“Surely your waste land
Will now be too crowded
For your inhabitants.
Your desolate places
Will surely now be too crowded
For your inhabitants.
Your devastated land
Will surely now be too crowded
For your inhabitants.
Those who swallowed you up
Will be far away.
The children born
In the time of your bereavement
Will yet say in your hearing?
‘The place is too crowded for me.
Make room for me to settle.’
Then you will say in your heart.
‘Who has borne me these?
I was bereaved.
I was barren.
I was exiled.
I was put away.
So who has reared these?
I was left all alone.
Where then have these come from?’”
Second Isaiah raises the question about overcrowding if all the exiles returned. There would be a special problem for those born in exile that had never lived in Israel. Why would they want to return there? The land was wasted, desolate, and devastated, why would anyone want to live in overcrowded conditions there? Their captives were gone. However, what would entice those who had spent their entire life elsewhere to move to a place that they had never known. There was nothing there to attract them. In fact, the mothers were upset at their children. They had spent their life bereaved, barren, alone, and exiled in a far away land. Who had reared these kids? Where did they come from? Why didn’t they want to go back to Israel? Was the influence of this new country too much for their own children?