William Tapley, the evangelist who gained fame when he said public works of art in the Denver airport included hidden phallic symbols, now sees evil in a puppy that appeared in a Super Bowl commercial.

In a video posted to YouTube on Friday Tapley says the Budweiser commercial in which a Labrador retriever puppy is born among Clydesdale horses and keeps running away from adoptive human parents to rejoin them is evidence of the nearing of the end times.

“It is talking about the arrival of the Antichrist,” Tapley said in his video.

In the commercial called "Puppy Love," which won USA Today’s Super Bowl ad contest, the puppy is born at a ranch identified as “Warm Springs.”

“That is code for 'lake of fire,'” Tapley said. “(That’s) where our puppy dog comes from. … But this puppy dog is more than a cute, warm, fuzzy animal. He is a symbol of the Antichrist.”

Tapley sees symbolism throughout the commercial, saying that four of the Budweiser Clydesdale horses represent the “beasts of the apocalypse” and a fifth is a false prophet.

“Will the end times signs and wonders in this commercial never cease?” he asks.

In 2012 Tapley made headlines when he complained that public art, architecture and the layout at Denver International Airport included hidden phallic symbols. Airport officials dismissed the complaint as ludicrous, and Tapley was roasted on The Colbert Report.

In an interview broadcast by Colbert, Tapley said that he is unusually attuned to phallic symbols, enabling him to see them where others may overlook them.

It’s “a gift from the holy spirit,” he said.