A religious organization has called on Alabama Senate Republican nominee Roy Moore to apologize after he made what the group described as "anti-Semitic comments" on a radio show Monday.

The Interfaith Alliance expressed its concern Tuesday about comments Moore made about George Soros, a billionaire philanthropist.

The Moore campaign told AL.com on Tuesday that Moore did not make anti-Semitic statements and there was no reason to apologize.

Click here to listen to the interview with Moore, which begins at about the 1 hour, 1 minute mark.

Appearing on American Family Radio, Moore was asked by host Bryan Fischer about Soros' efforts to register convicted felons to vote. Fischer said that he Fischer believed the felons would be more likely to vote for Democrats rather than Republicans.

"I don't know what registered felons would do," Moore responded. "There's different types of felonies. I'm not saying some shouldn't have the opportunity to vote. Some shouldn't. It just varies with the crimes and the people involved. But I don't think you can predict how anybody's going to vote.

"But Soros is certainly trying to alter the voting populous and if that's true, he's pushing an agenda. His agenda is sexual in nature. His agenda is liberal and not what Americans need. It's not our American culture. Soros comes from another world I don't identify with. I wish I could face him directly and I'd tell him the same thing that no matter how much money he's got, he's still going to the same place that people who don't recognize God and morality and accept his salvation are going. And that's not a good place."

Rabbi Jack Moline, president of Interfaith Alliance, took issue with Moore insinuating that Soros' immigration status put him outside "our American culture. And that Soros' wealthy status and the fact that he is Jewish would not prevent him from "going to the same place that people who don't recognize God and morality and accept his salvation are going. And that's not a good place."

"Roy Moore owes George Soros and the entire Jewish community an apology for comments he made that are clearly anti-Semitic," Moline said in a statement. "Moore is playing on well-known anti-Semitic tropes in which Jews are cast as outsiders using their money for evil intent. These comments have no place in public discourse. The rise in anti-Semitism we have seen over the last year is extremely disturbing and comments like this only serve to validate its perpetrators. No candidate for office should appeal to latent bigotry when asking for support."

In a statement to AL.com, Moore campaign strategist Brett Doster said, "Judge Moore did not utter any anti-semitic comments. He uttered anti-George Soros comments, and for that, there is no need for any apology."

In the interview with Fischer - who defended Moore against allegations of sexual misconduct and said that those claims have been "debunked" - Moore also spoke against his critics.

"What they've done to me is not only unforgivable, it's pure hated and it's pure spite and it's pure evil and it's wrong," Moore said in the interview. "They have made up stuff I would never even consider doing. They've been successful. The press has been apart of it. It's the definition of fake press.

"This is the most dirty political race I've ever been in and I think that anybody could be in."

In response to the interview, Drew Courtney, a spokesperson for People for the American Way, blasted Moore as well as President Trump and the Republican National Committee. Trump endorsed Moore on Monday and the RNC said it would resume working with the Moore campaign to raise money for the Dec. 12 election against Democrat Doug Jones.

"No reasonable person can ignore the mountain of credible evidence that Roy Moore is a sexual predator," Courtney said in a statement. "Donald Trump and the RNC are exposing their true moral colors in this race, and it should be deeply disturbing to anyone who cares about the safety of young women and girls: they'd willing to support a known sex predator if that's what it takes to pass tax cuts. It's repulsive."