I’d like to think that different classes have different outlooks on resurrection, even when they’re all completely for it.
Specifically, different classes with access to resurrection - clerics, druids and bards.
Clerics have a caring view on resurrection with the focus on the soul of the person who has died. If it would be painful to bring someone back, then a cleric would refuse to, even if they were slain as the result of a great wrong. Clerics do not wish to bring undue suffering into the world, and that sometimes, counterintuitively, includes restored life.
Druids know of the balance that the world exists in, and so their question would be one of balance. Would the restored individual be a boon or a bane to the world, would they throw it out of balance, would lives and systems be thrown into turmoil by the intervention of magical energy in lieu of actual life? If so, then a druid worth their salt would balk at the idea of bringing someone back.
Bards, though.
Bards, the closest-to-arcane of those casters who have regular access to resurrection spells, the ones who study and dissect and understand reality, those who know what’s behind the veil and how to cut it...
Bards remember death. Every death. From the greatest to the smallest. Bards have little black books with names and places and tombstones etched into them with heavy hands, stamps of their plans for the future when they’re powerful and wise enough to reverse them.
Bards hold grudges against Death.









