Years earlier, I had been told that John Smyth, the glamorous, upright Christian barrister I'd known from a distance since I was child, had committed acts of unimaginable brutality against teenage boys. Immediately, I contacted a clergyman who knew Smyth better than I, and who knew someone I feared might be a victim. He reassured me there was nothing to worry about: he would have known.
Should I have believed him? Absolutely not. Do I wish I’d done more? Absolutely I do.
Nevertheless, in 2012 I wrote an article in the national press about Smyth’s abuse. I was the first to speak up publicly by some years, although many others had known far more and for far longer. I was subjected to a storm of invective on Twitter, and was briefly sacked from Thought for the Day.
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