So I guess the earth must really be flat?
Googled:
http://www.stnews.org/Commentary-1069.htm
By Carolyn Moynihan
(July 12, 2005)
It is important to separate fact from fiction in the life of Galileo.
(Photo: NASA)
Related STNews articles Debunking The Flat Earth Myth
What does recent scholarship tell us about the history of the church and science?
The idea that Christopher Columbus had to defy Catholic flat-earthers to embark on his voyage of discovery has had wide currency. But as historian Jeffrey Burton Russell has shown in his book Inventing the Flat Earth, the real error is not the alleged medieval belief that the earth was flat, but rather the modern error that such a belief ever prevailed. Virtually all educated Christians during the high Middle Ages knew that the earth was round.
The ignorant medieval flat-earth Catholic is a modern myth, a product largely of Protestant and secular prejudice.------------------
Another - excerpt:
http://www.tfp.org/TFPForum/TFPRecommends/Books/inventing_flat_earth.htm
Flattening the Flat Error
A review of Jeffery Burton Russells book Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians by Michael Whitcraft
Sometimes conventional knowledge is fraught with error.
However, this outlook is false.
The Church never taught the flat error. This falsity was invented in the nineteenth century by anti-Catholic rationalists intent on depicting the Church as the enemy of science. This would allow them to further Enlightenment ideas and clear the way for the aborning theory of evolution. Jeffery Burton Russell presents these facts in a concise and crystal clear manner in his 1991 book, Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians.
Another:
http://www.veritas-ucsb.org/library/russell/FlatEarth.html
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Many things over time can change - Doctrine is what we believe but doesn't change. Discipline is how we show it and can change. What the Church teaches regarding faith and morals is correct. Now that can truly rely on your teacher teaching the proper thing and not their own interpretation.
Discipline is how we practice the faith - an example is no meat on Fridays during Lent. It used to be no meat on Fridays throughout the year. Meat used to represent a celebration but over the years meat is no longer considered such a celebratory meal. No meat on Friday due to it being Good Friday on the day that Jesus was crucified. It is now common so the tradition has changed to only do no meat on Fridays during Lent. Married priests is a discipline - it can change. The eastern rites have married priests - the western rites do not unless special dispensations have been given. This too can change.
Flat earth was never part of Church Doctrine; or I just can't seem to find it in my Cathecism of the Catholic Church.