I agree with TD that although a bit frootloopy, the first article is a refreshingly positive one, coming from a JW mag. But the recent one, suggesting that a "good Christian" gives up his or her hobbies, signals a significant shift. So what's changed in the years between 1991 and 2004? I think there are two spectres haunting the 'Tower that stand behind this shift: bad association, and the internet.
One major aspect of hobbies are that they are something that can link you to others. It's only natural to seek out and "fellowship with" people who have something, in this case a hobby, in common. It gives a JW a chance to bond with another JW, or even worse, a non-Dub(!), via means other than the channel provided by the WT. And we all know how the 'Tower feels about that scenario.
Further, in this day and age, the best way to link up with people who have hobbies in common, is via the internet. And again, we all know what that means to the 'Tower.
So, a dedicated hobbyist within the JW movement is, by WT standards, endangering himself or herself spiritually. He or she is cultivating regular contact with outsiders who may well turn out to be moral and ethical people, equal to (or even better than!) the Dubs themselves. In using the internet to broaden the hobby experience, the JW hobbyist may also stumble upon a group whose common interest involves the doctrines and policy of the 'Tower itself. And the 'Tower certainly doesn't what that!
Stephanus,
Of the "can read an awful lot between the lines, sometimes" class.