yes
As the new wine is found in the cluster,
and one says, ‘Do not destroy it,
for a blessing is in it,’
so will I do for My servants’ sake,
that I may not destroy them all.
(Isaiah 65:8)
someone says, 'do not destroy it'
why would anyone say vines full of fresh grapes at the time of harvest should be destroyed?
and in the context of the whole chapter, in the opening stanza God says He is found by those who did not seek Him - a reference to the bringing in of the Gentiles. then we have much written about the sin & idolatry of Israel, which is 'bad fruit' - i.e. He has gone out to harvest from them, and found only things that have rotted on the vine, or produced nothing.
then the chapter closes by speaking of the new creation
so contextually, we are overall talking about after Israel has been examined and found without good fruit. i.e. after harvest time.
and we are talking about a vinedresser having in mind to destroy or at least cut back the vine - not something done while it is full of fresh grapes.
and we are talking about a certain situation, not an everyday occurrence, when the state of a cluster of grapes makes one consider throwing them away. when does that situation occur? certainly not when they are fresh and full.
when they have begun to ferment on the vine.
it is that 'new wine' being found in the grapes that one man says 'destroy it!' but another says 'no, it is a blessing'
this makes zero sense if we're talking about fresh ripe grapes.
it makes perfect sense if we're talking about grapes which are beginning to naturally ferment into alcoholic wine.