One of its burial enclosures has on its east face an ornately carved memorial for William Gordon of Greenlaw, which is itself independently listed at Category A.
As of 2022[update] the church is still in regular use as a place of worship, and its former hearse house is owned by a community group and used as an information centre.
[3][4] There are raised galleries on Tuscan columns, and box pews, some named for important local heritors including the Gordons of Kenmure and the Copelands of Danevale.
[3][8] The church's hearse house, at the bottom of the knoll on its west side on the level of the street, has been converted into a local history centre.
[1] The oldest part of the current building is the tower, which is seventeenth-century, possibly as old as the 1611 bell (made by John Burgerhuys) that hangs in it.
[8] In 2018, Dumfries and Galloway Council sold the church's hearse house to the Crossmichael Community Trust for a nominal fee, so that it would be turned into an exhibition space.