
LISTEN, DOWNLOAD OR VIEW
![]()
The 2007 Prayer Breakfast Program
44th Greater Chicago
Leadership Prayer Breakfast
was held at:
Hilton Chicago Grand Ballroom
720 S. Michigan Avenue
Friday, December 7, 2007
7:30 am – 8:59 am


Greater Chicago Leadership Prayer Breakfast
The purpose of the Greater Chicago Leadership Prayer Breakfast is to gather as an interfaith community in thanksgiving and hope to pray for our city and its leadership.

History
The Greater Chicago Leadership Prayer Breakfast traces its origin to 1952 when members of the United States Senate and House of Representatives organized the first National Prayer Breakfast involving the President and the Vice President of the United States, as well as members of the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the federal government. The acknowledgment on the part of many of our national leaders of their dependence on God for strength and guidance inspired leading citizens around the country to organize similar events in their cities and states. In 1964, C. Virgil Martin, President of Carson Pirie Scott and Company, served as Chairman of the first annual Chicago Prayer Breakfast. Since then, distinguished business and civic leaders have sponsored an annual event.
The Chicago Prayer Breakfast was originally held on the first Thursday in May in the Grand Ballroom of the Conrad Hilton Hotel. The late Mayor Richard M. Daley started a tradition of annual participation by the city's Chief Executive Officer—a tradition that continues with his son, Mayor Richard M. Daley. Because the Chicago mayoral elections are held every four years in the Spring, it was decided in 1980 to move the prayer breakfast to the first Friday in December.
Over the years, Chicago Prayer Breakfast keynote speakers have included U.S. Senators Mark Hatfield (Oregon), William Armstrong (Colorado) and Harold Hughes (Iowa); Minnesota Governor Albert Quie; religious leaders Tony Campolo, Joseph Cardinal Bernardin, John Buchanan and Susan Thistlethwaite; sports figures Tom Landry, Mike Singletary and Gary Barnett; business leaders James Beré (Borg Warner), Donald Soderquist (Wal-Mart) and Dennis Baake (AES Corporation); and NPR radio host, Krista Tippett (Speaking of Faith). Protestant, Catholic and Jewish leaders participated from the beginning, and in 2001 the circle was widened to include participation by the Muslim community and others.
The Prayer Breakfast was originally sponsored by the Chicago Foundation, an Illinois non-profit created to organize the annual event. In 1999 the Chicago Foundation dissolved and responsibility for the breakfast was given to the Chicago Sunday Evening Club, another Illinois non-profit, many of whose board members were part of the Chicago Foundation. The Chicago Sunday Evening Club produces the weekly interfaith television broadcast, 30 Good Minutes, on WTTW Channel 11.
The Chicago Sunday Evening Club organizes the Chicago Prayer Breakfast on behalf of the wider community and does not benefit financially from the event. Ticket process for the event are set to cover basic expenses and the event is underwritten annually by the Northern Trust Company. Any proceeds from the event are kept in a restricted fund for future Prayer Breakfasts.