Islamic sexual hygienical jurisprudence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on the
Islamic Jurisprudence

– a discipline of Islamic studies

Fields


This box: view  talk  edit
This is a sub-article of Sexuality in Islam and Islamic cleanliness.

Islamic sexual hygienical jurisprudence is a prominent topic in Islamic jurisprudence (Arabic: fiqh), due to its relevance to the issues prominent in everyday life.

[edit] Rulings

Ibn Abidin, a 13th century Sunni Islamic scholar explains [1]:

In Sahih Muslim Book 3 Hadith 684:

Regarding things that necessitates Ghusl:

  1. sperm or female ejaculate that leaves its place of origin with desire [f: whether actual or effective], even if it exits the body without desire, even if without sexual intercourse;
  2. the head of the penis entering either private part of a living human being who is fit for sexual intercourse, even without any release of sexual fluids…” [al-Hadiyya al-`Ala’iyya (Gifts of Guidance, unpublished translation)][2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Radd al-Muhtar ala al-Dur al-Mukhtar [1]
  2. ^ http://qa.sunnipath.com/issue_view.asp?HD=1&ID=2125&CATE=129