Do you, Meg, insist that Scripture does reveal a flat-earth, and do you subsequently imply that any Catholic who disagrees with you is therefore a bad Catholic?
I fail to see how your question is related to the rediculous accusation that flat-earthers may be blasphemous.
The skill with which our flat-earth friends are now avoiding their previous assertions that the Scriptures reveal a flat-earth shows me this thread has been successful in putting a stop to the idea that Catholics are obliged to believe the earth is flat as an item of faith if it is indeed revealed in Scripture.
That is all I intended to achieve. I have no problem with any believing or considering the earth is not a globe like every other cosmic body known to man except bits of rocks out there. Admittedly there is a lot of relativity in God's geocentric universe and a lot can be used to support a flat earth. For me the science of geodesy has confirmed the earth is a sphere. Further are the outer space photos and images that clearly show a curved Earth, even a spherical earth from afar. To deny these images is like saying all those rockets we see heading from space are frauds, and that NASA has hundreds of engineers permanently employed in one of the greatest cօռspιʀαcιҽs ever undertaken all to hide the fact that the earth is flat. What really fascinates me is how does NASA know the earth is flat and that it had to be hidden?
Inherent in a global earth is the 'miracle' of gravity, for that is something created by God. This means that everyone living on Earth has the ground below his or her feet and the sky above. That defies human capacity to understand. It also accounts for the fact that bits of the moon or planets do not fall off them. The size of the Earth accommodates this creation, it is so big in comparison to man that all appears level at all times on the larger scale to man on it.
Heaven is above, and if anyone is looking for its physical place then it is all outside the created universe. St Thomas said hell is the furthest place from heaven which is in the centre of the Earth. That theological belief makes a lot of sense.