There is no real evidence that the Romans ever punished the early Christians for any kind of disaster. The preferred official reaction to the presence of Christians was that if the Christians were discreet about their refusal to worship the Roman gods, they could be ignored.
A Christian tradition holds that, in the mid-first century, Nero persecuted the Christians living in Rome because he blamed them for the Great Fire, but historians have been unable to find any evidence of such persecution or even a reason for Nero to want to blame them unjustly.
The Romans believed that by refusing to worship the gods, Christians were risking divine wrath. So, while there is no real evidence that this occurred, there may have been isolated instances of Christians being punished because their lack of faith in the Roman gods, (for which they were accused of being atheists) which supposedly brought disasters on the people.
because the Jews gave Jesus up to the Romans.... there for putting the final nail in his coffin.
Blame him
It forced Germany to accept blame blame for starting the war
Condemn. blame, punish, accuse, charge and restrain
accuse, blame, convict, punish, sentence
Because the Christians had many followers which over populted the country
spitting.? Accuse, blame, censure, charge, punish...
Blame the ancient Romans.
No country is disaster-free, so Singapore also has a risk. It is just that we haven't been exposed to natural disasters. My own answer :) Please don't blame me if it is wrong.
The guy is suffering from some esteem and mental problem.
There is an old saying withing the pitbull community... Punish the deed not the breed.
Blame for the Great Fire of Rome has been attached to two sides. The Emperor Nero was blamed for his lack of action, and there were even suggestions that he may have started it himself in order to bypass the senate and rebuild Rome to his liking. Evidence to support this theory includes the fact that the Domus Aurea, Nero's majestic series of villas and pavilions set upon a landscaped park and a man-made lake, was built in the wake of the fire. To direct attention away from himself, Nero used the Christians as scapegoats. Thus began the earliest persecutions of Christians in Rome, action which included feeding them to the lions.