In Genesis 13, Abram does none of those. He and Lot are living within earshot of the Canaanites and Perizzites. And his herdsmen and Lot's are beginning to fall-out over the pasture arrangements. So Abram deals pro-actively with the issue by being prepared to sacrifice for the sake of peace (he offers Lot first choice of the land - and he chooses the best).
Quarrels within the family of God - and in earshot of those not yet Christians - are a bad thing. Abram shows the way - a Christ-like way, of course - to defuse the difficulty: a willing sacrifice, for the sake of peace and for the sake of the gospel.