The Way Back to One Another: A Review of Koinōnia in an Age of Aloneness

The contemporary Western church finds itself in a paradox. It is more connected than ever through digital means, yet increasingly marked by fragmentation, loneliness, and relational shallowness. The Way Back to One Another (by Jeff Galley & Phillip Newell Smith) enters this tension with both clarity and conviction, offering a compelling diagnosis of what it terms “aloneness” and a corresponding call toward rediscovering interdependent, Christ-centered community.¹

This work is not merely sociological in its concern. It is profoundly theological. At its core lies the conviction that the human person is created for shared life, and that the church is the primary locus in which this reality is embodied. The authors argue that loneliness is not simply an emotional deficit but a disruption of God’s creational and redemptive intent.² This review seeks to affirm the strengths of the work while situating its claims within a broader biblical-theological framework, offering both edification and gentle admonition for the sake of the church’s formation.

NOTE: Scroll to the bottom for the YouTube X44 Author Interview


One of the most significant contributions of the book is its distinction between loneliness and what it calls “aloneness.” Loneliness may be understood as a subjective emotional state, whereas aloneness is a deeper ontological condition marked by the absence of meaningful, interdependent relationships.³ This distinction is not merely semantic. It reflects a theological anthropology that resonates deeply with Genesis 2:18, where the first “not good” in Scripture emerges prior to the entrance of sin.

The Hebrew term לְבַדּוֹ (levaddo) denotes not merely solitude but a form of existential isolation.⁴ The divine response is not the provision of information, structure, or even worship practices, but the creation of עֵזֶר כְּנֶגְדּוֹ (ezer kenegdo), a corresponding relational partner.⁵ As John Walton notes, this passage establishes relationality as intrinsic to human ontology rather than incidental to it.⁶

The authors rightly perceive that modern Western culture has normalized a form of existence that Scripture identifies as deficient. The church, rather than resisting this formation, has often accommodated it, offering proximity without participation and programs without presence.⁷ In this sense, the book functions prophetically, calling the church to repentance from a subtle but pervasive individualism.


The central constructive proposal of the book is the recovery of κοινωνία (koinōnia), a term that encompasses shared life, mutual participation, and covenantal belonging.⁸ While often translated as “fellowship,” its semantic range is far richer, denoting a dynamic participation in both God and one another.⁹

Acts 2:42–47 provides the paradigmatic expression of this reality. The early church is described as devoted not only to teaching and prayer but to a shared life marked by economic redistribution, daily presence, and communal meals.¹⁰ As Michael J. Gorman observes, this is not an optional expression of Christian life but its very essence, a participation in the life of the crucified and risen Christ.¹¹

The book captures this well, particularly in its emphasis on shared identity, shared purpose, and shared experience.¹² These categories reflect a lived ecclesiology that resists reduction to institutional forms. Instead, they call for a reorientation toward embodied presence and mutual dependence.


While the book is deeply aligned with New Testament expressions of community, it would be strengthened by a more explicit engagement with its Old Testament foundations. The rhythms of Israel’s life were structured around practices that cultivated relational interdependence.

The Deuteronomic festival tithe provides a striking example. Israel was commanded not only to give but to gather, to eat, and to rejoice together before the Lord.¹³ This practice functioned as a formative mechanism, shaping a people whose identity was inseparable from shared presence and celebration. As Christopher Wright notes, Israel’s economic and liturgical life was designed to reinforce covenantal solidarity.¹⁴

Similarly, the concept of חֶסֶד (hesed) underscores the covenantal nature of relationships within Israel. Hesed is not merely kindness but steadfast loyalty expressed in concrete action.¹⁵ It binds individuals into a network of mutual responsibility that reflects the character of God Himself.

The absence of these categories in the book does not undermine its argument but does suggest an opportunity for deeper theological grounding. The vision it articulates is not a novel innovation but a recovery of ancient covenantal patterns.


One of the most compelling aspects of the book is its insistence that meaningful relationships are formed not through affinity but through commitment. The narrative of intentional, sustained relational investment illustrates that depth emerges over time through shared presence and vulnerability.¹⁶

This aligns closely with the biblical concept of covenant. The Hebrew term בְּרִית (berit) denotes a binding relational commitment that persists beyond fluctuating emotions or circumstances.¹⁷ In the New Testament, this finds its fulfillment in the new covenant inaugurated by Christ, which establishes a community marked by mutual self-giving.¹⁸

Discipleship, therefore, cannot be reduced to information transfer or individual spiritual disciplines. It is inherently communal. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer argues, the Christian life is life together under the Word, where believers bear one another’s burdens and confess their sins to one another.¹⁹ The book rightly calls the church back to this reality, emphasizing that spiritual formation occurs within the context of shared life.


The pastoral implications of this work are both urgent and far-reaching. The loneliness epidemic is not merely a cultural phenomenon but a theological crisis. It reveals a disconnect between the church’s practices and its calling.

The authors offer a hopeful vision, but this vision requires costly obedience. It demands a relinquishing of autonomy, a willingness to be known, and a commitment to others that mirrors the self-giving love of Christ.²⁰ As N. T. Wright reminds us, the church is called to be the place where God’s future is brought into the present through a community shaped by love.²¹

At the same time, a gentle admonition is warranted. The recovery of koinōnia must be grounded not only in practical steps but in a robust theological framework that integrates creation, covenant, and new creation. Without this grounding, there is a risk of reducing community to a strategy rather than recognizing it as the very life of God shared among His people.


The Way Back to One Another offers a timely and necessary call to the church. It exposes the inadequacy of superficial connection and invites believers into a deeper, more demanding vision of shared life. Its strengths lie in its clarity, its accessibility, and its compelling portrayal of what authentic community can look like.

Ultimately, the book reminds us that the gospel is not merely a message to be believed but a life to be lived together. The church is not a collection of individuals but a covenantal people, gathered by God and sustained through mutual participation in His life.

If the church is to faithfully respond to the loneliness of our age, it must recover this vision. Not as an optional enhancement, but as the very essence of what it means to be the people of God.


  1. Jeff Galley and Phil Smith, The Way Back to One Another (IVP, 2025), 12.
  2. Ibid., 18.
  3. Ibid., 22.
  4. Ludwig Koehler and Walter Baumgartner, The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament, 2:94.
  5. Genesis 2:18.
  6. John H. Walton, The Lost World of Adam and Eve (IVP Academic, 2015), 82–85.
  7. Galley and Smith, 31.
  8. BDAG, s.v. “κοινωνία.”
  9. Gordon D. Fee, Pauline Christology (Hendrickson, 2007), 45–47.
  10. Acts 2:42–47.
  11. Michael J. Gorman, Apostle of the Crucified Lord (Eerdmans, 2004), 284–289.
  12. Galley and Smith, 69.
  13. Deuteronomy 14:22–27.
  14. Christopher J. H. Wright, Old Testament Ethics for the People of God (IVP, 2004), 195–198.
  15. Nelson Glueck, Hesed in the Bible (Hebrew Union College, 1967).
  16. Galley and Smith, 68–70.
  17. Scott W. Hahn, Kinship by Covenant (Yale University Press, 2009), 27–31.
  18. Luke 22:20; 2 Corinthians 3:6.
  19. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Life Together (Harper, 1954), 21–30.
  20. Philippians 2:5–11.
  21. N. T. Wright, Paul and the Faithfulness of God (Fortress, 2013), 1040–1045.