John 15:2
He removes every branch in me that bears no fruit. Every branch that bears fruit he prunes to make it bear more fruit — the vineyard image becomes stark: the divine gardener is neither sentimental nor wasteful; unfruitful branches are removed entirely (airō—taken away, lifted up), severed from the vine. Yet fruitful branches undergo pruning (kathairō—cleanse, prune), a painful process that seems destructive but actually serves flourishing. The pruning is not punishment but training; it removes what is alive but unproductive to direct energy toward fruit-bearing. This is the nature of grace: demanding, sometimes painful, always oriented toward transformation.