A Sad Date but Good News

7 05 2025

For you who have been faithful to check in here over the years and who know our story, you know that May 7 is the date that we lost our daughter, Anna. I have written here elsewhere about the differences between March 29 (her birthday) and May 7 (the day she died). Obviously, they will evoke different memories–some happy, some sad–but the calendar makes the dates different as well. When we remember Anna’s birthday we are always in the burgeoning days of spring. Flowers are blooming. Easter is on the horizon. We are in the midst of so many signs of hope. May 7, on the other hand, comes after those days of hope have gone by. The hot days of summer are approaching. Perhaps most significantly, May 7 always comes in the week preceding Mother’s Day. That fact has always made for an awkward and difficult Sunday. Over the years, Timberley and I, along with Sam and now his wife, Grace, have found ways to celebrate Mother’s Day that are positive and hopeful, but there is always a yearning in the eyes and heart of Timberley on that day. As time goes on, however, the pain continues to change. It softens in some ways. It deepens in others. But time does go on, and for that we can give thanks.

Some time ago, we made you all aware of a scholarship fund we established in Anna’s name at Southeastern Seminary. It was established to support international students studying at SEBTS. Donations have been going toward the permanent funding of the endowed scholarship. We are getting very close to having that endowment fully funded so that it will continue supporting students in perpetuity. In the meantime, we have also been making some funds available for students while we await funding from the permanent fund. (If this all sounds confusing, it was for us as well!)

I did not get permission from the student to share her name, but I did want to share that the first student has been receiving help from Anna’ s scholarship this past year. She and her sister moved to North Carolina a few years back to study here. I still remember well their first semester, as they both were in my Old Testament course. It was January and they had just moved from Pakistan. They always came to class bundled from head to toe in heavy coats. When all the other students took off their jackets, the two sisters said it was far too cold to take them off. But they stuck with it and have succeeded. The funds given to one of the two is helping her to graduate in the near future. It has been exciting to watch her growth during her time here in North Carolina.

I want to say thank you on behalf of this student for the help you have given by supporting the scholarship. I also want to say thank you from myself, Timberley, Sam and Grace, for helping us remember Anna in this meaningful way.

Blessings to you all.





The Anna C. Borger Memorial Scholarship Fund

7 05 2024

Today we are remembering the day we lost Anna in 2008. On this day, I will often write about some memory of Anna, or something Timberley and Sam and I have learned about the grieving process. But today, I am writing with good news.

In March, I announced the creation of the Anna C. Borger Memorial Scholarship Fund at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. Since then, the fund has been approved by the trustees and is now active.

We created the fund to support international students enrolled at SEBTS. We thought this would be a good way to remember Anna, her love for other cultures, and her love for the gospel of Jesus.

This fund will be fully endowed, meaning that gifts you make will help students not only now, but perpetually into the future, until the Lord returns. You can make donations at https://www.sebts.edu/alumni/anna-c-borger-memorial-scholarship-fund/.

In my announcement in March, I described four kinds people that would want to donate to this fund. I am going to copy that part here:

  1. People that want to remember Anna. There are a number of occasions during the year when family and friends may want to give a gift as a way to honor Anna’s memory. Her birthday is on March 29. The day of her passing is May 7. You know about Christmas (it falls on December 25 this year). If at any point you wish to honor Anna’s memory, please consider contacting Southeastern Seminary to make a donation for this scholarship fund.
  2. People that love international students. International students are a unique group. They have so many obstacles to overcome when moving overseas for their education. They are learning a new culture. Often they are learning a new language. Sometimes they have new weather to deal with. (I’m thinking now of my two Pakistani students who moved to Wake Forest in January. Oh my!) But a big obstacle for them is financial. Not only do they have the normal problems related to work and school, but they also have governmental restrictions on their ability to work while they are in the country. This fund will be a tremendous aid to these students.
  3. People that love Southeastern Seminary. I have been teaching at SEBTS for fifteen years now. I love this school. We have a great faculty. We have a great campus. We have a great group of students. We have a great president with a vision for reaching the nations for Christ. If you know our school, then you know that this fund will help the mission of Southeastern to train students to serve the church and the world in the advancement of the kingdom of God.
  4. People that love the gospel of Jesus Christ. Coming out of the third point are those people who love the Lord and who love to see students trained to become pastors and missionaries. These international students will very often be returning to their home countries after graduation. Sometimes they are sent elsewhere with the International Mission Board. But however they serve, our international students are very often our students who are most passionate about sharing their faith with the lost world around them. They love the Lord.

Our hope and prayer is that this fund will provide much needed aid to a particular group of students that are in great need, that this fund will honor Anna’s memory as one who loved her Lord and loved others greatly, and finally will honor our Lord by preparing ministers of his gospel for the world.

Anna resurget.





South Carolina Reads About Anna

23 04 2009

The Baptist Courier of South Carolina share a little about Anna with the information taken from the Southern Seminary newspaper, The Towers.  Don Kirkland concludes by saying:

Clearly, they do [believe what they preach, speaking of the McClain family who lost their adult daughter]. And so must we when our lives are shaken to the core by circumstances that leave us holding onto faith for dear life — or rather, that leave us being held onto by a loving, caring God who must remain unfathomable, but who is nonetheless trustworthy in the midst of our suffering and sorrow.

He understands it well.