Built of flint and rubble, it is a Grade I listed building and an active parish church.
[2] The interior contains some 18th century funerary monuments, which Pevsner considers "very grand"[1] for their modest setting, and a set of panelled box pews and pulpit.
[1] The organ dates from 1917, and was a gift of Mary Earle Gwynne of Folkington, in memory of the men of the village who died in World War I.
[4] The graveyard contains the grave of the cookery writer Elizabeth David, marked by a slate headstone carved in 1992 by local stonemason Geoffrey Aldred.
[1] Just inside the door, on the left-hand side wall is a small stone relief sculpture, commissioned by the family of Ronald Stacy Marks, by John Skelton (sculptor).