It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Condover, the archdeaconry of Ludlow, and the diocese of Hereford.
[2] The church was built between about 1275 and 1280 for Robert Burnell, who became Lord Chancellor of England, and then Bishop of Bath and Wells.
It has a pyramidal roof with a weathervane, and a gabled dormer window on the west side.
[2] At the west end of the church are buttresses, and a doorway with a steep arch, above which are three stepped lancet windows.
The four-light east window is elaborate, with Purbeck marble shafts.
In the north wall of the chancel is a stained glass window of 1927 designed by A. K. Nicholson.
[4] A marble plaque in the north transept commemorates Lieutenant Walter Smythe, who was killed at the siege of Mentz when serving in the Austrian army in the French Revolutionary Wars (1794), with carved figures of cannon, cannonball, drum, flags and a castle.
[5] Also inside the church is a plaque listing parish men who died serving in World War I while in the north porch a painted wooden plaque lists all who served in the same war, with indications of those who were wounded or died.
It is in sandstone, and consists of a bowl standing on a stem with an octagonal base.