Hi Narkissos,
Digressing even more with you here.
The impression I get from the NT is that the main point to the "message" of Christ and the apostles was faith in Christ and believing in the resurection as a guarantee of a future life with God. Since Christ was not setting up his kingdom but was will-ing people to live under secular government, many of these social/political issues simply were not covered in detail. It was not his time to start reigning.
The principles were clearly there though as I pointed out and people stumbled and struggled with them through the centuries. Where secularist's see progress coming from thought free of NT influence, when I read the history honestly and thoroughly I see men's consciences bothered by the influence of the NT providing the impetus for change, especially for the first few centuries. Nothing was smooth though. That's for sure. I am not denegrating secular thought at all, I'm just not willing to ignore clear NT influence on the West either.
BTTT,
To deny the impact of the NT on the West is to deny the impact of Mohammed and the Koran on Muslim countries in my opinion. This is the corner that secularists have backed themselves into with their thinking. It's not politically correct, I know. It's the way I see it though.
I don't see principles of peace, equality, respect for women etc. in the Koran and Mohammed like I do with the NT. Do you? Do you think that secular remedies will be enough to eliminate Islam's prophetic violent expansionism? Murder, rape, slavery, women as chattel? I can't see it. We must think in terms of religion if we are to understand and hopefully lessen this threat.
Just my opinion.