Friends, family, and faculty members gathered November 6, 2020, on the lawn at Southern Seminary to remember the life of 20-year-old Nick Challies who died suddenly three days earlier. Nick Challies was the son of noted evangelical blogger and author, Tim Challies.

Challies, a Boyce College junior and Toronto, Canada, native, collapsed suddenly while playing a game with his sister, fiancée, and other students at a park near Southern Seminary’s campus. Efforts by emergency personnel to revive him were unsuccessful.

Testimony after testimony described Nick Challies as a young man who worked tirelessly to build strong relationships, prioritized others, and lived every moment all out for the glory of his Savior. Nick grew up in church and was saved at age 13. He came to Boyce College and Southern Seminary in 2018 after sensing a divine call to pastoral ministry.

“He came home after his first semester here and he was a different person,” said Michaela Challies, Nick’s sister. “He was a person who was living and breathing for God . . . I know that I’ll think about the things he never got to do, but then I’ll think about what he’s doing right now, what he’s wanted to do since he was 13 years old—he’s living with the Lord.”

While at the seminary, Nick met his fiancée, Ryn Conley, and his sister, Abigail, joined him this year as a freshman student at Boyce. He had made numerous friends and had become a leader among students. “All the pieces were falling into place that would position Nick for many years of faithful ministry,” Mohler said.

“Every single student is a gift,” Mohler said. “Every single student is a stewardship. Every single student is a test: are we really who we say we are? Do we really teach what we say we teach? Do we really serve whom we say we serve? Every student becomes proof of what an institution really is and what it really believes, who it really serves. In the brief time in which he was with us, Nick Challies affirmed that we are who we say we are and we’re the kind of school that would draw the kind of student that Nick Challies was.”