The original larch church from the foundation of the Skórkowski heirs of the Jelita coat of arms dates back to 1313. It still existed in 1413.
Around 1521, a new wooden church was built. The parish was established before 1521. Another brick church, founded by Stanisław Skórkowski, the royal secretary, was built in the years 1639-1648. In 1817 it was burnt.
The nave was added to the remaining walls in 1888 thanks to the efforts of Rev. Marek Gujski. The temple was dedicated in 1897 by Bishop Antoni Sotkiewicz. The church was extended according to the design of architects Słonimski and Kazimierz Prokulski from Radom in 1924–1925 thanks to the efforts of Fr. Jan Zajączkowski. It was renovated in the years 1945–1947 and in 1969.
It is a single-nave, oriented, stone-built structure. The chancel walls and the square chapel on the south side of the nave have been preserved from the seventeenth-century church.