A theocratic Christianity is a absurd as a non theocratic Islam
The history of Europe strongly suggests otherwise. There's a reason that the Catholic Church in the 19th century labeled the idea of separation of Church and State a heresy dubbed "Americanism".
so to the extent that Christians have been active in politics, they tended to ditch the New Testament, (Christians on the left) or else claim with varying degrees of plausibility to be defending the Church from state intervention (Christian conservatives)
Excuse me? Most left wing Christians make a big deal about how they care about the New Testament and not the old. The second claim is simply wrong. The whole modern return of evangelicals to the political sphere (starting in the 1970s) was explicitly to put religion back into government. Jerry Falwell is one example of this approach. More extreme are the Christian Recontructionists. And even the fairly moderate Mike Huckabee has explicitly said that if the US Constitution is not in keeping with God's law that it should then be modified to fit it.
A theocratic Christianity is a absurd as a non theocratic Islam
The history of Europe strongly suggests otherwise.
The pope at least pretended not to be a theocracy. Theoretically the Holy Roman Emperor was Caesar, in "render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's, render unto God that which is God's" To the extent that they actually were a theocracy, they were criticized for it, and denied it. The Spanish inquisition was supposedly answerable to the King of Spain, and theoretically the Pope's minions were supposedly merely advising them, m...
I wanted to bring attention to two posts from Razib Khan's Discover magazine gene expression blog (some of you may have been readers of the still active original gnxp) on the polemic surrounding Pinker's The Better Angels of Our Nature.
Relative Angels and absolute Demons (and the related But peace does reign! )
I generally agree with some of his arguments, but found this quote especially as summing up some of my own sentiments: