St. Stanisław Kostka - Barnisław.
The Gothic church in Barnisław was built in the 14th century. Made of granite cubes, it is set on a rectangular plan with dimensions of 16.8 x 8.4 m. The church has a gothic eastern gable with a pair of triphorous blendes. The building was rebuilt in the second half of the 19th century and the new western portal, brick additions to the crown of the walls, comes from this period. It was then that the Gothic pointed-arched window in the eastern façade was bricked up with stone cubes and a new window opening with brick framed was punched out. Probably also in the second half of the In the nineteenth century, the ceilings and the floor were replaced, a western gallery and benches were built. In the western wall above the entrance, decorated with a brick three-step frame, there is a brick rosette.
The parish church was endowed with land and meadows in the village, and from 1632 it received tithes from the branch church in Laddenthin and from the branch in Schwennenz. The parish owned 195 acres of 43 prongs of land and 6 acres of 87 prongs of meadows located by the Odra River. In addition to the lands belonging to the parish, the parish priest from Barnisław had: 46 ¼ scoops of rye, 45 ells of meat sausages, 15 missiles of eggs, 35 thalers from the church cash register, 28 thalers from donations and money for transport.
The church was not damaged during World War II and on November 14, 1946, it was dedicated to St. Stanisław Kostka