it's not really about power, because a v-brake can overwhelm either front or rear (ie, you can lock the wheel). personally (just ordered a CT with v-brake front and disc rear) I am fed-up with rebuilding wheels with new rims. This is required because I mainly cycle in mountains with a loaded bike in poor weather (spring/autumn, as well as summer).
The disc on the rear means I shouldn't need to replace a rear rim, though I won't really get much more usable power. In theory the disc also stops the rim overheating during descents, but I've never experienced that with v-brakes and I think that's largely a poor-technique red-herring.
I went for the light fork on the CT, which (trusting the designers) isn't built for a front disc. No big deal, at least I'm only going through half as many rims now. I also don't really want a dished front wheel.
I've had a front/rear v-brake setup on a 130kg bike+rider in various mountain ranges, and never had any sort of brake problem; always had enough stopping power. Personally, it's about rim-wear for me.
EDIT: oh, and you modulate the brakes based on feel for grip. So whatever the power of the brake (whether worn pads, disc or v) you'll just get used to how it feels. you do this already, as your front and rear brakes are rarely in perfect power-balance.
cheers,