Article argues that biblical texts employ "height" as a recurring rhetorical and theological marker of human pride, self-exaltation, and institutional overreach. Reading the giant traditions (1 Sam 17; 2 Sam 21), the Tower of Babel (Gen 11), Babylon in prophetic and apocalyptic literature (Isa 13–14; Jer 50–51; Dan 4; Rev 17–18), and Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 19; Ezek 16) in canonical relation, study traces a shared pattern of ascent, divine descent, reversal. Giants, towers, empires, morally insulated cities each function as variations on a single biblical grammar which height signifies attempted autonomy from God. Drawing on Fishbane, Childs, and Brueggemann, article demonstrates that these texts form a coherent biblical critique of pride, violence, and imperial self-assertion. David's defeat of Goliath serves as personal-scale prototype for fall of Babel, Babylon, and Sodom. The God who "comes down" consistently brings down the high and lifts up the lowly.
Edward Chard, Hon. Lect. School of Arts, UKZN, Mark (Sun,) studied this question.