He takes the ideas of many other scholars and synthesizes them into his own personal opinions, eventually drawing his own conclusion as to what Jews and Christians, alike, must do in order to deal with the idea of God in the wake of the Holocaust. A second approach is that of David R. Blumenthal, a professor of Judaic Studies at Emory University in Atlanta. Blumenthal makes a very interesting observation regarding Jewish survivors of the Holocaust and their reactions post-World War II. He asserts that Holocaust survivors display many of the same responses as do adult survivors of child abuse. A third approach taken is that of Stephen Haynes and John Roth, professors of Religious Studies at Rhodes College and Philosophy at Claremont McKenna College, respectively. These two well-respected men in the field of Holocaust studies fuse together the ideas of many scholars and create a debate within their own style and discuss the American assertion that God is dead. What is known as the "death of God movement- in 1960s America creates a heated debate among many scholars and is how Haynes and Roth maintain that American Christians and non-Christians alike responded to the Holocaust. A fourth and final intellectual standpoint on theodicy in a God-created world, is that of recognized Richard L. Rubenstein. A professor of Religion at Florida State University, Rubenstein is a Jew that was rejected by his own people because of his publications concerning the Holocaust and the idea of a God afterwards. These five influential men each make strong points and many of them build their ideas off those of their intellectual equals, yet some arguments are more viable and convincing than others. By looking intensely into each argument, one will see an emergence of similarities as well as differences, but what will inevitably remain is the need to understand the being that could allow such an atrocity to occur.