As the title of the movie suggests, a lot of the thinking here hinges on the dovetail of gay rights being a continuation of the African-American civil rights struggles of the 20th century. One activist notes "this struggle is in its revolutionary phase, frightening for some," and insists that it's part of "the unfinished business of black people being free."
A little later on, a former fundamentalist minister talks about the social-issue (if you will) component of Black churches: "We preach against smoking, drinking, drugging, even movies."
Lebih lagi, seorang bekas menteri fundamentalis membahas tentang isu sosial dari gereja Afrika-Amerika: "Kami berkhotbah menentang rokok, minuman keras, obat-obatan, bahkan film."
Tak lama kemudian, seorang menteri berlatar belakang mantan fundamentalis, berbicara tentang persoalan sosial (jika anda bersedia) komponen dari gereja-gereja hitam : "kami berceramah melawan perilaku merokok, minum-minum, penggunaan obat terlarang, dan bahkan film-film."
This by was of a preface to how it looks at homosexuality: "We think it's is a white man's disease, that got on us." It's possibly instructive that this movie is seeing its first theatrical run on the week that an openly gay African-American college football player is testing NFL waters: it's demonstrative of the attitudes of some of the other institutions this movement is trying to shake up.
I'm sorry, this paragraph seems a bit weird. Maybe you should check the English translation because most of the sentences don't make sense.