishioner had assumed that his copy of the Bible was complete when it wasn’t.
Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox Christians use the Apocrypha and it is part of the Bible for them. Many independent churches and low-church denominations are only aware that it is not in their printing of the Bible, and think it is a Catholic addition when it is really a printer’s subtraction.
In other words, printers removed the Apocrypha from the Bible, not any church.
So you don’t use the Apocrypha because of the cost of printing and then comment on its absence in the Anglican ecclesial body and compare that belief and practice to the Septuagint that does have the Deuterocanonicals for quite a lot longer and in fact were included as part of a translation to bring the word of God to a Greek speaking world. As you recall Alexander the great conquered most of the known world in the 4th century and spared Jerusalem.
The translation into Greek is recorded by Josephus and the Talmud. God wanted to be known by the world and so the OT was translated into Greek. Why did God move the people to translate this version is the question to ask. It has been around lots longer than 500 years.
P.S. The NRSV was not around at the time of Christ.