The first granite parish church in Maszewo was built at the end of the 13th century. Its remains are the lower parts of the tower of today's temple and fragments of the western wall of the nave. By the mid-fourteenth century, two higher storeys of the tower were also built. In the first half of the 15th century, the present nave and presbytery were erected on the plan of the earlier building. In the following years, a sacristy and a chapel of St. spirit.
After repairs in 1725 and 1741, the church was plastered inside and out and painted red. In 1790, a storm seriously damaged the building, which was renovated in 1795-1796. Further damage to the tower by the storm took place in 1801 and 1809.
In the years 1806–1807 Maszewo and its vicinity were the battlefields between the Prussian and French armies. The French who camped in the city used the temple as a warehouse.
In the years 1809-1810 the church was renovated again.
In 1819, the church burnt down, in the years 1821-1822 it was rebuilt. It received a new top of the tower and new roofs. At the same time, the plaster from the façade was knocked down, the chapel of St. Spirit, and the sacristy was rebuilt.
During World War II, the church was partially damaged, and the Russians turned it into a warehouse. The roof was partially destroyed, which was repaired already in 1945. After the church was tidied up by the first inhabitants of Maszewo, already in 1945 the first mass was celebrated there.