You need to turn from your past,
and you need to pray
that the Lord will forgive
the evil intent of your heart.
—Acts 2:22
The Voice Bible

Tom Buchanan in The Great Gatsby is a reminder of what happens when a person becomes captive to their own pride—racist, unfaithful, entitled, and convinced of a greatness he never earned. He wounds others without remorse, blind to the decay within him. Fiction, yes—but fiction often mirrors the truths we’d rather not face.
There is a sorrow that settles in when life drifts off-course. You may not speak of it, but it stirs in the quiet moments—those early hours when the world is still and your thoughts grow honest. Perhaps anger has lived in you too long. Perhaps resentment has become familiar. Perhaps you’ve believed the world owes you something because of what you’ve endured.
But what if that belief has been leading you away from life, not toward it?
What if the deeper truth is this: you’ve been avoiding the weight of your own choices—the harm you’ve caused, the apologies you’ve postponed, the entitlement you’ve mistaken for worth? Maybe someone once overindulged you, meaning well. But somewhere along the way, you learned to expect the world to bend around your wounds. You learned to justify the very things that kept you from growing.
Yet Easter tells a different story.
It tells us that worth is not inherited, and it is not owed. It is given by a God who sees us fully—our failures, our pride, our hidden sins—and still chooses to love us. It is shaped by how we respond to truth, how we turn from darkness toward light, how we allow ourselves to be remade.
And here is the truth Easter refuses to let us ignore: no one finds peace while hiding from themselves.
The world cannot hand us joy when we sow bitterness. It cannot give us peace when we refuse to offer it. And we cannot stand before God with a heart that clings to hatred, manipulation, or unconfessed harm.
But Easter is the declaration that this is not the end of your story.
The blood of Christ tells us that sin is real, and costly. The empty tomb tells us that grace is stronger still. This moment—this breath—can be the beginning of resurrection in your own life.
You were made for more than secrets and self-deception. More than the fragile armour of superiority. You were made for love, for being loved, for peace with God and peace with your neighbour. And yes, even for forgiving yourself once you’ve faced what needs to be faced.
Scripture says God is near to the broken-hearted (Psalm 34:18). That includes those broken by their own choices. Tears are not weakness; they are the first cracks through which resurrection light enters.
You cannot rewrite your past, but you can choose a new direction. You can acknowledge your wrongs. You can apologise, even if forgiveness doesn’t come. You can stop blaming others and begin becoming the person you were always meant to be.
This path asks for humility. It asks for honesty. But it offers something priceless in return: a quiet mind, a steady heart, and the deep joy of living rightly.
Don’t wait for the world to change. Let the change begin in you. And you may find that the risen Christ—the One who walked out of the grave—is already walking toward you with mercy in His hands.
God has not given up on you. Easter is proof of that. Today is a good day to rise again; a day to begin.
Verse quoted from The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.