Botham Shem Jean was dedicated to God at a young age and grew into an accountant with a passion for singing and volunteering.

The day of his funeral, mourners stood up from their pews and cheered when a family friend said, “Botham Shem Jean was not a silhouette.”

“He was the light in a dark room,” said pastor Michael Griffin.

On Sept. 6, 2018, at the age of 26, Jean was shot and killed by Amber Guyger, a Dallas officer who had just ended a work shift.

Jean was inside his own apartment when Guyger said she mistook his residence for her own. She fired her gun at what she later described to investigators as a “large silhouette” she believed was an intruder, arrest records show.

It was Botham – a singer, preacher, volunteer, accountant.

A young Botham Shem Jean

Botham Jean was born on Sept. 29, 1991 to mother Allison and father Bertrum Jean in Castries, Saint Lucia, an island in the eastern Caribbean.

Friends would later call him “Bo.”

He was born 10 years after his older sister, Allisa Findley, and 10 years before his younger brother, Brandt Jean.

At an early age, Botham Jean was self-assured and ready to dedicate himself to Christ, his mother said as she recalled memories of her son at a vigil.

He was 8 when he approached his parents and first asked to be baptized.

“His dad said, ‘No, you’re too young. Do you know exactly what you’re doing?’” his mother said.

So he came back to his parents again at the age of 9, “Dad, I want to be baptized.”

It took two years of persistence before Jean was baptized at the age of 10.

A leader at an early age

In his early teens, Jean began preaching.

“No one forced him,” his mother said. “Botham knew what he wanted.”

She said her young son was a perfectionist.

"He always had a plan or proposal,” Allison Jean said.

He once took it upon himself to teach his mother's church choir "how to sing," she said.

"Botham was not happy with our singing at the congregation," his mother said with a laugh.

He taught the choir how to read music and arranged the singers by sopranos, altos, bass and tenor.

“Everything Botham did was to impact the lives of people," Allison Jean said of her son.

Destined for Harding University

When it was time for college, Jean had his mind set on one place – Harding University, a private Christian school with its main campus in Searcy, Ark.

While Allison Jean said she encouraged her son to stay in the West Indies, she said Jean had already made up his mind.

"It was a place to get an education while maintaining his Christian identity," she said of her son's choice.

By the time the Jean family went to Arkansas to visit the campus, his mother said Botham had already memorized the school's layout.

In 2011, he was accepted to the university and moved to Arkansas at the age of 19.

But every year he attended Harding, his mother said, Jean would return to Saint Lucia with his classmates to show them his birthplace and give back to his community.

During those visits, he would volunteer – working with at-risk youth and visiting the Saint Lucia orphanage.

A passion for singing

Botham Jean's passion for singing started as early as his devotion to God.

He grew up singing in his church's choir in Saint Lucia.

And when he went on to college, he became a member of the Good News Singers, Harding University's Christian a cappella group.

After graduating in 2016, Jean was hired as an accountant at PricewaterhouseCoopers, known a PwC, in Dallas.

He soon found a new place to sing at the Dallas West Church of Christ, where he became a song leader. The church became his home of worship up until his death.

Video captured Jean leading the congregation in song the Sunday before he was killed:

After his death: #BeLikeBo

The impact of Botham Jean's life and death was evident by the 1,500 people that attended his funeral more than a week after he was killed.

Mourners wore red neckties and red roses in honor of Jean's favorite color.

Following his death, several programs were created to continue his legacy.

His family created the Botham Jean Foundation, which "promotes Christian intervention through social change."

Harding University and Jean's former employer, PwC, established a scholarship program, which awards four minority students pursuing degrees in the College of Business with $5,000 each year. The first four recipients were awarded the scholarship one year after Jean's death.

And in the wake of his death, PwC's U.S chairman, Tim Ryan, started an education campaign on unconscious racial bias he calls "blind spots."

#BeLikeBo was started by PwC to share memories of Jean. Here is how he's remembered:

He was kind. He was charitable. He was faithful. He was a leader. – Emmet J Daly

He was joyful. He is missed. – Shannan Knudsen

Bo always looked for the best in situations and people. – Chris Williams

Bo was a man of great joy. – Kerry Ray

Bo was the best of us. – Shanna St. Martin