“If you would suffer with patience the adversities and miseries of this life, be a man of prayer. If you would obtain courage and strength to conquer the temptations of the enemy, be a man of prayer. If you would mortify your own will with all its inclinations and appetites, be a man of prayer. If you would know the wiles of Satan and unmask his deceits, be a man of prayer. If you would live in joy and walk pleasantly in the ways of penance, be a man of prayer. If you would banish from you soul the troublesome flies of vain thoughts and cares, be a man of prayer. If you would nourish your soul with the very sap of devotion, and keep it always full of good thoughts and good desires, be a man of prayer. If you would strengthen and keep up your courage in the ways of God, be a man of prayer. In fine, if you would uproot all vices from your soul and plant all virtues in their place, be a man of prayer. It is in prayer that we receive the unction and grace of the Holy Ghost, who teaches all things.” – St. Bonaventure
St. Bonaventure’s profound reflection on prayer is not merely a spiritual instruction; it is a blueprint for personal transformation, disciplined leadership, and wise stewardship. His central message is simple yet powerful:
A person who seeks wisdom, resilience, courage, and virtue must cultivate a life of prayer.
For ultra-high-net-worth (UHNW) families and family offices, this teaching carries a deeper meaning. Wealth preservation across generations is not only a financial challenge. It is a human challenge. Families may possess extraordinary assets, sophisticated investment strategies, global businesses, and advanced governance structures, yet the greatest risks often emerge from within:
A family office exists not only to preserve capital but to preserve the character, values, relationships, and vision that allow capital to serve future generations.
St. Bonaventure teaches that prayer develops the internal qualities required for enduring success: patience, courage, self-control, discernment, joy, and virtue. These are precisely the qualities required of great wealth stewards.
Every wealthy family eventually faces adversity.
Markets decline. Businesses fail. Partnerships dissolve. Health challenges emerge. Family relationships become complicated. Political and economic environments change.
Financial resources can reduce many difficulties, but they cannot eliminate uncertainty.
The greatest family offices understand that wealth management is ultimately risk management of both capital and character.
Prayer cultivates patience because it teaches individuals to respond rather than react.
A patient wealth steward asks:
The strongest families are not those who avoid hardship. They are those who develop the wisdom to navigate hardship.
Great wealth creates unique temptations:
For UHNW families, temptation often does not appear as obvious wrongdoing. It appears as subtle compromises:
Prayer strengthens the ability to make decisions based on principles rather than impulses.
A prayerful family leader develops the courage to say:
The greatest family fortunes are protected not only by lawyers and investment committees but by leaders with moral courage.
One of the greatest dangers of inherited wealth is the loss of discipline.
When every desire can immediately be satisfied, individuals may lose:
St. Bonaventure’s teaching on controlling personal desires is highly relevant to wealth education.
Successful families teach heirs:
You are not the owner of wealth; you are the temporary steward of wealth.
This mindset transforms:
“I can do whatever I want.”
into:
“I have been entrusted with something greater than myself.”
Family governance should encourage:
Discipline does not restrict greatness. It creates the foundation for greatness.
Modern wealth management requires sophisticated analysis.
Family offices evaluate:
Yet financial analysis alone is insufficient.
Many financial disasters begin with deception:
Prayer develops discernment—the ability to see beyond appearances.
A wise family office asks:
Discernment is one of the greatest forms of wealth protection.
Many wealthy families discover that financial success alone does not create fulfillment.
A family can possess:
and still experience:
Prayer reconnects wealth with meaning.
It encourages families to ask:
“What is our wealth for?”
The greatest family legacies are not measured only by net worth but by:
True wealth creates joy because it serves a purpose beyond accumulation.
Family leaders often carry enormous responsibilities:
Without reflection, the mind becomes overwhelmed.
Prayer creates space for:
This is similar to the modern leadership practice of intentional thinking time.
Great CEOs, investors, and family office leaders understand:
The quality of decisions depends on the quality of the mind making them.
A distracted leader creates unnecessary risk.
A centered leader creates clarity.
Every family office has a culture.
Culture determines:
A family without intentional values will eventually adopt outside values.
Prayer nourishes the internal culture of a family.
Virtues essential for legacy families include:
Recognizing wealth is a responsibility.
Understanding success is never achieved alone.
Using resources to benefit others.
Choosing long-term value over immediate pleasure.
Treating people fairly.
These virtues become the invisible infrastructure of generational wealth.
Family wealth often faces pressure to change direction:
A strong family mission provides stability.
Prayer strengthens commitment to a higher purpose.
For a family office, this means maintaining:
Successful dynasties are built by families who know what they stand for.
Financial assets can disappear.
Businesses can fail.
Markets can collapse.
But character creates the ability to rebuild.
The greatest inheritance a family can provide is not simply:
It is:
A family office should therefore develop not only financial statements but character statements.
The question for future generations should not only be:
“How much wealth will you inherit?”
but:
“Who must you become to responsibly steward what you inherit?”
St. Bonaventure concludes:
“It is in prayer that we receive the unction and grace of the Holy Ghost, who teaches all things.”
For family offices and UHNW families, this represents the highest form of intelligence:
Wisdom beyond information.
Modern wealth management has access to:
Yet technology cannot replace wisdom.
AI can analyze information.
Experts can provide advice.
Governance structures can create accountability.
But only wisdom can determine:
From a seven-generation family wealth perspective, St. Bonaventure’s teaching provides a framework:
Prayer provides humility and purpose for building wealth.
Prayer provides discipline to protect wealth.
Prayer develops responsible leadership.
Prayer provides discernment for growth.
Prayer transforms wealth into impact.
Prayer preserves family identity.
Prayer ensures wealth serves a meaningful mission.
St. Bonaventure’s message reveals a timeless truth:
The greatest asset of any family office is not the investment portfolio—it is the wisdom, character, and spiritual maturity of the people entrusted with it.
Prayer is not an escape from responsibility. It is preparation for responsibility.
It creates leaders who can:
For UHNW families seeking seven-generation success, the ultimate family office strategy begins not with wealth management—but with self-management.
Because before a family can successfully steward billions of dollars, it must first learn to wisely steward the human heart.