

The church stands above the village with a paved causeway leading to it. These were frequently constructed in olden times when the roads became impassable seas of mud in wet weather. This is occasionally the case to this day!
The church was often in a poor state of repair. In 1791 Collinson, in his history of Somerset, says that at the time "the whole is out of repair, and very dirtily kept". Tradition has it that it was almost lost among the brambles and the battle continues! The chancel at the time of Collinson was a curious one, being a separate room, shut off from the rest of the church by a wall in which were two windows and a door. There is a similar chancel in Stockton in Wiltshire.
At about 1858 the chancel wall was removed and a new window was introduced into that part of the church. The flat ceiling between the rafters was also removed and the sanctuary laid with encaustic tiles.
The chancel arch is plain, but across the wall beside it there are the marks of a rood loft. The nave also is plain with arched ceiling and modern windows. It has a circular arch to the tower that is placed askew to the church.
The font is extremely plain and early decorated, square in shape with chamfered edges, and is similar to the one in Saltford church.
On the north side, the stair turret of a preceding tower has been retained and from evidence of this, and a splayed perpendicular buttress on the south side we come to the conclusion that the present tower is built on the foundations of one of some considerable pretensions.
The church would also seem to have been almost completely rebuilt at the same time as the tower, as there are few remains that testify to any older date.
Originally four bells were hung in the tower, but three were sold in 1803 to meet the expense of work carried out to the church in the previous year.
The incomplete list of Rectors, started in 1309, consists mainly of monks from Bath Abbey up to the dissolution in 1536. This gives some idea of the age and history of the church.
In 1978 the benefices of North Stoke and Weston All Saints were joined and the Rev. Eric Normington became the first Rector of the joint Benefice.
Services are still held every Sunday Morning and a full list of services can be found on the notice board in the porch.
The church is wholly supported by the residents of the village.