A stagnant Eagles offense needs weapons. Carson Wentz is delivering them.

The quarterback from North Dakota is gifting shotguns to his offensive linemen for Christmas, about eight weeks after the team made an anti-gun statement by cutting a wide receiver following his arrest for possession of a gun without a permit.

Wentz, an avid hunter and promising quarterback, wanted his protection to get protection, buying his offensive linemen personalized Beretta shotguns, according to ESPN, which are legal.

The holiday offering is a curious one, because a gun led to the, ahem, firing of another Eagle.

Josh Huff, a third-year wide receiver, was a Wentz target for seven games this season before his Nov. 3 arrest. The 25-year-old from Houston was busted on gun and marijuana charges in New Jersey, where he didn’t have a license for the 9mm handgun. He also possessed six hollow-point bullets when he was pulled over for speeding on the Walt Whitman Bridge.

The Eagles did not drop him right away — in fact, coach Doug Pederson pledged on a Wednesday that Huff would play Sunday’s game.

Huff passionately defended his gun-toting that day, and after the Eagles further discussed his situation, they released him one day later.

“I’m a professional athlete. What professional athlete don’t have a gun?” Huff said. “I have a wife and I have a son at home, and my job is to protect them at all costs. My job is to protect myself as well.”

Huff was picked up by Tampa Bay, and his former teammates — gun novices and veterans both — are appreciative of their Christmas haul.

“I like to go clay shooting and stuff,” guard Brandon Brooks said. “All I’ve got is a home defense tactical shotgun, short-barrel, so I was looking for one of these.”

“I haven’t really held a gun or anything before,” rookie guard Isaac Seumalo said. “But I’m more than thankful for it. It looks sweet. Carson said he’d teach me how to use it and all that good stuff.”