
Rhea Graham is not your average content creator. With a powerful physique and a penchant for heavy lifting, she looks every inch the fitness influencer. Yet her page isnāt quite what youād expect from someone who bench presses 55 kilos āfor bantsā. Amid the gym vlogs and the modelling shoots, Graham uses her platform primarily to talk about her Christian faith. āBoth my faith in the Lord and my health and wellness are formed by discipline,ā she writes, accompanying a video montage of endless perfect pull-ups. āThey require both discipline and grace.ā
Graham, a 25-year-old Londoner, is far from alone. TikTok and Instagram are now bulging with Christian āfitfluencersā, not least Grahamās friend @veryvalerie, who mixes āthicker thigh supersetsā with reels about the āgrace of the Lordā. Weāre also seeing a āGym Bro Revivalā on Christian blogs and forums, something even non-believers are noticing. āWhy does fitness culture skew so HEAVILY Christian?ā laments one Reddit thread.
No less striking, specifically Christian fitness spaces are on the rise. CrossFit, for instance, has a subsidiary called Faith RXD, which boasts chapters across the world and integrates workouts with Bible study. The Station Gym in Sheffield features a community room where Christians can hold prayer meetings. Then thereās Fountains Church in Bradford: famous for its regular wrestling events, in which the takedowns function as a metaphor for a believerās inner fight.
For Graham, the links between faith and fitness are watertight, with the minister and personal trainer describing herself as a āsister in Christ who navigates fitness from a Christ-centred perspectiveā. Yet the relationship between the two is complex. For most of Christian history, the faithful were taught to de-prioritise the flesh, favouring spiritual might over physical prowess. And while more recent Protestants have placed sportiness near Godliness, the rise of Christian gymgoers remains a peculiarly 21st-century story ā one speaking to the distinctive rhythms of a life lived between reps.
Christianity and fitness might seem like an awkward pairing. While gym culture is notoriously image-focused, bleeding all too easily into a fixation on the body beautiful, Christians try to steer clear of vanity and bodily obsession.
Graham concedes that many older believers shy away from fitness, dismissing the spiritual importance of physical discipline. That said, there is a striking shift among younger generations. Many Gen Z Christians of her acquaintance are cultivating a passion for movement, and talking openly about God between sets.