In an interview for Fox News, Rhyan Glezman, a pastor in a Michigan Church, told host Tucker Carlson that “just everything that Pete is pushing is, it’s anti-God,” responding to Buttigieg’s earlier claims that he does not see any “compatibility” between being a Christian and a Trump supporter.

“The height of intellectual dishonesty for Pete to make claims that there’s no compatibility with being a Christian and voting for Trump, which Pete, in fact, is the one who is pushing agendas and rhetoric that is clearly against Scripture,” Glezman blasted his brother-in-law.

The pastor also referred to Buttigieg’s defense that late-term abortion is not “murder.” Glezman said, “You played that clip from The View, and I’m just in a state of lament when you hear that we have someone running for commander in chief who can’t make a moral decision on whether to keep a child after it’s already been born or to have it killed.”

Then, Carlson asked Glezman if abortion is consistent with the Christian doctrine. “Absolutely not,” the pastor objected. “Just everything that Pete is pushing is, it’s anti-God. I’m just gonna be honest with you.”

Glezman said, “Nothing lines up with Scripture for him to make cases like to say that you cannot be a Christian and vote for Trump. He’s the one that is openly contradicting God’s word over and over.”

Glezman then backed up his statements saying, “I encourage Pete, and everyone in America, to read Psalm 139:13-16, where God says in his word that every single person is ‘fearfully and wonderfully made’ in the image of God. Go to Jeremiah 1:5, where it talks about God knew us before we were ever in our mother’s women.” It is not the first time that Buttigieg’s brother-in-law spoke out against the aspiring presidential nominee. Last year, Glezman accused the former mayor of “hijacking his family history” and using it to his own political advantage.

During the length of his campaign run, Buttigieg claimed that he had met Glezman’s brother on a dating app, Hinge, in 2015. He then depicted Chasten’s story as someone who was forced out of his home for being gay. As the Washington Post wrote “Chasten Buttigieg has been a homeless community college student and a Starbucks barista…Now, he could be ‘first gentleman.” However, in another interview with the Washington Examiner, Glezman said, “A mayor from a small city and his husband, a child who grew up with nothing and his parents kicked him out… it makes a perfect political story for the campaign.” Glezman continued, “To me, that’s very sad. If that’s all you have to stand on, you’re not fit to be president of the United States.”

The Michigan pastor also denied accusations that Chasten’s brothers had disowned him. With a pained expression, Glezman finally said, “Do I love him? Absolutely. He is my brother. You can’t change that. Just because we have a disagreement doesn’t change that.”