The parish of Saint Józef the Worker in Taciszów belongs to the diocese of Gliwice (Pławniowice deanery). It is run by the Camillian fathers.
After World War I, parishes in Gliwice were looking for a center outside the city for the Catholic Workers' Association. It was planned to organize retreats and days of recollection for workers and their families, free training for the unemployed and summer camps for children. In 1930, the parish of All Saints in Gliwice brokered the purchase of a house in Taciszów, which was renovated for the needs of a retreat house. A chapel was built from the former barn, which was dedicated to St. Józef Robotnik. On December 8, 1932, the chapel was blessed by Fr. dean Jan Michalec from Rudno. In the same year, the center and the church were entrusted to the care of Fr. Jerzy Jonienc, who organized a modern youth pastoral center in Taciszów. In 1934, a premises for Taciszów and Kleszczów was erected next to the church. For 8 years, the archbishops' ordinariate in Wrocław made efforts to obtain permission from the secular authorities to institute the treatment, which was opposed by the then staroste of Gliwice. After obtaining the appropriate permits, Cardinal Adolf Bertram, by decree of April 1, 1942, erected the treatment of St. Józef, separating its territory from the parish in Rudno and from the parish of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Łabędy. In 1937, the treatment purchased the site of the future cemetery in Kleszczów, which was consecrated on August 8 of that year. In the years 1947–1951 the parish was administered by the Capuchins, and in August 1951 the parish was taken over by the Camillians. The monastery also houses the order's novitiate.