Servus Iesu said:
...Also, what do you make of Old Testament warfare? It is written in several places (see especially the book of Joshua) that God commanded the extermination of entire populations of cities. Would God really command such an extermination or was this the interpretation of the Jews?
Most of OT can be read (among other things) as a manual for spiritual warfare with the demons and the passions. How to escape from the bondage of sin (Egypt/Babylon) and come to the promised land of dispassion where we can build Jerusalem, a soul that enjoys peace (Jerusalem means 'vision of peace') and a temple where God can dwell, this is the deified mind which contemplates God. The various tribes/kings that the Israelites had to fight represent the different passions. An Israelite is the mind that seeks to see God - again, that is what the name literally means.
God has wonderfully woven prophecy, spiritual/moral lessons in almost all - if not all - the historical events recorded in the OT. Read St. Gregory above, he will blow your mind.
Finally, what do you make of Saul's fall from grace? He was commanded to exterminate everything (including animals) which He captured on one particular military expedition. Rather than exterminate the animals, he kept some alive and offered others in sacrifice to the LORD. The story goes that God was angered at this act of disobedience and withdrew His blessing from Saul's Kingship. What do you make of this?
Quote from St. Maximus:
52. The reign of Saul is an image of the external worship of the Law, which the Lord abolished because it perfected nothing. For the Law, says Scripture, made nothing perfect (Heb. 7:19). But the reign of the great David prefigures the worship set forth in the Gospel, for it enshrines to perfection Gods most intimate purposes.
53. Saul is the natural law originally established by the Lord to rule over nature. But Saul was disobedient: he spared Agag, king of Amaiek (cf. 1 Sam. 15:8 - 16:13), that is, the body, and slipped downward into the sphere of the passions. He was therefore deposed so that David might take over Israel. David is the law of the Spirit -the law engendering that peace which so excellently builds for God the temple of contemplation.
54. Samuel signifies obedience to God. So long as the principle of obedience exercises its priest-like office within us, even though Saul spares Agag - that is, the earthly will - yet that principle in its zeal will put him to death (cf. 1 Sam. 15:33): it strikes the sin-incited intellect and puts it to shame for having transgressed the divine ordinances.
55. When the intellect scorns the teaching which purifies it from the passions, and ceases to examine what should be done and what should not be done, it will through ignorance inevitably be overcome by the passions. As the intellect gradually comes to be separated from God, it is more and more involved in difficulties not of its own choosing. Obeying the demons, it makes a god of the belly and tries to find relief there from what oppresses it. Let Saul convince you of the truth of this: because he did not take Samuel for an adviser in all things he inevitably turned to idolatry, putting his trust in a ventriloquist and consulting her as if she were a god (cf. 1 Sam. 28 : 7-20).
Also,
36. Interpretation of the outward form of Scripture according to the norms of: sense-perception must be superseded, for it clearly promotes the passions as well as proclivity towards what is temporal and transient. That is to say, we must destroy the impassioned activity of the senses with regard to sensible objects, as if destroying the children and grandchildren of Saul (cf. 2 Sam. 21:1-9); and we must do this by ascending to the heights of natural contemplation through a mystical interpretation of divine utterances, if in any way we desire to be filled with divine grace.
37. When the Law is understood only according to the letter, it is hostile to the truth, as the Jews were, and as is anyone else who possesses their mentality. For such a person limits the Laws power merely to the letter, and does not advance to natural contemplation, which reveals the spiritual knowledge hidden mystically in the letter; for this contemplation mediates between figurative representations of the truth and the truth itself, and leads its adepts away from the first and towards the second. On the contrary, he rejects natural contemplation altogether and so excludes himself from initiation into divine realities. Those who diligently aspire to a vision of these realities must therefore destroy the outward and, evanescent interpretation of the Law, Subject to time and change; and they must do this by means of natural contemplation, having ascended to the heights of spiritual knowledge.
Clear as mud?
