D'Angelo Saxon said:Hot cross buns were used as a weapon in Tudor times when English soldiers would hand them to enemy soldiers as a peace offering. Once accepted, Henry VIII's spy satellite (few know that he was the first man to invent such a thing) would be able to lock on to the cross on top of the bun, and fire a salvo of homing arrows down from the heavens, killing the enemies instantly.
ChapmansThe Saviour said:
"Hot cross buns were used as a weapon in Tudor times when English soldiers would hand them to enemy soldiers as a peace offering. Once accepted, Henry VIII's spy satellite (few know that he was the first man to invent such a thing) would be able to lock on to the cross on top of the bun, and fire a salvo of homing arrows down from the heavens, killing the enemies instantly."
And actually who were his enemies.
As far as I am aware most of his rucks involved the abolition of the monastries etc. Which seems ironic, giving Monks and Friars a cake with Jesus' cross and then shooting them with arrows from "God". So perverse! So Tudor!
LC
ChapmansThe Saviour said:And does the cross on hot cross buns represent Christ?
Meade's_Ball said:I actually applied to be Jesus a few years ago. I got down to the last 3, but i had a little contretemp with St Peter (he's always had it in for me) about modernising the role. I was sick of the whole beard, crucifix, sandals business. I wanted to drive a brightly-coloured bus and shout "Don't be a sinner, be a winner." at anybody who takes my name in vain. I was also thinking about a catapult.
Peter, on his special chair, frowned throughout the interview and called me "professionally unforgiving". I'm gonna do that c*nt if i ever see his huge, ghostly face again.
Meade's_Ball said:"Don't be a sinner, be a winner."