The early Gothic building was built of granite cubes (sixteen layers, not including the plinth) in the 13th century (maybe as early as the 12th century). In 1492, N. Reddemer, the parish priest of Wapnice, was appointed.
In the 19th century, the edge of the gable decorated with pinnacles was added. Windows were given their current form in the 19th century. At the same time, a tower was added from the west and the corners of the western wall were rebuilt.
The building was destroyed during World War II and was not rebuilt after 1945, but only in the years 1980-1983 (the tower was then raised and covered with a tent roof).
The church is a hall building, built on a rectangular plan. In the southern wall, two pointed arch portals have been preserved (two-step and three-step).
The area around the church formerly served as a cemetery.