Originally a Gothic temple that served as a Calvinist church in the mid-XVI century. When in 1654 it became a Roman Catholic church, it was rebuilt in the Lublin Renaissance style. The added chancel ending in a semicircular apse was decorated with a console frieze and had a vault covered with stucco ornaments. The church tower was erected at the end of the XVII century. In 1822 the church burnt down and was rebuilt in the years 1855–1857.

The focal point of the Baroque interior of the church is the high altar with a painting of Our Lady of Częstochowa, which can be covered behind a sliding panel depicting the conversion of St. Paul, adorned by statues of St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr, St. Adalbert, St. Florian, and St. Theodore. Four side altars have paintings of the Mother of God, St. Joseph, St. Anthony, and the statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. At the fifth, neoclassical side altar hangs a painting of crucified Christ from the mid-XIX century. The church treasury is located above the vestry where historical chasubles and liturgical vessels from the XVI and XVII century are kept.

The church complex includes a XVII century bell tower, XIX century presbytery, and a church organist’s house from the 1920s.