On 20 December 2016, Dorgu was announced as the next Bishop of Woolwich, a suffragan and area bishop in the Diocese of Southwark.[6] He was consecrated a bishop by Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, during service at Southwark Cathedral on 17 March 2017.[3][10] As such, Dorgu became the first ever Nigerian bishop in the Church of England,[11] and the first black person to be consecrated a bishop in the Church of England since John Sentamu in 1996.[7] At the end of the service, Sentamu, now the Archbishop of York, gifted Dorgu a mitre; this mitre had turn been given to Sentamu by Wilfred Wood, the first black bishop in the Church of England and a former bishop of the Diocese of Southwark.[10][4]
Views
Dorgu identified with the evangelicaltradition of the Church of England.[7] He supported the Church's current position on human sexuality; it defines marriage as between a man and a woman, and requires gay clergy to be celibate.[7]
In 2023, following the news that the House of Bishops of the Church of England was to introduce proposals for blessing same-sex relationships, he signed an open letter which stated:[12]
many Christians in the Church of England and the Anglican Communion, together with Christians from across the churches of world Christianity, continue to believe that marriage is given by God for the union of a man and woman and that it cannot be extended to those who are of the same sex. [...] Without seeking to diminish the value of many committed same-sex relationships, for which there is much to give thanks, we find ourselves constrained by what we sincerely believe the Scriptures teach which cannot be set aside.[12]
Unusually for an evangelical, he suggested that as the death and resurrection of Jesus was the centre of the Christian message that "We should celebrate the Eucharist every day."[4]
Personal life and death
Dorgu was married to Mosun; she also trained as a medical doctor in Nigeria and now works as a consultantchild psychiatrist.[11] Together they had two children.[6] One son died while at school in 2015, and his parents set up the "Joshua Dorgu Foundation" in his memory.[4][13]