Perhaps the perfect paradox is, the perfect answer lies outside the parameters of the question. When the Jews brought the adulterous woman to Jesus and asked, what should we do with this woman, Moses said, “a woman like this should be stoned, what do you say?” They were expecting an answer somewhere between, stone her or let her go; Jesus found the answer in the third way. When Satan tempted Jesus after the 40 days in the desert, turn these stones into loaves, he was expecting a yes or no; again, Jesus found the third way. If this perfect paradox seems plausible, that the perfect answer lies outside the parameters of the question; then one conclusion would be; that the perfect question lies outside the parameters of any possible answer. It wouldn’t be the perfect question if it had an answer. Conversely, if the answer did lie within the parameters of the question, then you would have to admit that you already knew the answer before you asked, or you would never recognize the answer was the answer. If this is plausible, then, there can only be one perfect answer to the perfect question. So, if you see the only answer to this seeming endless ‘catch 22’ is; the perfect question is the perfect answer, then you would be absolutely right. Jesus is the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last. He is the cause and the effect. He is the question and the answer.