Tybuss was first mentioned in 1285. In the middle of the 14th century, in 1354, it was one of the villages that Margrave Ludwig the Roman ceded to the diocese of Lebus together with the town of Fürstenwalde. In Slavic, the name means either a place where clearing took place or the settlement of a man named Trebuch or Trebusch. The Trebus village church was one of the many places of worship badly damaged in the last battles for Berlin in the spring of 1945. Rebuilt between 1953 and 1955, the extent of the destruction at that time can still be seen today. The areas plastered today mark their extent. What remains of the medieval structure is the regular field stone masonry of the outer walls. On the north side there is still a walled-up pointed arch portal while all of the original side windows have disappeared. However, the former three-window group can still be seen in the east.
However, the church had already undergone a fairly serious remodeling. Around 1745 it was renovated in Baroque style, partially plastered and the windows were also enlarged. At the same time it got a roof tower in the west.
Its current appearance combines the high medieval and baroque appearance like a patchwork.