However, the original half-timbered temple has not survived to our times. Dated at the end of the 16th century, the half-timbered building was the oldest village church in the shape of a Greek cross in Pomerania. Unfortunately, the church burned down on May 24, 1934. Only the altar cover and the metal cross crowning the tower were saved. On the site of the burned down one, a new brick church was erected and put into use in 1936, on a rectangular plan and with a square wooden tower on the west.
The tower, coming out of the roof, is covered with boards and is finished with a neo-baroque cupola covered with sheet metal and a spike topped with a cross. A brick wall is built around the temple. The roof above the temple is gable and covered with tiles. Inside, a wooden beam ceiling. The choir gallery comes from the time when the church was built.
In 1945, for several months, the church served as a cowshed for the cows of the Soviet troops stationed here. Part of the roof, the altar and the organ were destroyed then. The inhabitants of Kobylanka repaired the roof themselves and r