I would look into Clojure, which has implementations for both the JVM and the CLR. While it may not be the easiest to grasp for an experienced object-oriented programmer, it does addresses the key concerns of OO: encapsulation, polymorphism, and inheritance. There is a good article by Stuart Halloway that explains this quite well (he calls it rifle-oriented programming).
Keep in mind that while Clojure is predominantly a functional programming language, it is much more (as Lisp dialects are a multi-paradigm programming language). Here is the description straight from the Clojure website:
Clojure is a dialect of Lisp, and shares with Lisp the code-as-data
philosophy and a powerful macro system. Clojure is predominantly a
functional programming language, and features a rich set of immutable,
persistent data structures. When mutable state is needed, Clojure
offers a software transactional memory system and reactive Agent
system that ensure clean, correct, multithreaded designs.
Clojure is picking up steam as popular language these days (as can be seen by the number of questions on stackoverflow with the Clojure tag). One of the cool things about the language is that if you're a Java programmer or a .Net programmer, you can make use of the many mature libraries from these languages/frameworks, directly in your Clojure code (here are some basic examples). I think this is part of where the popularity has come from (this book has also helped it gain strides too). One final point about the language is that those who think Lisp dialects look like a three-headed mutant, due to the endless parentheses, will be happy to know that Clojure has replaced parentheses with other characters for certain data structures. Maps use { } and vectors use [ ]. This breaks up the sea-of-parentheses quite a bit.
To address some of your points:
IDE:
There is a good article that covers various IDE options (plugins for Vim, Emacs, Eclispse etc.). For the CLR implementation there is a Visual Studio plugin. Keep in mind that there is also various REPL (read-eval-print-loop) environments that can be used for quick prototyping of functions etc.. There is even one embedded in this webpage so you can try Clojure without downloading or installing anything! I believe the most popular all-in-one solution for Windows (at least at this point in time) is Clojure Box (don't quote me on that, but it is the one I've seen mentioned the most in my personal experience).
Compiler Maturity:
While the language has only been around for about 4 years, it is still has very active development. The last stable release (as of this post) is about 4 months old. So there still may be the odd breaking changes here and there. I would still consider the compiler to be mature at this stage though.
Debugging:
There are various ways to debug Clojure code, both in an IDE and in REPL environments. Here are a few places to get you started:
- CDT (Clojure Debugging Toolkit)
- Some interesting approaches found in this stackoverflow post.
- The official Clojure getting started guide has a Debugging section (mentions using JSwat)
And to end this post, here is a decent quick tutorial on Clojure for non-Lisp programmers (I would assume the majority of object-oriented programmers fall into this category).