The parish church of Sorradile, dedicated to St. Sebastian, was built in the first half of the 17th century on a layout probably dating back to the 11th/12th century. Some traces of the ancient construction remain in the presbytery and sacristy. Many decorative elements in the church (lion protomes, zoomorphic elements) are from the Romanesque period. The first reconstruction work was begun in the late 1500s: in 1636, as recorded in an engraving on the left side of the main entrance, the new facade made entirely of local trachyte was built.
The work was carried out by workers locals led by the stonemason Antonio Pinna, who combined architectural skills with a marked decorative taste typical of picapedrers of Gothic-Catalan formation. The church of Sorradile is one of the few that preserves the original furnishings: the wooden altars that adorn the side chapels, two pulpits from different periods, the high altar, and the trachyte baptismal font dated 1697. The interior has a single nave covered by a barrel vault and flanked by eight side chapels also covered by a barrel vault. According to an ancient belief, the devotion of the Sorradilesi to St. Sebastian is due to the cessation of the last plague on his feast day.