In February 1305, Warnice and the adjacent towns were sold to the bishop of Kamien. In 1490, a parish church in Warnice was founded by the then owner, Günter von Billerbeck. The construction of the church extends to the first years of the 16th century. In the 19th century, the church was renovated, the window openings were changed, the crown of the walls was rebuilt and new roofs were installed over the body and the tower. The church was founded on a rectangular plan of 8.6 x 17.6, with a tower on a square plan from the south. The northern gable wall with a triangular finial is decorated with pinnacles and ogival blendes. Roof 2 - pitched, on the tower 4 - pitched. The windows are slender, closed, semicircular, decorated with tracery. The eastern wall of the tower with the ogival entrance portal is richly decorated with circular and ogival blendes. The second portal in the eastern wall of the nave. Single-space interior. Inside: flat larch ceiling, by the northern wall a contemporary larch music gallery supported on two pillars. During World War II, the church was damaged, and after the war, it was destroyed and robbed. Only ruins remain. In 1974 it was rebuilt.