christians accept that because most don't actually believe in their religion anymore, as I have been saying. There was a time where you would be burned at the stake or exiled or any number of things if you went against christianity. It's not the religion, it's the times that we live in. Islam is still stuck in the stone ages, mostly because they live in garbage poor as shit countries made of sand.
Watch how quickly dubai will lose their religion when they no longer need god as a crutch for their shitty lives.
Well, I wouldn't hold my breath.
What tends to go on is a kind of feed back, where as societies become increasingly materialistic, more and more people discover the emptiness of materialism and go searching for deeper answers. It winds up making fertile ground for religion.
Post Christian Europe is learning this the hard way as formerly Christian young people are turning to radical Islam and joining ISIS.
Islam has had ample time to accept modernity and there are large swaths of the global Muslim population that won't. Also, Islam is part political system in ways Christianity never was and can't be [without ignoring some of its central tenets---"my kingdom is not of this world" "rend unto Ceasar" and etc].
I'm by no means convinced orthodox Islam can make its peace with secular institutions without abandoning the orthodoxy or watering down some of their central tenets. Even orthodox Christians accept that the human government isn't the church and vis a versa: historically, when they tried mixing the two it was a disaster and Christians ended up rejecting it, because any fool that can read the NT could see that it was a doctrinal error.
In contrast, any fool can see how Islam has trouble embracing secular government in the majority of places that have Muslim majorities. Liberals tend to ignore this *fact* because it doesn't comport with their multicultural fantasies. Even Turkey, which is part of NATO and supposedly an example a secular Muslim nation struggles with it under Ergodan.