A 22-year-old political science instructor said Brigham Young University-Idaho has terminated her teaching contract over a Facebook post that questioned the LGBT policy of the LDS Church.

BYU-Idaho told the station that university policy prohibits public comment on personnel issues, but the school’s website still shows Robertson teaching global politics through 2018. The school’s adjunct faculty policy is password-protected online. Adjuncts can be fired, even from public universities, for virtually any reason or none at all.

Robertson is a member in good standing of the Mormon Church, formally known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, which strongly opposes homosexuality.

In the post, she wrote: “I’m now a member of the LDS Church”. I hope that this will some day apply to the stance on the LGBT community.

A Mormon university professor has been fired after refusing to renounce her support for LGBT rights.

Robertson suspects a former roommate who disagrees with her views on feminism reported her statement to her church-affiliated employer.

“It was just this post”, she said. “… I’m still a member of the church, but I don’t support this”.

The post went viral, and despite Robertson’s insistence that her account was private and she was not Facebook friends with any of her students, the university sprung into action.

“That night I got a call that I had been reported to my department head and the president of the college”, Robertson said.

“I could not take it back”, Robertson explained, according to KUTV.

And she told KUTV that she has no intention of leaving her church.

Before the Facebook post, she had been contracted to teach classes this fall, and she believed she would be contracted in the winter of 2018 as well. She said she didn’t discuss religious doctrine in the classroom. There had never been anything in my classroom that had been controversial. “It’s a political science class”.

She said no other issues were raised in her meetings with university officials.

Robertson said disagreement with the policy she criticized, of varying degrees, is widespread, though criticism is often limited to private conversations. “Most Christian faiths label homosexuality as a sin based on archaic writings”.

“A large majority of the school is in disagreement with this policy”, she said.

She has since accepted friend requests from students who reached out in support, and Robertson said she has no plans to leave the church she grew up in.