Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
A Jewish Conservative Looks at Pagan America
A Jewish Conservative Looks at Pagan America
Sep 14, 2025 4:19 AM

Don Feder reminds me of Paul Caplan, a Reform rabbi in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and of Peter Himmelman, perhaps the only practicing Orthodox Jew to carve out a career for himself in rock and roll.

Like Rabbi Caplan and Peter Himmelman, Feder exhibits a palpable joy about his faith–and a passion strong enough to attract people in search of God. Feder, who writes editorials for the brassy tabloid The Boston Herald, writes about one experience at the office:

When I started keeping kosher, I stopped eating the food in pany cafeteria and brought my lunch instead. I refrained from dining out with colleagues, unless it was a kosher restaurant. Quite naturally, my friends and co-workers were curious.

When they discovered my motivation, they were impressed by the fact that here was a person who was willing to do something–even at the cost of inconvenience and modest sacrifice–because he believed it was God’s will. A number began wondering if perhaps there wasn’t something God wanted them to do. It might not be keeping kosher, but there must be something they could do to show their gratitude for His blessings, to connect more closely to the source of their lives.

Feder, once an attorney, is now a syndicated columnist. He’s also a former Libertarian, which gives him a robust skepticism not only about an eternally power-hungry State but also about idealistic passions.

A Jewish Conservative Looks at Pagan America is almost entirely a collection of Feder’s syndicated columns, along with a speech or two. The book is divided into 13 often overlapping chapters with headings such as “Family,” “Faith,” “Judaism,” and “Abortion/Euthanasia.”

John J. Cardinal O’Connor of New York endorses Feder’s work with this blurb: “For believers in God, of all religious persuasions, Mr. Feder is a champion.”

Feder himself praises what he calls “ethical monotheism,” writing: “All monotheistic religions that teach ethical conduct (charity, justice, self-discipline, spirituality) are good. They inculcate virtue, the social adhesive that keeps our culture from unraveling.”

This enthusiasm for all monotheistic religions is both a strength and a limitation in Feder’s work. As a strength, this conviction makes Feder remarkably sympathetic with orthodox Catholics and evangelical Christians as allies in the culture wars.

Even so, how many Christians–for that matter, how many observant Jews–would like to count Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons, Sunni Muslims or mere deists within the ranks of “ethical monotheism”? Feder is no apologist for these groups, but his all-embracing endorsement of monotheism is too romantic, perhaps even utopian.

One monotheist for whom Feder has little time is the modernist Rabbi Harold Kushner, who “sees Scriptures the way the Supreme Court views the Constitution: subject to highly imaginative interpretation. At one point the rabbi speculates: ‘Moses may have gotten his ideas about morality from the same place that Shakespeare got his poetry and Mozart his music, but the process surpasses my understanding.’ A frank admission, this.”

Like his Jewish and Christian allies, Feder sees through the hypocrisy of Planned Parenthood, condom-pushing educators, self-esteem gurus, euthanasia enthusiasts, and recipients of National Endowment for the Arts monies.

Feder’s distrust of es through in several passages that positively sing:

• “Sounding like bination of Mary Poppins and Vladimir Lenin, [author Jane Palzere] suggests this socialization [in daycare centers] ‘might just be the hope of our future.’ Here is the age-old dream of tyrants: Give me a child for its formative years, and I’ll give you an adult with my values, obedient to mands.”

• Former Colorado Gov. Dick Lamm pared seniors who voluntarily refuse extraordinary means to prolong their lives to ‘leaves falling off a tree and forming humus for other plants to grow up.’ An interesting metaphor, this. Recall which totalitarian movement turned people into fertilizer and its zeal in disposing of those it deemed unfit to live.”

Feder is not as reflective a syndicated columnist as Paul Greenberg (of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette), and he sometimes resorts to bative language. The editing of his work by Huntington House, an obscure publisher in south Louisiana, leaves plenty to be desired. Punctuation errors plague the paperback copy of Pagan America.

Such errors are forgivable in this first book by Feder. Next time around, Feder needs a publisher that will challenge him to write a book of fresh material addressing one major theme. He’s especially strong on the sanctity of human life, and he could argue a strong pro-life case from his Jewish perspective.

Meanwhile, we can thank the one true God for friends like Don Feder.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The Light of the World
  Saturday, January 11, 2025   The Light of the World   “Jesus spoke to the people once more and said, ‘I am the light of the world. If you follow me, you won’t have to walk in darkness, because you will have the light that leads to life.’” (John 8:12 NLT)   John 8:1-30   The Jewish religious leaders wanted revenge on Jesus. He...
Having Time Alone
  Having Time Alone   Weekly Overview:   Why should we spend time alone with God? Why is meeting with God in the secret place so important? Until we gain an understanding of the immense value and availability of encountering God, we will never consistently engage in this foundational, vital practice. As we discover God’s heart to meet with us in order that...
How to Avoid Falling into Bad Doctrine
  How to Avoid Falling into Bad Doctrine   I urge you, brothers and sisters, to watch out for those who cause divisions and put obstacles in your way that are contrary to the teaching you have learned, Keep away from them. -Romans 16:17   Africa’s Victoria Falls produces a cloud of mist that is often heavy enough to impair visibility. Once a...
The Storytelling of Clint Eastwood
  Clint Eastwood is an unstoppable force. An actor and a director who has been building his career since his first appearance on screen in 1955, Eastwood, now 94 years old, has directed and produced a new film. Juror #2 was released in November, and like many of Eastwood’s films, it deals with justice and moral dilemmas that characters face. In...
The DOJs War on Algorithmic AI
  Should the government or private sector determine which innovations flop or take off in the marketplace?   Most American businesses and consumers would argue the private sector should make this call. However, when it comes to new artificial intelligence-based technology, the Department of Justice appears to believe that the onus should be on the former. Government oversight over this innovative technology...
Syria and the Future of Global Jihad
  Since Bashar al-Assad fled Damascus on December 8, there has been a strange mixture of excitement and trepidation. On one hand, it is difficult not to greet the regime’s defeat with pure jubilation. After all, Assad was a cruel dictator who engaged in horrible crimes for the sole purpose of staying in power. There is little question that Assad’s image...
Why Commitment Is More Romantic Than Passion
  Why Commitment Is More Romantic Than Passion   By: Betsy St. Amant Haddox   Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins.- 1 Peter 4:8   Love has been creatively described many times over in songs, TV shows, novels, and movies throughout the years. There are pulsing heart eyes in cartoons, passionate kisses, the poetic description of...
When You Feel Tempted to Compare Your Christian Walk with Others
  When You Feel Tempted to Compare Your Christian Walk with Others   By Megan Conner   Bible Reading:   “Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.” 1 Thes. 5:16-19 (ESV)   Does walking out of this Christian faith ever feel overwhelming, possibly even daunting? In today’s communication-overload culture it...
When Parenting is Politicized
  In 1967, my mother was 10 years old. By that time, she had for about a year been taking a city bus alone, from her residential neighborhood to Philadelphia’s city center, where she would walk and window shop. She had also been babysitting her two younger siblings—alone in the house, not as a mother’s helper—from the age of seven.   Even...
Pope Benedict XVI And A Human Ecology
A brief summary of the article Pope Benedict XVI And A Human Ecology
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved