The church is based on the foundations of a previous Gothic building that was built of fieldstone in the 13th century. The church was permanently under patronage and was given a pulpit in 1710 at the behest of Frederick I, which was marked in a cartouche with the letters FR above it. In 1740 Frederick II gave the order to significantly rebuild the church. Under the direction of the architect Christian Friedrich Feldmann, a much larger building was built by 1744, which is architecturally based on the garrison church in Potsdam with its transverse hall. The altar has been moved south from its original location on the east side of the church. Feldmann also built in a surrounding gallery, which rests on Tuscan wooden columns and is only interrupted at the altar. In 1755 the wooden church tower was replaced by a larger stone model. After the end of the Seven Years' War, in 1764, it received a spire with a spire.
In 1905 a childless couple donated a Sauer organ. In 1908 the church received electric lighting. An extensive interior renovation was carried out in 1978. In October 1986, two youths broke into the church and damaged the organ, pews and parts of the altar. From 2006 to 2009 the organ was restored. In the years 2007 to 2009 the roof truss and the outer facade were renovated. A year later the tower with its three bells was renovated. The total cost was 1.34 million euros. The inauguration ceremony took place on September 4, 2011.
Source: Wikipedia