The Mayfield Class

Genesis 17-18 | Circumcision & Unexpected Visitors

1 h 2 min · 26. apr. 2026
episode Genesis 17-18 | Circumcision & Unexpected Visitors cover

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Reflection Questions 1. Why do you think God began with His name “El‑Shaddai” after 13 years of silence? What does this reveal about how God restores discouraged believers? 2. What does it mean to “walk before Me and be blameless”? How does the idea of wholeness or integrity help you understand this command? 3. Abraham receives a new name as a daily reminder of God’s promise. What “names” or reminders has God placed in your life to keep His promises before you? 4. Why do you think God chose circumcision, a permanent, embodied sign, and the very spot where he tried to take a shortcut, as the covenant marker? What does this teach us about surrender? 5. Where have you quietly stopped hoping, the way Sarah had?  What would it look like to bring that area back before God? How does the question “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” confront your current fears or doubts? 6. Abraham intercedes not only for Lot but for the entire city. How does Abraham’s prayer challenge your own prayer life? Where do you need to grow in boldness, persistence, or compassion?

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130 episodes

episode Genesis 24 | Isaac & Rebekah, God’s Providential Love Story artwork

Genesis 24 | Isaac & Rebekah, God’s Providential Love Story

Reflection Questions 1. Abraham’s final recorded words in Genesis 24:1–9  show unwavering trust: “He will send his angel before you.” How does Abraham’s confidence in God’s providence shape the servant’s mission? Where do you need to trust God’s unseen work in the ordinary moments of your life? 2.  The servant prays with remarkable specificity in Genesis 24:12–14, asking God to reveal character through ordinary actions. How does this challenge the way you pray? What would it look like to pray specifically rather than vaguely in your current season? 3. Genesis 24:15–21 says, “Before he had finished praying…” Rebekah was already on her way. How does this passage reshape your understanding of God’s providence in everyday events? Where have you seen God working “before you finished asking”? 4. In Genesis 24:21–27, the servant stands still and watches in silence to see if God is answering. What does his patient watching teach us about faith? Where do you need to slow down and watch for God’s hand instead of forcing an outcome? 5. In Genesis 24:55–58, Rebekah says, “I will go.” How does her response echo Abraham’s obedience in Genesis 12? What is God calling you to say “I will go” to right now? 6. Isaac and Rebekah’s story ends in Genesis 24:62–67 with the first mention of marital love in the Bible: “And he loved her.” How does this passage challenge modern assumptions about love, commitment, and covenant? What does it teach us about how love grows inside God’s promises?

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episode Genesis 23 | Sarah’s Death & Faith That Grieves Well artwork

Genesis 23 | Sarah’s Death & Faith That Grieves Well

Reflection Questions 1. In Genesis 23:1–2, Moses slows down to honor Sarah’s life and Abraham openly weeps for her. What does this teach us about the relationship between faith and grief? Why is it important that the Bible shows Abraham, a great man of faith, mourning deeply? 2. In Genesis 23:3–9, Abraham rises from mourning and begins negotiating for a burial place. What does this reveal about taking faithful action before the feelings of strength return? How does Abraham’s belief in God’s promises shape the way he makes decisions in sorrow? 3. In Genesis 23:10–16, Abraham refuses a gift and insists on paying full price for the land. Why is this significant theologically? How does this act demonstrate that Abraham is interpreting his grief through the covenant rather than interpreting the covenant through his grief? 4. In Genesis 23, Moses emphasizes twice that Sarah is buried “in the land of Canaan.” Why does the location matter? How is every burial in this cave an act of resurrection hope pointing forward to Christ? 5. Hebrews 11:13–16 says the patriarchs died “in faith,” looking toward a better country. How does this New Testament lens help us understand Abraham’s actions in Genesis 23? How does the resurrection of Jesus shape the way Christians grieve today? 6. Abraham grieves (v.2), acts (v.3), and hopes (v.19–20). Which of these three movements do you most need right now? What is the “next faithful thing” God is calling you to do in the middle of your own loss or uncertainty?

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episode Genesis 22 | Abraham & Isaac, God the Tester & Provider artwork

Genesis 22 | Abraham & Isaac, God the Tester & Provider

Reflection Questions 1. Why does Moses tell us upfront that this is a test? How does that shape the way we read the passage and understand God’s character? 2. In Genesis 12, Abraham surrendered his past. In Genesis 22, he is asked to surrender his future. Where is God asking you to surrender something you’ve been holding tightly? 3. What is the emotional and theological weight of the phrase: “your son… your only son… Isaac… whom you love”? 4. Abraham rises early and obeys immediately. What does this teach us about faith as movement, not merely emotion? How might three days of walking with Isaac have tested Abraham’s resolve? What does this teach us about long obedience? 5. In verses 6-10, Isaac willingly carries the wood and submits to being bound. What does this reveal about his faith and Abraham’s discipleship? 6. God will provide. Abraham’s answer to Isaac is both confident and open‑ended. How can we learn to trust God’s character even when we don’t know His method? 7. How does the ram “in the place of his son” prepare us for the gospel? How does substitution deepen your understanding of Christ’s work? 8. Jehovah‑Jireh. What does it mean that “on the mount of the LORD it shall be provided”? Where have you seen God “see to it” in your own life? 9. Why does Moses introduce Rebekah in verse 23, immediately after Moriah? What does this teach us about God preparing the future before we even know we need it?

24. maj 202656 min
episode Genesis 21 | Laughter is Born & Ishmael Laughs artwork

Genesis 21 | Laughter is Born & Ishmael Laughs

Reflection Questions 1. Where in your life are you tempted to laugh with doubt rather than laugh with joy? How does the quiet, matter‑of‑fact fulfillment of God’s promise in verses 1–2 challenge the way you expect God to work? 2. Where do you see yourself tempted to “walk toward Egypt” when life gets hard? Why do we so easily forget past encounters with God when the next crisis hits? 3. What does Hagar’s story teach us about the difference between experiencing grace and embracing grace? Where do you need God to “open your eyes” to a well that is already in front of you? 4. How does Paul’s interpretation in Romans 9 and Galatians 4 help you understand the spiritual meaning of this chapter? What does this story reveal about the danger of assuming that proximity to God’s people equals belonging to God? 5. Why is Abimelech’s statement “God is with you in all that you do” so significant in light of Abraham’s failures? Where do you see God polishing you through friction, waiting, or adversity?

17. maj 202644 min
episode Genesis 20 | Abraham & Abimelech, When Old Sins Come Back artwork

Genesis 20 | Abraham & Abimelech, When Old Sins Come Back

Reflection Questions 1. Where do you see your own “default sins” resurfacing the way Abraham’s fear-driven deception resurfaced in Gerar? Why do certain sins feel “natural” or “reasonable” to us even when we know they are wrong? 2. Abraham knew God’s promise, yet acted as if he didn’t. Where do you see that same gap in your life? What does this chapter teach us about the difference between knowing truth and trusting truth? 3. How does God’s intervention in Abimelech’s life challenge our assumptions about who is “righteous” in a given moment? What encouragement do you draw from the fact that God protects His covenant even when His people fail? 4. Why is it easier to explain our sin than to repent of it? What does Abimelech’s confrontation reveal about the role of others in exposing our blind spots? 5. How does Genesis 20 help us understand the difference between grace that forgives and grace that enables change? What does this chapter teach us about the real consequences of sin, even forgiven sin?

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