Roy Moore's campaign website no longer contains a list of endorsements.

A message on www.roymoore.org said the list of endorsements "is currently being updated." A list of names was on the site as recently as yesterday.

The change comes after a host of Republicans have pulled their support from Moore in the wake of allegations he had improper sexual contact with two teen girls when he was in his 30s. Moore, now 70, denies the charges but faces growing calls to step aside in the race. Yesterday, the Republican National Committee announced it was ending its fundraising and support agreement with his campaign, with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan calling for him to step down.

Moore denies the allegations.

Moore had previously received endorsements from a host of Republicans, including the Republican members of Alabama's legislative delegation. Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Huntsville, said this week he remains supportive of Moore; Sen. Richard Shelby said Moore should "seriously consider dropping out" of the race. The remainder of Republicans on the delegation have not commented on the Moore situation.

Pastor letter remains

While the endorsements have been scrubbed from the site, a controversial letter indicating support from Alabama pastors remains.

The undated letter is posted to Moore's website under the "news" category. The letter references the Aug. 15 primary and contains the name of more than 50 pastors who urged support for Moore.

"For decades, Roy Moore has been an immovable rock in the culture wars - a bold defender of the "little guy," a just judge to those who came before his court, a warrior for the unborn child, defender of the sanctity of marriage, and a champion for religious liberty. Judge Moore has stood in the gap for us, taken the brunt of the attack, and has done so with a rare, unconquerable resolve," the letter said.

Moore's wife, Kayla, posted the letter to Facebook this week but omitted the first three paragraphs that referenced the date. Since that time, four pastors have come forward to say they were not asked about their support for Moore and asked that their names be removed from the letter.

Moore's campaign did not respond to AL.com's request for comment on the letter or Facebook post.