In a region where billboards have long been used to proselytize and "save souls," it's not surprising that questioning God on the roadside prompted a few detractors. For a week after the billboard went up, local television and talk radio stations filled the airways with the wails and screams of the faithful.
Letters to the editor of The Post and Courier expressed the anger of true believers: "At best this is just plain mean and spiteful. At worst it is an attempt to continue the assault on Christian and religious values," wrote a Charleston resident. "God is love."
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See also:
FFRF's Provocative Bus Signs Now Up on 50 Buses in Madison, Wis.
FFRF's Billboard Re-Posted in Columbus, Ohio
U.S. agency refuses atheist ads in Ontario