The church has been reconstructed with a new copper roof, tower, and flèche. The nave roof, trusses, and vault collapsed in 1984, and the annex to the left of the nave entrance is mostly demolished. The facade is repaired with new windows and the tower has new shutters. Temporary doors are closed. Inside, there is new, unpainted plaster and scaffolding. Drainage is being installed around the church. The surrounding cemetery is cleared of overgrowth, nearly half of the perimeter wall is repair.. Read more »ed, and the Stations of the Cross chapels on the wall are being restored. The access stairs to the church and the main gate are also repaired.
After 1948, the church was deliberately neglected. By the mid-1960s, the damaged roof began leaking, and in 1965, parts of the Baroque ceiling stucco detached. The entire vault subsequently collapsed. Part of the roof collapsed in 1974, and the entire roof structure fell into the nave in 1984. Locals took the fallen timbers for firewood, and the ruins were declared off-limits. Finally, the last remaining vault above the presbytery collapsed, along with the triumphal arch and the Thun coat of arms. Prior to this, valuable furnishings were removed on orders from the communist authorities and transported to Slovakia. A large altarpiece depicting St. Martin, a medallion painting of the Virgin Mary above it, two side Baroque altars including a statue of St. John of Nepomuk, a painting of Christ's relatives, and 24 paintings of saints were all lost. Four statues of the Evangelists survived and are now in the church in Růžová. The organ was also taken to Slovakia, and its carved Baroque case reportedly ended up in a sawmill. A Gothic wooden crucifix, located in the choir, and a double-sided hanging sculpture of the Virgin Mary of the Rosary also disappeared.