- Walking through the Oldest Churches in Vienna
- Unique things about the oldest churches in Vienna
- How the Gospel First Reached Vienna
Long before Vienna became a city of churches, it was the Roman military settlement of Vindobona on the Danube frontier. During the first three centuries, soldiers, merchants, and travelers moved constantly along the river and its roads, connecting cities such as Passau (Germany), Linz, Vindobona (Vienna), and Aquincum (Budapest). Like many parts of the Roman Empire, Vienna most likely received the gospel through ordinary believers rather than a famous apostle.
From House Churches to Public Worship
Christian soldiers, merchants, and families carried the good news of Jesus wherever they traveled, following the pattern seen throughout the New Testament. As believers scattered through travel and persecution, they proclaimed Christ wherever they went (Acts 8:4). Along the Roman roads and the Danube River, ordinary Christians likely brought the gospel to Vindobona long before church buildings or ecclesiastical institutions existed.
Before church buildings existed, Christians gathered in homes, just as they did throughout the New Testament. Small Christian communities likely met quietly in Vindobona during the third and early fourth centuries.
Archaeological speculation indicates that Christians were worshiping there by the fourth century, centuries before Vienna’s surviving churches were built.[1]this is based on Circumstantial Archaeological Clues that speculate that a 1676 floor plan of St. Peter’s Church shows a lower floor level that some believe shows church mosaic flooring but … Continue reading Although Rupert’s Church is the city’s oldest standing church, the gospel reached Vienna long before its stone walls were raised, reminding us that God often advances His kingdom through faithful, unnamed believers.

4th-century Religious Freedom
Everything changed in AD 313 when Constantine and Licinius issued the Edict of Milan, granting Christians the freedom to worship openly. Congregations could now own property, meet publicly, and eventually construct places of worship.
Although Vienna did not yet have its own bishop, it was far from isolated. At the Council of Nicaea in AD 325, nearby bishops from Siscia (modern Sisak, Croatia) and Sirmium (modern Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia) represented Christian communities along the Danube frontier. Roman roads connected these cities to Vindobona, allowing Christian teaching and influence to spread throughout the region.
The Influence of Catholicism
The collapse of the Western Roman Empire during the fifth century brought political instability to the Danube frontier, which the empire shifted to Constantinople. Vindobona (Vienna) declined, and written records nearly disappeared during this period. Yet the gospel did not vanish. Christian communities endured even as governments rose and fell.
Centuries later, Catholic monks from Salzburg, building on the work begun by Rupert of Salzburg, reestablished organized Christian worship in the region. Their efforts explain why Vienna’s oldest surviving church bears Rupert’s name. At this point in history, the Western and Eastern churches had not yet divided; Christians still belonged to one united church despite regional differences. However, the orthodox influence waned, and the Latin Christian tradition was becoming firmly established throughout Central Europe.
Beginning in the twelfth century, the Babenberg rulers transformed Vienna into one of Central Europe’s leading cities. Churches such as St. Stephen’s, St. Michael’s, and the Schottenstift became religious centers of influence throughout Austria during this time and the Habsburg Dynasty.
The Habsburgs
The Habsburg dynasty’s rise in 1278 transformed Christianity in Vienna. The Habsburgs, calling themselves the Holy Roman Empire, consolidated power by using the Church to strengthen their rule. They appointed or strongly influenced the appointments of bishops and abbots, endowed churches and monasteries, and sponsored grand cathedrals that showcased both religious devotion and dynastic prestige. Public worship, royal coronations, state ceremonies, and feast days merged with political life, linking loyalty to the Catholic faith with loyalty to the ruling house.
The Church increasingly served as a tool of political power as well as spiritual ministry. The religious-political influence culminated under Joseph II in the 18th century and did not wane until his Patent of Tolerance in 1781, which led to the first official Protestant church being formed two years later. Allowing non-Catholic congregations to worship legally for the first time in centuries. Here is a visit to his square in Vienna:
The Third Roman Empire
The Habsburgs, after the fall of Constantinople in 1453, increasingly viewed themselves as the chief defenders of Latin Christendom. Although they never officially claimed to lead a “Third Rome,” they regarded the Holy Roman Empire as the continuation of Rome’s imperial legacy and used both religious symbolism and imperial authority to strengthen their rule.
They defended Latin Christianity against the Ottoman sieges of Vienna in 1529 and 1683, and they saw themselves as the heirs of Charlemagne.
After the Ottoman sieges of Vienna in 1529 and 1683, many monuments depicted their victories over these invasions. Also, churches such as St Stephen and St. Peter highlighted a politically victorious faith, but no direct frescoes or paintings concerning these specific sieges.
The Habsburg court viewed the victory as both a military and religious triumph, and churches wove that message into their art and public worship. This process strengthened Catholic identity throughout the empire, but it also blurred the line between allegiance to Christ and allegiance to the Habsburg state. The New Testament describes Christ’s kingdom advancing through the proclamation of the gospel and transformed lives, rather than through political power or military conquest. The Catholic victory highlights triumph but blurs the call to look to the cross for salvation.
Salvation and Works
We know that in Romans 6, the Word of God says, “22 But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the fruit you get leads to sanctification and its end, eternal life. 23 For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Salvation comes by God’s grace and not by works. God will deliver us from our sins when we come to accept the Lord Jesus as our savior.
My desire is for everyone to recognize the profound love of God for the world. The covenantal God, who passionately loves the world, sent His Son to accomplish His eternal plan. Jesus entered the world through a miraculous birth, lived a sinless life, and willingly offered Himself on the cross to atone for the sins of humanity. After his burial, He triumphed over death and now lives in the hearts of believers. Believers are resolutely awaiting Jesus’ return before the Day of Judgment. Each person who places their trust in Christ will stand before their Creator with Christ as their advocate.
I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. – Galatians 2:20 (ESV)
References
| ↑1 | this is based on Circumstantial Archaeological Clues that speculate that a 1676 floor plan of St. Peter’s Church shows a lower floor level that some believe shows church mosaic flooring but none has been found. |
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