Dennis RenshawDr. Dennis Renshaw was born in Brownsville, Tennessee, but grew up in Iran, India and Indonesia as his father was with the United States State Department. At age 15, Dr. Renshaw climbed Mt. Damavand, Iran, elevation 18,406 feet, the highest mountain n Iran and the highest volcano in Asia. It's snow-covered year-round. You have to climb the last 3,000 feet in the dark and summit at sunrise so you can quickly descend due to toxic sulfur emissions caused by the heating of the sun, Dr. Renshaw said. He attended high school at the Tehran American High School and received his B.S. in math and chemistry at Lambuth College in Jackson, Tennessee. He ran track and cross-country on scholarship in high school and on scholarship in college. He studied engineering at the University of Tennessee Knoxville and graduated cum laude in 1992 from Union University in marketing and management. At Memphis Theological Seminary, he received his master of divinity in 1999 and doctor of ministries in 2006. He has worked as an industrial engineer, manager of engineering, in industrial sales and as an industrial sales manager. He has been an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church since 2002 and has served churches for 14 years as a pastor. Dr. Renshaw hiked the Appalachian Trail over the summers of 2013 and 2015. Hiking 2,186 miles over hazardous mountains into steep valleys through every kind of terrain and weather imaginable turned into a 5.5-month adventure, especially at age 66. Dr. Renshaw started this trek as a challenge to himself because his research of the Appalachian Trail said only a small percentage of those starting the hike actually finished. Newly retired as a United Methodist pastor, he felt God's presence in unique ways as he trekked across the 14 states to Mount Katahdin in Maine. Read about his adventures, challenges, danger and resolve in being God's hands and feet as he felt God's Footprints on the Mountains. Dr. Renshaw is an avid golfer, a certified scuba diver and has a commercial pilot's license. He built half of his home and can do most maintenance on the home, including electrical, plumbing, framing, woodwork and yard work. He's married to Judy Renshaw, and they have four children and seven grandchildren. They love to travel in their fifth-wheel camper. They've traveled to Canada and Alaska twice and 26 states. Read More Read Less