It certainly does... I wonder if Simon knew the scriptures though; I suppose he did being among the Samaritans- they had Deuteronomy. Their conversation is a little hazy "you need to pray and repent", " You pray for me, so that doesn't happen", that's not a bad thing to ask, but... I feel like I would have asked for more- like, I would ask Peter to help me deal with the situation right then and there; I'd be like "will you pray with me right now and help me fix this?", maybe he was still holding onto something about his life of sorcery... maybe there was an idol he was attached to or something, that he thought he could continue-like it says- in his stubborn ways, he could pay for the power, and it would be "his" to do his sorceries with, or whatever; but that isn't the case- so he had to work through that still.
If the other historical accounts about Simon can be trusted he did not turn out well. He seems to have constructed false teachings to justify his own stubborn will.
The text does not tell us the end of Simon. It seems to leave us wondering. Meaning it could have gone well with him if he continued in a heart of true repentance and faith but history seems to suggest that he did not.
However what really stands out in the narrative is that God gave Peter discernment to protect the new church in Samaria. These people had been paying attention to Simon for a long time. Now they were paying attention to Phillip preaching about Jesus. What would have happened if Simon had become a church leader with a poisoned heart? Peter protected them from that. Or rather the Gifts of the Holy Spirit in Peter protected them. This same outpouring of the same Holy Spirit that Peter had received on the day of Pentecost that had given him these gifts was poured out on the Samaritans and the same Holy Spirit was giving them gifts. They would be able to perceive false hearts like Simons in the future as well.
The main message is that one of the works of the Holy Spirit in the book of Acts was to protect the saints from false prophets. And the record is recorded to give us faith that we can expect the same.