Jemal Countess via Getty Images Billy Graham delivers a sermon at the Flushing Meadows Park in New York City, New York, on Sunday, June 26, 2005.

Near the end of his life, the famous evangelist Rev. Billy Graham concluded after decades of experience that it wasn’t good for pastors to become too entangled with political leaders.

But the late evangelist’s ministry, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA), apparently has no such qualms about proclaiming its approval of President Donald Trump.

The BGEA’s official Decision Magazine made its political leanings abundantly clear in a column written by its editors last week that predicted dire consequences for American evangelicals if Republicans perform poorly in this year’s midterm elections.

The editors suggested that if Democrats gained a majority in Congress, it would essentially be open season for progressive activists to target American Christians.

“If progressives reclaim a majority in Congress, not to mention in state and local governments, believers will once again be open targets for punishment by left-wing activists bent on silencing those who wish to live out their faith in society,” the editors wrote in the magazine’s October edition, which was published online last Friday.

The editorial listed out nine ways the Trump administration has helped restore religious liberty for evangelical Christians over the past 22 months, victories the editors believe helped “reverse years of hostile actions under the previous president.”

ASSOCIATED PRESS The Rev. Franklin Graham is the son of the late evangelist Billy Graham and CEO of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

First among the victories are Trump’s appointment of conservative judges. In addition to placing two solidly conservative justices on the Supreme Court, the Republican-controlled Senate has confirmed over 25 Trump-nominated appellate court judges ― more than any other president has two years into office.

The editors complained that “liberal, activist” judges have consistently allowed “newly invented civil rights” to supersede their religious beliefs.

Other key victories include steps the White House has taken to defund Planned Parenthood, defend Christian business owners, protect persecuted Christians around the world and move the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

The editors feared that the gains of the past two years could be “brought to a screeching halt or even lost after next month’s midterm elections.”

Tom Williams via Getty Images President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump and Franklin Graham attend a ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda as the late Rev. Billy Graham, the father of Franklin, lies in honor on Feb. 28, 2018.

Although Billy Graham tried to steer clear of championing specific presidents, at least in his later years, Graham’s son and the heir to his ministry, Franklin Graham, has long been an ardent Trump supporter.

In a separate article for the October edition, Franklin Graham claimed he doesn’t want to tell evangelicals how to vote. Still, it’s clear that he believes that God is on the president’s side.

Franklin Graham said evangelicals have felt attacked in recent years for professing their religious beliefs. While he’s met every American president since Lyndon Johnson, Graham wrote that he’s never seen a president like Trump who “aggressively” fights to protect evangelicals’ religious liberty.

Still, numerous surveys have shown a widening gap between the beliefs of white evangelical Protestants and the rest of the country. They’re often the religious group most likely to support Trump on some of the issues he’s made a priority in his presidency ― such as the temporary travel ban. On issues like same-sex marriage and the ability of religious business owners to refuse service to customers they disagree with, white evangelicals increasingly stand alone.

Evangelicals of color often have widely different political stances than their white co-religionists.

Adam Taylor, executive director of the Christian organization Sojourners, told HuffPost that many progressive evangelicals admire Billy Graham’s efforts to evangelize to people around the world. However, many also know the evangelist often shied away from speaking up forcefully about civil rights issues. And they feel his son has undermined Billy Graham’s legacy with a “narrow partisan view rather than a holistic gospel focus.”

As an evangelical of color, Taylor said his biggest concern about the Decision editorial is that the piece presumes that the issues laid out are the only and most important issues that evangelicals should care about and use to evaluate Trump’s presidency.

“The religious right has been irresponsibly consistent in focusing on a very narrow set of priorities to abortion and religious liberty, which often comes at the expense of a much more holistic and consistent ethic of life that recognized that how our nation treats the poor, the immigrant, women, the environment and are also core gospel issues,” Taylor said.

For Graham, these cultural gaps translate into a feeling of being “under siege.”

“It’s impossible to watch a late-night television talk show, read the editorial and opinion pages of newspapers or magazines or just scan digital news stories without coming across a slew of abhorrent attacks on conservatives,” Graham wrote in his article.

Graham wrote in his article that he believes God has given Americans a “very brief window” to repent and turn back from their “wicked ways.” That’s why he’s urging evangelicals to get to the polls during the upcoming midterm elections.

“It is urgent this November for Christians to turn out in record numbers to vote for candidates who wholeheartedly support the work of religious liberty and who have pledged to do all they can to continue the amazing advances that have been made on this front in such a short period of time,” Graham wrote.

This story has been updated with comment from Adam Taylor.