Taysir al-Karim al-Rahman fi Tafsir Kalam al-Mannan
تَيْسِيرُ الْكَرِيمِ الرَّحْمَنِ فِي تَفْسِيرِ كَلَامِ الْمَنَّانِ
Taysir al-Karim al-Rahman fi Tafsir Kalam al-Mannan (The Facilitation of the Most Gracious in the Exegesis of the Words of the Bestower) by Abd al-Rahman b. Nasir al-Din al-Saadi (d. 1956 CE) is one of the most beloved and widely read tafsir works in the contemporary Sunni world. Its objective is to explain the Quran in clear, simple, and accessible Arabic while drawing readers to spiritual benefit and practical implementation, avoiding lengthy scholarly debates and complex apparatus in favor of warm and direct engagement with the text. The manhaj combines transmitted and rational analysis in plain, flowing language, making the work accessible to a broad audience without sacrificing scholarly reliability. Saadi was a Saudi Hanbali Athari scholar deeply connected to the Salafi scholarly tradition of Najd, and he was notably a teacher of the later Grand Scholar Ibn Uthaymin. He is firmly Athari and his madhhab is Hanbali. The work is extraordinarily popular in Salafi and broadly Sunni communities globally, prized above all for its clarity, accessibility, and spiritual warmth. More...
Taysir al-Karim al-Rahman fi Tafsir Kalam al-Mannan (The Facilitation of the Most Gracious in the Exegesis of the Words of the Bestower) by Abd al-Rahman b. Nasir al-Din al-Saadi (d. 1956 CE) is one of the most beloved and widely read tafsir works in the contemporary Sunni world. Its objective is to explain the Quran in clear, simple, and accessible Arabic while drawing readers to spiritual benefit and practical implementation, avoiding lengthy scholarly debates and complex apparatus in favor of warm and direct engagement with the text. The manhaj combines transmitted and rational analysis in plain, flowing language, making the work accessible to a broad audience without sacrificing scholarly reliability. Saadi was a Saudi Hanbali Athari scholar deeply connected to the Salafi scholarly tradition of Najd, and he was notably a teacher of the later Grand Scholar Ibn Uthaymin. He is firmly Athari and his madhhab is Hanbali. The work is extraordinarily popular in Salafi and broadly Sunni communities globally, prized above all for its clarity, accessibility, and spiritual warmth.