(RNS) — A sign declaring “God Bless the Military” is staying put on a Hawaiian military base, despite protests from a religious freedom advocacy group in the military.

Col. Sean C. Killeen (shown below), commander of the Marine Corps Base Hawaii, located on Oahu near Kaneohe Bay, told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser last Friday, “We will always support all service members’ rights to pursue and practice their own belief sets, whether religious or not.”

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The sign became a sore point in September when base officials received a complaint from the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, an Albuquerque, New Mexico, group that supports religious freedom and the rights of atheists in the military.

The group’s founder and president, Mikey Weinstein, has called the sign a “brazen violation” of the Constitution’s protection against government-supported religion, and said it “sends the clear message that your installation gives preference to those who hold religious beliefs over those who do not.”

Col. Sean C. Killeen , commander of the Marine Corps Base Hawaii, located on Oahu near Kaneohe Bay, told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser Friday (Oct. 9), "We will always support all service members' rights to pursue and practice their own belief sets, whether religious or not." Photo courtesy of Marines
Col. Sean C. Killeen, commander of Marine Corps Base Hawaii (courtesy The Marines)

The large white sign with red, black and blue letters was erected after the 9/11 attacks and has been in place for 14 years. It reads “God Bless the Military, Their Families, And the Civilians Who Work With Them.”

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If the sign is not removed or relocated to the base’s chapel, Weinstein has said his group will call for the erection of nine additional signs that proclaim other gods’ special feeling for the military, including “Vishnu blesses the Military” and “There is no god to bless … We have each other.”

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation has assisted more than 40,000 active-duty servicemen, veterans, and civilians who have served with the U.S. armed forces.

Other signs would recognize the Jedi Church, the Baha’i faith and the Church of Satan, Weinstein said.

If their demands are not met, Weinstein has threatened a lawsuit.

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“We are in discussion with civil rights litigators in Honolulu,” Weinstein said in a phone interview. “It is just a matter of whether any of our military men want to come forward.”

Killeen told the Star-Advertiser no one on the base has told him they are offended by the sign. Weinstein said base personnel felt too intimidated to do so, but that more than 70 people — many of them Christian — on the base have complained to his group about the sign. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation claims it has assisted more than 40,000 active-duty servicemen, veterans, and civilians who have served with the U.S. armed forces.

This article originally appeared in Religion News Service.