Thank you very much for the help!

Here is the rephrase I found in the sparknotes.

1) Shakespeare has unhooked his work from time and place. The witches tell us that the next time they meet, it will be with Macbeth, and that this will occur before the sun goes down, when the noise of the battle is over and when one side has won and the other has lost.
2) The first witch's question is connected with time, which is one of the main themes of the play. However, the answer is expressed in terms of space.
3) The second witch says that they will meet in the open field.
4) Seyton appears to tell him that his wife is dead. He doesn’t ask why or how she died. He is shocked, filled with anguish. He wishes his wife had died later, when he had time to properly mourn her.
5) Macbeth is tired of life because there is nothing in it for him. The brave, noble-hearted hero of the beginning of the play has turned into (been replaced by) an indifferent and disappointed man.
6) His crimes have hardened him and he has realized that fate has defeated him.
7) He has given up any possibility of going to heaven and his current life is filled with fear.

All are fine.