Wait a minute. If you're already drawing a military pension, you have to give it up? Did I get that right?
Regarding the brother baptizing his brother, who, exactly, has the authority to baptize in the church? Anciently, these Keys of the Kingdom, binding on Heaven and on Earth, were given to Peter and the apostles. Now are they claimed by the WBTS?
Jesus said that he who believeth and is baptized shall be saved. He never said a person could be baptized in one's heart. We also know that the Galatian saints were baptizing people vicariously for the dead (1 Cor. 15:29), something Paul never condemned or criticized. If they thought baptism was so necessary that they had to have it for their dead. Epiphanius states: "In this country–I mean Asia and even in Galatia–their school flourished eminently and a traditional fact concerning them has reached us, that when any of them had died without baptism, they used to baptize others in their name, lest in the resurrection they should suffer punishment as unbaptized." (Heresies 8:7) One scholar notes: " St. Chrysostom tells of how the Marcionites, when one of their catechumens died without baptism, would place a living person under the dead man’s bed and ask whether he desired to be baptized. The living person would respond in the affirmative and was then baptized as a proxy for the deceased. (Homily XL on 1 Corinthians 15)"
So baptism was taken pretty seriously. And though there are many people in the world who have not been baptized, they also have not taken the gospel to heart, so what will become of them?
What I hear you saying is that one must be first questioned or cleared for baptism, then done under supervision. I didn't know the part about the anointed class not having clout. In a way, aren't they part of the faithful and discreet slave?
Let's change the hypothetical a bit. Instead of just baptizing his brother, he notifies the local Kingdom Hall and says his brother is dying...can he baptize him? Could they do everything required in a day or two, perhaps a week, if the person is dying?
If it were you, Larsinger58, what would YOU do? Let's say your brother really wanted to be baptized despite your telling him he didn't need it. Would you baptize him?
Finally, if Jehovah, as the judge of the quick and the dead, recognized the baptism, wouldn't he be bypassing his own organization on Earth? And what's the worst that could happen if your elders or overseer found out you had participated in an unauthorized baptism? Would they disfellowship, shun or reprimand you?
Thanks for your replies. Other views are welcomed.