The first mention of a parish in Kamieniec comes from 1451. In the document of the cathedral canon, Paweł from Krakow, from June 7 of the same year, there is a record of the death of the parish priest Mikołaj of "Kamyenz".
During the visit to the parish in 1679, it was noted that the church in Kamieniec was consecrated in 1413. According to art historians, the origins of the present church can be traced back to around 1487. In the years 1498 - 1499, the inhabitants of Księży Las built a church. st. Michael the Archangel, it is not known, however, whether an independent parish priest was foreseen for this church, as indicated by the census from 1447. Around 1570, both churches fell into Protestant hands. The remains of those times is the tombstone of two children from the Sedlnicki family: Jan (who died in 1573) and Małgorzata (who died ten years later) embedded in the wall of the chancel. At the beginning of the 17th century, Kamieniec, Karchowice and Księży Las were incorporated into the Lutheran parish in Zbrosławice. In 1629, the parish in Kamieniec became Catholic again.
The parish church was thoroughly renovated in the years 1860-1870, 1939 and after a fire in 1986. In 1905, the church in Księży Las was enlarged by a brick entrance. In 2015, the wooden structure of the southern façade of the church was renovated, as part of which it was necessary to completely reconstruct the side chapel from the 18th century.
The rectory building was built in the years 1883-1889 by the master builder P. Walther from Pyskowice. From the end of the 17th century, there was a small shelter for the poor in Kamieniec. In 1901, Count Rudolf Strachwitz funded a private hospital ("Rudolf-Spital"), to which the Borromeo Sisters from Trzebnica were brought.