Kim Davis may not want to listen to what LGBT advocates have to say, but one group just made it nearly impossible for her to hide from their message.

Planting Peace, a non-profit group that focuses on humanitarian issues including LGBT rights, has paid to put up a large billboard addressed specifically to Davis in her hometown of Morehead, Kentucky after the county clerk refused to issue same-sex marriage licenses.

Davis was jailed earlier this month for "willful disobedience" of the law after she was filmed at work refusing to issue a marriage license to same-sex couples, citing her religious beliefs. She was released from jail last week and almost immediately became a figure on the 2016 Republican presidential campaign trail.

The new billboard cites one arguably widely abandoned biblical practice in an attempt to discredit those like Davis who continue to use the bible as justification to fight same sex marriage, even after it became the law of the land thanks to a Supreme Court ruling earlier this year.

Non-profit organization Planting Peace just erected the above billboard in Kim Davis' hometown of Morehead, Kentucky pic.twitter.com/0bteoct6Uu — Sam Kalidi (@samkalidi) September 12, 2015

"The intent of the billboard is to expose this narrow interpretation by Davis and others that they use to defend their discrimination against the LGBTQ community," Planting Peace explained in a post on Friday announcing the billboard. "It is important and relevant to call this out, because these messages and actions are not simply about a political or religious debate.

"There are LGBTQ youth across the world who are taking their lives at an alarming rate because of these messages from society that make them feel broken or less than," the statement continued. "We have to meet hate with love…intolerance with compassion."

Planting Peace has engaged in similar advocacy stunts before. It is, perhaps most famously, the organization behind the Equality House, which sits across the street from the Westboro Baptist Church in Kansas. The house has been painted the colors of the rainbow and once even hosted a wedding for Gandalf and Dumbledore.