Find out when See No Evil is on TV today, tonight and this week at the UK TV Listings Guide.
See No Evil is scheduled to air at these times (may include spoilers):
First of a two-part investigation of the biggest scandal in Church of England history, telling the inside story of prolific abuser John Smyth's sinister world through testimony from his children and widow. In the 1980s, John Smyth was a high-flying barrister offering discipleship to young Christians at Winchester College, then began to invite them to lunches and parties at his family home. Before long he introduced them to a secret and brutal regime, involving cane beatings that he justified as spiritual discipline intended to relieve them of their sins
More details for See No Evil, Wed 3, 12:50 am
The concluding part explores the new life John Smyth built in Zimbabwe, where he set up Christian summer camps that provided him access to hundreds of young boys every year, with the camps involving enforced nudity, skinny dipping and beatings on a hugely increased scale. The programme also explores the suspicious death of Guide Nyacharu, a schoolboy who was found dead in a swimming pool at one of Smyth's camps
More details for See No Evil, Thu 4, 1:50 am
The concluding part explores the new life John Smyth built in Zimbabwe, where he set up Christian summer camps that provided him access to hundreds of young boys every year, with the camps involving enforced nudity, skinny dipping and beatings on a hugely increased scale. The programme also explores the suspicious death of Guide Nyacharu, a schoolboy who was found dead in a swimming pool at one of Smyth's camps
More details for See No Evil, Thu 4, 2:50 am
First of a two-part investigation of the biggest scandal in Church of England history, telling the inside story of prolific abuser John Smyth's sinister world through testimony from his children and widow. In the 1980s, John Smyth was a high-flying barrister offering discipleship to young Christians at Winchester College, then began to invite them to lunches and parties at his family home. Before long he introduced them to a secret and brutal regime, involving cane beatings that he justified as spiritual discipline intended to relieve them of their sins
More details for See No Evil, Thu 4, 1:50 am