While 63% of Americans identify as Christian, only 4% actually live as disciples whose faith shapes their daily decisions. That means many are calling Jesus Savior, but few are following Him as Lord. This week marks the beginning of a series designed to reintroduce us to the habits of Jesus, not as religious tasks, but as the pathway to genuine transformation. When a rabbi said “follow me,” it meant something tangible: come be with me, watch how I live, learn how I pray, rest, love, and obey. Jesus didn’t just forgive us; He formed us. And spiritual formation isn’t about trying harder. It’s about learning to live differently. We fail not because we don’t want to grow, but because we often rely on willpower, more information, or one spiritual high to carry us. That’s not how Jesus formed people. He taught truth, lived in community, modeled practices, and gave us His Spirit. The call of discipleship is to be with Him, become like Him, and do what He did. And that starts right here.