Just in time for the holiday season, an anti-religion organization is planning on erecting dozens of atheists billboards in an effort to let fellow non-believers know they're "not alone."
The Greater Sacramento Chapter of the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) has paid for 55 different billboards this year, all of which will go up in Sacramento, Calif., the Monday after Thanksgiving, according to local station News 10.
"It's because atheists are starting to speak up and they're beginning to identify each other," chapter president Judy Saint told the station. "There are a lot of non-believers and this time of year, they feel like they're all alone. This is not directed to people who enjoy their church, who enjoy their religion. That's fine. But we're talking to people who don't know that atheism is okay."
The billboards, all featuring area residents sharing messages like, "I worship nothing and question everything," or "Science. It works," are part of the Wisconsin-based Freedom From Religion Foundation’s overarching campaign to try to get atheists to "come out of the closet," Fox News reports.
“The whole month of December is taken over in a celebration of the religious beliefs, in particular Christianity," FFRF co-president Annie Laurie Gaylor told Fox. "And it’s just as if the whole month turns non-believers into outsiders."
Not everyone is excited about the planned signs, however.
Sacramento Bishop Jaime Soto of the Cathedral of a Blessed Sacrament told local Fox affiliate KTXL that he wasn't particularly pleased about the billboards, which he labeled propaganda.
“While I’m not happy about these billboards, I am certain people still, when they look deep down in their soul and in their heart, find a spark," Soto told the outlet. "They believe in a higher power."
While the tone of the signs is not meant to be confrontational, according to Saint, both atheists and Christian groups have used similar billboards as a way to criticize their rival's principles in the past.
This October, for example, the creationist group Answers in Genesis paid for large billboards in New York City's Times Square, San Francisco and Los Angeles bearing the message: “To all of our atheist friends: Thank God you’re wrong.”
Times Square has previously included billboards paid for atheist groups like American Atheists, which last year posted a controversial sign reading: "Keep the Merry! Dump the Myth!"