Foxe served as the king's
almoner c. 1532 – 1537, and as
prolocutor of
convocation in April 1533 when it decided against the validity of Henry's marriage with Catherine. In 1534 he published his treatise
De vera differentia regiae potestatis et ecclesiae, defending the
Royal Supremacy by use of the documents collated in the
Collectanea satis copiosa. Various ecclesiastical preferments were now granted him, including the
archdeaconry of Leicester (1531–1535), the
archdeaconry of Dorset (1533–1535), the
deanery of Salisbury (1533) and the bishopric of
Hereford (1535). He was nominated to the See of Hereford on 20 August 1535,
elected by the
college of Hereford on 25 August,
confirmed on 15 September, and ordained a
bishop on 26 September 1535; he received the
temporalities on 7 September and the
spiritualities on 14 October 1535. In 1535–36 he was sent to
Germany to discuss the basis of a political and theological understanding with the
Lutheran princes and divines, and had several interviews with
Martin Luther, who could not be persuaded of the justice of Henry VIII's divorce. In 1536,
Martin Bucer dedicated his
Commentaries on the Gospels to Foxe. ==Death and legacy==