{"id":5071,"date":"2024-01-09T07:24:06","date_gmt":"2024-01-09T07:24:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/maxhealthliving.com\/?p=5071"},"modified":"2024-01-23T02:49:36","modified_gmt":"2024-01-23T02:49:36","slug":"is-bodybuilding-haram","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/maxhealthliving.com\/is-bodybuilding-haram\/","title":{"rendered":"Is Bodybuilding Haram or Halal? (what islam law says)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Social media and modern physical culture are dangerous places for the spiritual well-being of young Muslims.<\/p>\n
Bodybuilding culture even more so, which has raised the question: is bodybuilding haram?<\/p>\n
There’s a big debate going on about whether or not bodybuilding is haram. Some people say that it’s fine to do as long as you’re doing it for health reasons, while others say that any form of bodybuilding is forbidden because it’s vain and self-centered.<\/p>\n
So what’s the truth?<\/p>\n
Bodybuilding is a popular approach to health and fitness that has only gained more popularity with the development of social media.<\/p>\n
Today we’re discussing what that means for young Muslims and their relationship with fitness, the body, and the relationship between physical and spiritual well-being.<\/p>\n
The internet is not the best source for more important questions of faith.\u00a0<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n
If you find that you are stuck in the nuances of any issue, you should seek your local faith leader and discuss the exegeses surrounding the topic.<\/p>\n
The question of what haram is more important than a google search for the devout. Personal details can be lost in larger discussions like this, where the main questions are discussed without personal considerations.<\/p>\n
While we can discuss the broad strokes of an issue, consulting with a Mullah is almost always the best choice for a question in matters of faith.<\/p>\n
Fortunately, the question of whether bodybuilding is haram is a black and white issue with no nuance.<\/p>\n
Yes \u2013 bodybuilding is haram<\/b>. This is mainly because of bodybuilding competitions, which are unavoidably haram because of exposure to the awrah<\/i>.<\/p>\n
Training to develop the body is not de facto<\/i> haram, but it also provides considerations \u2013 like pride and your relationship to aesthetic affirmations \u2013 that could be a problem.<\/p>\n
Intent and process matter in training, while the nature of competition is a problem for Muslims.<\/p>\n
There are two counts on which bodybuilding is likely to be haram. First, it is a pursuit closely associated with problems of pride and worldly aggrandizement. Secondly, it is the exposure of the body \u2013 particularly the awrah \u2013 to others during a bodybuilding competition.<\/p>\n
Like other Abrahamic religions, Islam rejects worldly vanity and self-absorption. Bodybuilding often falls foul of these haram patterns of behavior for focusing on the vain tendencies associated with this pageantry style and exposure. However, perceptions in this regard differ.<\/p>\n
There is an argument by some that it is possible to use the struggle of strength training as a route to better developing the virtues of patience, tenacity, and self-abnegation, which are often laudable.<\/p>\n
It can be the pursuit of excellence through struggle, a microcosm of the greater personal spiritual project of greater jihad.<\/p>\n
It is impossible to say for certain if the training of bodybuilding is haram for this reason.<\/p>\n
It can be one of many routes to transforming the inner self and building discipline.<\/p>\n
It is obvious, however, that this is not the greatest form of abnegation of al-nafs al-amaranth <\/i>(the lower self that seeks vice and carnal gratifications). In this way, it is important to consider how you approach training \u2013 there is a lot of variability between individuals.<\/p>\n2: Exposure to the awrah<\/h3>\n
Bodybuilding competition<\/i> is clearly and directly haram. It is not only the seeking of worldly validation but the exposure of the awrah to judges, which is haram.<\/p>\n
While the training of the body for strength, virtue, and well-being is lauded in Islam, the body’s exposure is directly stated to be haram. Bodybuilding competition requires a man to pose in skimpy underwear, clearly exposing the area from the navel to the knee.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
This is haram for both the bodybuilder and (in the eyes of his faith) those who see him.<\/p>\n
Bodybuilding is haram for its exposure of the self and the conspiracy in which it takes the observer. It is haram to expose and induce others to haram behavior, thus clearly not permissible under the tenets of Islam.<\/p>\n
Of course, these restrictions are even more of a problem for women, where bodybuilding competition exposes more haram areas of the body than men. Women’s bodybuilding is not permissible in Islam.<\/p>\n
No, exercise is not haram. It is important to build a healthy, strong, and resilient body.<\/p>\n
Muslim scripture often discusses the importance of physical well-being-exercise and preparation as both a worthwhile goal and a way of building character and its virtues.<\/p>\n
Examples exist in the Hadiths and elsewhere discussing the importance of strength. This can be for health, to prevent capacity deterioration while aging, or to prepare for worthwhile physical activity.<\/p>\n