In his early theological publications and especially in a dispute with the Presbyterian leader, Richard Baxter, Womock identified himself as an uncompromising anti-Calvinist.
It was the furore over the impeachment of Thomas Osborne, earl of Danby (later marquess of Carmarthen and duke of Leeds) and the right of bishops to vote in blood cases that brought Womock to the attention of the king in 1679. Enjoying the more liberal publishing environment permitted by the lapse of the Licensing Act, Womock joined with Edward Stillingfleet, of Worcester, and Thomas Hunt in defending the bishops’ rights.
Womock was also ambitious, seeking preferment in the Church as a reward both for his writings and for his suffering in the service of crown and Church during the Civil Wars and Interregnum.
It was clear from the complete absence of canons at the episcopal election that Womock’s new cathedral city was far too remote and rugged even for members of the cathedral chapter, let alone for an elderly bishop who was accustomed to a comfortable life in Ely and who was unable to speak Welsh. He repeatedly delayed visiting his new diocese, and when he finally arrived in Brecon in July 1684, complained bitterly that the 300 mile journey was ‘too long for a man of 70 years’ and that the cost of entertaining the Welsh gentry was already proving financially ruinous, ‘to be kept here at this age, for any time, will in all likelihood prove the ruin of myself and mine’.
