This article presents a study of ta’wīl promulgated by two prominent Sufis, namely Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī and Ibn ‘Arabī. Although both use the ta’wīl method of explaining the Qur’anic verses, they are different in terms of “the school” they embrace to. When al-Ghazali belongs to the Sunni Sufi category, Ibn ‘Arabī is a representation of the Naẓarī Falsafī Sufi. In their ta’wīl both Sufis employ symbols as a medium to understanding. In al-Ghazālī’s perspective, symbols are the most appropriate method to explain the meaning obtained through kashf. As for Ibn ‘Arabī, the symbol is a method of solving and breaking down the ultimate reality associated with the basic concepts of truth, nature, and man. The symbolic language framework can be known ...