The concept of absolute destiny, understood as a fixed and unalterable course of human existence, is critically challenged within Christian theology. This study argues that Christianity does not endorse rigid determinism but rather advances a dynamic theological framework in which divine sovereignty engages meaningfully with human response. Drawing from a careful exegetical and theological analysis of selected biblical narratives, the paper demonstrates that divine pronouncements are frequently conditional, functioning within a relational paradigm that accommodates prayer, repentance, and ethical transformation. The narrative of Hezekiah reveals that even a pronounced sentence of death may be reversed through fervent supplication, while the account of Nineveh illustrates the suspension of impending judgment in response to collective repentance. Similarly, the experience of Jabez affirms that adverse beginnings do not constitute fixed existential outcomes. These cases, alongside additional biblical instances of intercession and divine relenting, collectively undermine fatalistic interpretations of destiny. The study concludes that Christianity presents a theology of hope, moral responsibility, and spiritual agency in which destiny is neither static nor predetermined but open to transformation through sustained divine-human interaction. This study recommends that contemporary Christian theology and practice should consciously move away from fatalistic interpretations of destiny and instead emphasize the transformative roles of prayer, repentance, and ethical responsibility as integral to divine-human interaction. Keywords: Divine Relenting; Conditional Prophecy; Free Will; Prayer; Non-Determinism; Biblical Theology
Yinka Stephen JACOBS (Mon,) studied this question.