With Fr Richard Frederick Clarke SJ (1839-1900) Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“The Sacred Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ”
“Short Meditations for Lent”
From “The Devout Year”
By Fr Richard Frederick Clarke SJ (1839-1900)
The First Sunday in Lent
Jesus’ Desire for His Sufferings
Read St Luke xii:49-50
[49] I am come to cast fire on the earth; and what will I but that, it be kindled? [50] And I have a baptism wherewith I am to be baptized and how am I straitened, until it be accomplished? [Luke 12:49-50]
+1. How are we to account for Christ’s desire to suffer? Human nature shrinks from suffering and dreads it and none of the sons of men, was ever as sensitive as He, or had sufferings to look forward to, in any way comparable to His. Yet, in spite of this, Christ longed for His sufferings.
O wondrous Love which not only suffered for us but longed for the time when His Passion should come!
+2. Was it the suffering in itself for which Christ longed? Impossible! It was for the result of that suffering, for the joy which was set before Him that He endured the Cross and despised the shame. Even Christ could not work without the prospect of some reward.
So we should encourage ourselves with the thought of the glorious recompence God will give to all who suffer for Him and, who unite their sufferings to the Sacred Sufferings of the Son of God.
+3. But what sort of reward was that, to which the Son of God looked forward?
It was no selfish reward. It was the pure, unselfish joy of seeing others happy, of knowing that, by all He was to endure, millions of mankind would be freed from the eternal misery of hell and raised to the eternal and unspeakable joy of the Beatific Vision. He knew it was by sufferings, graces would be won for others. This lesson too, the Saints learned from their Master.
How have I learned it? Do I recognise the necessity, the dignity, the happiness, of suffering

