A Toronto-based ice cream chain is facing backlash from conservative Christians over the name “Sweet Jesus,” which some say is blasphemous.

A petition demanding that the three-year-old chain change its name has racked up more than 9,700 signatures on the website CitizenGO Canada. The petition was launched on March 8 by an individual in Woodstock, Ont.

“Your blasphemy of Jesus is unacceptable,” the petition says. “Choosing the name of our Lord for a brand of soft-serve ice cream is totally offensive and revolting.”

The petition points out that Sweet Jesus puts a twist on religious phrases and iconography with its menu and promotional materials. The menu includes such flavours as Red Rapture and Hella Nutella, while Instagram posts include text such as “Oh Sweet Jesus that looks delicious.”

The petition promises to boycott Sweet Jesus until its founders, Andrew Richmond and Amin Todai, change the chain’s name and apologize for their “blasphemy.”

“We want them to consider how they have attacked the Christian community, and how they have attacked God,” the petition says.

The petition also incorrectly claims that the stylized “S” in the chain’s name “mimics the Nazi symbol for Hitler’s paramilitary organization, the ‘SS.’” The “S” actually resembles a lightning bolt, and is pointed at the ends – not squared like the “SS” logo.

A similar petition on Change.org has more than 1,000 signatures. That petition claims that Sweet Jesus uses “anti-Christ” imagery in its promotional materials.

A message on the Sweet Jesus website says it was named for “the popular phrase that people use as an expression of enjoyment, surprise our disbelief.

“Our aim is not to offer commentary on anyone’s religion or belief systems,” it says. “Our organization is made up of amazing people that represent a wide range of cultural and religious beliefs.”

“We are conscious of the fact that, to some, our name can be off-putting,” Richmond, Sweet Jesus’ co-founder, added in a statement to CTV News. “That fact is something we struggle with because we sincerely do not wish to give offense or show disrespect in any way toward anyone’s personal beliefs. Neither is it our intention to be exploitative or flagrantly provocative.”

Richmond, however, said the chain has no intention of changing its name.

“The best brands come from an honest place,” he explained. “Sweet Jesus is an honest reflection of our experiences and that of our customers and how they react when they try our product. In our experience, the majority of people understand that we’re not trying to make a statement about religion.”

Richmond is also the CEO of Monarch & Misfits, a Toronto-based restaurant group that owns Sweet Jesus, La Carnita, Home of the Brave and Good Fortune.

Sweet Jesus boasts nine operational locations in Canada, 10 more shops expected to open or re-open in the near future and one location in Baltimore, Maryland. Most of the Canadian locations are in Toronto and the surrounding area, although Sweet Jesus has plans to open two locations in Edmonton sometime soon.

Some of its locations – although not all – are closed on Easter weekend.

Ontario mother Theresa Potvin, whose daughter Charlie appears in a child beauty pageant-inspired ad for Sweet Jesus, says she’s been tagged or messaged by more than 1,000 angry Facebook users over the last week.

“Some of the messages have been pretty nasty,” she told CTVNews.ca by telephone. She added the first wave of messages she received were coming from people in the U.S., but she’s received even more hate from people in the Toronto area over the last few days.

“It’s kind of upsetting because Andrew (Richmond) is a great guy,” she said. “He does a lot for the community, and a lot for SickKids, and just to be taking the backlash that he’s taking is shocking.”

Potvin says she’s tried to shield Charlie, who is 8, from the backlash, but the child still catches glimpses of it on her mom’s computer.

The ice cream chain’s Instagram and Facebook pages have been filled with comments urging it to change its name.

Those defending Sweet Jesus suggest its Christian critics are hypocritical for attacking a fast-food name, while the community has stayed largely silent on allegations that U.S. President Donald Trump had affairs with adult film star Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal. Trump continues to enjoy strong support from his Christian base.

The chain previously captured attention in the summer of 2016, when Kim Kardashian stopped in to buy a cup of ice cream on a shopping trip in Toronto.