Parents are naturally concerned that their children not make the same mistakes they did. The Society seem to be worried about the power of this impulse to protect one's children. Page 161 of the new book Live with Jehovah's Day in Mind reads:
A dampening of our expectation of Jehovah's great day could reveal itself in the advice we give to our children or to others. A Christian could reason within himself: 'I chose to forgo educational or career possibilities because I felt that the end was very close. Now I want to be sure that my children get the training that will allow them to have a comfortable life.' Perhaps some in Hosea's day had similar thoughts. If so, would their giving parental advice that centred on a "satisfied" lifestyle have been in their best interests? And if children back then had in fact pursued a "satisfied," or comfortable, way of life, what would their situation have been in 740 B.C.E., when Samaria fell to the Assyrians? - Hosea 13:16; Zephaniah 1:11, 13.
I wonder if even loyal Witnesses will not be a little peeved by this statement...
Slim