"A blind squirrel finds a nut very once and awhile and a broken clock is right twice a day. Meaning that yes when they're talking about killing homos and they throw homos off a building, the Bible says stone them with stone but you can get creative on how you do the death penalty I guess," said Pastor Jason D. Robinson during a sermon.

Pastor Robinson spoke these words about Islam and what the Bible says during a sermon at the independent fundamental, Mountain Baptist Church and it was all recorded on tape.

We received a video from a concerned viewer, who didn't want to go on camera. The video, posted to YouTube by the church, has since been taken down for what Robinson says was because of YouTube's hate speech guidelines.

"If you're in the Bible and actually reading the Bible you would never say that 'well Islam is wicked because they kill homos," said Robinson.

"It doesn't promote peace and harmony. It doesn't promote the Christian gospel. It doesn't promote what Jesus stood for," said D.D. Meighen an interim minister at the First Presbyterian Church in Fairmont.

5 News showed Meighen the video and he stopped watching it within seconds saying he had "seen enough."

"The scriptures for Christianity is based on how we treat each other, love and compassion and understanding," said Meighen.

This part of the video is what Robinson describes as him not condoning Islam, but rather doing his job in teaching what the Bible teaches about homosexuality.

"I'm against Islam 6 ways to Sunday, it's a wicked religion and it was started by a pedophile. So ya, I'm against Islam, but I'm not going to be against Islam when they're actually doing something the Bible teaches," said Robinson, in the video.

"The Bible does say that they should be put to death just as much as an adulterer and a murderer," said Robinson.

In his sermon Robinson notes that people should "be careful of what they're condemning when they're against Islam."

"They're actually doing what the Bible teaches," said Robinson.

Meighen says all religions have a factor in them that's full of hate, even the Christian church. However he says the negative propaganda in the video is not the basis of the faith.

"This is not who we are. This is just a small branch reaching out for some attention and trying to promote hate," said Meighen.

Robinson says, this wasn't what he was doing at all and it's being taken the wrong way.

"There are false accusations that are applied to that [the video] and false interpretations of what I said. I'm not advocating that people go out and execute any types of judgment like this," said Robinson.

Robinson says he doesn't regret the things he said and that he's not trying to appease anyone. Meighen on the other hand wants people to know that this is against the Christian faith.

Pastor Robinson said he disputed YouTube's act of taking down the video of the sermon, but he doesn't expect it to be put back up.