After premiering one of the first commercials promoting his Ark Encounter theme park, creationist Ken Ham took to Twitter to rage at the secularists whom he thinks “want to suppress the wickedness of man” by making fun of his tax-funded religious entertainment center.

Ham, who heads up Answers in Genesis — a Christian ministry dedicated to disproving evolution by using the Bible to explain that Earth is only 6,000 years old — went off in a Twitter rant Monday morning complaining about non-believers making “moral judgments” that he believes mocks God’s words.

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On Twitter, Ham wrote: “Secularists accuse God of being immoral as He judged at the Flood but ignore the fact they’ve no absolute basis to make any moral judgment,” before later tweeting, “Secularists mock at @ ArkEncounter because they want to suppress the wickedness of man and that we’re all under judgment by a Holy God.”

He continued, “Secularists mock @ ArkEncounter as they don’t want to acknowledge they are in need of the Ark of salvation–Noah’s Ark is a picture of Jesus.”

Never ones to be shy about sharing their opinions about the rural multi-million dollar Kentucky entertainment complex featuring a full-sized ark that will also showcase dinosaurs that Noah saved, Twitter users responded in kind.

A sampling below:

@aigkenham If someone kills 99 people but lets one go because he decided they weren't so bad he's not a saviour, he's a serial killer — Scott Johnson (@scottiej24) April 25, 2016

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@aigkenham In Ken's world not only were infants "wicked" but even the animals were endowed with human personalities. That cray cray. — Mars Capone (@curvemudgen) April 25, 2016

@aigkenham @ArkEncounter Secularists mock the ark encounter because it's stupid and deserves mocking. — ædǝm (@adamk2012) April 25, 2016

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@aigkenham @ArkEncounter does wickedness include wasting money on a stupid boat rather than feeding the poor? — greeniemax (@greeniemax) April 25, 2016

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Nope. Lots of people, including Christians, mock @aigkenham and @ArkEncounter because they see right through your cynical money making scam. — Sionnach (@sionnachfionn) April 25, 2016

@aigkenham @ArkEncounter – so the price of salvation is $40, or $60 if you buy the combo ticket. Very reasonable outlay for eternal bliss. — Darren Adams (@darrenjadams) April 25, 2016

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@aigkenham @ArkEncounter we don't need to pay to go on your silly boat to stop God from killing us Ken — BrendaDidn'tSeeJesus (@BrendaMadeItUp) April 25, 2016

No we think it's ridiculous because you e built a huge boat to honour a story about a flood cause by a sky wizard. @aigkenham @ArkEncounter — The One True Sceptic (@OneTrueSceptic) April 25, 2016

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The park is scheduled to open July 7, 2016.

God willing.