The opinion of others is of interest if we want to dialog with them; hats off to Jehovah for even trying to talk to us.
Which is very much to the point of this discussion topic.
Abraham was surrounded by peoples that engaged in child sacrifice (even if there is some dispute among scholars as to what extent it went on). But without doubt animal sacrifice was the norm. So the Maker of heaven and earth tries to teach his ways tin a world of slaughter, rape and pillage. He may make allowances for us "knowing we are dust"---but he nevertheless calls us to a higher consciousness.
We actually do have some idea of what they used to go through each day. There have been plenty of peoples who have lived this way up to the present times in the very lands that Abraham lived in. And--crazy as it may seem--my husband and I traveled from NW Arkansas for a three year sojourn outside North Platte, Nebraska in the spring of 1981--in a covered wagon. We had three young children and a dog (the cat skipped out on us) and twelve head of horses. My married life from time to time included electricity--but sometimes not. Without doubt the loss of plumbing I missed the most. We butchered our own meat and on occasion I gave birth at home without these conveniences. We eventually had 7 children together. But the point that was important to me when I first picked up a Bible (miracle #1, as I was a cradle Catholic) was this: even in straightened , challenging physical circumstances the principles of personal conduct do not change in God's economy. Or I was doomed. We had events that involved physical aggression, frightful violent neighbors.Gunshots even. We didn't have this during all our days by any means--and such is not the norm for most peoples. Though we all know of many Christians who are undeterred even by war in their own lands.
No, the tedium and the drudgery of "rustic living" definitely limit free time but I cannot see that it alone is a deterent to knowing God as he is. On the contrary. When I think of how set upon we are by the tentacles of money-woes and our technological dependence, these things make God seem less accessible--not more so.
I apologize for the long post and the personal details butI cannot find rough living an acceptable reason for Jehovah to violate his own character and so stoop to the level of the surrounding nations by saying "kill Isaac". If he had so condescended to the prevailing opinion of worship then how could Genesis 22 have achieved the perfect parallel in Jesus' Ransom as it eventually did?
Maeve