There were some hard realities to be faced.
After 350 Years, Vatican Says Galileo Was Right: It Moves
In fact, geocentrism was never a doctrine of the Catholic Church. But it was a handy excuse for some in the Church to go after Galileo for other issues. Initially, the pope had been supportive of Galileo, until he mocked the pope in a thinly-disguised "dialogue."
You do realize I've studied World History, 2,000 years of Church History and Church Doctrine/Interpretation, the History of Philosophy, and the History of Science.
I'm already familiar with all that you're asserting here, but it doesn't dent what I've said previously. Just concentrate on the fact that both you and I are, to whatever degree, evolutionary in our assessment of the world's overall history and both still Christian.
As for Augustine, even though he said folks should be open to science and not misrepresent or overstate biblical intepretations, as per his book,
City of God, he still had qualms with "the fable that there are Antipodes......." (the fuller quote is made by Davis A. Young and Ralph F. Stearley in their book,
The Bible, Rocks and Time (p. 32) [which is a Geological work and not a Biological one, obviously).
So yeah, although I'll keep and value my copy of Augustine's
Confessions, I by no means give him the mike or the stage. No, I'll start with 21st century sciences (both hard and soft) and the Bible will just have to take a philosophical hit from it; and so will the Catholic Church. Galileo was probably right to say a "little something." as did Copernicus before him,
“There may be babblers, wholly ignorant of mathematics, who dare to condemn my hypothesis, upon the authority of some part of the Bible twisted to suit their purpose. I value them not, and scorn their unfounded judgment.” -- Nicolaus Copernicus
Some of those babblers would also have included Luther, and probably Calvin, as well, so I'm not just knock, knock, knock'n on Catholic brethren.