Well, I think it is very important to take all this Globular vs Flat with a large dose of salt and a good sense of humour. I also know of one quote in the Holy Fathers where they draw a spiritual lesson from the phoenix which renews itself in the fire as a kind of resurrection, and speaks of it as though it is a real creature, because it was a widely held report that such a bird was actually in existence and had been seen in far off lands. There are many things that the fathers said according to the knowledge or beliefs that reflect the standard physical scientific beliefs of the time. For myself, I am sure the earth is not flat, I am also sure (though I would not argue about it too seriously) that the moon landings were entirely faked. I also place myself on the geocentric universe side of cosmology of the universe rather than the heliocentric model of the solar system and the big bang version of the universe's cosmology. I have the text that satisfies my questions quite solidly on that last part, and believe that the earth is located centrally in the universe and that God created the Earth and set it in the centre of the universe and that this little ball of rock soil and water is where the Second Person of the HOly Trinity entered into time, space and matter materially by His incarnation and lived and died as a man and rose again for our salvation and justification. I think that is totally consistent with the idea that the Lord's focus is on humanity not spread equally on possible life on other worlds in the billions of galaxies we know to be spread out across the heavens. I believe we are IT in the Universe. Modern man thinks this is hubris, proud and self-serving a view in the extreme, but it is the Gospel and the faith of the Church and the martyrs. (that Christ God the Creator of all things in the physical universe was born of the Virgin and died for us--is the gospel and faith not geocentrism as a cosmology I mean--though as I say, it physically is more reflective of the Gospel teachings and Faith of the Church than the humanist, Earth, the solar system and man is just an ordinary insignificant speck of dust in an unbelievably huge universe and that we are off is some backwards off the beaten path part of it). Hence, we are not special. And the universe shows this -- so would the humanists that overthrew patristic geocentric cosmology. But, like I say, I would not get in a tiff over any of this or say anyone was a heretic on any of this if they held to the modern views of the largely atheistic scientific community, the mainstream beliefs of whom were formed by atheists and were by no means Christians. Yes, maybe I am wrong and backwards by going back to the geocentrist view, but I can live with that if such turns out to be the case. But I think having read the truth and details of just who formed modern theories, why they taught it according to their own confessions, and the many outrageous and egregious things they said and even some of the confessions they have made in print in publications never meant for the public, I am convinced that I am no worse off in going back to the old model than I would be by continuing on in my previous views that I was taught in today's public school system.
Symeon