Critics were outraged after Donald Trump once again talked about trying to get into heaven, this time using the phrase for a weekend fundraising email.

Earlier in August, Trump made waves when he said, "I want to try and get to heaven if possible. I hear I'm not doing well. I hear I'm really at the bottom of the totem pole."

Trump on Saturday reportedly once again repurposed the heaven comment for a fundraising email.

Democratic influencer Harry Sisson reported, "Trump sent out an email at 8 am this morning saying 'I want to try and get to heaven.' Pretty weird to send out when you’re trying to reassure people that you’re healthy!"

A writer who goes by SleuthyFella said, "This is classic Trump: blending existential dread with brand loyalty. The line 'I want to try and get to Heaven' isn’t just weird; it’s strategically weird."

"It invites supporters to see his political mission as sacred, his survival as miraculous, and their donations as part of a divine plan. It’s televangelism meets campaign finance," the writer added.

Ex-prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega said the email is, "Very weird."

"Also grammatically incorrect, as usual. He meant to say, 'I want to try to get to heaven,'" she added.

X's AI chatbot, Grok, confirmed the news:

"Yes, multiple sources including Mediaite and The Daily Beast confirm Donald Trump sent a fundraising email via Never Surrender, Inc. (his leadership PAC) with the subject 'I want to try and get to Heaven.' It references his survival of an assassination attempt and calls for $15 donations to support his campaign," according to the AI program.