That Year the Eagles Could've been the 2nd Seed and had a 1st Round Bye if they had won this Game, they eventually went from the 2nd seed to the 6th seed then both teams met the next week and Dallas Eventually won that Wild-Card Game to the Divisional Round then Minnesota obliterated them in that Game
Dallas obliterated the eagles in 2 playoff caliber games 57-21. Them minnesota beat down dallas because dallas had the worst o line and minnesota had the best d line.. that game should of been 20-3 vikes but they were running up the score. Keith Brooking was pissed off. Lol
First the clap in week 17 and then 1 week later in the Wild Card Round the next clap. To get such a beating from your rival 2 times in a row is tough. 😅😂
@@cynoflads Congrats for winning a game that means absolutely nothing at all. We lost the game more than Dallas won it. Turnovers happened, not Dak out playing us. If ya'll can get past Tom Brady we'll see you again when Hurts is healthy in a game that actually matters in the playoffs.
@@cynoflads If anything I should be laughing. If ya'll handled your business and beat Jacksonville, this win would actually mean something. But.... It doesn't.
For tomorrow’s game 12/24, I Fr think we will lose to the cowboys, but it will totally be a close game. Cowboys 34-28. If the Eagles win, I have it Eagles 27-20. Fly Eagles Fly and Merry Christmas y’all! 🎄☃
@@NFLVault yeah I know, that was the 44-6 game the season before, you guys should've edit & uploaded the 20-16 L from week 9, instead of this 24-0 L, but I guess the shutout was more fitting 😅
2014 was. Amazing offense and defense was playing lights out. They got robbed in the Divisional round and Murray fumbled way before that too. They were dominating Green Bay Shouldve won in Green Bay. Win at Seattle and beat New England. If only
Wow... dallas lost 44-6 at the philly the year before... if you count the missed opportunities from turnovers and mistake by both teams dallas should of won this game like 34-6. Or 38-6
🔴🎄 *Jesus Wasn't Born in 25 December* ☃️ *Luke 2:7-8* _⁷ And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. ⁸ And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night._ *Ezra 10:9-13* _⁹ Then all the men of Judah and Benjamin gathered themselves together unto Jerusalem within three days. _*_It was the ninth month,_*_ on the twentieth day of the month; and all the people sat in the street of the house of God, trembling because of this matter, _*_and for the great rain._*_ ¹⁰ And Ezra the priest stood up, and said unto them, Ye have transgressed, and have taken strange wives, to increase the trespass of Israel. ¹¹ Now therefore make confession unto the LORD God of your fathers, and do his pleasure: and separate yourselves from the people of the land, and from the strange wives. ¹² Then all the congregation answered and said with a loud voice, As thou hast said, so must we do. ¹³ But the people are many, _*_and it is a time of much rain, and we are not able to stand without,_*_ neither is this a work of one day or two: for we are many that have transgressed in this thing._ In Luke 2, Jesus was born while the shepherds were watching over their flock at night. Besides that, in Ezra 10, we find that the ninth month of the Hebrew calendar (Kislev=December) is very cold in Palestine. So it is impossible that Jesus was born in December. - *The Jewish Encyclopedia:* The ninth month of the Jewish calendar, corresponding to December. www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/9352-kislew - *Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges:* (Ezra 10:9) The "ninth month" was Chislev, corresponding nearly to our December. - *Barnes' Notes on the Bible:* (Ezra 10:9) It was the ninth month - Or, our December, a time when rain fails heavily in Palestine. - *Encyclopedia Britannica:* Christmas, the holiday commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ, is celebrated by a majority of Christians on December 25 in the Gregorian calendar. But early Christians did not celebrate his birth, and no one knows on which date Jesus was actually born (some scholars believe that the actual date was in the early spring, placing it closer to Easter, the holiday commemorating his Resurrection)... In the 3rd century, the Roman Empire, which at the time had not adopted Christianity, celebrated the rebirth of the Unconquered Sun (Sol Invictus) on December 25th. This holiday not only marked the return of longer days after the winter solstice but also followed the popular Roman festival called the Saturnalia (during which people feasted and exchanged gifts). It was also the birthday of the Indo-European deity Mithra, a god of light and loyalty whose cult was at the time growing popular among Roman soldiers. The church in Rome began formally celebrating Christmas on December 25 in 336, during the reign of the emperor Constantine. As Constantine had made Christianity the effective religion of the empire, some have speculated that choosing this date had the political motive of weakening the established pagan celebrations. The date was not widely accepted in the Eastern Empire, where January 6 had been favored, for another half-century, and Christmas did not become a major Christian festival until the 9th century. www.britannica.com/story/why-is-christmas-in-december - *Jaroslav Cerny. (1952). Ancient Egyptian Religion. Hutchinsons University Library, pp.148-149:* Even the choice of 25th December for the date of the birth of Jesus and the celebration of Christmas perpetuated the old solar festival of the "birth of Re" (Egn. Mesore). - *Catholic Encyclopedia:* So again Origen had evidently some similar thought before him when he insists that "of all the holy people in the Scriptures, no one is recorded to have kept a feast or held a great banquet on his birthday. It is only sinners (like Pharaoh and Herod) who make great rejoicings over the day on which they were born into this world below" (Origen, in Levit., Hom. VIII, in Migne P.G., XII, 495). www.newadvent.org/cathen/10709a.htm - *Will Durant. The Story of Civilization: Cæsar and Christ, Vol. III, p. 558:* Tertullian records a census of Judea by Saturninus, governor of Syria 8-7 B.C. ; if this is the census that Luke had in mind, the birth of Christ would have to be placed before 6 B.C. We have no knowledge of the specific day of his birth. Clement of Alexandria reports diverse opinions on the subject in his day, some chronologists dating the birth April 19, some May 20 ; he himself assigned it to November 17, 3 B.C. As far back as the second century the Eastern Christians celebrated the Nativity on January 6. In 354 some Western churches, including those of Rome, commemorated the birth of Christ on December 25 ; this was then erroneously calculated as the winter solstice, on which the days begin to lengthen ; it was already the central festival of Mithraism, the natalis invicti solis, or birthday of the unconquered sun. The Eastern churches clung for a time to January 6, and charged their Western brethren with sun worship and idolatry, but by the end of the fourth century December 25 had been adopted also in the East. - *Philip Schaff. History of the Christian Church, Vol. III: Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity, p. 337:* The Christmas festival was probably the Christian transformation or regeneration of a series of kindred heathen festivals-the Saturnalia, Sigillaria, Juvenalia, and Brumalia-which were kept in Rome in the month of December, in commemoration of the golden age of universal freedom and equality, and in honor of the unconquered sun, and which were great holidays, especially for slaves and children. This connection accounts for many customs of the Christmas season, like the giving of presents to children and to the poor, the lighting of wax tapers, perhaps also the erection of Christmas trees, and gives them a Christian import ; while it also betrays the origin of the many excesses in which the unbelieving world indulges at this season, in wanton perversion of the true Christmas mirth, but which, of course, no more forbid right use, than the abuses of the Bible or of any other gift of God. Had the Christmas festival arisen in the period of the persecution, its derivation from these pagan festivals would be refuted by the then reigning abhorrence of everything heathen ; but in the Nicene age this rigidness of opposition between the church and the world was in a great measure softened by the general conversion of the heathen. Besides, there lurked in those pagan festivals themselves, in spite of all their sensual abuses, a deep meaning and an adaptation to a real want ; they might be called unconscious prophecies of the Christmas feast. Finally, the church fathers themselves confirm the symbolical reference of the feast of the birth of Christ, the Sun of righteousness, the Light of the world, to the birth-festival of the unconquered sun, which on the twenty-fifth of December, after the winter solstice, breaks the growing power of darkness, and begins anew his heroic career. - *Herbert W. Armstrong. Pagan Holidays - or God's Holy Days - Which?, p. 3:* Ancient Rome's pagan holidays have been chained upon a heedless and deceived world. These include certain annual holidays - Christmas, New Year's, Easter, as well as many more, every one a pagan day - every one used to stimulate the sale of merchandise in the commercial markets. Upon honest investigation, the earnest seeker after truth learns that these days are all of heathen origin and pagan significance. He learns that he can have no part in them. But is the Christian of today left without any annual holy days? Did God never give to His people annual holy days, as well as the weekly Sabbath? Are not ancient Rome's annual holidays mere counterfeits of God's true holy days, exactly as Sunday is a counterfeit of the true Sabbath?
Marion Barber was such a good and underrated player. RIP
Marion the barbarian!!
Yes I know right & drop them pads on a defender as well, I was shocked when I found out about his death. RIP "Marion The Barbarian" 💪🏿✊🏿
Always loved watching him run over people in the open field. RIP Barbarian
He was. Also had the best 2 yrd run ever lol
They played the week after and it was Dallas's first playoff victory of this century.
True
Year before in 2008 Eagles destoryed Cowboys 44-6 and Cowboys took that personal in 2009
Broke their back beat their ass and made them humble….
Then it’s wasn’t enough so we kick there ass in the playoffs
@@qmcsinglike my uncle the late great Iron Sheik would say!!! BTW Cowboys 4 life!!!
Revenge for that 44 - 6.
Rest in peace Marion Barber.
This wasn't just a game for the NFC East. An Eagle win would have given them the 2 seed and a bye
It was too good to be true
Fox just isn't the same without Buck and Aikman!
Same is really isn’t
Honestly tho
How crazy. Eagles went from needing to win and they get a first round bye, to losing this game and then losing the following first round of playoffs
Now if only Dallas could win a super bowl this century ….
The Eagles would end up going one-and-done in the playoffs in this very same building the next week.
Yeah they would in ugly fashion as well just like the week before.
And the Cowboys got absolutely destroyed by the Vikings the week after
@@Ryan-zt2xw Yeah they in fact did i remember watching the game the vikings won 34-3.
@@Ryan-zt2xw who cares
For MNF, it'll be interesting to see what Throwback does for Chargers/Colts (they've already done the 2008 AFC WC game and 2004 Week 16)
Maybe 2007 matchup in the regular season or the playoffs
That Year the Eagles Could've been the 2nd Seed and had a 1st Round Bye if they had won this Game, they eventually went from the 2nd seed to the 6th seed then both teams met the next week and Dallas Eventually won that Wild-Card Game to the Divisional Round then Minnesota obliterated them in that Game
Dallas obliterated the eagles in 2 playoff caliber games 57-21. Them minnesota beat down dallas because dallas had the worst o line and minnesota had the best d line.. that game should of been 20-3 vikes but they were running up the score. Keith Brooking was pissed off. Lol
Miss romo
Can you not put hints in the title on who wins? It ruins the highlight.
I love this time of year 😊🎄☃ 🎁
Rip Marion Barber 🥲💯
In 2008 it was different when the eagles dominated the cowboys 44-7 I believe in week 17
44-6
@@thomascrowley9122 ok I was close
Na not that different dallas swept them 3-0 that 2009 year
A clear shutout the cowboys gave to the eagles that day.
This Video 📸 Is Awesome 👍 NFL Throwback 🏈 Keep Up The Good Work.
Eagles fans aren't gonna like this one.
They beat Dallas 44-6 the year before this game
Should’ve put the game between these two teams from the 2006 Christmas game
Aww... eagle fan with hurt feelings 😂
Posted this on the perfect day right before a big game between them once again
Double digit halftime lead, only scored once in the 2nd half and still won the game...because of the defense. QBs don't blow leads, defenses do.
I know that they played the next week, but this game probably rushed the McNabb trade. Still makes no sense. They were so well before that.
Mcnabb should’ve stayed for all of the Reid era. Should’ve never let him go
I agree, went with Kevin kolb and Vick for no playoffs wins.
Whoa. I remember that. A shutout
Where’s the HD broadcast?
Holding at 6:37
Ugly loss and was just as bad 6 days later in McNabb's final Eagles game
So glad 44-6 wasn’t posted
I think it’s already been posted on here
RIP MB III
First the clap in week 17 and then 1 week later in the Wild Card Round the next clap. To get such a beating from your rival 2 times in a row is tough. 😅😂
Hope Cowboys fans remember that feeling they had because they definitely won't be feeling it tomorrow night.
This aged like Milk
@@cynoflads
Congrats for winning a game that means absolutely nothing at all. We lost the game more than Dallas won it. Turnovers happened, not Dak out playing us. If ya'll can get past Tom Brady we'll see you again when Hurts is healthy in a game that actually matters in the playoffs.
@@chosen_remnant lol lmao
@@cynoflads
You're the 5 seed and losing the division, what's so funny?
@@cynoflads
If anything I should be laughing. If ya'll handled your business and beat Jacksonville, this win would actually mean something. But.... It doesn't.
What about the Heidi Bowl???
RIP Marion Barber
Not the same score, but likely the same Result when they play Tomorrow.
For tomorrow’s game 12/24, I Fr think we will lose to the cowboys, but it will totally be a close game. Cowboys 34-28. If the Eagles win, I have it Eagles 27-20. Fly Eagles Fly and Merry Christmas y’all! 🎄☃
Cowboys 2nd straight shutout. The last time Dallas allowed points was in their win over the previously unbeaten saints
Hell yeah, they also shut out the Redskins the week before
It's the only time In franchise history to achieve back to back shut out games.
Ol Reliable Witten he made 3rd and 10 to 1rst and 10
how is this revenge when the eagles lost the one earlier in that year?
Cowboys got crushed by Eagles Week 17 2008 for the division title
@@NFLVault Great Job 👍
@@NFLVault yeah I know, that was the 44-6 game the season before, you guys should've edit & uploaded the 20-16 L from week 9, instead of this 24-0 L, but I guess the shutout was more fitting 😅
This was the best team in cowboys history
What?
@@jp31291 Exactly my boy
Not even close. They were only good and nothing more.
Crack. Is that what your smoking?
2014 was. Amazing offense and defense was playing lights out. They got robbed in the Divisional round and Murray fumbled way before that too. They were dominating Green Bay
Shouldve won in Green Bay. Win at Seattle and beat New England. If only
Really all the great cowboys vs eagles games and this is the one you pick 🤦🏻♂️ wow would of rather seen eagles vs cowboys 2007 week 16 ironically
RIP Marion Barber..Free Patrick Crayton..NFL just suspended Miles Austin for gambling
Wow... dallas lost 44-6 at the philly the year before... if you count the missed opportunities from turnovers and mistake by both teams dallas should of won this game like 34-6. Or 38-6
Eagles would get beat by a combined score of 58-14 at Jerryworld
When the eagles got swept
Matthew 10:16
Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.
🔴🎄 *Jesus Wasn't Born in 25 December* ☃️
*Luke 2:7-8*
_⁷ And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. ⁸ And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night._
*Ezra 10:9-13*
_⁹ Then all the men of Judah and Benjamin gathered themselves together unto Jerusalem within three days. _*_It was the ninth month,_*_ on the twentieth day of the month; and all the people sat in the street of the house of God, trembling because of this matter, _*_and for the great rain._*_ ¹⁰ And Ezra the priest stood up, and said unto them, Ye have transgressed, and have taken strange wives, to increase the trespass of Israel. ¹¹ Now therefore make confession unto the LORD God of your fathers, and do his pleasure: and separate yourselves from the people of the land, and from the strange wives. ¹² Then all the congregation answered and said with a loud voice, As thou hast said, so must we do. ¹³ But the people are many, _*_and it is a time of much rain, and we are not able to stand without,_*_ neither is this a work of one day or two: for we are many that have transgressed in this thing._
In Luke 2, Jesus was born while the shepherds were watching over their flock at night. Besides that, in Ezra 10, we find that the ninth month of the Hebrew calendar (Kislev=December) is very cold in Palestine. So it is impossible that Jesus was born in December.
- *The Jewish Encyclopedia:* The ninth month of the Jewish calendar, corresponding to December.
www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/9352-kislew
- *Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges:* (Ezra 10:9) The "ninth month" was Chislev, corresponding nearly to our December.
- *Barnes' Notes on the Bible:* (Ezra 10:9) It was the ninth month - Or, our December, a time when rain fails heavily in Palestine.
- *Encyclopedia Britannica:* Christmas, the holiday commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ, is celebrated by a majority of Christians on December 25 in the Gregorian calendar. But early Christians did not celebrate his birth, and no one knows on which date Jesus was actually born (some scholars believe that the actual date was in the early spring, placing it closer to Easter, the holiday commemorating his Resurrection)... In the 3rd century, the Roman Empire, which at the time had not adopted Christianity, celebrated the rebirth of the Unconquered Sun (Sol Invictus) on December 25th. This holiday not only marked the return of longer days after the winter solstice but also followed the popular Roman festival called the Saturnalia (during which people feasted and exchanged gifts). It was also the birthday of the Indo-European deity Mithra, a god of light and loyalty whose cult was at the time growing popular among Roman soldiers. The church in Rome began formally celebrating Christmas on December 25 in 336, during the reign of the emperor Constantine. As Constantine had made Christianity the effective religion of the empire, some have speculated that choosing this date had the political motive of weakening the established pagan celebrations. The date was not widely accepted in the Eastern Empire, where January 6 had been favored, for another half-century, and Christmas did not become a major Christian festival until the 9th century.
www.britannica.com/story/why-is-christmas-in-december
- *Jaroslav Cerny. (1952). Ancient Egyptian Religion. Hutchinsons University Library, pp.148-149:* Even the choice of 25th December for the date of the birth of Jesus and the celebration of Christmas perpetuated the old solar festival of the "birth of Re" (Egn. Mesore).
- *Catholic Encyclopedia:* So again Origen had evidently some similar thought before him when he insists that "of all the holy people in the Scriptures, no one is recorded to have kept a feast or held a great banquet on his birthday. It is only sinners (like Pharaoh and Herod) who make great rejoicings over the day on which they were born into this world below" (Origen, in Levit., Hom. VIII, in Migne P.G., XII, 495). www.newadvent.org/cathen/10709a.htm
- *Will Durant. The Story of Civilization: Cæsar and Christ, Vol. III, p. 558:* Tertullian records a census of Judea by Saturninus, governor of Syria 8-7 B.C. ; if this is the census that Luke had in mind, the birth of Christ would have to be placed before 6 B.C. We have no knowledge of the specific day of his birth. Clement of Alexandria reports diverse opinions on the subject in his day, some chronologists dating the birth April 19, some May 20 ; he himself assigned it to November 17, 3 B.C. As far back as the second century the Eastern Christians celebrated the Nativity on January 6. In 354 some Western churches, including those of Rome, commemorated the birth of Christ on December 25 ; this was then erroneously calculated as the winter solstice, on which the days begin to lengthen ; it was already the central festival of Mithraism, the natalis invicti solis, or birthday of the unconquered sun. The Eastern churches clung for a time to January 6, and charged their Western brethren with sun worship and idolatry, but by the end of the fourth century December 25 had been adopted also in the East.
- *Philip Schaff. History of the Christian Church, Vol. III: Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity, p. 337:* The Christmas festival was probably the Christian transformation or regeneration of a series of kindred heathen festivals-the Saturnalia, Sigillaria, Juvenalia, and Brumalia-which were kept in Rome in the month of December, in commemoration of the golden age of universal freedom and equality, and in honor of the unconquered sun, and which were great holidays, especially for slaves and children. This connection accounts for many customs of the Christmas season, like the giving of presents to children and to the poor, the lighting of wax tapers, perhaps also the erection of Christmas trees, and gives them a Christian import ; while it also betrays the origin of the many excesses in which the unbelieving world indulges at this season, in wanton perversion of the true Christmas mirth, but which, of course, no more forbid right use, than the abuses of the Bible or of any other gift of God. Had the Christmas festival arisen in the period of the persecution, its derivation from these pagan festivals would be refuted by the then reigning abhorrence of everything heathen ; but in the Nicene age this rigidness of opposition between the church and the world was in a great measure softened by the general conversion of the heathen. Besides, there lurked in those pagan festivals themselves, in spite of all their sensual abuses, a deep meaning and an adaptation to a real want ; they might be called unconscious prophecies of the Christmas feast. Finally, the church fathers themselves confirm the symbolical reference of the feast of the birth of Christ, the Sun of righteousness, the Light of the world, to the birth-festival of the unconquered sun, which on the twenty-fifth of December, after the winter solstice, breaks the growing power of darkness, and begins anew his heroic career.
- *Herbert W. Armstrong. Pagan Holidays - or God's Holy Days - Which?, p. 3:* Ancient Rome's pagan holidays have been chained upon a heedless and deceived world. These include certain annual holidays - Christmas, New Year's, Easter, as well as many more, every one a pagan day - every one used to stimulate the sale of merchandise in the commercial markets. Upon honest investigation, the earnest seeker after truth learns that these days are all of heathen origin and pagan significance. He learns that he can have no part in them. But is the Christian of today left without any annual holy days? Did God never give to His people annual holy days, as well as the weekly Sabbath? Are not ancient Rome's annual holidays mere counterfeits of God's true holy days, exactly as Sunday is a counterfeit of the true Sabbath?
The year my boys beat them stank eagles 3 times then got spanked by farve & the Vikings 😭
Dallas is a great team by the way
3 peat on them eagles 😅😅😅20-16 24-0 34-10 cowboys whoop dat ass
The last pathetic whimper of the McPuke era.
What about the Heidi Bowl???