According to the stories told by old inhabitants in Chornyi Potik, the first chapel was burnt to the ground by Tatars in 1515. In 1545, a new church was built in its place. When they put a roof over it, the builders left a historical inscription on the eastern side of the church. The fact of the local wooden church was firstly documented in 1680. In 1816 at the exact place where the ancient church stood at the end of the 17th century, a new one was built. In 1827 Yuriy Stefaniuk, a professional of his craft, added narthexes and a sexton office. In 1958-1977 Lviv artists painted an iconostasis. In the middle of 1980s a tin cladding was placed on the church (renovated in 2005). The church is not high, one-domed and decorated with wide eaves.
It is situated in the middle of a cemetery in the northern part of the village.
It is a functioning church of the Orthodox patriarchate.