During the Ming dynasty, in 1535, the temple was rebuilt at Wenming Street at the Eastern Gate of Gaozhou County.
In 2002, after Chinese Communist Party general secretary Jiang Zemin visited, he declared that the scale was not large enough and needed to be developed as the base of patriotism education.
In 2007, the People's Government of Guangdong Province awarded it the provincial unit of cultural relic protection.
In the front hall, hung on the right and left walls, are paintings attributed to painters such as Yang Qiuxi.
The nave hosts a horizontal board stating “Temple of Madam Xian”, scribed by Zhao Puchu.
Hanging above in the middle of the nave is a large screen entitled "Birds paying homage to the phoenix".
The biggest statue wears a phoenix coronet, flowery shoes and colorful clothes and is located in the north of the main hall.
In addition to its red walls and green roof, craftsmen employed colored drawing, paste-on-paste decoration and carving to adorn it.
The frescoes in the eaves and walls of the nave were created in Ming or Qing dynasty, giving them historic as well as aesthetic value.
The crests are “double dragons plays with a ball”, “two carps jump across Longmen”, and “tales of Madam Xian” and reflect the traditional custom and distinctive culture.
Ding Yangzhong, professor of Central Drama Academy in Beijing, wrote a couplet for Temple of Madam Xian: 是人非神,千秋景仰;亦人亦神,万代馨香.