Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Mustahabb

Mustahabb (Arabic: مُسْتَحَبّ, lit.'beloved thing') is an Islamic term referring to an action or thing that is recommended and favoured.

Mustahabb actions are those whose ruling (ahkam) in Islamic law falls between mubah (neutral; neither encouraged nor discouraged) and wajib (compulsory). One definition is "duties recommended, but not essential; fulfilment of which is rewarded, though they may be neglected without punishment".[1] Synonyms of mustahabb include masnun and mandub. The opposite of mustahabb is makruh (discouraged).

Parallels have been drawn between the concept of mustahabb in Islamic law and the concept of supererogatory acts in the Western philosophical tradition.[2]

  1. ^ Reuben Levy, The Social Structure of Islam, p. 202
  2. ^ ZAROUG, ABDULLAHI HASSAN (1985). "THE CONCEPT OF PERMISSION, SUPEREROGATORY ACTS AND ASETICISM [sic] IN ISLAMIC JURISPRUDENCE". Islamic Studies. 24 (2): 167–180. ISSN 0578-8072. JSTOR 20847307.

Previous Page Next Page






المندوب Arabic Müstəhəb AZ Мөстәхәб BA Mustahabb BCL মুস্তাহাব Bengali/Bangla Mustehab BS Мустахьабб CE موستەحەب CKB Mandūb German مستحب FA

Responsive image

Responsive image