The interior is structured by slender columns with leaf capitals, which support a high rib vault.
[6] The company Schulze & Söhne from Paulinzella, Thuringia, who built the organ,[7] also installed the altar and the pulpit.
The painting on the high altar, showing a Crucifixion scene,[1] was created in 1885 by Paul Händler [de].
[3][8] While many furnishings designed by Heyden were changed over the years, the painting has been returned to the church.
It was improved in 1935 by Walcker, adding pipes, installing electrical tracture and changing the console.
In 1967, Albert Eisenberg, an international acoustics specialist, recommended new benches with textile cushioning.
It was declared an example of a neo-Gothic hall church of rare unity of style ("ein Beispiel einer neugotischen Hallenkirche von seltener Geschlossenheit" on 6 December 1967.