In a culture where more people subscribe to fitness influencers than attend church, the shift is no longer subtle—it’s seismic. As the West grows quieter in its churches and louder in its gyms, a strange reversal has taken place. The body, once viewed with suspicion by the Christian tradition—prone to sin, frailty, and decay—has become the last sacred object. In the absence of God, the mirror has become the altar. What was once called salvation is now called self-improvement. The spiritual has been absorbed into the physical. The new moral order is not built on charity, temperance, or humility, but on discipline, aesthetics, and exposure.
This is not merely a health trend. It is the rise of a new religious impulse—atomised, narcissistic, performative—emerging from the ruins of collective faith. Its liturgy consists of calorie tracking, hypertrophy routines, cold plunges, and curated wellness rituals. The reward is no longer eternal life, but fleeting digital approval. The gym TikTok has replaced the pilgrimage; the influencer serves as priest. This is not worship of God, but of the self—sculpted, optimised, and displayed.
What we are witnessing is the triumph of expressive individualism. Where Christianity once oriented man toward God and his fellow man, modern fitness culture orients him inward. The self is both the problem and the solution. Life becomes a process of constant revision, with the individual tasked with overcoming himself through technique, technology, and effort. There is no mystery left, only measurable outcomes. No grace, only metrics.
This was, in some ways, inevitable. Friedrich Nietzsche foresaw that the death of God would not liberate man but leave him hollow, desperate to fill the void. Man is not merely a rational animal—he is a religious one. When transcendence is denied, it is not replaced with nothing; it is replaced with imitation. The need for ritual, purpose, and hierarchy remains. What has changed is the object of worship. The divine has been relocated from the heavens to the smartphone.
Guy Debord called this "the society of the spectacle"—a culture in which life itself is mediated through images, where appearance becomes more important than essence. In such a world, the spectacle is not just entertainment but a mode of existence. We no longer live; we perform. The gym is not just a place of physical training—it is a stage. Every rep, every diet, every filtered photo is part of an ongoing performance, not only for others but for ourselves. Even when people gather in spin classes or group circuits, there is often a strange solitude—together, yet alone. Conversation gives way to headphones. Community becomes choreography. The rituals are shared, but the meaning is private. The result is not solidarity, but parallel striving—a feedback loop of self-absorption.
These fitness spaces have even begun to splinter into denominations of their own. CrossFit, Hyrox, F45, Orangetheory—each offers a different gospel tailored to temperament and identity. Like Protestant sects, one can shop around until a programme matches one's constitution, worldview, or aesthetic. The promise is not just physical improvement but belonging, identity, and moral purpose. The structure mimics religion but delivers only ritual without transcendence.
Social media has accelerated this transformation. It did not invent narcissism, but it industrialised it. Platforms like Instagram and OnlyFans represent the logical end point of a culture that treats the self as capital. The body is no longer a temple but a marketplace. It is monetised, rated, and consumed. Even vulnerability becomes a product. The distinction between private and public collapses; everything becomes content.
Christopher Lasch warned of this in The Culture of Narcissism, arguing that in a society where the self is the highest value, the inner life withers. Introspection is replaced by self-display. Relationships become transactional. What remains is a brittle, performative shell, always broadcasting but never rooted.
Jacques Ellul, in his work on technique, observed that modern societies elevate the efficient over the meaningful. Every activity must be optimised, every process streamlined. This mindset has invaded the most intimate aspects of life: dating becomes gamified; parenting becomes a formula; even spiritual practice is repackaged as productivity. Fitness, in this sense, becomes not just a pursuit of health but a submission to the broader cult of optimisation. The body is not an end in itself but a data point to be refined.
Even our attempts at community are hollowed out by the same forces. Group fitness classes, wellness retreats, online coaching communities—all promise connection but rarely deliver intimacy. They replicate the structure of traditional gatherings, but without the moral or metaphysical glue. Like followers of influencers, we are together only in our solitude, bonded not by belief but by consumption.
The irony is profound. In fleeing the constraints of religion, modern man has submitted to a harsher regime: the algorithm. The gaze of God has been replaced by the gaze of the crowd. Both demand purity, but only one offers forgiveness. In this new religion, there is no grace, only hustle. No redemption, only reinvention.
So absorbed are many in their own physical journey—tracking macros, monitoring personal records, chasing incremental gains—that they fail to see their civilisation crumbling around them. They jog past shuttered churches, graffiti-stained monuments to forgotten heroes, and hotels converted into holding pens for a new order, one no one voted for.
On the bus, a young woman scrolls absently through her feed, clad in activewear that reveals more than it conceals. Opposite her, a hijab-clad mother clutches her child and watches with quiet hostility—her world intact, her faith unshaken. On the train, a girl checks her fitness app, unaware of the new arrivals leering across the carriage—not just with desire, but with the silent confidence of a culture that feels it is winning.
Two civilisations now share a space—but not the same future: one confident, expanding, and cohesive; the other distracted, exposed, and unsure of itself. Our people chase physical strength in a land whose symbols and values have been replaced by logos and taglines, and scroll through news of institutional collapse with the same detachment they track their sleep cycles. The barbarians are not just at the gate—they’re inside, redecorating the castle, while the West stares in the mirror and calls it freedom. Citizens perfect their physiques while the pillars of their civilisation crack and crumble unnoticed—too absorbed to look up, too entranced to care.
Into this vacuum step systems that still believe in something greater than the self. Islam, in particular, offers structure, identity, and submission. It has not decoupled freedom from obligation. It commands adherence and rewards fidelity. It reproduces. It remembers. It grows. And it advances—not merely as a religion, but as a civilisational force. Where the West is uncertain, Islam is assertive. Where the West is rootless, Islam is rooted. In cities across Europe, this assertiveness is no longer theoretical—it is rapidly reshaping public life, law, and identity. This is not to romanticise, but to recognise: in the absence of a coherent Western identity, Islam presents itself as an unyielding alternative—and, increasingly, an existential threat to a culture that no longer believes in itself.
This pattern echoes the decline of Rome, where personal excess and spiritual exhaustion left the empire vulnerable to more ascendant, committed forces. Early Christianity itself emerged in such a context—as a moral and metaphysical challenge to a decadent world. But the Christianity of that time was a call to self-denial, not self-absorption; a call to community, not curated individuality. Today we have inverted that entirely.
None of this is to denounce fitness or discipline. These are virtues when rightly ordered. But the modern obsession with aesthetics and performance is not about health. It is about grasping at control in a world that feels increasingly chaotic. It is about meaning. In the absence of a shared story, we write one on our bodies. We brand ourselves, sculpt ourselves, display ourselves, hoping it will be enough.
But it never is. The mirror demands more. The algorithm is insatiable. We have been told that if we perfect ourselves, we will be loved. But love without grace is just conditional approval. And a civilisation built on conditional approval is not a civilisation at all.
The West once built cathedrals—structures that pointed beyond themselves, to something higher, something eternal. Today, we build fitness temples and digital profiles that point only inward. But no society can survive on self-reflection alone. It needs memory, meaning, and the humility to know that man is not the centre of all things.
Until we recover that, we will remain trapped in this hollow ritual—ripped, meditative, optimised, but utterly alone. The only question left is whether we can remember who we were before the camera and the algorithm became our gods.