The subsidiary church in Zimna Wódka belongs to the parish of St. Elizabeth of Hungary in Klucz and is one of three wooden churches of this parish, alongside Klucz and Olszowa. All were built or rebuilt around 1748, preserving a uniform style and characteristic construction features (tower embedded in the structure). The first mention of the village dates from 1260, and a previous wooden church was probably built in the fifteenth century and was used by Protestants until the beginning of the eighteenth century. The present temple was built in 1748. The church is situated on a rise in the center of the village. The wooden building in log-cabin and post construction (tower) has a square nave with a presbytery closed off on three sides and a tower from the west. From the north, a sacristy with a choir loft on the upper floor adjoins the presbytery. The structure is compact and has a two-gabled roof. The interior is covered with flat ceilings. The temple's furnishings include a valuable Baroque main altar with an image of Mary Magdalene repenting, late Baroque side altars, and a Neoclassical pulpit from the first half of the nineteenth century.
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