In 1926, the idea of building a church was born among the evangelical population of the village of Radawnica, which received support under the so-called Eastern program. The present-day church was built in the years 1927 - 28 in the historicist style. It had 270 seats. The form of the temple refers to the granite Romanesque village churches preserved in Pomerania. It is clearly embedded in the tradition of churches built by the Settlement Commission. Only the windows were shaped in a modern way. The cornerstone blessing ceremony was held with great pomp on September 7, 1927. Its main intention was to emphasize the presence of the Germans in this Polish village. The community numbered about 500 souls, including the inhabitants of neighboring farms. The site for the construction of the church, separated from the manor park, was donated by its then owner - a German. The construction was carried out by the construction company Radtke from Złotów. After the Second World War, St. the temple was not used. The organ was moved to the Catholic Church under the invocation of st. Barbara, where there was no instrument, and the pews were changed between the churches. The Catholic parish took over the post-evangelical church as an auxiliary and it received the call of St. Stanisław Kostka.