Consent for the construction of the first church in the village was issued on May 24, 1547. The parish of st. Stanisław Bishop Martyr in Nowy Lubiel was erected by the bishop of Płock Andrzej Noskowski on September 9, 1547. The founder of the church and parish was Anna Nowodworska, the owner of the Lubiel village. The temple burnt down on July 17, 1775, but two years later, the second church was erected in its place, founded by one of the successive owners of Lubiel, Adam Nowodworski, head of the Różan church.
The church survived until 1890, when the local parish priest, Fr. Józef Dmochowski, proceeded to build a larger temple. The old church building was enclosed with new walls and a roof and was only demolished when the new church was finished. It took place on November 9, 1890. At the same time, a wooden belfry was also built on the church grounds surrounded by a concrete openwork fence on a stone foundation made of fieldstone. The wooden presbytery located to the north-east of the church was also built a little later, around 1926 (probably in 1924-1928). The church survived both world wars without damage, and has been renovated successively since the second half of the 19th century. 1990s on the initiative of the local parish priest.