Yes, and I have similar feelings towards spells that revive people. For most people, death should be entirely meaningless. You can just buy a scroll or go to a temple to be revived. So when I see a cutscene of someone mourning a dead loved-one, I'm always asking myself... well, why not just go to a clerik?
There is this one guy in Waukeen's Rest in BG3 whose wife died in the fire. He is devastated, but he never once thinks to himself, "well I need to save some coin to revive her." It's kind of rude for him not to try, to be honest.
In theory resurrection magic, while definitely being a thing in D&D settings, is supposed to be incredibly rare and
not readily available from any backwater priest or temple. Even if you are lucky enough to find a priest who can resurrect in theory, it's far from certain that a resurrection will actually work (in earlier editions, for example, the deity could decide not to grant the spell or grant it only under certain conditions or a soul might simply refuse to be brought back).
Also, people tend to forget that
most priests are either not clerics or even if they are, they'll most likely be pretty low level.
I'd love if players wouldn't get access to resurrection spells (or scrolls) outside of very specific situations.