In 1554, Baines returned to England and was consecrated as Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, on 18 November 1554. He vigorously opposed the Protestant Reformers, and features largely in ''
Foxe's Book of Martyrs'', conducting many examinations with his Chancellor,
Anthony Draycot. His chancellor was involved, for instance, in the burning of a young blind woman,
Joan Waste, for heresy in
Derby. He was one of the eight defenders of Catholic doctrine at the
Westminster Conference of 1558/9. On the accession of
Elizabeth I of England, he was deprived of his bishopric (21 June 1559) and committed to the care of
Edmund Grindal, the Protestant
Bishop of London, becoming one of eleven imprisoned bishops (researches of G. Philips support a theory that, though nominally a guest, Baines was in fact a strict prisoner). His captivity lasted until 18 November 1559, when, in the words of fellow Roman Catholic
John Pitts, Baines "died an illustrious Confessor of the Lord". ==Works==