‘To say that Christ is a single hypostasis who joins together two wholly distinct and unequal natures […] is to say that he is a living paradox’ (Daley, 2004, pp. 194–5). In contrast to Daley, many have argued the paradoxicality of the incarnation refers simply to “verbal puzzles” (Basinger, 1987, p. 205). Such accounts of paradox as contradiction, focus on logical contradiction and the epistemic limitations of humans to be able to hold the concepts in a coherent epistemic or theological framework (Goulder, 1979; See Hepburn, 1960). A similar approach can be seen in C. Stephen Evans’ account of our “problematic” conceptual equipment at the root of paradox. In this paper I argue that the resolution of paradox does not require the removal of...