I think a strong case can be made that the bible does suggest a theory of the world that is consistent with what Spherical is arguing for.
i don't think that position is defensible at all. it's completely built on a very narrow interpretation of Isaiah 40:22 that no one would consistently use to interpret any other scripture.
refutation of that premise has been made multiple times here but subsequently buried by the same irrational arguments spherical keeps re-posting even though those arguments have also been soundly refuted.
that the Lord looks down on the 'circle' of the earth is not a description of the geometry of the planet. it is a word that is only used twice in the scripture, here and in Proverbs 8:27, where it's translated as 'horizon'
the same root word is used only one other time, in Job 22:14, describing the Lord walking the 'circuit' or 'vault' of the heavens. the word, by all three contexts, does not refer to a geometrical form in particular (if it does, it also applies likewise to the heavens, not just the earth - so to be consistent one must adopt a view that the sky is also flat) - but the word refers to the 'compass' of a thing - the entirety of it, as being contained within.
stand anywhere on the earth and look all around you, and everything you see is 'encompassed' by a circle marked by the horizon. look at the spherical earth from a vantage point far above, and the entirety of it is encompassed within a circle marking its boundaries.
Isaiah 40:22 is simply saying that the Lord sits enthroned over the whole earth -- not that the Earth has a specific geometry.
why would God create a universe so entirely deceptive in which ALL EVIDENCE points to the earth being spherical, but one single verse by a particular twisted interpretation without regard for contextual or comparative meaning can in a far-out way be construed to think that the earth is a thin disc?
this is inconsistent with the God we read about in the whole of scripture -- who by His works makes known His eternal qualities. scripture does not describe a God who creates an earth that deceives us when we study it, but the idea that the earth is flat regardless of all evidence to the contrary implies this about God.
no, i disagree completely with your statement.
the Bible does not support a flat earth.
one very twisted, ignorant way of looking at a single scripture may indicate that. that's all.