Saint-Luc Church was rebuilt in the 16th century after the Wars of Religion, probably on the site of a priory called Saint-Sauveur, near the old cemetery. In the square of the church the consuls and aldermen met. A wrought-iron cross is sealed on a square plinth built, like the church, in white limestone from neighboring quarries.
The original church is mentioned in ecclesiastical archives as early as the 13th century, when it depended on the powerful Benedictine abbey of Saint-Gilles in the Gard. It is still possible today to read the date of 1594 on the crowning of the campanile.
The five chapels of the church contain works from the 16th and 17th centuries, most of which are listed or classified in the inventory of Historic Monuments, as do the high altar and the communion grid.
Since 2017, the Church of Saint-Luc has been listed as a Historic Monument.