Symbolic objects at Christmas tree sites in Delray Beach and Boca Raton are being used to convey political, personal and religious statements — both controversial yet fully legal.

In Boca, there’s a satanic display that is nestled between a Biblical nativity scene and Christmas tree. In Delray, an anti-President-elect Donald Trump display stands feet from the 100-foot tree.

The satanic display, placed at Boca’s Sanborn Square by Preston Smith of an organization called "Freedom from Religion," included a pentagram with a sign that read "In Satan We Trust," and sparked a counter display from a local church.

"This group purports to be a group that wants religion removed from public places … but then they’re using an inflammatory religious symbol to make their point," said the Rev. Andrew Sherman of St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church. "That feels both hypocritical and frankly shameful to us."

On Wednesday morning, the church hoisted a banner that it encourages and respects free speech, but condemns the satanic symbol as "harmful to our community’s well-being."

Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie visited Sanborn Square, a designated "free speech zone," on Wednesday to support the church’s decision to erect the banner.

"I find (the satanic display) offensive," Haynie said. "However, the same constitutional right to freedom of speech that allows the church to display the nativity scene also allows for this objectionable symbol."

Freedom of speech was the inspiration behind the anti-Trump display in Delray Beach, according to the display-maker.

Chaz Stevens, a South Florida atheist blogger, has for three years now put up a "festivus" pole near the Christmas tree display at Delray’s Old School Square, which also has a Biblical nativity scene and menorah nearby.

Festivus is the invention of TV’s Seinfeld, which created a holiday for the nonreligious to celebrate around Christmas.

This year, Stevens wrapped his Festivus pole with an upside-down American flag and pinned on top a red "Make America Great Again" hat, the symbol of Trump’s supporters.

He decided to dress up the holiday display after Trump’s inflammatory comments on Twitter calling for the jailing of flag-burners.

"When the world turned upside down and Trump become president, and made those ignorant remarks about burning the flag, we decided to turn the flag upside down in distress," Stevens said Wednesday.

By Wednesday afternoon, the Trump hat had disappeared, and although it’s unclear how hat went missing, Stevens had his suspicions.

"The fact that we actually got somebody irritated enough to break the law and vandalize the Festivus pole, we like that," he said. "We consider it mission accomplished."

Each year, Stevens and members of his organization, Religious Liberty Project, decorate the Festivus pole to make a political statement. In 2015, they wrapped the pole in rainbow tape in support of the LGBT community.

This year, he considered a display supporting medical marijuana or the national Black Lives Matter movement, but decided on an anti-Trump display because of a strong local connection.

"He’s right down the block from us," Stevens said of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Palm Beach.

Stevens — who made national headlines three years ago when he successfully argued for the placement of the pole in Delray and Deerfield Beach — personally knows Smith, the man behind the Boca Raton display. Stevens wasn’t involved in the satanic display.

The holiday scenes are an opportunity to get a message of free speech across to more people, Stevens said.

"If I put a Festivus pole up in March, would you have noticed it?" Stevens asked The Palm Beach Post. "The idea is we are proud to admit that we live in the land of the free so why not use those freedoms."