Please define "privileges."
If any appointed brother (elder, MS, regular or auxiliary pioneer) has committed a DF'ing offense but is 1) repentant according to the BOE and 2) the offense is not known in the congregation and/or community, he will be privately reproved. He must lose the above privileges. He can also be put on restriction which can include not praying at a meeting, public reading at a meeting, participating in the school, taking the group out in field service. (Of course, since this is done in-house and only that individual and the elders are aware, they can do whatever they want to and conceal it.)
*** w77 11/15 697 Genuine Repentance-How Is It Identified? ***
WRONGDOING
BY
ELDERS
AND
MINISTERIAL
SERVANTSSince elders have such weighty responsibility in the Christian congregation, their conduct should certainly be exemplary. Therefore, if an elder commits a grave wrong, he is morally obligated to inform the body of elders respecting this, even though he may have repented of his error. Why? Because, having ceased to be irreprehensible, he is now disqualified from continuing to serve as an overseer. (1 Tim. 3:2) For men with serious spiritual blemishes to serve as elders would not conform to Gods standard of holiness.1 Pet. 1:15, 16; compare the law at Leviticus 21:17-23, which prohibited men of Aarons house from carrying out priestly duties if they had a physical defect.
On the other hand, if there is a valid accusation against an elder or if he confesses to gross sin, the other elders should assume full responsibility for relieving him of his eldership and should reprove him as needed, imposing whatever restrictions are advisable. Or, where an unrepentant attitude on his part makes it necessary, they should take disfellowshiping action.
*** km 6/73 3 What Should Be Done? ***
If someone serving as an
elder or a ministerial servant commits serious wrong and is put under restrictions by the judicial committee
he is no longer irreprehensible or free from accusation and thus he loses his privileges and his status as an elder.(1 Tim. 3:2, 10; Titus 1:6, 7)