The current village chapel was built between 1736 and 1742 as a rectangular brick building. There is no tower. Instead, there is a belfry in the churchyard with a bell that was cast by Laurentius Strahlborn from Lübeck in 1738. Above the south portal is a sandstone alliance coat of arms of the v. Holstein/v. Bülow family. At the end of the last century, a low, rectangular family crypt was added to the west as a burial place for the lords of the manor.
The single-nave interior is covered with a flat-walled barrel vault. The light openings are provided with a round arch at the top. The fact that the choir faces west is particularly peculiar. This really is an exception in sacred buildings. To the east, on the other hand, a stately gallery was added, which was raised by four steps from the floor. The altar and pulpit form a single unit, which was fashionable in Protestant areas during the Baroque period. The original furnishings of the church have been preserved and were restored in the 1970s. The organ was installed at the beginning of the 1990s thanks to a generous donation.