At a recent DC, an elderly sister was interviewed. She recounted how she endured through many years of her husband's opposition, never giving up, until finally he relented. Eventually, he bacame baptized and joined her in the full-time pioneer work.
End of experience. Clap clap clap clap clap.
One is left with the impression that this faithful sister and her husband continue on, down to today, in faithful full-time service.
The reality:
My wife and I know this couple personally, but not intimately - we both are originally from the same geographic region, and now live in...another geographic region.
After the DC, this couple invited us to dinner, so we went along. After some insightful questioning by my wife, here is what we learned had happened:
He is 76, she is 70. Several years back, when he retired, he had managed to accumulate $40,000 in an IRA, or 401K, or something. They decided to live off of that income, plus Social Security, as long as they could while pioneering.
The money lasted 5 years. Afterward, it became a necessity for both to return to work. They are not pioneering now, they have not pioneered for many years
He works as a real estate appraiser, but of course in the current market, his skills are little in demand. Money is tight. She holds 2 jobs, one tutoring, the other working at Target for 20+ hours per week. She can't do more because her legs become very painful.
The foundation sponsoring the tutoring may lose funding, and she is fearful of losing that job, because she can't work more at Target.
They are struggling financially. After the meal, she carefully boxed up the remainder of her dinner salad, plus dressing, plus bread.
They put all there "eggs in one basket", as it were, spending all the meager retirement savings they had, "putting Jehovah first" and hoping that Armageddon would come "soon" and rescue them.
It didn't, and now they face a future of declining abilities and financial insecurity, with no Armageddon in sight.
I wonder why they didn't include that part in the experience?